Hand Grenades like Cartier Clips
Transcription
Hand Grenades like Cartier Clips
4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 14th MARCH Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden Hand Grenades like Cartier Clips – Lee Miller, surrealism and the world of fashion Two genres shaped the life of Lee Miller, Surrealism and the world of fashion. They informed each other and were both central to the way she saw the world. Her career as a fashion model began with an accidental encounter with Conde Nast, the proprietor of Vogue who put her on his front cover a few weeks before her 20th birthday. She became the model for Lepape, Steichen, Genthe, Man Ray, Hoyningen Heune, Horst, Picasso and Penrose – later to be her husband. She emerged as a fashion photographer in her own right, metamorphosing into a war correspondent and finally a combat photographer before returning to her role as a distinctive and witty photographer for Vogue in the post war years. This presentation shows how Lee Miller’s success on both sides of the camera has left us with enduring images that result from her unique way of seeing. Presented by: ANTONY PENROSE (NADFAS) Antony Penrose is the Director of the Lee Miller Archive and The Penrose Collection, which is housed in Farley Farm House, the old Sussex farmhouse his parents used to occupy in the village of Chiddingly. His mother was the American photographer Lee Miller - fashion model for Vogue, Vanity Fair, surrealist photographer, fashion photographer, war correspondent, combat photographer, gourmet cook. His father was Roland Penrose, surrealist artist and poet and biographer of Picasso, Miró, Man Ray and Tàpies. He is known as a curator of photography, and is an artist in his own right. He has lectured at venues around the world, including the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Getty Museum, National Portrait Gallery, Stedjlik, Amsterdam, and Gallery of Photography in Dublin. His publications include The Lives of Lee Miller, Lee Miller's War, The Boat of your Body, Lee Miller, the Angel and the Fiend, The Home of the Surrealists, and Roland Penrose; The Friendly Surrealist, and the acclaimed children’s book The Boy Who Bit Picasso. 1 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 18th APRIL Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden Beyond Capricorn: Map making and European expansion (and discovery of Australia) This lecture discusses maps as prints, and traces the process of making maps, using the expansion of Europe and discovery of the new world to provide a context for this evolution. He shows that the “art” of maps reflected the contemporary fashions in the international art world. The printed map transitioned from a highly decorative production with little accuracy, to a more austere document of great accuracy. Maps reflect the milestones of history from the travelogues of the mid-16th century, the magnificent Dutch atlases of the 17th Century to the school atlases that we all know and the specialist maps that followed. World Map of Nicholas Desliens, 1566 Presented by: Professor ROBERT CLANCY AM Professor Clancy is a medical graduate and physician, with a PhD in auto immune disease. He was a clinical immunologist with a research interest in mucosal immunity and oral vaccines to manage chronic airways disease, and was foundation Professor of Pathology at the innovative medical school in Newcastle. He has collected maps of Terra Australis for 40 years, as decorative documents of history – with a special interest in Australia and Antarctica. He sees maps as a way of illustrating and understanding the past, and has written 4 books on historic cartography and lectures and has written widely on a variety of cartographic topics. With his wife, Christine, he runs a ‘Venice – London’ tour, following the course of the Black Death and aimed at tracing medical, science and pharmacy history from Renaissance times to modern. The tours are accompanied by an art historian to use ‘windows’ to follow change. He was awarded membership to the order of Australia for contributions to historic cartography and immunology. 2 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 30th MAY Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden The Posters That Sold Hitler, 1933-1939 The art of the poster became a weapon of mass communication in the life and death struggle for supremacy in WWI. But in the hands of the master propagandists of the Third Reich, posters became weapons of evil. This lecture covers the propaganda techniques used by the Nazis and shows how they demonized the Jews, the disabled, and anyone of the wrong genetic background. You’ll see how Hitler used posters to win the hearts and minds of his people gaining power and cementing his grip 'The seed of peace, not on society. Posters promoting dragon's teeth' cartoon of Hitler, from the magazine the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Kladderadatsch, 22 March sweeping new autobahns, shiny 1936 Volkswagens and affordable radios all served to paper Hitler with glory. As war broke out, 'Your Own Kd F-Car' poster, posters galvanised German hearts and minds to hate the British. 