Mishkin Gallery: Medieval Media Studies: Dreams and the Digital Imaginary
5/14
6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Mishkin Gallery
Baruch College, CUNY
135 E. 22nd Street
New York, NY 10010
In conjunction with Mishkin Gallery’s current exhibition Visible Communication, Dr. Alison Griffiths will present a lecture on the rich visual culture of the medieval period and dreaming as a kind of visual thought experiment—one in which ideas associated with cinema, such as embodied viewing, narrative sequencing, projection, and sensory engagement, are palpable in a range of visual and literary works. Opening up these intellectual thought lines across distinct eras can help us extrapolate similarities around ways of imagining the objects, spaces, and sensations of embodied viewing or immersion, reminding us that our contemporary digital landscape (and cinema before that) are not divorced from earlier ways of seeing and believing.
Dr. Alison Griffiths is a Distinguished Professor of Film and Media Studies in the Department of Communication Studies at Baruch College, The City University of New York and the CUNY Graduate Center, where she teaches film history, visual studies, and media theory. Griffiths is an internationally recognized scholar whose monographs, scholarly articles, and book chapters have had a major impact on the fields of anthropology, cultural history, cinema studies, nineteenth century visual culture, and new media studies.
Flatiron & NoMad Businesses: Have an event to add? Submit it here
‘Adoration of the Magi and their Dream’, Manuscript, fol. 003v, c. 1315-25, from Apocryphal Childhood of Christ. Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.