Brain Food
LONDON’S GLOBAL UNIVERSITY
Public events at UCL: January–April 2013
www.ucl.ac.uk/events
Welcome to UCL’s public events leaflet highlighting talks, exhibitions, workshops, film screenings and activities from across the university. In this issue, we see the reopening of UCL’s Flaxman Gallery and the launch of the new interactive Octagon Gallery exhibiting previously unseen items from UCL’s extensive collections. This term there is a diverse programme of talks from UCL’s Institute of Jewish Studies and a range of interesting discussions from UCL’s new Institute of the Americas. Finally, UCL’s Lunch Hour Lectures once again deliver bite-sized talks on topics ranging from diet and ageing to the Eurozone crisis. For a full listing and to find out more information, visit our online events calendar:
www.ucl.ac.uk/events
Cover image (detail): Map of Asia Hensel Synopsis universae philologiae (1741) UCL Library Special Collections
Talks
02
Lunch Hour Lectures
07
Activities
13
Performances
17
Exhibitions
22
Events diary
26
Venues/maps
28
Please note: all events are free and open to all, unless otherwise stated. Listings are correct at time of going to press. Watch online www.youtube.com/UCLTV http://itunes.ucl.ac.uk Read our blog http://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/events Subscribe to our newsletter events@ucl.ac.uk Follow on Twitter @UCLEvents
01
Talks Lectures Discussions
The developmental challenges of mining and oil UCL Institute of the Americas hosts a book launch and discussion on the development and challenges of mining oil. One of the book’s authors, Dr Rosemary Thorp (University of Oxford), will join the discussion. Wed 16 Jan | 5.30–7.30pm UCL Institute of the Americas Seminar Room 103 Pre-booking recommended Followed by a drinks reception o.martinez@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9721
The life and work of Michel-Rolph Trouillot This panel discussion reflects on the life and work of Michel-Rolph Trouillot, author of pioneering studies on Haiti and the Caribbean, and explores his lasting contribution to the fields of anthropology, history and politics. Wed 23 Jan | 5.30–7.30pm UCL Institute of the Americas Seminar Room 103 Pre-booking recommended Followed by a drinks reception o.martinez@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9721 02
Literature, politics and the Dutch Republic In this special lecture organised by the UCL Centre for Early Modern Exchanges, Professor Nigel Smith (Princeton University) talks about his work on 17th-century literature and politics. Thurs 24 Jan | 6–7.30pm Ramsay Lecture Theatre h.hackett@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3127
America Imagined: explaining the United States in 19th-century Europe and Latin America Professor Miles Taylor (Institute of Historical Research) and Professor Guy Thomson (University of Warwick) discuss the United States in 19th-century Europe and Latin America to mark the launch of this new book. Wed 30 Jan | 5.30–7.30pm UCL Institute of the Americas Seminar Room 103 Pre-booking essential Followed by a drinks reception o.martinez@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9721
Transmission and translation of trauma – interviews with underage Holocaust survivors
Library of Congress
In 1946, psychologist David Boder recorded interviews with more than 100 survivors of the Nazi persecution, constituting one of the first oral history projects with survivors. Dr Beate Müller (University of Newcastle) discusses his work. Thurs 24 Jan | 6.45–8pm Pearson Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520 UCL Institute of the Americas book launches, 16 and 30 Jan
03
Talks/Lectures/Discussions
Isaiah Berlin Taking a fresh look at the philosopher and political thinker Sir Isaiah Berlin (1909–1997), this contextualised study of his formative years gives a reappraisal of his theory of liberalism. Thurs 31 Jan | 6.45–8pm Pearson Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
A small town near Auschwitz: ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust Using letters, memoirs, testimonies and interviews, Professor Mary Fulbrook (UCL German) pieces together one man’s role in the unfolding degradation of the Jews, resulting in 85,000 Jews being sent to the gas chambers. Wed 6 Feb | 6.45–8pm Pearson Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
04
Timekeeper in Residence at the Petrie Join the Petrie Museum’s Timekeeper in Residence, artist-curator Cathy Haynes for a series of conversations with time specialists from music to mapmaking, as they debate what time actually is. Check online for information on her weekly guests. Tues 12 & Thurs 28 Feb, Thurs 21 & Tue 26 March | 6–8pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Pre-booking essential www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/petrie Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 4138
Every good thing: objects from the Petrie Museum in celebration of LGBT History Month Utilising artefacts from ancient Egypt, Egyptologist John J. Johnston discusses objects selected by prominent members of the LGBT community that further our understanding of the LGBT experience in the ancient world. Tues 26 Feb | 6–8pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Pre-booking essential, Followed by a drinks reception events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
Sport and British Jewry (1890–1970)
We are here: memories of the Lithuanian Holocaust
Giving a broad overview of Jewish involvement in British sport, this lecture discusses how sport not only affected the way that Jews thought about their identities and culture, but also how they were perceived by the wider non-Jewish population.
