听 SHARE

2021 VIRTUAL PLENARY PANEL DISCUSSION

Living with Legacies: 麻豆直播 Archaeo-activism and a Future for 21st Century Archaeology

Wednesday, December 8, 2021 (Free and open to the public)
2:00pm – 3:00pm EST | Request Zoom Link by e-mailing plenary@asor.org

Arabic translation will be provided for the Virtual Plenary Panel Discussion

Before attending this Virtual Panel Discussion, you can view Morag Kersel’s Plenary Address (given live in Chicago on November 17) . The Virtual Plenary Panel Discussion will be a continuation of the Plenary message that in-person attendees heard, with added perspectives from different voices in the field.

Moderator

Morag M. Kersel is associate professor of anthropology and director of the Museum Studies Minor at DePaul University. Prof. Kersel is an archaeologist who works in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age periods. She earned a PhD in Archaeology from the University of Cambridge. She also holds a Master of Historic Preservation (with Distinction) from the University of Georgia, a Master of Arts in Near Eastern Studies from the University of Toronto and a Bachelor of Arts (Honors) in Classical Studies from Queen鈥檚 University, Kingston, Canada. In addition to participating in archaeological excavations and surveys in Egypt, Greece, Israel, Jordan, Palestine, and Turkey, Morag is interested in the relationship between cultural heritage law, archaeological sites and objects, and local interaction. She has published a number of articles and is the co-author (with Christina Luke) U.S. Cultural Diplomacy and Archaeology: Soft Power, Hard Heritage听(2013) and co-editor (with M.T. Rutz ) of听Archaeologies of Text: Archaeology, Technology, and Ethics听(2014).

Panelists

Lisa脟补办尘补办听is currently Chair and Curator of the Arts of the Ancient Mediterranean and Byzantium at the Art Institute of Chicago — a position she started during the Summer of 2020 during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to AIC,听Lisa听spent ten years working at the Saint Louis Art Museum (SLAM), most recently as the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Associate Curator (2016鈥損resent). During her tenure, she oversaw tremendous changes to the museum鈥檚 galleries, managing the reinstallation of the Greek and Roman art galleries, as well as SLAM鈥檚 collections of Egyptian art and ancient coins. From 2006鈥2010,听Lisa听participated in excavations at Tel Kedesh, Israel, and wrote her dissertation on a selection of Hellenistic seal impressions from the site. Recently, she submitted a chapter on the ancient seals found from the Hellenistic city, Maresha. She initiated and realized the听critically acclaimed Sunken Cities: Egypt鈥檚 Lost Worlds (2018), SLAM鈥檚 largest-grossing special exhibition in 25 years.听Lisa听has lectured听and published widely on an extensive range of scholarly and professional topics, including the roles of women, hybridization, and identity in the Hellenistic world, as well as museum professional training and career paths. She earned her AB from Princeton University, MA and PhD from University of Michigan, and MBA from Washington University in St. Louis.

Geoff Emberling is an associate research scientist at the Kelsey Museum and currently directs archaeological research on ancient Kush at Jebel Barkal in northern Sudan. He received a BA in anthropology from Harvard and a PhD in anthropology and Near Eastern studies from the University of Michigan with a dissertation on ethnicity in early Mesopotamia. He has previously held positions as lecturer at the University of Copenhagen, assistant curator in the Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and as museum director and chief curator at the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. His research interests include comparative perspectives on ancient cities, states, empires, and ethnicity with a particular focus on ancient cultures across the Middle East and North Africa. He has also written on the politics of archaeological practice and museum display. His archaeological field experience spans much of the Middle East and North Africa. From 1998 to 2004 he directed excavations at Tell Brak, a site in northeastern Syria that contains the remains of one of the earliest and largest Mesopotamian cities. More recently, he directed salvage excavations in the 4th Cataract of the Nile in northern Sudan in 2007 and 2008, and at听 in northern Sudan from 2013 to 2018. He is increasingly committed to developing fully collaborative archaeological field projects, with equal representation of Sudanese and foreign staff, and extensive engagement with local communities. In addition to archaeological research, he has also curated and directed installation of numerous museum exhibitions, including the reinstallation of the Ancient Middle East gallery at the Detroit Institute of Arts and, most recently, the exhibition听听at the Kelsey (2019鈥2020, co-curated with Suzanne Davis).

Photo By: R. Dione Foto (www.rdionefoto.com)

Alexandra Jones, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Archaeology in the Community, is an education leader focused on community outreach and service. Dr. Jones has been an educator for more than 16 years. She obtained dual Bachelors of Arts degrees from Howard University in History and Anthropology in 2001.听She obtained a Master鈥檚 degree in History from Howard University in 2003 and then attending University of California, Berkeley to obtain a Ph.D. in Historical Archaeology in 2010. Dr. Jones worked for PBS鈥檚 television show Time Team America as the Archaeology Field School Director, where she directed field schools for junior high and high school students at each of the sites for the 2013 season. She is currently Professor of Practice of Archaeology at Goucher听College. 听Dr. Jones serves as the President-Elect for the Society of Black Archaeologists and she serves on the District of Columbia鈥檚 Historic Preservation Review Board, the Board of Directors of the St. Croix Archaeological Society and is an听Academic听Trustee听for the Archaeological听Institute of America.

Michael Rakowitz is an Iraqi-American conceptual artist who operates within art spaces and beyond them, based in听both Chicago and New York City. With his series paraSITE, Rakowitz built customized, inflatable shelters for the homeless using a mere budget of $5.00 for plastic bags and waterproof tape for each project, and the exterior vents of buildings for heat. In Return, produced by Creative Time in 2004, Rakowitz reopened his grandfather鈥檚 import and export business, Davison鈥檚 & Co., which first operated in Baghdad and then relocated to New York when his family was exiled in 1946. Rakowitz鈥檚 resurrected family business offered free shipping to Iraq three months after the U.S. declared stifling trade restrictions on the country. Spoils of 2011, another Rakowitz and Creative Time collaboration, took a more provocative and personal approach to American-Iraqi relations. Housed at Park Avenue Autumn restaurant, the 鈥渃ulinary/art experience鈥 provided patrons with rich traditional Iraqi dishes served on rare pieces of fine China from Saddam Hussein鈥檚 personal collection. More surprising than the sensory tensions experienced by each diner, notably the contrast between the 鈥渟weetness of the Iraqi date syrup, and the鈥itter provenance of the dishware,鈥 was the dramatic conclusion of the project. A cease-and-desist letter from the State Department calling for the 鈥渟urrender鈥 of the plates abruptly ended Spoils, and resulted in their return to Iraqi territory. It was, according to Rakowitz, a 鈥渒ind of perfect鈥 ending to the project.