New York Society
Lucille Roussin, President

JOIN the NYC Society of the AIA !
NEW LECTURES | PAST LECTURES | GOVERNING BOARD | FRIENDS | MEMBERS | LINKS | HOME

2008-2009 Lectures

Thursday, September 25, 6:30 pm : Richard Hodges, University of Pennsylvania (at the National Arts Club 15 Gramercy Park South)
"Butrint -- at the Cross Road of the Mediterranean"

The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Butrint – ancient Buthrotum – lies in south-west Albania on the Straits of Corfu. The lecture describes 15 years of excavations encompassing the Bronze Age, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Venetian and Ottoman periods and how today a successful archaeological park has been created here. The lecture, illustrated with many slides, aims to show how modern excavation methods offers many new interpretations of familiar histories from the=2 0Greek, Roman and Byzantine periods.

Thursday, October 16, 6:30 pm: John Pollini, University of Southern California (at at NYU, Washington Square)
"Christian Destruction and Desecration of Images of Classical Antiquity"

In popular culture Christianity is remembered for the art, architecture, customs, rituals, and myths that it preserved from the classical past. It is rarely acknowledged, however, that Christianity also destroyed a great deal in its conversion of the Roman Empire. The material evidence for Christian destruction has often been overlooked or gone unrecognized even by archaeologists. Professor Pollini’s talk examines various forms of Christian destruction and desecration of images of classical antiquity during the fourth to seventh centuries, as well as some of the attendant problems in detecting and making sense of this phenomenon. This talk is based on Professor Pollini’s present book project, “Christian Destruction and Desecration of Images of Classical Antiquity: A Study in Religious Intolerance and Violence in the Ancient World,” for which he received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the American Council of Learned Societies.

Thursday, November 13, 6:30 pm (AIA) Brendan Foley, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (at the Onassis Cultural Center 645 Fifth Avenue) "Shipwrecks in the Deep Mediterranean"

Sea borne trade fueled human development since the Bronze Age, but some constant fraction of sea voyages ended in shipwreck. Working with colleagues in Greece, Italy, Egypt, and Algeria, Dr. Brendan Foley leads an interdisciplinary research team to study ancient civilizations through deep water Mediterranean shipwrecks. New robotic technologies rapidly document wrecks regardless of water depth, as highlighted by investigations of a Classical Greek wreck in the Aegean Sea. The teams' method of extracting ancient DNA from ceramic objects allows unprecedented views of agriculture and early economies. Combined, these advanced techniques provide new understanding of critical moments in human history.

Please send comments/corrections/additions to: Linda Roccos Roccos@mail.csi.cuny.edu