Page 34 of 56331 to 340 of 559 Past Events
2014
February
-
Scots Herring Girls, 1900-1950: Oral History and Visual Narrative
-A lecture given by Jill de Fresnes, from the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments for Scotland (RCAHMS)
-
Book Sale in the Sir Duncan Rice Library
-A book sale will be held on Floor 1 of the Sir Duncan Rice Library for one week from Monday 24 February until Sunday 2 March.
-
Discovering the World: Japan
-Family Fun at the Library. Suitable for families with children aged 3-10 years but all welcome.
-
Museum Curator Talk
-A free talk from Neil Curtis, co-curator of 'Fiji, Scotland and the Making of Empire'
-
Fail Better: Emak Bakia by Man Ray and Film by Samuel Beckett
-Fail Better is an evening of avant-garde visual culture from two Modernist masters, with screenings 'Emak Bakia' by Man Ray, alongside 'Film' by Samuel Beckett.
-
King's Museum Lunchtime Talks
-Student volunteers will give short talks on the new exhibition 'Fiji, Scotland and the Making of Empire' at lunchtimes. Talks will be held 3 times a week at 1pm at King's Museum, and will last approximately 15 minutes
-
The Aberdeen Bestiary: Sound-Image-Narrative
-The Aberdeen Bestiary: Sound-Image-Narrative is an artistic research project led by Dr. Suk-Jun Kim and Prof. Pete Stollery from SERG, and was one of the inaugural beneficiaries of a bursary from the Aberdeen Humanities Fund at the University of Aberdeen.
-
Dressing the Barbarian: Greek and Persian identities and the semiotics of dress 530-330BC
-A free lecture given by Dr Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones, Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Edinburgh
-
Scottish Rural Labour in the Mechanical Age. Skeuomorphic Harvesters
-A free lecture given by Professor John Morrison, History of Art, University of Aberdeen based on his current research into images of rural labour in Scotland,
-
Students tours of the Sir Duncan Rice Library
-New student? Current student who like to learn more about library and information services? Come along to a tour and discover what is available to you from The Sir Duncan Rice Library and beyond...