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March
2 Hohenberg Lecture Will Examine Symbolism in Art
For
release: Feb. 21, 2003
For press information, contact
Gabrielle Maxey
Dr.
Christopher Reed, the 2002-2003 Dorothy K. Hohenberg Chair
of Excellence in Art History at The University of Memphis,
will speak at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art on Sunday,
March 2, at 2 p.m. Admission is free.
His
lecture, "Is a Calla Lily Ever Just a Calla Lily? Abstraction,
Symbolism, and Sexual Identity," is given in conjunction
with the Brooks exhibition "Georgia O'Keeffe and the
Calla Lily in American Art: 1860-1940," which runs Feb.
23-May 4. The exhibition features more than 50 works by 30
artists, including O'Keeffe, Charles Demuth and Marden Hartley.
With paintings of the calla lily as his background, Reed examines
practices of coding and symbolism in modern art, which have
often been overlooked by historians more concerned with the
significance of abstraction.
Reed
considers how the use of codes and symbols, whose meanings
are not always obvious, reinforced modern ideas of an avant-garde
distinct from the mainstream. He also examines how the avant-garde
overlapped with other modern subcultures based on new ideas
about gender and sexuality.
Reed
earned his doctorate from Yale University and serves as chairman
of the Art Department at Lake Forest College in Chicago.
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