Nettsider med emneord «Art history»
ACTA er er et internasjonalt, open access tidsskrift, som utgis av Det norske institutt i Roma. Tidskriftet publiserer artikler om middelhavsregionens arkeologi og kunsthistorie.
Images of old age and aging determine how we handle demographic change. This conference will explore how the stages of the life cycle have been construed throughout history in order to consciously recognise the stereotypes that emanate from these age categories.
Instituttets tidsskrift ACTA ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia har nå publisert vol. 34 ns. 20 (2022). Simon Malmberg, Eivind Heldaas Seland og Christopher Prescott er redaktører for bindet som er en samling av artikler med tittelen City, Hinterland and Environment: Urban Resilience during the First Millennium Transition.
Can exhibitions be qualified as research-in-itself? If they can, then how? Which criteria should be the basis of evaluating and verify research exhibitions? The aim of the PhD course is to build a solid knowledge-base for understanding the relationship between exhibitions and research in the past and today, in order to collectively explore potentials and challenges for what can be called research-by-display.
Contemporary Russian society does not visibly oppose the invasion of Ukraine. There are no barricades or protesters in the streets, and even the military mobilisation has not triggered an open clash between the public and the authorities. But does this silence mean consent and support for the war?
ACTA is an international open access journal and is the Norwegian Institute in Rome’s journal. It publishes articles about the Mediterranean region's archaeology, art history and within the Institute’s broader interdisciplinary mission.
ACTA ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia vol. XXXII nr. 18 N.S. (2020) er online nå.
Se innholdsfortegnelsen og last ned artiklene.
Du kan kjøpe en trykt versjon av fra forlaget Scienze e Lettere
The conference explores borders and border transgressions in the context of trauma, memory, and counter-culture and aims to highlight the specific relevance of Border Studies for better understanding literature, arts, and everyday culture in repressive, transformative and (post-)war societies.
We are pleased to announce the publication of vol. 34 ns. 20 (2022) of our journal, ACTA ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia. Simon Malmberg, Eivind Heldaas Seland and Christopher Prescott curate this issue, a collection of articles titled City, Hinterland and Environment: Urban Resilience during the First Millennium Transition