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Ashmolean

Asian Studies Centre

Dr Shailendra Bhandare on the Ashmolean Museum’s South Asian coin collections

Shreya Gupta interviews Dr Shailendra Bhandare, Curator of South Asian and Far-eastern Coins and Paper Money at the Ashmolean Museum
Regional Classics
Captioned

Episode 7: Everywhere

In this final episode, Katrina talks to Leo, Alice and Aimee about how Oxford has nurtured their passion for the ancient world, what connects Lizzo to Classics, and how understanding the past can be a force for good.
History of Art Radio Hour
Captioned

History of Art Radio Hour with Lena Fritsch

Lena Fritsch is the Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Ashmolean Museum, where she works on exhibitions, displays and acquisitions of international art.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Conference Programme

Conference Programme for the conference.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Art History and Museum as Medium

Cai Guo-Qiang, Artist, gives the eighth and final presentation in the symposium.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Cai Guo-Qiang: In Search of El Greco

Saul Nelson, Ruskin School of Art, DPhil Candidate, gives the sixth presentation in the symposium.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Yi 羿 - Myth: Shooting the Suns

Paul Bevan, Ashmolean Museum, Christensen Fellow in Chinese Painting, gives the sixth presentation in the symposium.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Two Gunpowder Drawings and Cai Guo-Qiang in Japan

Lena Fritsch, Ashmolean Museum, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, gives the fourth presentation in the symposium.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Cai Guo-Qiang and the Depths of Spectacle

David Taylor, University of Oxford, Associate Professor of English, gives the third presentation in the symposium.
Cai Guo-Qiang Gunpowder Art Symposium

Context and Influence in Cai Guo-Qiang's Work

David Eliott, Redtory Museum of Contemporary Art, Guangzhou, Vice Director and Senior Curator, gives the second talk for the symposium.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Ashmolean After Hours: Carpe Diem! Highlights video

Highlights of the Torch collaboration with the Ashmolean Museum for a special edition of After Hours as part of the Last Supper of Pompeii exhibition to celebrate all things Pompeii and ancient Rome.
Talking Sense

Episode 16: 'The Rough and the Refined: Sensing the Luxurious and the Everyday' – PART 2

Dr Juanjo García-Granero (Postdoctoral Researcher, Archaeology) explores the senses in grand and ordinary living, through examining a Minoan cooking vessel. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 15: 'The Rough and the Refined: Sensing the Luxurious and the Everyday' – PART 1

Clare Gardom (DPhil Student, Classics) explores the senses in grand and ordinary living, through examining textiles from Classical Egypt. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 14: 'Making Sense of Death' – PART 2

In this episode, Alexis Gorby (DPhil Student, Archaeology) looks at glass from the Roman catacombs to explore how ancient and contemporary cultures use the senses to make sense of death. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 13: 'Making Sense of Death' – PART 1

Dr Carrie Ryan (Postdoctoral Researcher, Anthropology) uses Angela Palmer’s Ashmolean Mummy Boy 3 to explore how ancient and contemporary cultures use the senses to make sense of death. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 12: 'Stripping Back to Sharpen the Senses: A Holy Face and a Waterfall Vase' – PART 2

Yayoi Teramoto Kimura (DPhil Student, Computational Neuroscience) focuses on a twentieth-century Japanese vase to demonstrate how artists can engage our senses through a pared down approach. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 11: 'Stripping Back to Sharpen the Senses: A Holy Face and a Waterfall Vase' – PART 1

Eleanor Townsend (DPhil Student, History of Art) focuses on a seventeenth-century Spanish painting to demonstrate how artists can engage our senses by focusing on a pared down approach. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 10: 'Sights for Sore Eyes: Reading the Senses in Religious and Cultural Pilgrimage' – PART 2

Jasmine Proteau (DPhil Student, History) uses an eighteenth-century carriage clock to explore the significance of the senses in reading and travelling to centres of culture and spiritual salvati. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast
Talking Sense

Episode 9: Sights for Sore Eyes: Reading the Senses in Religious and Cultural Pilgrimage' – PART 1

Raphaela Rohrhofer (DPhil Student, English) uses the Alfred Jewel and the reliquary casket of St Thomas Becket to explore the significance of the senses in reading and travelling. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.
Talking Sense

Episode 8: 'Altered States of Body: The Power of the Senses in Ritual and Revelry' – PART 2

In this episode, Helena Guzik (DPhil Student, History of Art) analyses Indian pilgrim stamps to show how objects have the power to transform us, engaging the senses to alter the body. Further reading: https://www.talkingsenseoxford.com/podcast.

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