Thu 29 January 2015 | 8:00AM - 5:00PM |
Exhibition of the history and evolution of St Michael's Church The History and evolution of St Michael's church. |
9:00AM - 5:00PM |
Concrete poetry exhibition - a token of concrete affection Works from the personal collection of art historian Stephen Bann relating to close exchanges between Cambridge and Brazilian poets in the 1960s. |
|
9:00AM - 6:00PM |
Highlight Private lives of print: The use and abuse of books 1450-1550 An exhibition of over 50 of Cambridge University Library's wonderful early printed books, selected for the stories they tell about the use of books in the first hundred years after the invention of printing. |
|
9:00AM - 7:00PM |
Embodied memories – another perspective on research in Africa Photographic exhibition by Ashley Ouvrier. |
|
10:00AM - 4:00PM |
Ediacaran Enigmas: resolving the fossil record of early animals This new display is a snapshot of the research taking place in the department of Earth Sciences at Cambridge on fossils from the 540-580 million year old Ediacaran Period, known as the 'Ediacaran Biota'. |
|
10:00AM - 5:00PM |
Fatal consequences: the Chapman Brothers and Goya’s disasters of war The Chapman Brothers’ Disasters of War takes Goya’s print series of the same title and reinvents and extends the imagery and horrors with a cornucopia of ideas from later wars and modern culture. This exhibition shows different versions of the Chapman Bothers’ set, together with a selection from Goya’s original series. |
|
11:30AM - 5:00PM |
The Poetry and Art of Ian Hamilton Finlay |
|
5:00PM - 6:20PM |
'Yeats and the Afterlife: the Artifice of Eternity' by Paul Muldoon This is the second of Paul Muldoon's Clark Lectures on 'Yeats and the Afterlife'. Paul Muldoon is a poet, critic, and professor in the humanities at Princeton University. |
|
8:00PM |
Laura van der Heijden, cello & Tom Poster, piano |