1939 Presented by: CHARLES HARRIS (NADFAS) Charles Harris has had a life-long career in advertising around the world, most of it as a Creative Director in global agencies responsible for the quality of the creative ideas and finished production of advertising campaigns. This has included many of the world's great brands - British Airways, QANTAS, Sony, Nestle, Kraft, BP, Ford, Black & Decker, Amex, Heinz, Gillette, General Motors and McDonalds. He has been the recipient of the advertising industry's highest accolades in New York and Hollywood, Singapore, Sydney and Melbourne. It is his experience as a creator of posters that makes his presentation and observations about poster art so different. He is not an academic but a practitioner who has researched the subject to provide historical context to his first hand advertising experience and internationally respected creative opinion. He has lectured to major advertising industry conferences in Manila, Buenos Aires, Singapore, Bangkok and Sydney. In addition to lecturing, he has also written two novels and a course in creativity. 3 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 27th JUNE Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden Daphne Du Maurier: The woman behind Rebecca Had Daphne Du Maurier written only one novel – Rebecca – she would still be considered to be one of the great shapers of popular culture and the modern imagination. Her life was something of a fairy story – she was born into a family with a rich artistic and historical background where she was indulged, free from financial and parental restraints and spent her youth sailing and travelling with friends. Her first novel was published when she was in her early twenties, bringing her fame and a handsome soldier husband. Her subsequent novels became best sellers, making her not only famous but also enormously wealthy. She enjoyed the life of a fairy princess in a mansion in Cornwall called Menabilly, which undoubtedly was the model for Manderley in Rebecca. She was obsessed with the past, intensively researching the lives of Francis and Anthony Bacon, the history of Cornwall, the Regency Period and nineteenth century England and France. Even more obsessive was her interest in her own family history which she chronicled in Gerald: a Portrait, and other works. Presented by: SUSANNAH FULLERTON BA, MSc (Arts) Susannah Fullerton has been passionate about literature for as long as she can remember. She has a BA from the University of Auckland NZ and a post-graduate degree in Victorian literature from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. She currently teaches literature courses in Sydney and lectures regularly at the State Library of NSW and the Art Gallery of NSW. She has been president of the Jane Austen Society of Australia for the past 18 years and has spoken about Jane Austen to many schools, community groups and adult classes. Susannah is the author of several books – Jane Austen – Antipodean Views, Jane Austen and Crime, Brief encounters: Literary Travelers in Australia, A Dance with Jane Austin and Happily Ever After: Celebrating Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. She has also written and recorded an audio CD, Finding Katherine Mansfield, about the life and works of New Zealand’s greatest writer. Susannah leads literary tours to the UK, France and the USA. These tours are run by Australians Studying Abroad. Susannah has lectured regularly for ADFAS for many years. 4 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 1st AUGUST Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden Picasso’s Guernica and the Spanish Civil War Guernica, Picasso’s best known and best documented picture, was his anguished response to the fascist destruction of the ancient Basque capital in April 1937. Its development is traced through Picasso’s surviving drawings and the photographs taken by his mistress, the photographer, Dora Maar, and it is also considered alongside other art works created during the Spanish Civil War, including celebrated images by the painters Salvador Dali and Joan Miro, photomontages by John Heartfield, photographs by Robert Capa and other graphic work. The lecture concludes with a look at the strange history of the picture after Franco’s victory: its travels, its influence on the next generations of artists and the huge embarrassment it caused to Colin Powell and George Bush on the eve of the Invasion of Iraq. Presented by: BARRY VENNING BA, MA (NADFAS) Barry Venning is an historian of British Art with a particular interest in the work of J M W Turner, on whom he has published widely, including the volume on Turner in Phaidon’s Art & Ideas series and several catalogue essays for exhibitions in the UK, Germany, Italy and Poland. He was the BBC’s script consultant and expert commentator for a 2005 documentary on Turner’s Fighting Temeraire and has recently taken part (2013) in a BBC documentary called The Genius of Turner: Painting the Industrial Revolution. He has also published a study of John Constable’s paintings. His interests and his teaching extend from medieval architecture to contemporary British art. He is currently Associate Lecturer with the Open University and lecturing on a freelance basis for NADFAS, Christie’s Education and other organisations. 