Netherlands: Haarlem, Alkmaar, Leiden, The Hague, Delft, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Gouda, Maastricht
Presenting a tour of the Netherlands
0:00 Introduction ; 03:26 Haarlem; 04:31 Alkmaar; 05:45 Leiden; 06:38 The Hague; 07:48 Delft; 08:54 Rotterdam; 10:11 Utrecht; 11:35 Gouda; 12:22 Maastricht ; 13:43 Conclusion
Starting with a visit to Haarlem, then to Leiden, doing a few day trips out from there. Then to Delft for three more nights and excursions to The Hague, political capital of the nation.
Then to Rotterdam the great modern city of the Netherlands, continuing to Utrecht, a university town with a large historic center and then to Maastricht in the southern part of the country. I'll also be going up to the Alkmaar cheese market which is a lot of fun.
This video is a summary of the trip through the Netherlands. We will be presenting short segments about each city here, but we have 22 movies providing a lot more details about these places so be sure to look for them in our collection.
See the 23 Dutch movies here:
Traveling between cities was so easy because the Netherlands has got perhaps the best train system in Europe. It's phenomenal. The trains are clean, fast, frequent and not expensive. This is a small country, so the cities are relatively close together, you can get from one to the next and 15 or 30 minutes usually. This superb rail service in itself makes a good reason to visit this country, shift for it really does eliminate some of those logistical problems of travel, just getting around. It is so easy with these trains.
Some call it Holland, but the country is The Netherlands. Holland is two provinces in the Netherlands.
Random Walk Queens Day Holland Giant Flea Market
If you get up early enough after the Queens Day parties of the night before Queens Day most of Holland is turned into one large flea market. I was looking for a Rembrandt. And I found one!
We are in the doll museum!! Come see old dolls!????????
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4K - DELFT City - the Netherlands 2019 #9
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This is second video about Delft.
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Delft is a great city for a night out on the town. Many students go to the Speakers entertainment centre on Burgwal, for an evening of salsa dancing, cabaret or music. Filmhuis Lumen and Mutsee cinemas are a popular way of starting off the evening. Then, what else but onto a pub crawl through BrabantseTurfmarkt, Kromstraat, Mark and Nieuwstraat? Perhaps you will end up at the Lorre Students Disco.
Weekly Markets
The Delft markets can be found in the city’s centre and can be a major attraction for tourists. You can expect many colourful flower stalls, merchants selling cheese, fresh stroopwaffles, and other fresh local produce and countless antiques, books and trinkets.
Below you can find a list of locations and operating times of the main markets
Thursday and Saturday Market: at the Markt, and at the Brabantse Turftmarkt
Thursday Flower Market: at the Brabantse Turfmarkt in the inner city of Delft.
Tuesday Market, Hoven Passage: near De Hoven Passage
Summer Antiques, Bric-à-brac and Book Market (from April till October): at the Markt, and at the Brabantse Turftmarkt
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Reception BRAFA 2019 at the Belgian Residence in The Hague
In October 2018, an exclusive reception was organized on the occassion of BRAFA 2019 (26 Jan - 3 Feb) by the Belgian Embassy in the Netherlands, BRAFA and Delen Private Bank. At the The Hague Residence of His Excellency Chris Hoornaert, the Belgian Ambassador, art collectors were given a preview by some of the exhibitors who showed their highlights for the 2019 edition of the international art fair. There was also an opportunity to see an exhibition of artworks from the collection of the Belgian Province of Limburg.
Guest of honour at BRAFA 2019 will be the internationally renowned duo Gilbert & George. Having started out as performance artists, they became famous for their large-scale photo pieces. These are often in very bright colours with superimposed black gridlines evoking the windows of yesteryear. The duo will present five recent large-scale works that will be placed at various spots throughout the fair. Their quirky vision of the world is sure to be a hit in the land of surrealism!
