picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | 2010 Schedule of Events | Week One
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/schedule.html
Introduction: Salem And Visual Culture. Sunday, June 27. Welcome Reception and Orientation to Salem and Salem State College Central Campus Dormitory Lounge. 6:00 pm - 7:15 pm. A Salem Trolley Tour of Local Historic Sites. Monday, June 28. Roundtable Panel: Standards and Frameworks in the Disciplines of History, English, and Art. Nicholas Aieta, Eva Kearney, Lucinda Damon-Bach). Roundtable Panel: Teaching with Visual Resources in the Disciplines of History, English, and Art. Field Trip: Pioneer Village.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Resources
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/workshop_resources.html
Salem Landmarks NEH Workshop (2005). Colonial New England NEH Institute (2006). 2010 Schedule of Events.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/index.html
People, Places, and Events 1770-1870. Initiative. The program’s multidisciplinary approach to content and pedagogy can be seen in the site's resources, which include podcasts, unit plans, and print and electronic bibliographies. Salem Landmarks NEH Workshop (2005). Colonial New England NEH Institute (2006). 2010 Schedule of Events.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Print Bibliography
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/readings.html
Allard, Joseph. “The painted sermon: the self portrait of Thomas Smith.” Journal of American Studies. 10:3 (1976): 341-348. Baumgarten, Linda. What Clothes Reveal: The Language of Clothing in Colonial and Federal America. Williamsburg, VA: Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 2002. Barratt, Carrie Rebora and Ellen G. Miles. Gilbert Stuart. (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2004) pp. 128-36. Brookhiser, Richard. George Washington: A National Treasure. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2002. Miles,...
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Photo Galleries
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/photo_galleries.html
Salem Landmarks NEH Workshop (2005). Colonial New England NEH Institute (2006). 2010 Schedule of Events.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Faculty
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/faculty.html
This institute draws on the many talents of Salem State College faculty, museum professionals, and nationally-known guest scholars. The institute director is Patricia Johnston. Professor of Art History at Salem State College. Dr. Johnston is a nationally recognized scholar of American art and its wider visual culture. For the past several years her research has focused on art and material culture in Salem. In 2004 and 2005 she was the co-director of the NEH Landmarks project,. Her latest book,. 1994) Dr&...
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Institute Archives
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/archives.html
2010 Schedule of Events. Salem Landmarks NEH Workshop (2005). Colonial New England NEH Institute (2006). 2010 Schedule of Events.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Unit Plans
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/unit_plans.html
Salem Landmarks NEH Workshop (2005). Colonial New England NEH Institute (2006). 2010 Schedule of Events.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Dear Colleagues
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/dear_colleagues.html
We invite you to participate in. Picturing Early America: People, Places, and Events 1770-1870. A four-week-long summer institute on interpreting and teaching early American art to be held from June 27 to July 23, 2010, in Salem, Massachusetts. Explores the primary pictorial forms in American visual art from the British colonial settlement to the aftermath of the Civil War. The three units - portraiture, history painting, and landscape - will include a particular focus on works drawn from NEH's initiative.
picturingamerica.salemstate.edu
Picturing Early America | Podcasts
http://picturingamerica.salemstate.edu/podcasts.html
Props and Performance: Reading History through Artifacts. Spotlight: Paul Revere, Jr., Silver Teapot, 1796. June 29, 2010. Jessica Lanier discusses the work of Paul Revere, most notably his silversmith work in the Rococo style, crafted in the late 18th Century. Revere’s work reflects a period in early American history of the first public rebellions against the British crown. View Podcast ». Dr Ellen G. Miles. Spotlight: Gilbert Stuart, George Washington: The Lansdowne Portrait, 1796. July 2, 2010. CREDIT...