Writer Ellen Cassedy explores how a nation divided by competing histories is, and is not, engaging with its Nazi and Soviet past, and probes the terrain of memory and moral dilemmas.
Tues 26 Feb | 7–8pm Pearson Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
Thurs 7 March | 7–8.15pm Garwood Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
The big question 6.9 billion people live on our planet, but is this too many? Should we control human population growth? Six speakers from the worlds of ecology, history, finance, conservation and economics discuss the undiscussable. UCL Petrie Collection
Wed 6 March | 6–8.30pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
Petrie Museum LGBT History Month, 26 Feb
05
Talks/Lectures/Discussions
New perspectives on Caribbean literature As part of a series on the Caribbean by UCL’s Institute of the Americas, Dr Malachi McIntosh (Cambridge University) and Dr Wendy Knepper (Brunel University) discuss new perspectives on literature from this region. Wed 13 March | 5.30–7.30pm UCL Institute of the Americas Seminar Room 103 Pre-booking essential Followed by a drinks reception o.martinez@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9721
To what extent was archaeology founded on prejudice? Drawing on her new book, The Archaeology of Race, Debbie Challis (UCL Petrie Museum) explores the application of racial theory to interpret the past in Britain during the late Victorian and Edwardian period. Thurs 14 March | 6.30–8.30pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
06
Identity through difference: Rabbinic Judaism confronts Christian narrative Rabbinic Judaism is the scholarly term for the form of Judaism that emerged after the destruction of the Jerusalem temple (70 CE). Holger Zellentin (University of Nottingham) discusses this term in the context of emerging Christianity. Thurs 14 March | 7–8.15pm Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
Fighting a spectre in times of war: Soviet Jewry and the heroisation of Bohdan Khmelnitsky Discover how the uprising against the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth led by Bohdan Khmelnitsky (1648–1654) resulted in the creation of a Cossack state and the eventual loss of independence to the Russian Empire. Wed 20 March | 6.45–8pm Chadwick Lecture Theatre s.benisaac@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3520
Lunch Hour Lectures
From Bletchley Park to modern computing – the value of Twitter
Tuesdays and Thursdays
Codebreaking at Bletchley Park by Alan Turing and others during World War II led to the birth of the modern computer. Marking the centenary of Turing’s birth last year, Dr Black discusses the pivotal role of social media in everything from campaigning for a historical site to improving the quality of software. This lecture is rescheduled from 22 November 2012.
1.15–1.55pm, free, no need to book Places are on a first-come, first-served basis. Please arrive by 1pm to avoid disappointment. c.dean@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 3838 Darwin Lecture Theatre (accessed via Malet Place)
Dr Sue Black, UCL Computer Science
Tues 8 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Watch online www.youtube.com/ucllhl
Computer History Museum
Watch live www.ucl.ac.uk/lhl/streamed
www.ucl.ac.uk/lhl
Bletchley Park, 8 Jan
07
Lunch Hour Lectures
Gower Street to Euston Square: a local history of the Underground Professor Richard Dennis, UCL Geography
Science for everyone by everyone – the re-emergence of citizen science
When the world’s first underground railway opened in January 1863, it was beset by problems of asphyxiation, inadequate lighting, accidents, explosions and crime. This lecture will show how these issues were countered by the opportunities for improved connectivity, speed and intimacy – as seen through the lens of UCL’s local station.
