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showing 24 search result out of 92

Excavation to Exhibition: The Afterlife of Ancient Objects

College From the files Student Voices

An intern explores the history of works from the museum’s ancient collection, tracing the archaeological excavations that brought them to light and into the permanent collection.

Reconstructing the Villa Fondo Bottaro

Studio Notes

Architect James Stanton-Abbott explains his process for creating a computer-rendered reconstruction of a room in an ancient Roman villa near Pompeii, using images of wall-painting fragments in the RISD Museum and the MFA, Boston.

Digital Restoration of a 3rd-century Panel Painting of the God Heron

College Conservation Student Voices

In earlier decades, retouching (or “inpainting”) using reversible painting materials would have been employed where compositional elements were missing.

Arlene Shechet Interviewed by Judith Tannenbaum

Curator Studio Notes Artist

Arlene Shechet discusses the production of works for and the installation design of Arlene Shechet: Meissen Recast with the exhibition's curator, Judith Tannenbaum.

American Drawings and Watercolors

Grant Wood's Plowing on Sunday
Curator Drawing

Plowing on Sunday, from about 1934

Project Projects website for SALT. Photo Project Projects

Building a Bigger Picture

An Interview with Rob Giampietro of Google Design NY
Portfolio Studio Notes

What are the essential questions museums need to ask themselves to understand the future of art?

Ancient Panel Paintings: Examination, Analysis, and Research

Conservation

Examining and documenting four Fayum portraits as part of a larger study directed by the J. Paul Getty Museum

American Drawings and Watercolors

Eastman Johnson's Child in Bed
Curator Drawing

Eastman Johnson was raised in Maine in a family of eight children, and

Artist in their studio

(Re)tracing the Silver Seaweed: A Maker's Process

College How To Student Voices Studio Notes Sustainability and the natural world Artist

This salad spoon and fork set, made by the Gorham Manufacturing Company ca. 1885, is named after the coastal town of Narragansett, Rhode Island. Replete with intricately detailed shells, seaweed, and sea creatures—including small fish and tiny crabs—these two sea-encrusted utensils were my point of inspiration for a set of five brooches. In the following article I will describe some of the basic processes used to create my Narragansett-inspired jewelry

silver polishing with cotton

Tracing the Silver Seaweed

College Conservation Student Voices Sustainability and the natural world

Isabella McCormick (Brown/RISD 2015) explores the intricacies of the Gorham Narragansett Salad Set and their reflections on Rhode Island culture, insights gained from her meticulous cleaning of the utensils as part of her Mellon Summer Internship in conservation.

Defending the Right to Live: Political Prints in Providence, 1971

College

In 1971, a group of radical students in Providence produced stirring silkscreen posters. Their images contributed to the vibrant visual culture of antiwar protest.

Substitutions

College Studio Notes Artist

Composer Shawn Greenlee's experimental sound work Substitutions is inspired by the Chinese lithophone in the RISD Museum's Asian art collection

The Hypersexualization of Black People

College Student Voices

RISD student Abena Gyampo traces the history of the hypersexualization of black bodies from the early 19th century to contemporary popular culture

A grid of twelve pixelated rectangles

Seeing the History of Colonialism Through Resorts

College Student Voices

Artist and student Jade Cannata creates a chart describing the racial demographics of three all-inclusive resorts in locations with strong historical connections to colonialism, showing the effects of history on the present

Les Jeunes Mélomanes SIDE A + SIDE B

Student Voices

A student in a RISD course on pan-African aesthetics contemplates a vinyl record pictured in a Sanlé Sory photograph in the collection, and imagines the songs it contains.

Rediscovering Diasporic

Student Voices

A student in a RISD course on pan-African aesthetics, inspired by a photograph in the collection, explores Black youth occupying space in movements from La Sape to Noirwave.

At the Circus with RISD Graphic Design Students

College Educators Faculty Teaching Studio Notes

Professor Jan Baker encouraged her letterpress class to become inspired by the Circus exhibition at the RISD Museum.

Sandy-toned, weathered stone slab with evenly spaced etched inscriptions filling the tablet and a broken-off bottom corner piece.

Reading Inscribed Letters from Roman Macedonia

RISD Museum’s important Greek inscription dates to the period when Rome dominated the Eastern Mediterranean.

Screenprinted graphic of Colonial pillow case created by Walker Mettling. Contains clues and findings for his research.

Artist Fellow Walker Mettling

on the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition Souvenir Textile
Studio Notes Artist

2017 Artist Fellow Walker Mettling delves into the history and context of a previously overlooked textile with colonial origins.

Home Page of the virtual exhibition Samurai At Leisure displayed on a model of a computer monitor.

Samurai at Leisure Taken into the Digital World

College Student Voices

A graphic design student at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, Marta Jeż describes her virtual exhibition project and new possibilities of translating physical exhibitions into digital forms.

Video still

The Origin of the Blues

An Interview with Artist Ariel Jackson
Curator Artist

Nancy Prophet fellow Amber Lopez interviews artist Ariel Jackson her video *The Origin of the Blues*

Kicking the Bucket in Ancient Etruria

College Student Voices

Why is an Etruscan situla, or pail, one of the most important objects in RISD's ancient collection? We examine its form, decoration, and context to understand its unique place in European archaeology.

Painted coffin depicting a colorful winged human figure kneeling beneath a red sun with raised arms, bordered by hieroglyphs and decorative patterns.

K-12 Virtual Visit

Nesmin and his coffin, 170-30 BCE
Educators K-12 Virtual Visits

What can we learn about life in ancient Egypt by examining protective symbols on the coffin of a priest named Nesmin?

K-12 Virtual Visit

Lynda Benglis, Zita, 1972 and Shari Mendelson, Round Blue/Green Vessel, 2015
Educators K-12 Virtual Visits

How do Lynda Benglis and Shari Mendelson communicate ideas and messages through their sculptures’ forms and materials?

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