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  • Archaeology-Hour Screening: NAGPRA as a Path to Healing and Reciprocity

    Whitman College Maxey Hall 207 173 Stanton St., Walla Walla, WA, United States

    Please join us for an in-person screening and informal discussion of the Archaeology Hour talk by Danyelle Means (Museum of Indian Arts & Culture, Santa Fe). Have you noticed empty exhibit cases at museums over the past two years as museums move to comply with the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)? Means' […]

  • Reflections on Ancient Greek Mirrors

    S150 Lamar Dodd School of Art, University of Georgia 270 River Road, Athens, GA, USA

    The Barbara Tsakirgis Memorial Lecture

  • TBA (Stanford)

    TBA (Stanford 1) Stanford, CA, United States

    The Frederick R. and Margaret B. Matson Lectureship for Near Eastern Archaeology and Archaeological Technology Time TBA

  • “Late Victorian Race Science and its Legacies in Aegean Archaeology”

    Swallow Hall, Room 101 507 South 9th Street, Columbia, MO, United States

    Interested in receptions of antiquity, discoveries in prehistory, and ideas about race during the late 19th and early 20th centuries? The Archaeological Institute of America (AIA)’s Central Missouri Chapter as well as the Classics, Archaeology, and Religion (CAR) Department welcome Dr. Anne Duray for her lecture “Late Victorian Race Science and its Legacies in Aegean […]

  • The Unknown Ottawa Project – working with colonial and indigenous assemblages from the Ottawa region

    303 Paterson Hall Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

    Speaker: Laura Banducci – Carleton University This project involves the re-studying and digitization of artefacts from several assemblages from Lake Leamy Park, at the confluence of the Ottawa and Gatineau Rivers. This was a central meeting place from the earliest days of human occupation of the region, yet the materials are not well-published or easily […]

  • “What Do We Owe to Already-Looted Objects?”

    Jepson Hall, Room 118 Richmond Way 221, Richmond, VA, United States

    Lecture by Elizabeth Marlowe, Professor of Art History and Chair of the Art department at Colgate University (https://www.archaeological.org/lecturer/elizabeth-marlowe/)

  • Daniel Healey, Provenance Researcher, Worcester Art Museum: “Orphaned Antiquities & Cold Case Files: Investigating Provenance in the New Era of Museum Restitution”

    The Clarence and Anne Dillon Dunwalke Lecture Provenance refers to an artwork’s history of ownership, from the time of its creation or archaeological discovery to the present. Provenance researchers track down a wide range of sources—scholarship, auction catalogs, financial records, inventories, correspondence, photographs, markings on artworks themselves, and more—to reconstruct an object’s past and retrace […]

  • The Ecstasy and the Agony:Excavations at La Venta, Mexico, an Olmec Capital

    University of Florida, Smathers Library Room 100 1508 Union Rd, Gainesville, FL, United States

    Lecturer: Dr. Susan Gillespie Professor of Anthropology, University of Florida In 1942 and 1943, excavations revealed fabulous buried deposits of jade and other precious items in a very unexpected place: La Venta on Mexico’s southern Gulf coast, an area of swamps and tropical forest. These finds produced an “ecstatic” reaction in the world of archaeology […]