Skip to main content
Skip to main content

GAHA Distinguished Speaker Event: Dr. Huey Copeland, "The Eye Is a Correcting Mirror"

Mark Bradford, "What You Say is True,"  2007. Mixed media on canvas. 72 x 84 in (183 x 213 cm)

GAHA Distinguished Speaker Event: Dr. Huey Copeland, "The Eye Is a Correcting Mirror"

Art History and Archaeology Wednesday, March 9, 2022 1:00 pm - 3:00 pm Parren J. Mitchell Art/Sociology Building, 4213A Michelle Smith Collaboratory for Visual Culture

The Graduate Art History Association (GAHA) is delighted to welcome Dr. Huey Copeland, the BFC Presidential Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Pennsylvania, to this their signal event of the academic year.

In this lecture, drawn from the introduction to his forthcoming anthology 'Touched by the Mother': On Black Men in American Art from Watts to the Whitney, art historian Huey Copeland discusses the theoretical frameworks that have not only come to inform his own evolving black feminist praxis, but that also provide means through which to envision a radically intersectional approach to the writing of art's histories.

To register for attending this event, please visit https://go.umd.edu/GAHA22DistinguishedSpeaker

Mark Bradford, "What You Say is True,"  2007. Mixed media on canvas. 72 x 84 in (183 x 213 cm)
Mark Bradford, "What You Say is True," 2007. Mixed media on canvas. 72 x 84 in (183 x 213 cm)
Add to Calendar 03/09/22 13:00:00 03/09/22 15:00:00 America/New_York GAHA Distinguished Speaker Event: Dr. Huey Copeland, "The Eye Is a Correcting Mirror"

The Graduate Art History Association (GAHA) is delighted to welcome Dr. Huey Copeland, the BFC Presidential Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Pennsylvania, to this their signal event of the academic year.

In this lecture, drawn from the introduction to his forthcoming anthology 'Touched by the Mother': On Black Men in American Art from Watts to the Whitney, art historian Huey Copeland discusses the theoretical frameworks that have not only come to inform his own evolving black feminist praxis, but that also provide means through which to envision a radically intersectional approach to the writing of art's histories.

To register for attending this event, please visit https://go.umd.edu/GAHA22DistinguishedSpeaker

Mark Bradford, "What You Say is True,"  2007. Mixed media on canvas. 72 x 84 in (183 x 213 cm)
Mark Bradford, "What You Say is True," 2007. Mixed media on canvas. 72 x 84 in (183 x 213 cm)
Parren J. Mitchell Art/Sociology Building false