Arts and Culture at Wake Forest

Arts and Culture at Wake Forest University

Museum of Anthropology

The museum’s permanent collection consists of objects from the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, including household and ceremonial items, textiles, hunting and fishing gear, and objects of personal adornment. Materials collected by Moravian missionaries can be found here, as well as prehistoric artifacts from North Carolina’s Yadkin River Valley. The special exhibits gallery houses topical exhibitions reflecting University and community interests and provides faculty and students opportunities to develop and install exhibits, research and care for collections, and produce special class project exhibits.

Museum of Anthropology: SPRING 2013 EVENTS

January 15 – October 26, 2013Pen Banks web
Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00am – 4:30pm

EXHIBIT: Celebrating 50 Years of the Museum of Anthropology

As the MOA commemorates its 50th year, this student-curated retrospective exhibit showcases the Museum’s history through a detailed timeline featuring photographs from the institutional archives and artifacts from around the world.  Admission is free.

January 22 – May 19, 2013
Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00am – 4:30pm

EXHIBIT: This Beautiful World

Peaceful JourneyThis touring exhibit features the work of photographer and world traveler Robert Radin.  It contains images of the people and landscapes of six continents, a presentation of Radin’s life work selected from more than 6,000 photos.  Admission is free.

Opening February 5 (ongoing)
Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00am – 4:30pm

EXHIBIT: Chinese Ceramics from the Changsha Kilns: Reflections of Tang Dynasty Openness and Tolerance

31 Lam Ewer editMOA’s new permanent exhibit provides an overview of the ceramics produced by families at the Changsha Kilns during the Tang Dynasty more than one thousand years ago.  The exhibit puts Tang ceramics into their historical, geographic, and cultural context. The Tang Dynasty was a time of peace, prosperity, and acceptance in China, during which Changsha ceramics and other goods were traded to reach as far away as western Asia and Africa. The exhibit features more than 100 spectacular ceramic objects from the MOA’s Lam Collection.

Thursday, February 7 , 7:00pm
LECTURE: Trade and Treasure: The Silk Road on Land and Sea

Virginia Bower, a scholar of Chinese art and archaeology from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia will present an overview of the history of “The Silk Road” of China including the origin of this term.  She will also discuss Tang dynasty Changsha ceramics, comparing and contrasting pieces on display at the Museum with examples in other collections and works that have been excavated or recovered in China and elsewhere including those from a 9th century shipwreck.  Admission is free.

Saturday, March 23 12:00 – 4:00pm
MOA Turns 50! Birthday Party & Family Day

This exciting event for all ages will feature birthday cake, Chinese dance performances, and crafts activities from cultures around the world as the Museum celebrates its 50th birthday.  Join us for an afternoon of educational fun!  Admission is free.

Added January 14th

MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY FALL 2012 EVENTS

Museum of Anthropology
Museum Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10:00am – 4:30pm

MOA Day of the DeadEXHIBIT: Días de los Muertos (Days of the Dead)

Sept. 11 – Dec. 14

MOA’s annual exhibit features a traditional Mexican ofrenda: a home altar with sugar skulls, colorful tissue paper cutouts, food and beverage offerings, marigolds, and photos of deceased relatives to honor the dead.  A children’s ofrenda and photographs illustrating different aspects of the celebration are also on display.  This exhibit features text in English and Spanish.  Admission is free.

EXHIBIT: Weaving along the Silk Road: Amazing Asian Saddle Rugs
Opening September 25 (ongoing)

This new long-term exhibit examines the creation, function, and cultural importance of saddle rugs across Central Asia.  It features colorfully woven horse covers and saddle covers, as well as elaborately decorated saddles from an area spanning the ancient Silk Road from China to Constantinople (Istanbul).  Admission is free.

Along the Silk Road Family Day
Saturday, October 13
1-4 pm

This exciting event for all ages will feature crafts and hands-on activities from the cultures along the ancient Silk Road from China to Turkey.  Join us for an afternoon of educational fun exploring Central Asia.  Admission is free.

LECTURE: Shared Cultural Heritage. The Case of Moctezuma’s Headdress
7 pm Tuesday, October 16

Dr. Christian Feest, Associate Professor at the University of Vienna, Austria and former director of Vienna’s Museum of Ethnology will discuss the artifact known as Moctezuma’s Headdress, the only surviving feather headdress from pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica.  Feest will focus on the present debates about cultural property, heritage, and restitution which surround the headdress after it was rediscovered in Vienna in the late nineteenth century.  Admission is free.Kerman small

FILM PREMIERE: Immersed in India
7 pm Tuesday, October 30

MOA will present the world premiere of this documentary produced by Kimberly Dryden, a 2013 MFA candidate with the Documentary Film Program at Wake Forest University.  Immersed in India is a short documentary film that will explore the personal journeys of students traveling to India as part of a Wake Forest study abroad trip this summer. Through the lens of each student’s experience, the audience will come face-to-face with the challenges posed by the ashram teaching method of complete cultural immersion and travel with them as they learn about India and its people.  Admission is free.

FILM: Quest for the Blue Mountain
7 pm Monday, November 12

Dr. Whitney Azoy, a distinguished scholar of the culture and politics of Afghanistan, will screen and discuss this short 1989 National Geographic Explorer documentary.  Dr. Azoy plays the role of guide/central character/narrator in the film, which depicts a trip on foot with an anti-Soviet Afghan Resistance caravan from northwest Pakistan into northeast Afghanistan in search of the world’s oldest and best mine of lapis lazuli.  The film will be shown in 111 Carswell.  Admission is free.
This event is sponsored by the Museum of Anthropology, Global Affairs Funds for International Scholars, Documentary Film Program, Department of Politics and International Affairs, Humanities Institute, and the Office of Multicultural Affairs.

LECTURE: An Anthropological Understanding of Afghanistan
7 pm Tuesday, November 13

Dr. Whitney Azoy, a distinguished scholar of the culture and politics of Afghanistan, will present an illustrated lecture discussing the history, culture, and religion of the country.  Dr. Azoy currently tours the US and Europe to give similar presentations to US and NATO military personnel preparing to deploy to Afghanistan.  Admission is free.
This event is sponsored by the Museum of Anthropology, Global Affairs Funds for International Scholars, Documentary Film Program, Department of Politics and International Affairs, Humanities Institute, and the Office of Multicultural Affairs.

Added August 23rd