5 FRIDAY 28th AUGUST 5.30 for 6.00 pm SPECIAL INTEREST PROGRAMME Narellan Library, Queen Street Narellan Fabergé’s Imperial Easter Eggs BEFORE THE REVOLUTION: The first egg, given by Tsar Alexander III to his beloved wife, Marie Fedorovna in 1885, was apparently plain white. It was the ‘surprises’ hidden inside that made it special: a golden yolk that further concealed a hen, a diamond miniature of the Imperial crown and a ruby pendant. The gift began a tradition that would last for over three decades and that would send Fabergé on a relentless search for novelty, exploiting and extending almost every jewellery technique and style available. The designs that resulted would inevitably reflect the lives and characters of the empresses who received them. Lavishly extravagant eggs commemorate public events that now seem little more than staging posts on the march to revolution. The muted austerity of the final few eggs seems all too appropriate for a country fighting for survival in the First World War. Above all, the eggs illustrate the attitudes that would ultimately lead to the downfall of the Romanovs: their apparent indifference to the poverty that choked their country; their preference for style over substance and their all-consuming concern with the health of the sickly heir – a preoccupation that would propel them toward Rasputin and the doom of the dynasty AFTER THE REVOLUTION: The eggs embarked on a journey that included embattled Bolsheviks, desperate for foreign exchange, acquisitive members of the British royal family, eccentric salesmen, and such famous business and society figures as Armand Hammer, Marjorie Post, and Malcolm Forbes. Now, the interest of Russian oligarchs means that their story is turning full circle, as the eggs begin to return to Russia. Finally, new information is emerging as researchers delve into the Kremlin archives, in particular, to piece together the designs and possible fates of the seven missing eggs. We will be taken through the information available – from photographs of old exhibitions and Fabergé’s original invoices to auction catalogue descriptions – to explain why one egg has just been rediscovered and why at least two more are likely to re-emerge. Presented by: 6 TOBY FABER (NADFAS) 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 29th AUGUST Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden The Genius of Antonio Stradivari Two hundred and fifty years after Antonio Stradivari’s death, his violins and cellos remain the most highly prized instruments in the world. Loved by great musicians and capable of fetching fabulous sums when sold, their tone and beauty are legendary. Every subsequent violin-maker has tried to match them. Not one has succeeded. How can that be? This lecture explores that central mystery by following some of Stradivari’s instruments from his workshop to the present day. It is a story that travels from the salons of Vienna to the concert halls of New York, and from the breakthroughs of Beethoven’s last quartets to the first phonographic recordings. Stradivarius was described in The New York Times as ‘more enthralling, earthy and illuminating than any fiction could be.’ The lecture is illustrated with pictures of violins and of key individuals and locations, as well as with some short musical recordings. Presented by: TOBY FABER (NADFAS) Toby Faber has written two works of narrative history, Stradivarius, and Fabergé’s Eggs, and has given lectures at venues including The Victoria and Albert Museum, Hay Literary Festival, The Library of Congress and the Huntington Library in California. He became a NADFAS lecturer in 2012. Toby’s career began with Natural Sciences at Cambridge and has been through investment banking, management consulting and five years as managing director of the publishing company founded by his grandfather, Faber and Faber, where he remains on the board. He is also nonexecutive Chairman of Faber Music, vice-Chairman of the Authors Licensing and Collecting Society and a trustee of Yale University Press (UK). 7 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 26th SEPTEMBER Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden Out of the Blue: the story of blue in art Have you ever wondered where the Blue in medieval illuminated manuscripts came from, or how the glaziers of our Gothic cathedrals made their blue glass? The Ancient Britons tattooed their bodies in a blue dye, and, two thousand years later in a Parisian art gallery Yves Kline in a public performance painted his nude models blue and dragged them across his canvasses. Why does the Virgin Mary wear blue and what is significant about the blue used by Gainsborough in his portrait “The Blue Boy”? The story of blue takes us from the lapis lazuli mines in Afghanistan to the studios of Titian, Vermeer, Hokusai, Picasso and Brett Whiteley, to name but a few. In Munich in 1911 Kandinsky and Franz Marc created the Blue Rider art movement, a group of artists who shared a belief in the importance of expressing the spiritual dimension in their art. Presented by: ALEXANDRA DRYSDALE BA Hons (NADFAS) Alexandra is an art historian and a professional artist specialising in painting, sculpture and performance. Her lectures combine art historical knowledge with personal expertise in aesthetics and artistic techniques. It is this combination that makes her lectures so original and dynamic. Art from all periods, including examples of her own work, is examined from an artist’s point of view. This entails a perceptive analysis of a painting’s structure, its meaning, and its relationship to the history of art. She puts a particular emphasis on studying the symbolic language of the imagination. Alexandra has a BA (Hons) Fine Art from Chelsea School of Art and an MFA from Cambridge School of Art. In 2007 and in 2012 she lectured in Australia for ADFAS, and was an artist in residence at Bundanon, New South Wales. 8 FRIDAY 30th OCTOBER 5.30 for 6.00 pm SPECIAL INTEREST PROGRAMME Narellan Library, Queen Street Narellan Windsor Castle History and Royal Occupants, 1080 to the present day Windsor Castle is the oldest and largest continuously occupied castle in the world. It has been enlarged and modified throughout its 900 year history to reflect the needs, ambitions and styles of various monarchs. As such the castle has evolved from an impregnable fortress into a royal country residence which as well as being the Queen's favourite home, is regularly used by her for spectacular state occasions. The restoration of the castle after the fire of 1992 enabled Her Majesty to continue the development of the structure. The lecture shows how the present castle has grown from its 11th century origins and how this evolution relates to the personalities and tastes of its Royal occupants and to the history of Britain. Four monarchs in particular are shown to have made Windsor Castle what it is today - Edward III in the 1360s, Charles II in the 1670s, George IV in the 1820s and the present Queen. Treasures and Curiosities from the Royal Library The Library is primarily used by the Queen to show to her guests after dinner parties at Windsor Castle. This is because it is so full of a great range of fascinating objects associated with the history of Britain and the Royal family. The lecture gives a tour of the Library similar to that experienced by the Queen's guests. The Library is open to academic researchers but not to the general public. The lecture therefore constitutes a rare opportunity to see its rooms and treasures. These treasures include beautiful and rare books and manuscripts; books with personal royal associations; old master drawings (Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, Michelangelo, Holbein, Canaletto) and watercolours; miniature paintings; clocks; the shirt in which Charles I was executed; and the Queen's description (when Princess Elizabeth, aged 11) of her father's Coronation in 1937. Presented by: 9 OLIVER EVERETT (NADFAS) 4.00 for 4.30 pm Saturday 31st OCTOBER Carrington Recreation Hall, 90 Werombi Road Camden The Drama behind the Taj Mahal: Mughal painting at its zenith and the life and times of the Indian Emperor Shah Jahan This lecture is based on the Islamic manuscript, the Padshahnama (chronicle of the King of the World) which is the unique official history of the Mughal Emperor, Shah Jahan, who ruled India from 1628 to 1658. He is best remembered for the building of the Taj Mahal as a tomb for his favourite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. The Padshahnama is illustrated with 44 of the finest Mughal paintings in the world. They vividly depict the very dramatic events in the Emperor's reign and the years before it. Most of the important individuals in Shah Jahan's court can be identified and the paintings tell the remarkable story of the intrigues of court life as well as the Emperor's Coronation, royal weddings, bloody battles and hunting scenes. The book is the finest Islamic manuscript in the Royal Library at Windsor Castle and was given to King George III in 1797 by the ruler of the north Indian state of Oudh. Presented by: OLIVER EVERETT (NADFAS) Following service in the Foreign Office, including postings in India and Spain, he was Assistant Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales, 1978-80; and then Private Secretary to Diana, Princess of Wales, 1981-83. He was Librarian in the Royal Library, Windsor Castle, 1984-2002 and is now Librarian Emeritus following his retirement. He wrote articles on the Royal Library, helped with several books on the Royal Collection, wrote the official guidebook on Windsor Castle, taught a history course and advised on a television series on it. Oliver was educated at Cambridge University and did post graduate work at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, USA; and at the London School of Economics. He lectures widely in Britain and abroad. 10 Saturday 28th NOVEMBER 2015 11.00 for 11.30 am – Tegel Gallery, 581 Cobbitty Rd, Cobbitty ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING followed by CHRISTMAS LUNCHEON 11