Professor Muki Haklay, UCL Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering
Tues 15 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Tues 22 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Obama’s America: the significance of the 2012 elections
Xtreme Everest 2 research expedition
Professor Iwan Morgan, UCL Institute of the Americas
Dr Ned Gilbert, UCL Institute of Child Health
Obama won a second term with the support of women, the young, blue collars, African Americans and Latinos. The Republicans retained the support of their habitual white base that in essence represents America’s demographic past. In this polarised nation, how can the United States make progress towards solving its fiscal, environmental and educational problems?
Following their first recordbreaking research expedition in 2007, the Xtreme Everest team will return to Everest in March 2013. Their investigations into the effects of low oxygen on the body at high altitude are identifying mechanisms that may lead to successful treatment of critically ill patients.
Thurs 17 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre 08
Public participation in scientific research – from birdwatching to stargazing – is not new. This lecture will demonstrate a model for extreme citizen science, in which any community, regardless of their literacy, can utilise scientific methods and tools to understand and control their environment.
Thurs 24 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Where to give birth, at home or in a hospital? Does it matter? Professor Peter Brocklehurst, UCL Institute for Women’s Health
Gravity and continuum Dr Christian Boehmer, UCL Maths & Physical Sciences
The past 10 years have seen increasing emphasis on the importance of offering healthy women choice in where they give birth. This lecture will discuss the results of the Birthplace in England research project, the implications for maternity policy and the challenges in undertaking large-scale research of this kind.
Within theoretical physics, the gravitational force is the odd one out. It is much weaker than the other forces, its mathematical formulation is different and we are struggling to understand it. This talk outlines a new approach to understanding the gravitational force motivated by ideas from material sciences and the study of crystals.
Tues 29 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Tues 5 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Framing the digital: materialising new media Professor Susan Collins, UCL Slade School of Fine Art
Xtreme Everest
How are artists translating or materialising digital works for gallery and physical situations? Professor Collins will show works from the Slade and the Slade Centre for Electronic Media in Fine Art (SCEMFA) over the past decade that explore the material of the digital. Thurs 31 Jan | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre Xtreme Everest 2, 24 Jan
09
Lunch Hour Lectures
The influence of Islam on science
A diet to treat ageing
Dr William MacLehose, UCL Science & Technology Studies
Dr Matt Piper, UCL Institute of Healthy Ageing
The influence of classical Arabic science on the Western scientific tradition has been much discussed, yet these achievements have been variously ignored, overlooked or occasionally overstressed. This lecture discusses the impact that scholars from the Islamic world have made in the fields of medicine, astronomy, optics, geography, mechanics and many other disciplines.
It has been known for some time that moderate dietary restriction can extend healthy lifespan in a variety of organisms. Experiments on fruitflies are uncovering that only very small changes in specific nutrients are required for this effect, and that these new discoveries could be applied to benefit human ageing.
Thurs 7 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Can the Eurozone crisis be solved? Professor Wendy Carlin, UCL Economics
Thurs 21 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
By the donzerly light: when our ears play tricks on us
Economists have long been sceptical about the success of a common currency in Europe. Peripheral countries have seen growing public sector deficits and private sector debts, while in the South, wages have increased and productivity decreased. This lecture will set out the risks of full political union and explore whether there is a solution.
Dr Andrew Nevins, UCL Division of Psychology & Language Sciences
Tues 19 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Tues 26 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
10
Almost every song lyric can be misunderstood, but while slips of the tongue are well-known, slips of the ear have received far less attention. The lecture looks into recurrent slips to reveal that our expectations can bias what we mishear, but our ears can only deceive us within limits.
