Mondays at Beinecke Gallery Talk & Tea

Event time: 
Monday, October 7, 2019 - 4:00pm to 4:45pm
Location: 
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (BRBL) See map
121 Wall Street
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

A weekly series of insightful, engaging, informal talks on materials from the Beinecke Library’s collections and exhibitions, followed by tea on the library mezzanine. Mondays at Beinecke talks take place during the academic year; note: no talks during recesses.
Speakers this semester include:
September 9: Kevin Repp, curator of modern European books & manuscripts, on fall exhibition, “Beyond Words”
September 16: Kerri Sancomb, exhibits production manager, and Megan Czekaj, library exhibits technician, on fall exhibition, “Beyond Words”
September 23: Michael Morand, Beinecke Library communications director, on the visibility, and invisibiity, of women at the origins of New Haven and of Yale and its library collections
September 30: Ken Minkema, executive editor of The Works of Jonathan Edwards and of the Jonathan Edwards Center & Online Archive, “The Edwards Manuscripts at Yale, Old and New.”
October 7: Morgane Cadieu, assistant professor of French, on fall exhibition, “Drafting Monique Wittig”
October 14: Joseph Zordan ’19, student curator of Place, Nations, Generations, Beings: 200 Years of Indigenous North American Art, on view at the Yale University Art Gallery, November 1, 2019 - June 21, 2020
October 21: Theresa Kauder, graduate student in Germanic Languages and Literatures, on artist Carl-Friedrich Claus (and maybe in relation to another artist
October 28: Ève Bourbeau-Allard, processing archivist, on Gil Wolman
November 4: Jill Campbell, professor of English, on Daniel Defoe
November 11: Kevin Repp, curator of Modern European Books & Manuscripts, on concrete Poetry sound piece
November 18: Nancy Kuhl, curator of the Yale Collection of American Literature, on John James Audubon’s “Birds of America”

November 25: No tea (Thanksgiving break)
December 2: Lucy Mulroney, associate director for collections, research, and education, on fall exhibitions

Open To: