lectures

Architect Shigeru Ban Discusses Social Implications of Design

October 6, 2009 - 1:48am
By Will Cordeiro

When people mention “paper architects,” they usually mean architects who design highly theoretical, exorbitant, unrealizable utopian projects that remain consigned to the drafting board. While such architects are sometimes critiqued for being overly academic, inattentive to the nuts-and-bolts of their craft as well as client needs, they are important for pushing the conceptual frontiers of the discipline. Paper architects can help expand the poetic possibilities of architecture’s collective imagination even if their designs are never intended to be built.

Quick Moving, Slow Seeing

University of Chicago professor Barbara Maria Stafford speaks on the relationship between science and art

April 28, 2009 - 11:00pm
By Will Cordeiro

Barbara Maria Stafford, a professor of Art History at the University of Chicago, has been instrumental in bridging ideas from the sciences and social thought into the humanities: Her work focuses on how neuroscience and other recent developments in cognitive theory can help explain the unique visual knowledge we gain through artworks. Such is her far-ranging, trans-disciplinary appeal that she attracted an audience of students and scholars from fields as diverse as fine arts, literature, political science, philosophy and biology to her lecture in Goldwin Smith’s Lewis Auditorium yesterday entitled Slow Looking, co-sponsored by the departments of art history, architecture, art, urban and regional planning and chemical biology.

How We Roll: Printing at the Johnson

Local artist lectures on lithography, modern print making and her oeuvre

April 20, 2009 - 11:00pm
By Kimberly Chew

Minna Resnick is a local artist who has been printmaking and drawing for over 30 years. She was the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1980, one of many other honors she has received throughout her career. Her work is currently displayed at more than 50 public and private collections, both nationally and abroad. She has taught and lectured at many colleges across the nation, and was even an art instructor at Cornell for a few semesters.

Architect Team Emphasizes Calm and Continuity

April 1, 2009 - 11:00pm
By Ahsiya Kurlansky

An elegant woman takes the seat in front of me to talk to a man. She is sharply dressed, the dark combination of her clothing offset by a perfectly coiled blonde bun, red lipstick, light skin and the sharpness of her cheekbones.

“Why are you sitting all the way back here?” the man asks her.

“I am just here until I dance,” she answers.

Reading Between the Timelines

March 31, 2009 - 11:00pm
By Will Cordeiro

Matthew Buckingham’s work challenges our understanding of historiography by its disquieting insistence that “narrative depends on silence,” as he remarked during his Monday lecture entitled “The Sense of the Past.” If the power of narrative derives from what gets left out, what’s implied and “what we are meant to forget,” then our understanding of historical narrative becomes troubled by a necessary void.

From Big Red to Architectural Fame

Rhodes Professor Peter Eisenman '55 to Visit Ithaca Campus

February 16, 2009 - 12:00am
By Ann Lui

When Peter Eisenman ’55 (Frank H. T. Rhodes Class of ’56 professor) attended Cornell, he moonlighted as our sports mascot the Big Red Bear. For a man whose post-graduation work has been revered as changing the field of architecture, it’s a pretty big surprise that when Eisenman attended C.U. he wasn’t always a studious architect, living in Rand Hall. Rather, there was a side to him that was about big lights and game night. Current students now have the opportunity to see Eisenman, live in performance, when he visits this week.

Commissioner of Corrections Expounds on America’s Prisons

December 1, 2008 - 12:00am
By Brendan Doyle

As students filed into Goldwin Smith Lewis Auditorium last Tuesday for GOVT 3141: Prisons, a different face than Prof. Mary Katzenstein, government, greeted them at the front of the room. Brian Fischer, commissioner of corrections for New York State, was brought in to talk about the Prison system in America.

“We talk about the structure of society that often ends up directing people to the prison system,” Katzenstein said of the class.

Prof Recounts Kristallnacht Story on 70th Anniversary

November 11, 2008 - 12:00am
By Ayala Falk

Last night, Prof. Emeritus Edgar Rosenberg, English and comparative literature, recounted his childhood experiences of a night of terror, known to German Jews as Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass. Seventy years ago, on Nov. 9, 1938, Nazis destroyed synagogues, smashed Jewish shop windows and burned Jewish books, leaving German cities littered with glass, broken furniture, and strewn shop items. Gather 'round: Prof. Emeritus Edgar Rosenberg, English and comparative literature, shares his personal memories to commemorate the 70th anniversary in RPCC last night.Gather 'round: Prof. Emeritus Edgar Rosenberg, English and comparative literature, shares his personal memories to commemorate the 70th anniversary in RPCC last night.

Francis Fukuyama on the War in Iraq

April 24, 2008 - 1:08am
By David Wittenberg

[video]

Cornell Sun Opinion and Associate Editor David Wittenberg take a look at the Iraq War with political economist Francis Fukuyama