Genomics and healthcare Professor Aroon Hingorani, UCL Institute of Cardiovascular Science
Greater understanding of how genetic differences influence disease susceptibility and drug response has potentially important healthcare applications. This lecture will focus on some of the opportunities and challenges of using genomic information to improve personal and public health, using cardiovascular disease as an example. Thurs 28 Feb | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Scandinavian crime fiction and the end of the welfare state Dr Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen, UCL Scandinavian Studies
The Scandinavian region, with its universal welfare states, is commonly considered a peaceful place, with low rates of crime and high levels of wellbeing. Scandinavian crime fiction offers a much bleaker and more complex image. To what extent does ‘Nordic Noir’ indicate the end of the Nordic Model in a global age? Thurs 7 Mar | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Civil engineers against the double negative Professor Chris Wise, UCL Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering
Alice Genevet
Is a culture of infallibility holding back our engineers by celebrating the avoidance of failure rather than the achievement of success? This lecture will offer a wholly upbeat alternative: re-wiring the engineering mind to be optimistic, life-enriching and mind-blowing, arming itself to do amazing stuff. Tues 5 Mar | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre A diet to treat ageing, 21 Feb
11
Lunch Hour Lectures
Stuff matters Professor Mark Miodownik, UCL Mechanical Engineering
As a result of our greater understanding of matter, the distinction between living things and non-living ‘stuff’ is now becoming blurred and is likely to usher in a new materials age. As we become more synthetic, our man-made environment is becoming more lifelike. This lecture reviews the changes to the material world that are coming our way. Tues 12 Mar | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
Cigarettes: the most successful product ever Professor Allan Hackshaw, UCL Cancer Institute
Despite five decades of research into the harms of smoking, many people take up and continue with the habit. Cigarette sales remain high as tobacco companies excel at marketing. This lecture will explore what has been learnt, the benefits of quitting at any age and plans for future policies. Thurs 14 Mar | 1.15–1.55pm Darwin Lecture Theatre
12
Activities Workshops Family events
Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Getting plastered… Get your hands on casting, mixing, carving and moulding plaster with artist and Curator of Materials, Zoe Laughlin from UCL’s Institute of Making. Tues 29 Jan | 1–2pm | workshop UCL Art Museum college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540
Getting plastered, 29 Jan
13
Activities/Workshops/Family events
Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Under the microscope
Fantastic fossils
What is plaster made of? Find out the recipe used in the age of industrialism by neoclassical sculptor John Flaxman with geologist and archaeologist Dr Ruth Siddal.
Get your hands on some of UCL’s most fantastic fossils this half-term – whether it’s the bones of an Iguanodon or the teeth of a giant shark. Bring along your budding palaeontologists for our Pterosaur-iffic hands-on activities.
Tues 5 Feb | 1–2pm UCL Art Museum college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540
Mon 18–Sat 23 Feb | 1–5pm | activity UCL Grant Museum of Zoology zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
Love in the natural world
Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Jane Rendell presents
Looking for love or seeking to impress your Valentine date? Discover how seduction is done in the animal world. Find out how big a heart can get and just how far animals will go to get the girl in this one-night only exhibition. Thurs 14 Feb | 6.30–8.30pm | exhibition UCL Grant Museum of Zoology £5 payable at the door (includes a glass of wine) zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
14
Jane Rendell (UCL Bartlett School of Architecture) investigates thresholds and transitional spaces by linking up prints and drawings from the Art Museum’s collections in unexpected ways. Tues 26 Feb | 1–2pm UCL Art Museum college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540
Grant Museum (not in a) pub quiz
Easter egg-laying animals
Do you know your manatees from your dugongs or your anacondas from your African rock pythons? Bring along your brainiest friends for the chance of being crowned winners at our first Grant Museum (not in a) pub quiz.
For the Easter holidays, the Grant Museum is exploring the wonderful world of eggy animals. From penguins to platypuses, sharks to snails and bullfrogs to butterflies, our fantastic specimenbased activities will investigate the best shells and spawn. Come and unscramble our games and whip up some excitement with our amazing animal specimens.
