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Berea College Hosts Symposium on Horses in Art on Saturday, October 30

 

The Berea College Art Gallery at Berea College in Berea, Ky., will present a
free public symposium, “The Reign of the Horse: Exploring Cultural
Connections Through Equine Images in Art,” from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Saturday, October 30, 2010. The symposium has been organized to coincide
with the art exhibition, “The Horse in Japan, 1615-1912,” on exhibit through
November 12 in the Upper Traylor Gallery in the Traylor Art Building at
Berea College.  The symposium will take place on the Berea campus in Room
218 of the Frost Building. For more information about the symposium, contact
symposium organizer, Dr. Elizabeth Tobey at [log in to unmask] or 540-687-6542 x
11.

 

The dominant theme of the symposium will be on the role of the horse in the
development of cultural connections and how widely Kentucky’s influence
extends throughout the world by virtue of its prominent role in the world of
horsemanship. Curator and art historian Dr. Sandy Kita’s research on
woodblock prints from Japan’s Edo period (1615 – 1868) examines the role of
the horse in Japan’s cultural and military history and in its art. Dr. Kita
will discuss how the connections established throughout history continue
into the present day, connecting Japanese culture and Kentucky traditions in
surprising and significant ways. Dr. Kita is Senior Scholar at Chatham
University in Pittsburgh, Pa.

 

Dr. Ingrid Cartwright will examine connections between equestrian imagery
created in the American Revolutionary period and early Republic and the
European artistic traditions from which they spring. Dr. Cartwright is an
Assistant Professor of Art at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green,
Ky., and is the curator of “Hoofbeats and Heartbeats: The Horse in American
Art,” which is on view at the Art Museum at the University of Kentucky in
Lexington through November 21.

 

Dr. Elizabeth Tobey will discuss the similarity of cultural roles of the
horse throughout history, specifically how Italian city states cultivated
diplomatic and trade ties with European and Ottoman courts through the
equestrian activities of riding, racing, and horse breeding. Her
contributions to the exhibition and the symposium will highlight the
present-day connections between Kentucky and Japan through the Thoroughbred
racing and breeding industry. Dr. Tobey is the Director of Research &
Publications at the National Sporting Library & Museum in Middleburg, Va.

 

The exhibition features woodblock prints (ukiyo-e), paintings on silk, and a
rare Edo-period book on horse ornaments, all with equestrian subject matter.
In addition to selections drawn from the permanent collection of the Berea
College Art Museum, the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art in Eugene, Ore.; the
National Sporting Library & Museum; and Mr. and Mrs. Walter and Dörte
Simmons have lent works to the exhibition. The show was co-curated by Drs.
Kita and Tobey. For more information on the exhibition, call 859-985-3530 or
visit www.berea.edu/art/dug/

 

Elizabeth Tobey, Ph.D., Director of Research & Publications

National Sporting Library & Museum

P.O. Box 1335 (102 The Plains Rd.)

Middleburg, VA 20118-1335

540-687-6542 x 11

[log in to unmask]

http://www.nsl.org/

 



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