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Lecture Archives

“From Spain to Argentina: Reflections on the Influence of ‘Mudéjar’ in Esteban Lisa’s Art” (Lecture 9/17/17)

As part of the McMullen Museum’s 2017 fall opening celebration, “Esteban Lisa: The Abstract Cabinet,” curator and Boston College Professor Elizabeth Thompson Goizueta introduces the exhibition by tracing Lisa’s artistic developments and connecting his works to larger trends within the global modern art movement of his day.

This lecture took place at the McMullen Museum of Art on September 17, 2017.

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“It’s about Them, Not Us! ‘Turning the Museum in an Anxious World'” (Lecture 3/30/17)

Declan McGonagle Lecture Photo

The McMullen Museum of Art welcomed the Founding Director of the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA), Declan McGonagle as part of its Museum Current lecture series. In this illustrated talk, McGonagle explored issues raised by the opening and subsequent development of a Museum of Modern Art in Ireland at the end of the 20th century–to argue that an expansion of the inherited model of ‘museum’ and of the definitions of art, artist, and public value are now necessary.

Declan Mc Gonagle has been Director of the National College of Art and Design, Dublin, since 2008. He is a Contributing Editor of Artforum, New York, and a member of the International Advisory Panel of Engage, London, and writes, lectures and publishes regularly on art, museum/gallery policy issues, and curates exhibitions with a focus on the relationship between art, artist, and society.

The lecture, “It’s about Them, Not Us! ‘Turning the Museum in an Anxious World'” took place at the McMullen Museum on March 30th, 2017. A recording can be accessed via the following link: Declan McGonagle Lecture. This video requires the latest version of Flash. If you experience any problems viewing the video, please update your flash player at https://get.adobe.com/flashplayer/.

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Lecture Archives

“The Medieval Cathedral as Museum” (Lecture 3/16/17)

During the Middle Ages, a pilgrimage provided the most popular and convenient form of travel for people with means. The destinations were cathedrals and their collections of relics, reliquaries, and, coincidentally, great works of art. Medieval cathedrals met many of the criteria we use today to define museums: they had collections, an audience (both local and foreign tourists), an educational agenda (Catholicism), were open to the public, and provided the foundation for a growing tourist economy in many cities.Screen Shot 2017-03-19 at 3.15.09 PM

Mary Malloy has been on the faculty of the Museum Studies Program at the Harvard Extension School for more than a decade, and won the teaching prize in 2010. She earned her MA in American Studies at Boston College, and a PhD at Brown University. The author of three novels and four works of nonfiction maritime history, Malloy has walked across England to trace the pilgrimage route of Chaucer’s “Wife of Bath,” and has followed the character’s path to Rome, Bologna, Santiago de Compostela, and Cologne to look at cathedrals and their collections. She is currently working on a book on the history of museums.

The lecture, “Medieval Cathedral as Museum,” took place at the McMullen Museum on March 16, 2017. A recording can be accessed via the following link: Mary Malloy Lecture. Please be sure to update Adobe Flash on your device to access the software’s full interactive features.