Wed 27 Feb | 6–8.30pm | quiz UCL Grant Museum of Zoology Free, pre-booking essential Teams of up to five people zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
Mon 8–Sat 13 April | 1–5pm | workshop UCL Grant Museum of Zoology zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
Fossil forage Mark National Science & Engineering Week by seizing this amazing opportunity to sieve through sediment to hunt out fossils. Any fossils you find, you get to keep – but be warned, you will have to work for them!
Matt Clayton
Sat 16 & Sat 23 March | 1–5pm | activity UCL Grant Museum of Zoology zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
Grant Museum (not in a) pub quiz, 27 Feb
15
Activities/Workshops/Family events
Out and about: Freemasons and Ancient Egypt at Kensal Green Cemetery Explore the influence of ancient Egypt on Victorian funeral monuments and learn to recognise the Egyptian Revival style with Cathie Bryan in the capital’s first garden cemetery – the Cemetery of All Souls at Kensal Green (1833). Sat 13 April | 11–1pm | Walk Main Gate, Kensal Green Cemetery, Harrow Road, London W10 4RA Pre-booking essential, £7/£5 concession events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
Timekeeper In Residence workshops The Petrie Museum’s Timekeeper in Residence, artist-curator Cathy Haynes invites you to take part in two creative workshops giving you the opportunity to help invent maps and models of how time is actually lived. Sat 20 April & Sat 4 May | 1.30–4pm | workshop UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Free, pre-booking essential +44 (0)20 7679 4138 events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk
16
From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia Weekly public readings, in English and Italian, from Dante’s Divine Comedy. Each week, Professor Took (UCL Italian) and Dr Scafi (Warburg Institute) will discuss a canto, with Dr Tuckett (UCL Library) presenting rare books from UCL’s Dante Collection. Tuesdays until 5 March | 1–2.30pm Cost per term £80/£50 concessions /free UCL & Warburg Warburg Institute, Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB spec.coll@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 7827
UCL Library Special Collections
Performances Film screenings Music
From devilry to divinity, until 5 Mar The Vision of Hell viii, iII. Doré (1869) 17
Performances/Film screenings/Music
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
Enjoy a varied programme of chamber music, including Schumann’s Six Songs for voice and string quartet, Op.107, Schubert’s ‘Arpeggione’ sonata in the arrangement for flute and piano, and works by Bach and Brahms.
Welcome performers new to the Chamber Music Club presenting a programme including Rachmaninov’s Trio élégiaque No 1 in G minor and Beethoven’s Bagatelles, Op.126.
Tues 8 Jan | 5.30–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
Tues 22 Jan | 5.30–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
Digging the past: archaeology on TV
Fantastic Voyage (1966) on the big screen
The UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, the UCL Institute of Archaeology and the British Film Institute present three sessions looking at the different aspects of television’s approach to archaeology and those often eccentric characters who presented the stories.
When a brilliant scientist falls into a coma with a blood clot on the brain, a surgical team embarks on a journey to the centre of the mind in a submarine shrunk to microbial dimensions. Join this Grant Museum of Zoology event hosted by Professor Joe Cain (UCL Science & Technology Studies).
Sat 19 Jan | 4pm, 6.20pm, 8.40pm | TV/film screening BFI Southbank, London See www.bfi.org.uk for tickets and prices events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
18
Wed 23 Jan | 6–9pm | film screening J Z Young Lecture Theatre Followed by a drinks reception zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
Celebrate Benjamin Britten’s centenary and John Dowland’s 450th anniversary with Britten’s Lachrymae, based on a song by Dowland. The concert also includes Roger Beeson’s Two Poems of W B Yeats and is dedicated to the memory of Slade academic Liz-Anne Bawden MBE (1931–2012).