BRAFA 2019 also marks the centenary of the Belgian Royal Chamber of Antiques and Art Dealers. Thanks to their historically close ties, what better place than BRAFA to host a prestigious exhibition made up of works from private collections all of which were bought by members of the Chamber? This exhibition will be accompanied by the publication of a book that will address different aspects of the art dealer’s trade, peppered with thousands of anecdotes collected and edited by journalist Thijs Demeulemeester, and by a lecture at BRAFA on Sunday, 27 January, as part of the cycle of the BRAFA Art Talks.
Learn more at brafa.art
Home Book Review: A Beginners Guide to the Dolls House Hobby: Revised and Expanded Edition by J...
This is the review of A Beginners Guide to the Dolls House Hobby: Revised and Expanded Edition by Jean Nisbett.
Konya, Turkey: Home of Mevlana and Dervishes
More info about travel to Turkey: Konya is one of the oldest, most conservative, and religious cities in the world. It's the home of 13th-century Muslim philosopher Mevlana, whose followers whirl in a meditative trance.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
Capitalism and the Dutch East India Company: Crash Course World History 229
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In which John Green teaches you about the Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, doing business as the VOC, also known as the Dutch East India Company. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the Dutch managed to dominate world trade, and they did all through the pioneering use of corporations and finance. Well, they did also use some traditional methods like violently enforced monopolies, unfair trade agreements, and plain old warfare. You'll learn how the Dutch invented stuff like joint stock corporations, maritime insurance, and futures trading. Basically, how the Dutch East India Company crashed the US economy in 2008. I'm kidding. Or am I?
Citation 1: William J. Bernstein, A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World. Grove Press. 2008. p. 218
Citation 2: Stephen R. Bown. Merchant Kings: When Companies Ruled the World, 1600-1900. New York. St. Martin’s Press. 2009. p. 28
Citation 3: Bernstein p. 223
Citation 4: Bernstein p. 228
Citation 5: Bown p. 53
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Delft, Netherlands, Complete Tour
You will love the Dutch city of Delft. It is one of the most famous, historical and beautiful towns in the Netherlands, preserved in picture book perfection. It's also a modern city that functions very well for its hundred thousand resident as you're going to see in this comprehensive video guide.
Dutch East India Company | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:06:10 1 Company name, logo, and flag
00:08:16 2 History
00:08:25 2.1 Origins
00:11:58 2.2 Formation, rise, and fall
00:12:08 2.2.1 Formative years
00:16:48 2.2.2 Growth
00:22:47 2.2.3 Reorientation
00:32:14 2.2.4 Decline and fall
00:38:43 3 Organizational structure
00:45:02 3.1 VOC outposts
00:45:44 3.2 Council of Justice in Batavia
00:46:04 4 Shareholder activism at the VOC and the beginnings of modern corporate governance problems
00:48:41 5 Main trading posts, settlements, and colonies
00:48:53 5.1 Europe
00:49:01 5.1.1 Netherlands
00:49:21 5.2 Africa
00:49:30 5.2.1 Mauritius
00:49:45 5.2.2 South Africa
00:49:58 5.3 Asia
00:50:06 5.3.1 Indonesia
00:50:18 5.3.2 Indian subcontinent
00:50:50 5.3.3 Japan
00:51:08 5.3.4 Taiwan
00:51:35 5.3.5 Malaysia
00:51:51 5.3.6 Thailand
00:52:03 5.3.7 Vietnam
00:52:21 6 Conflicts and wars involving the VOC
00:56:10 7 Historical roles and legacy
00:59:53 7.1 Institutional innovations and impacts on modern-day global business practices and financial system
01:06:23 7.2 Impacts on social, economic, financial, political, and military history of the Netherlands
01:11:11 7.3 Roles in the history of the global economy and international relations
01:15:59 7.4 Artistic, scientific, technological, and cultural legacies of the VOC World
01:16:14 7.4.1 VOC World as an information/knowledge exchange network in the Dutch maritime world-system
01:19:06 7.4.2 Influences on Dutch Golden Age art
01:20:23 7.4.3 Formation of early modern religious communities and ethnic groups within the VOC World
01:20:37 7.5 Contributions in the Age of Exploration
01:21:29 7.5.1 iHalve Maen'/is exploratory voyage and role in the formation of New Netherland
01:24:25 7.5.2 Dutch discovery, exploration, and mapping of mainland Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, and various islands
01:29:24 7.5.3 VOC-sponsored inland exploration and mapping of Southern Africa
01:29:37 8 Criticism
01:30:09 8.1 VOC colonialism, monopoly policy and uses of violence
01:30:22 8.2 Dutch slave trade and slavery under the VOC colonial rule
01:35:25 9 Cultural depictions of people and things associated with the VOC
01:39:36 10 VOC world etymologies
01:39:47 10.1 Places and things named after the VOC and its people
01:42:45 10.2 Places and things named by VOC people
01:43:58 11 Populated places established by VOC people
01:45:34 12 Important heritage sites in the VOC World
01:46:22 13 VOC buildings and structures
01:47:02 14 VOC archives and records
01:47:53 15 VOC coinage
01:48:03 16 VOC ships
01:48:18 17 Field of VOC World studies
01:51:21 17.1 VOC World archaeology
01:51:31 18 VOC timeline and historical firsts
01:52:23 18.1 Proto-VOC period (with the establishment of the ivoorcompagnieën/pre-companies/i)
01:55:14 18.2 VOC era (with the amalgamation of the ivoorcompagnieën/pre-companies/i)
02:08:20 19 Gallery
02:08:40 20 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
Upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
Speaking Rate: 0.9307992778992489
Voice name: en-GB-Wavenet-D
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
The Dutch East India Company (Dutch: Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie; VOC) was an early megacorporation, founded by a government-directed amalgamation of several rival Dutch trading companies (the so-called voorcompagnieën or pre-companies) in the early 17th century. It was originally established, on 20 March 1602, as a chartered company to trade with India and Indianized Southeast Asian countries when the Dutch government granted it a 21-year monopoly on the Dutch spice trade. The VOC was an early multinational/transnational corporation in its modern sense. The Company has been often labelled a trading company (i.e. a company of merchants who buy and sell goods produced by other people) or sometimes a shipping company. However, the VOC was in fact a proto-conglomerate company, diversifying into multiple commercial and industrial activities such as internat ...
MAHARAJAHS AND THEIR MAGNIFICENT MOTOR CARS
MAHARAJAHS AND THEIR MAGNIFICENT MOTOR CARS
GAUTAM SEN Book Number: 77155 Product format: Hardback
Acknowledged as the 'father' of Indian automotive journalism, the author founded one of India's first car magazines and this is reflected in the detailed text that accompanies the superb photos of the gorgeous cars featured in this impressive volume. The Indian maharajas' love affair with the automobile began as far back as 1898 when a European firm imported three 'horseless carriages' into British India. They completely changed the lifestyle of Indian royalty, triggering an enthralling new passion that persists to this day. The choicest cars with the most unusual coachworks were required to satisfy the varied tastes and demands of the rajas and maharajas, including ceremonial throne cars, hunting vehicles with search lamps and gun racks, automobiles for weddings and state processions and even cars in which ladies could travel in secluded purdah. Each wealthy family tried to outdo the other in terms of pomp, glamour and splendour. Not all of their purchases were in good taste. Consider the Ford belonging to a prominent landowner, who favoured overpowering silver repoussé decorative work and lace curtains, or the gold-plated Daimler of an ambitious merchant. The strangest limousine of all must surely have been the famous Swan Car of Calcutta - a 1912 Brooke with the front end fashioned to look like a swan that hissed steam from its nostrils, but our overall favourite is the pink Cadillac de Ville! During the first half of the 20th century, several thousand wonderful and exotic machines were owned by the 500 very wealthy Indian princes, but only a few hundred still survive. Some of them are with collectors and museums in Europe and America, others remain in India, with the ageing and declining Indian royal families of yesteryear. This luxurious book celebrates the most remarkable of these magnificent cars. 384 pages 30cm x 24.5cm lavishly illustrated in glorious colour. With map.
Published price: £40
Bibliophile price: £20.00
List of works about the Dutch East India Company | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:07:29 1 Non-fiction
00:07:38 1.1 Books, dissertations and theses
00:07:49 1.1.1 General
00:24:47 1.1.2 Roles in economic, financial and business history
00:44:41 1.1.3 Science, technology, and culture in the VOC World
01:01:53 1.1.4 VOC military and political history
01:06:02 1.1.5 VOC maritime history (VOC in the Age of Exploration)
01:24:44 1.1.6 VOC historiography
01:27:47 1.1.7 VOC people
01:42:03 1.1.8 VOC in Europe
01:47:45 1.1.9 VOC in Africa
02:08:51 1.1.10 VOC in South and West Asia (including the Indian subcontinent)
02:30:42 1.1.11 VOC in Southeast Asia (including the East Indies)
02:44:53 1.1.12 VOC in East Asia
03:09:42 1.2 Journal articles, scholarly papers, essays, and book chapters
03:09:55 1.2.1 General history
03:42:39 1.2.2 Economic, financial and business history
04:35:09 1.2.3 Cultural and social history
05:29:40 1.2.4 Military and political history
05:54:16 1.2.5 Maritime history
06:12:14 2 Fiction
06:13:42 3 Audio
06:14:30 4 Video
06:15:16 5 Seminars and symposiums
06:15:42 6 Documentary
06:16:09 7 Film
06:16:27 8 Music
06:16:40 9 VOC World in visual arts
06:17:01 10 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
Upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
Speaking Rate: 0.8284446142312462
Voice name: en-GB-Wavenet-C
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
The Dutch East India Company (Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC) is one of the most influential and best expertly researched companies/corporations in history. As an exemplary historical company-state, the VOC had effectively transformed itself from a corporate entity into a state, an empire, or even a world in its own right. The VOC World (i.e. networks of people, places, things, activities, and events associated with the Dutch East India Company) has been the subject of a vast amount of literature that includes both fiction and non-fiction works. VOC World studies is an international multidisciplinary field focused on social, cultural, religious, scientific, technological, economic, financial, business, maritime, military, political, legal, diplomatic activities, institutional organization, and administration of the VOC and its colourful world. Some of the notable VOC historians/scholars include Sinnappah Arasaratnam, Leonard Blussé, Peter Borschberg, Charles Ralph Boxer, Jaap Bruijn, Femme Gaastra, Om Prakash, Günter Schilder, and Nigel Worden.
In terms of global business history, the lessons from the VOC's success and failure are critically important. With a permanent capital base, the VOC was the first permanently organized limited-liability joint-stock company at the dawn of modern capitalism. As an early pioneering model of the modern corporation, the VOC was the first corporation to be ever actually listed on a formal stock exchange. In the early 1600s the VOC became the world's first formally listed public company (or publicly listed company) by widely issuing bonds and shares of stock to the general public. In many respects, modern-day publicly listed multinational corporations (including Forbes Global 2000 companies) are all 'descendants' of the 17th-century VOC business model.
For almost 200 years of its existence (1602–1800), the Company played crucial roles in business, financial, socio-politico-economic, military-political, diplomatic, legal, ethnic, and exploratory maritime history of the world. In the early modern period, the VOC was the driving force behind the rise of corporate-led globalization, corporate power, corporate identity, corporate culture, corporate social responsibility, corporate governance, corporate finance, corporate capitalism, and finance capitalism. It was the VOC's institutional innovations and business practices that laid the foundations for the rise of giant global corporations to become a highly significant and formidable socio-politico-economic force of the modern world as we know it today ...
Nethercutt Museum-02-25-12
Today I took the tour at the Neathercutt Museum in Sylmar, CA. It was a terrific surprise and wonderful collection of classic cars and various orchestreons and the Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ - third largest in the world. If you have never been, take a look at this collection of pictures and book your tour today.
Panorama of Haarlem Centruum
In the Grote Markt: Buildings dating from 1300--Grote kerk, Saint Bavo Church, Vleeshal (Meat Hall), Hoofdwacht,, Cathedral of Saint Bavo and City Hall.
Grote Markt. Haarlem's main market square, with the huge Saint Bavo church right on it, is the heart of the old city. Not only the church, but several monumental buildings can be found on different sides of the square and when the weather allows, it's lined with outdoor café terraces. You'll also see the statue of Laurens Janszoon Coster, locally called Lautje, a pioneer of book printing who has become an icon of Haarlem. edit
Saint Bavo Church. This impressive Gothic style church has been the heart of the city and its main landmark for centuries. Located right in the middle of the Grote Markt, it was originally built as a Catholic church between 1370 and 1520. In 1559 it finally became the cathedral of the Diocese of Haarlem-Amsterdam, but less than 20 years later it was confiscated in the name of the Protestant Reformation and it has been a Protestant church ever since. Much of the antique interior remains, including the great Müller-organ that, according to records, has been played by Händel, Mozart, Mendelssohn and other famous people throughout its history. When built, this organ was the largest one in the world, leading Herman Melville in his famous novel Moby Dick to compare the inside of the whale's mouth to the many pipes of Haarlem's great organ. edit
Vleeshal (Meat Hall), Grote Markt 18. From 1604 until the 18th century, the Meat Hall was the only place in town where it was permitted to sell fresh meat. Butchers had to pay rather steep amounts to be granted a spot in the Dutch Renaissance style building that had been designed and built for the purpose. It's now part of the Frans Hals Museum. edit
Hoofdwacht, Grote Markt 17 (Corner of Smedelaan), [8]. Built in the 13th century, this is one of the oldest monuments in the city and the first century of its existence, it served as the first town hall. Later, it was used as private housing for several prominent Haarlem families. From April-Sept. the building is open to visitors but only on weekends. No fee. edit
City Hall, Grote Markt 2. After fires destroyed the Count's castle on this location in the 14th century, this city hall was built. The current façade is slightly younger, and originates from the 17th century. edit
Windmill De Adriaan, [9]. this beautiful windmill on the benches of the river Spaarne was of the main landmarks of Haarlem for centuries, until it was destroyed in a 1932 fire. Several plans to rebuild it failed due to lack of funds, but in 2002 the windmill was finally fully restored to former glory. It's functional, for tourist purposes, and holds a small museum. €3. edit
Cathedral of Saint Bavo, Leidsevaart 146, [10]. editThis cathedral, confusingly named after Saint Bavo too, as is the much older church on the Grote Markt, was built by the Catholics from 1895 to 1930. It replaced the former Waterstaatskerk St. Joseph, which itself was built to replace the confiscated Sint-Bavo church, which had been converted to Protestantism in 1578. The Cathedral became the main cathedral for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Haarlem-Amsterdam, and holds that function still today. A small museum has been created in the former sacristy, allowing visitors to see some historical artefacts from Haarlem's Catholic past.
