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Arts of Asia Lecture Series

Arts of Asia Fall 2022 Forging New Connections: Asia in the First Millenium of the Common Era

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Please refer to the Speaker & Topics below to ascertain the location of each lecture.

The Fall 2022 Arts of Asia Lecture Series, entitled “Forging New Connections: Asia in the First Millennium of the Common Era,” continues our Spring 2022 ancient Asia series. The 14-lecture fall series is designed to be a survey of Asian cultures with attention to how they used their natural resources and trade routes in the first 1,000 years of the common era.

The series will provide our audience with a better understanding of key cultural and artistic traditions of Asia. Thus, the Fall 2022 series will offer lectures on Armenia and trade until the Mongols, the advent and growth of Islam in Afghanistan, exchanges along the Silk Road, early Turkic settlements in Central Asia, stone temples of ancient South India, the Seljuqs, the Tang and Song Dynasties of China, Japan before the Shoguns, the Khmer, the Champa, kingdoms in maritime Southeast Asia, kingdoms in Thailand and Myanmar, the Tibetan empire, and Korea’s pivotal role in the transmission of Buddhist art.

Speakers & Topics (Subject to Change)

August 19, 2022
The Rise and Florescence of Turkic Nomadic Polities in Central Asia (6th to 12th C. CE): Material and Political interactions Across a Connected World  Study Guide
Michael Frachetti, Professor of Archeology, Washington University in St. Louis

August 26, 2022
Armenia Between East and West  Revised Study Guide with links to the Met publications available online
Helen Evans, Curator Emerita, Metropolitan Museum of Art

September 2, 2022 – No lecture

September 9, 2022
Xuanzang’s World: Art and Pilgrimage in Tang China  Study Guide
Anne Feng, Assistant Professor of Chinese Art, Boston University

September 16, 2022
Who Built the Stone Temples of Ancient South India: Key Monuments of the Pallava and Early Chola Period  Revised Study Guide
Padma Kaimal, Batza Professor of Art and Art History, Colgate University

September 23, 2022 New Speaker & Topic – The speaker will not be in San Francisco, so this lecture will be presented on Zoom. We will also broadcast the Zoom webinar on the big screen in Samsung Hall for in-person attendees.
Golden Crowns and Buddhist Monuments: Arts of the Paekche Kingdom. Study Guide
Maya Stiller, Associate Professor of Korean Art History and Visual Culture, University of Kansas

September 30, 2022
The Transition from Tang to Song Dynasty China: Visual and Material Culture  Study Guide
Michelle C. Wang, Associate Professor, Georgetown University

October 7, 2022
Consolidation of Power and Visual/Material Culture in the Nara and Heian Periods of Japan – Materiality and Power of Hidden Buddhist Scriptures  Study Guide
Akiko Walley, Maude I. Kerns Associate Professor of Japanese Art, University of Oregon
Tekagami and Kyōgire: The University of Oregon Japanese Calligraphy Collection

October 14, 2022
Celestial Palaces, Axial Mountains, and Cosmic Seas: Ancient Khmer Temple Architecture  Study Guide
Paul Lavy, Professor of South and Southeast Asian Art History, University of Hawai’i at Manoa

October 21, 2022
The Champa Empire of Southeast Asia and Its Relationship with Its Environments and Neighbors during the First Millennium of the Common Era  Study Guide
Kenneth Hall, Professor of History, Ball State University

October 28, 2022
Between the East Indian Ocean and South China Sea: Port Kingdoms of Southeast Asia in the First Millennium AD  Study Guide
Derek Heng, Professor and Chair of the Department of History, Northern Arizona University

November 4, 2022 New Location – Koret Education Center and New Speaker & Topic
Ayurveda and Yoga in Buddhist Medieval China: Two Case Studies of Globalization in the Premodern World  Study Guide
Dominc Steavu, Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of East Asian Languages & Cultural Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara

November 11, 2022 New Location – Koret Education Center 
The Tibetan Empire and Its Aftermath in Central Asia  Study Guide
Brandon Dotson, Associate Professor and Thomas P. McKenna Chair of Buddhist Studies, Georgetown University

November 18, 2022 – The speaker will not be in San Francisco, so this lecture will be presented on Zoom only.
Arts of the Seljuqs and Their Successor States from Iran to Anatolia, ca. 1000-1300   Study Guide Rev. 1
Deniz Beyazit, Associate Curator, Islamic Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art

November 25, 2022 & December 2, 2022 – No lectures

December 9, 2022 New Speaker & Topic – The speaker will not be in San Francisco, so this lecture will be presented on Zoom only.
Hatayi
: The “Chinese Style” at the Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Court under Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent and His Successors  Study Guide
Walter B. Denny, History of Art and Architecture, University of Massachusetts Amherst

December 16, 23 & 30, 2022 & January 6 & 13, 2023 – No lectures

January 20, 2023 Bonus LectureThe speaker will not be in San Francisco, so this lecture will be presented on Zoom only.
Arts in Afghanistan: From the Arrival of Islam to Ghaznavids
  Study Guide
Martina Rugiadi, Associate Curator of Islamic Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Attendance

Registered attendees of the lecture series are encouraged to attend in-person in Samsung Hall. Otherwise, registered attendees can attend via Zoom. Drop-ins for individual lectures are only available in-person in Samsung Hall on a space available basis. Drop-ins for individual lectures are not available on Zoom. The lecture series is organized as 14 separate Zoom webinars. A Zoom webinar confirmation email with information on how to join each week’s webinar will be sent to all registered attendees 2 or 3 days before each lecture. Even though it is not required by Zoom, we recommend that you download and install Zoom on your computer or mobile device in advance, and set yourself up with a free account. Attendees will have a chance to participate in the Q&A via Zoom Q&A. Read our Arts of Asia Zoom Webinar FAQs.

Registration Policies

The Society for Asian Art’s cancellation policy requires at least one week’s advance written notice in order to receive a refund of registration fees. This excludes our Travel programs, which have separate cancellation policies, as well as any programs where a specific refund policy is stated on the event page. Your fees will be returned to you through a check in the mail. To cancel, please contact us.

For programs located within the Asian Art Museum, the museum entrance fee must be paid separately and is not included with your registration fee.

Please note that by registering for a program, you are giving consent to the SAA to be photographed or videoed as a participant.

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