A lunch hour concert featuring the piano duet version of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring. Fri 8 Feb | 1.10–1.55pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
Wed 30 Jan | 5.30–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
Caesar and Cleopatra (UK, Gabriel Pascal, 1946) Join John J. Johnston as he introduces this stunning adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s take on history’s most famous love affair, starring Claude Rains as Julius Caesar and Vivien Leigh as, arguably cinema’s greatest, Cleopatra. Wed 6 Feb | 6–9pm | film screening UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 Digging the past, 19 Jan
19 11
Performances/Film screenings/Music
Bright Club: Out
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
Marking UCL Diversity Month and LGBT History Month, UCL researchers become stand-up comedians for one night to celebrate the contributions that LGBT people have made to science, history, culture and London. Includes professional comedians too.
A programme presented by members of UCL Music Society to promote UCOpera’s forthcoming production of Verdi’s I Lombardi. Thurs 21 Feb | 5.30–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
Fri 8 Feb | 7.30–10pm Bloomsbury Theatre Pre-booking essential £8 (plus booking fee) www.brightclub.org +44 (0)20 7388 8822
Digital Egypt: museums of the future Travel back in time to antiquity with future technology and give feedback to our on-hand designers to help with new technologies being developed for the museum. Sat 16 Feb | 1–4.30pm | activity UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
20 20
The Tragedie of Cleopatra This play by Samuel Daniel overturns the conventional view that women did not participate in drama in Shakespeare’s time, demonstrating the complex and turbulent politics of the Elizabethan court. Find out why this fascinating play calls out for revival 400 years on. Sun 3 March | 2.30–6pm Great Hall, Goodenough College, Mecklenburgh Square, London WC1N 2AB Pre-booking essential y.arshad@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7783 162499
Empire
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
It is 2083 and London is a soulless dystopia where dancing is prohibited. Rogue dancers have secretly been organising dance jams, but are being arrested one by one. Can this tyranny be overthrown? Join UCLU Dance Society to find out.
A ‘world music’ concert featuring music from around the world, including Chôros No 2 for flute and clarinet by the Brazilian Composer Heitor Villa-Lobos.
Thurs 7–Sat 9 March | 7–9.30pm Bloomsbury Theatre Pre-booking essential, £10 full / £8 Concessions / £5 Students edbarrie@hotmail.co.uk +44 (0)7917 874567
Fri 15 March | 1.10–1.55pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764
The women behind the Petrie Museum
Fri 8 March | 6–8pm | activity UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138
Mary Hinkley
To celebrate International Women’s Day, meet the influential women who made the career of Flinders Petrie and created, nurtured and saved the museum. They include writer Amelia Edwards, Egyptologist Margaret Murray and model, archaeologist and wife Hilda Urlin Petrie.
The women behind the Petrie Museum, 8 Mar
21 11
Exhibitions
Model Translations For the first exhibition in the new Octagon Gallery, UCL Museums & Public Engagement and UCL Mellon Programme join forces to present previously never displayed artefacts from UCL’s extensive research collections. Until Tues 30 April | 9am–6pm, Mon–Fri, 11am–5pm, Sat UCL Octagon Gallery sussanah.chan@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3163
Death mask
22
The Octagon Gallery
23
Burwell Deakins Architects
Exhibitions
Flaxman and his circle
Journeys and exchange: This exhibition illustrates the world the Dutch East India Company that John Flaxman inhabited in the 18th and 19th centuries. The main display focuses on the design and development of UCL’s Flaxman Gallery, with other exhibits drawing on the man himself and his contemporaries. Until Dec 2013 | 9am–5pm, Mon–Fri Main Library k.cheney@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 6141
This exhibition explores cultural exchange during the Dutch Golden Age and in today’s London. It includes exquisitely illustrated early printed books, alongside tiles and vases beautifully painted in the style of delftware by workshop participants in collaboration with the Wallace Collection.
Design for the Flaxman Gallery
24
UCL Library Special Collections
UCL Library Special Collections
Until end of April | 9am–5pm, Mon-Fri Main Library spec.coll@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 7827
Jewish Bible, 1666
Plastered This exhibition about plaster and the casting process highlights the sculpture models of the neoclassical artist John Flaxman, and includes displays of Victorian death masks and casts of human pathological specimens.
