Graphic Tales: The Art of Visual Storytelling
GETTY VILLA
The Getty Villa and Online
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Throughout human history, images have provided a dynamic means of sharing and preserving a culture’s stories. But how do viewers comprehend pictorial narratives, and how do artists convey meaning? Beginning with the painted ceramic vessels displayed in the exhibition Picture Worlds: Greek, Maya, and Moche Pottery, speakers consider what it means to be visually literate, how the mind processes imagery, and the ways in which, even today, narrative art shapes—and is shaped by—society.
Speakers:
Introduction
David Saunders, associate curator, Getty Villa Museum
Greek Pots and Storytelling across the Mediterranean
Mark Stansbury O’Donnell, professor of Archaeology and Art History, University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN
Message in a Bottle: The Moche Hero’s Journey to the Ancestral World
Ulla Holmquist, director, Museo Larco, Lima, Peru
Clay that Talks: Narrative on Classic Maya Pottery
Stephen Houston, Dupee Family Professor of Social Science, Brown University, Providence, RI
Deciphering Visual Languages: From Ancient Pots to Comic Books
Neil Cohn, associate professor, Department of Communication and Cognition, Tilburg University, the Netherlands
Narrative Murals: Visualizing Societal Histories at the Lucas Museum
Pilar Tompkins Rivas, chief curator, Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Los Angeles, CA