- LocationMemorial Student Center
- DescriptionFor service information visit transport.tamu.edu/busroutes (http://transport.tamu.edu/busroutes)
- Websitehttps://calendar.tamu.edu/live/events/319919-transit-fall-service
- CategoriesGeneral Interest
More from Upcoming Events
- Oct 234:00 PMColloquium Series: John Patrick Casellas Connors and Alyssa CarpenterPresenters:John Patrick Casellas Connors, Assistant Professor | Geography "Socio-ballistic Landscapes: How gun politics have shaped American conservation" Alyssa Carpenter, Graduate Student | Anthropology "Cannon Cluster Site: Uncovering the Historical Provenance of 20 Guns Recovered in Savannah, Georgia" Abstracts:Casellas ConnorsFirearms politics and conservation politics share a deeply intertwined, but often overlooked, history in the United States. This research explores these entanglements to understand the ways that firearms (and our relationships to them) have shaped conservation practices and the role of environmental institutions in supporting the firearms industry. I trace these interconnected histories to demonstrate how environmental agencies play a growing role in promoting firearms use – in general, not just for hunting – and how exceptions in environmental policies facilitate gun use. Meanwhile, environmental agencies are increasingly dependent on tax revenues derived specifically from firearms and ammunition. In this manner, gun policy is increasingly a matter of environmental policy.Carpenter In 2021, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, during the Savannah Harbor Expansion Project, recovered a total of 20 guns (cannons), 8 partial anchor fragments, 14 munition shot, a fragment of a ship's bell, and an anchor ring. In 2023, 17 guns were transported to the Conservation Research Lab (CRL) at Texas A&M University for conservation. Throughout the past year and a half, the guns underwent a thorough study and digital documentation, in addition to undergoing the conservation treatment plan. On-site analysis was performed on comparable guns and their markings in both Canada and England. This presentation will discuss the research findings and propose a working theory on the gun's origins. Chair: Kim Kattari | Performance, Visualization & Fine Arts Please note that this is not a lecture, and thus, is not suited for class attendance. The Colloquium Series is intended to provide the presenter with a forum to discuss their research and receive feedback from colleagues and peers.
- Oct 236:00 PMSustainability DinnerYou are cordially invited to the 11th Annual Sustainability Dinner hosted by Texas A&M Residence Life. The Dinner provides an avenue for faculty and staff who live, teach, and/or research issues related to sustainability to share their knowledge with students in a relaxed atmosphere. It is a part of the Department's "Dinner with a Prof" series hosted in celebration of Campus Sustainability Month.
- Oct 24All dayKathleen Blackshear: American Artist From TexasShe made a name for herself as a professional artist at a time when the art world was marginalizing women. She was one of the few female faculty members at the Art Institute of Chicago prior to World War II, becoming an innovative teacher known for mentoring her students. During her over 30-year teaching career she influenced generations of art history students, embracing modernism, introducing them to African art, and instilling her constant drive to explore new things into her students. Join us for a Gallery Talk & Reception on Nov. 7, 2024 at 5:30 p.m. in the Stark Galleries with guest speaker Victoria Hennessey Cummins, Ph.D. This exhibition represents the eighth installation in the Texas Art Project (https://uart.tamu.edu/texasartproject/) series.
- Oct 24All dayPattern RecognitionThe concept of pattern in the arts provides artists with tools that can limit creativity or suggest new avenues for exploration. They can offer a maker innovative options to explore with their accustomed materials and techniques; at times present a designer a means of control; advance a range of new ornaments and motifs to work with; and impart a new understanding of the relation between functional and decorative form. This exhibition will look at the impact of pattern in the arts using the University Art Galleries collections.
- Oct 2412:00 AMShawn Smith, "Dissonant Data"Austin-based artist Shawn Smith merges nature and technology in his two- and three-dimensional work featuring life-size animals, insects and abstract self-portraits, exploring "how humans use data as a lens for looking at the anthropocene, species loss and habitat destruction." On view at Wright Gallery, Langford A, Room 212, from Sept. 16-Oct. 24. Artist talk: Sept. 26, 4-5 p.m.; reception from 5-6 p.m.
- Oct 24All dayTransit Fall ServiceFor service information visit transport.tamu.edu/busroutes (http://transport.tamu.edu/busroutes)