Rob Eagle
Mon 21 Jan–Fri 19 April | 1–5pm, Mon–Fri UCL Art Museum college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540
Flaxman work
25
Events diary (exhibitions listed p23–25)
2 Jan 8
Tues until 5 Mar 1–2.30pm 1.15–1.55pm
8
5.30–6.30pm
15
1.15–1.55pm
From devilry to divinity: readings in the Divina Commedia
p17
From Bletchley Park to modern computing – the value of Twitter UCL Chamber Music Club concert
p07 p18
16
5.30–7.30pm
Gower Street to Euston Square: a local history of the Underground The developmental challenges of mining and oil
17
1.15–1.55pm
Obama’s America: the significance of the 2012 elections
p08
19
p18
22
4pm, 6.20pm, Digging the past: archaeology on TV 8.40pm 1.15–1.55pm Science for everyone by everyone – the re-emergence of citizen science 5.30–6.30pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert
p18
23
5.30–7.30pm
p02
22
The life and work of Michel-Rolph Trouillot
p08 p02
p08
23
6–9pm
Fantastic Voyage (1966) on the big screen
p18
24
1.15–1.55pm
Xtreme Everest 2 research expedition
p08
24
6–7.30pm
Literature, politics and the Dutch Republic
p03
24
6.45–8pm
p03
29
1–2pm
29
1.15–1.55pm
30
5.30–7.30pm
p19 p09
30
5.30–6.30pm
Transmission and translation of trauma – interviews with underage Holocaust Survivors Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Getting plastered… Where to give birth, at home or in a hospital? Does it matter? America Imagined: explaining the United States in 19th-century Europe and Latin America UCL Chamber Music Club concert
31
1.15–1.55pm
Framing the digital: materialising new media
p13 p09 p03
31
6.45–8pm
Isaiah Berlin
p04
5 Feb
1–2pm
Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Under the microscope Gravity and continuum
p14
5
1.15–1.55pm
6
6.45–8pm
6
6–9pm
A small town near Auschwitz: ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust Caesar and Cleopatra (UK, Gabriel Pascal, 1946)
7
1.15–1.55pm
The influence of Islam on science
p09 p04 p19 p10
8
1.10–1.55pm
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
p19
8
7.30–10pm
Bright Club: Out
p20
12
6–8pm
Timekeeper in Residence at the Petrie
p04
14
6.30–8.30pm
Love in the natural world
p14
16
1–4.30pm
Digital Egypt: museums of the future
p20
26
18 Feb
Fantastic fossils
p14
19
until 23 Feb 1–5pm 1.15–1.55pm
Can the Eurozone crisis be solved?
p10
21
1.15–1.55pm
A diet to treat ageing
p10
21
5.30–6.30pm
UCL Chamber Music Club concert
p20
26
1–2pm
p14
26
6–8pm
26
7–8pm
Pop-up exhibitions at UCL Art Museum: Jane Rendell presents Every good thing: objects from the Petrie Museum in celebration of LGBT History Month Sport and British Jewry (1890–1970)
26
1.15–1.55pm
By the donzerly light: when our ears play tricks on us
p10
27
6–8.30pm
Grant Museum (not in a) pub quiz
p15
28
1.15–1.55pm
Genomics and healthcare
p11
28
6–8pm
Timekeeper in Residence at the Petrie
p04
3 Mar
2.30–6pm
The Tragedie of Cleopatra
p20
5
1.15–1.55pm
Civil engineers against the double negative
p11
6
6–8.30pm
The big question
p05
7
1.15–1.55pm
p11
7 7
until 9 March 7–9.30pm 7–8.15pm
Scandinavian crime fiction and the end of the welfare state Empire We are here: memories of the Lithuanian Holocaust
p05
8
6–8pm
The women behind the Petrie Museum
p21
12
1.15–1.55pm
Stuff matters
p12
13
5.30–7.30pm
New perspectives on Caribbean literature
p06
14
1.15–1.55pm
Cigarettes: the most successful product ever
p12
14
6.30–8.30pm
To what extent was archaeology founded on prejudice?