Chic Two Room Apartment in Hague Displaying a Youthful Style
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Roundtable on the Monetary System in The Netherlands (Eng subtitles)
Roundtable on the Monetary System in the Netherlands | 14 October 2015 by the Our Money Foundation
Block I
- Edgar Wortmann (legal expert)
- Martijn Jeroen van der Linden (economist & Phd Candidate)
- George van Houts (theater maker, actor, script writer)
- Luuk de Waal Malefijt (IT specialist and founder of the Our Money Foundation)
Block II
- Jan Marc Berk (Dutch Central Bank)
- Teunis Brosens (ING bank)
- Klaas van Egmond (professor in environmental sciences & Advisor in governmental economic counsel)
- Dirk Bezemer (professor of economics in Groningen)
- Reinier Pollman (Authority on Financial Markets (Regulator))
MPs:
P.J. Duisenberg, chairman of the commission on Finance (Liberals)
M.G.J. Harbers, (Liberals)
H. Nijboer, Tweede Kamerlid (Labor)
A.Z. Merkies, Tweede Kamerlid (Socialist)
P.H. Omtzigt, Tweede Kamerlid (Christian-Democrats)
A.P.C. (Tony) van Dijck, Tweede Kamerlid (Freedom-movement)
W. Koolmees, Tweede Kamerlid (Democrats)
C.J. Schouten, Tweede Kamerlid (Christians United)
M.L. Thieme, Tweede Kamerlid (Labor)
N.P.M. Klein, Tweede Kamerlid (Independent, ex-member of 50+ Party)
**** Special thanks to the volunteers of the Our Money Foundation for transcribing the video, translating the transcript and syncing it to make the subtitle. ****
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rondetafelgesprek Geldstelsel 14 oktober 2015
Blok 1 (10.00 - 10.30)
Gesprek met een delegatie van de initiatiefnemers van het burgerinitiatief Ons Geld ( bestaande uit:
- Edgar Wortmann (jurist)
- Martijn Jeroen van der Linden (econoom en promotieonderzoeker TU Delft)
- George van Houts (acteur en scriptschrijver)
- Luuk de Waal Malefijt (voorzitter Stichting Ons Geld)
Blok 2. (10.40 - 12.10 uur)
- Jan Marc Berk (De Nederlandsche Bank)
- Teunis Brosens (ING)
- Klaas van Egmond (Universiteit van Utrecht en kroonlid van de SER)
- Dirk Bezemer (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen)
- Reinier Pollmann (Autoriteit FinanciÎle Markten)
Kamerleden:
P.J. Duisenberg, voorzitter van de vaste commissie voor Financiën (VVD)
M.G.J. Harbers, Tweede Kamerlid (VVD)
H. Nijboer, Tweede Kamerlid (PvdA)
A.Z. Merkies, Tweede Kamerlid (SP)
P.H. Omtzigt, Tweede Kamerlid (CDA)
A.P.C. (Tony) van Dijck, Tweede Kamerlid (PVV)
W. Koolmees, Tweede Kamerlid (D66)
C.J. Schouten, Tweede Kamerlid (ChristenUnie)
M.L. Thieme, Tweede Kamerlid (PvdD)
N.P.M. Klein, Tweede Kamerlid (Klein)
Vintage Dollhouse Trailer
1:12 scale 1950's vintage trailer/dollhouse. Done is cherries and red and yellow. I used a basic kit you can find on Amazon. It took me over a year to gather all the pieces and then about a week to construct after it was built and painted and the floor was laid.
Vintage Collectible Dolls
These are some great old dolls that I came across. Fans of 80's miniature dolls should like this.
Baba's Doll Shoppe
You can buy Baba's dolls and their clothes at the Bus Depot Markets, Kingston ACT on the last Sunday of every month.
Claudia Swan | Rarities of These Lands: Tulips & Other Exotica in the Making of Golden Age Holland
Scholar lecture by Claudia Swan, associate professor of Art History at Northwestern University, presented as part of the KAM exhibition Coveting Nature: Art, Collecting, and Natural History in Early Modern Europe, co-curated by Maureen Warren, curator of European and American Art at KAM and Anna Chen, head librarian, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California at Los Angeles (On view at Krannert Art Museum August 31–December 22, 2017).
This lecture is the Fall 2017 Philipp Fehl Lecture in Art, honoring the work of the distinguished scholar and University of Illinois professor Philipp Fehl. Co-sponsored by the Department of Entomology, Department of History, and Krannert Art Museum.
About Krannert Art Museum
Krannert Art Museum (KAM) promotes a vibrant exchange of ideas in the visual arts. KAM's rich permanent collection contains over 10,000 works of art dating from the fourth millennium BCE to the present, representing a broad range of cultures and varied modes of expression. Located at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, KAM is the second largest general fine arts museum in Illinois. It operates within the College of Fine and Applied Arts. More information can be found at kam.illinois.edu