| Thu 13 February 2014 | 8:00AM - 5:00PM |
Highlight Exhibition: humour in colour Yunoki Textiles, Curated by Miles Dodd |
| 9:00AM - 5:00PM |
Exhibition by Roeland Verhallen and Ash Summers Exhibitions by Roeland Verhallen and Ash Summers at the Alison Richard Building. |
|
| 9:00AM - 5:00PM |
Photographs of cultural heritage by Gwil Owen A rare opportunity to witness a collection of striking and informative images from the world of Archaeology and Anthropology |
|
| 9:00AM - 9:00PM |
A festival of light, illuminating the city's historic architecture and latest technology. |
|
| 10:00AM - 4:00PM |
Magadan: life in the Russian north A photography exhibition exploring the City and Region of Magadan. |
|
| 10:00AM - 4:30PM |
The exotic allure of the tropical orchid will take centre stage in a special display in the Botanic Garden's Glasshouse Range. |
|
| 10:00AM - 5:00PM |
Highlight A world of private mystery: John Craxton, RA (1922 -2009) A fresh retrospective on John Craxton - from his beginnings as a young hope of post-war British art, creating dark, meditative images of the natural world, to works of incredible vibrancy, light and colour from his later life in Crete. |
|
| 10:00AM - 5:00PM |
Highlight Edmund de Waal: on white – porcelain stories from the Fitzwilliam Come and experience the visual drama of the intervention that renowned potter and Cambridge graduate, Edmund de Waal, has staged in four interconnected ground-floor galleries of the Museum. |
|
| 10:00AM - 5:00PM |
From root to tip: Botanical art in Britain This exhibition brings together a selection of watercolours from the Fitzwilliam’s outstanding collection of botanical art. It draws on over 300 years of work by both professional and amateur artists, tracing a history of flower drawing in Britain. |
|
| 10:00AM - 5:00PM |
This exhibition of contemporary photography by visual artist Robert Richardson turns the lens not on the monuments of Rome but on the tourists and locals who people the city's winding streets. |
|
| 10:00AM - 6:00PM |
The small selection of paintings exhibited here have been chosen by Marilyn Johns because they incorporate images and allusions that reflect a lifetime's association with the art of Italy. |
|
| 10:30AM - 4:30PM |
Chiefs and governors: art and power in Fiji A major exhibition of Fijian Art at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, drawing from its historically significant collections |
|
| 2:00PM - 4:00PM |
A new five week course, which focuses on a variety of different themes to discover, interact and engage with a wide range of objects and paintings in the Museum’s collection. The course is led by Sarah Burles, Art Historian and Museum Educator, in partnership with Cambridge Art Tours. |
|
| 7:30PM - 9:00PM |
A brief history of fungi on plants Ali Ashby, from the Department of Plant Sciences, will address what is currently known about the co-evolution of plants and fungi and the link between fungi and both the evolution of Orchids and the depletion of the carboniferous coal deposits and why fungi ruled the Earth following the two great extinction events. |
|
| 8:00PM - 9:00PM |
Highlight Lynndie sings the blues An interactive theatre project by Georg Genoux and Molly Flynn. Co-sponsored by the Interdisciplinary Theatre Laboratory NEDRAma and the Judith E. Wilson Foundation at the University of Cambridge |
|
| 8:00PM - 10:00PM |
The Jim and Helen Ede Concert with the Kettle's Yard ensemble in residence 2013/14 - Mozart, Tippett & Mendelssohn |