p06
14
7–8.15pm
p06
15
1.10–1.55pm
Identity through difference: Rabbinic Judaism confronts Christian narrative UCL Chamber Music Club concert
16
1–5pm
Fossil forage
p15
20
6.45–8pm
p06
21
6–8pm
Fighting a spectre in times of war: Soviet Jewry and the heroisation of Bohdan Khmelnitsky Timekeeper in Residence at the Petrie
23
6–8.30pm
Fossil forage
p15
26
6–8pm
Timekeeper in Residence at the Petrie
p04
8 Apr
until 13 Apr
Easter egg-laying animals
p15
13
11–1pm
20
1.30–4pm
Out and about: Freemasons and Ancient Egypt at Kensal p16 Green Cemetery Timekeeper in Residence workshops p16
p04 p05
p21
p21
p04
27 27
Venues/map
3 UCL Art Museum South Cloisters, Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT Mon–Fri, 1–5pm college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/ uclart 4 UCL Bloomsbury Theatre 15 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AH +44 (0)20 7388 8822 www.thebloomsbury.com 5 Chadwick Lecture Theatre Chadwick Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 6 Darwin Lecture Theatre (accessed via Malet Place) London WC1E 6BT 7 Garwood Lecture Theatre South Wing, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 8 UCL Grant Museum of Zoology Rockefeller Building, 21 University Street, London WC1E 6DE Mon–Sat, 1–5pm zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/ zoology 28
10 Haldane Room Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 11 JZ Young Lecture Theatre Anatomy Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 12 Octagon Gallery Octagon, Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT Mon–Fri, 9am–6pm Sat, 11am–5pm susanah.chan@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3163
Warren Street
GRAFTON WAY
UNIVERSITY STREET
13 Pearson Lecture Theatre Pearson Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 14 Ramsay Lecture Theatre Christopher Ingold Building, 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AJ
HUNTLEY STREET
2 UCL Institute of the Americas Seminar Room 103, 51 Gordon Square London WC1H 0PN
9 Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT
TOTTEN HAM C OURT R OAD
1 UCL Main Campus Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT +44 (0)20 7679 2000 www.ucl.ac.uk
15 The Warburg Institute Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB 16 UCL Main Library Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT 17 UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Malet Place, London WC1E 6BT Tues–Sat, 1–5pm events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2369 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/ petrie
TORRING Goodge Street
Euston
Euston Square
P
GOWER
PLACE
GARD
7
14
9 E
E GORD ON SQUARE GORDON STREET
6
MALET PLACE
17
WOB URN
15
SQUARE
Waterstones
GORDON SQUARE
2 BYNG PLACE
GTON PLACE
GORD
GOWER
11
CHENIES MEWS
TAVITON STREET
3
5
4
16
GORDON
GOWER STREET
UCL Quad
12
ST E T
1
T
10
North Lodge
Wilkins
8
13
North Cloisters
AY
STREET
GOWER CT
Getting to UCL By Tube
ACCESSIBILITY
Underground stations near to UCL’s main campus:
UCL aims to provide accessibility to all its events. If you require any information about any accessibility requirements, please contact UCL Disability Services on:
Euston Square (Circle, Metropolitan, Hammersmith and City lines) Goodge Street (Northern line) Warren Street (Northern and Victoria lines)
+44 (0)20 7679 0100 disability@ucl.ac.uk
By Rail Mainline train stations near to UCL’s main campus: Euston, King’s Cross and St Pancras International
By Bus Buses serving Gower Street: 134, 390, 10, 73, 24, 29, 14
By Car The Bloomsbury area has metered parking and visitors are strongly advised not to travel to UCL by car.
University College London Gower Street London WC1E 6BT +44 (0)20 7679 2000 For further information about any of our events, please visit our website:
www.ucl.ac.uk/events