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Looking Closely

February 20, 2015

On March 3, my friend and colleague Malcolm Thurlby will be visiting 杏吧原创 to give an HTA guest lecture on Durham Cathedral. I鈥檓 really looking forward to this, partly because Malcolm鈥檚 a great lecturer and Durham鈥檚 a great building, and partly because it will be a case study in something we don鈥檛 always do 鈥 or teach 鈥 as well as we should: how to look very, very closely at what we study.

The west front of Durham Cathedral (built 1093-1133)
The west front of Durham Cathedral (built 1093-1133)

Looking closely is a lot harder than it sounds. We bring all kinds of assumptions to what we see, and are drawn to evidence that reinforces those assumptions. The methodology of material culture teaches us to ignore our assumptions, see what鈥檚 actually there and figure out what it tells us. An object, after all, is what it is because of its history; it can鈥檛 lie, but it can easily be misinterpreted if we don鈥檛 have the training to 鈥榬ead鈥 it properly.

Malcolm 鈥 who is a Professor of Art History at York and Adjunct Research Professor here in HTA 鈥 has been 鈥榬eading鈥 Romanesque buildings for decades and there鈥檚 no one better at it. He is an architectural Hercule Poirot; he assumes nothing, observes everything, proceeds inductively, and draws impeccable conclusions. This will be a master class in analytical looking, as well as an up-close and personal look at one of the most majestic buildings ever made.

The stones of Durham Cathedral have a lot of stories to tell 鈥 if we know how to 鈥榬ead鈥 them.
The stones of Durham Cathedral have a lot of stories to tell 鈥 if we know how to 鈥榬ead鈥 them.

All are welcome. Don鈥檛 miss it!

What: 鈥淒etective Work on English Romanesque Architecture: The Case of Durham Cathedral鈥, an HTA guest lecture by Professor Malcolm Thurlby

When: Tuesday, March 3, at 12:00 noon

Where: 2017 Dunton Tower