Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Arts Faculty News

Select tags to filter on

World Poetry Day 2022 - Celebrate the Poem on Display in the new Faculty of Arts Building

Today is National Poetry Day and we’re celebrating the poem on display in our new Faculty of Arts Building.


Faculty of Arts at Home - Film 32: Amazing Women: Mapping Suffrage

This month the Resonate FestivalLink opens in a new window showcases Amazing WomenLink opens in a new window, focusing on women’s lives, women’s stories, and the work of great women who have pushed all areas of all our lives forward.

Accordingly, in this videoLink opens in a new window Professor Sarah RichardsonLink opens in a new window from the Department of History tells us about the Mapping Women's SuffrageLink opens in a new window project, which aims to identify, plot and record the everyday lives and locations of as many Votes for Women campaigners as possible across England at the height of the suffrage movement in 1911. In particular, Sarah introduces us to some local Coventry and Warwickshire women who made their mark in the suffrage effort.

Intrigued to discover the story of the suffragette who lived down your street? You can check out the interactive map database hereLink opens in a new window.

Want to hear more about the Coventry women who fought for women’s right to vote? You can walk in their footsteps as part of the Resonate Festival:

Coventry Women's Suffrage Walk


Amphibious Screens :The Sustainable Cultures of Water Seminar Series

Amphibious Screens: The Sustainable Cultures of Water Seminar Series, hosted by The University of Warwick, begins on January 27th. This online series delves beneath the surface to connect new research ideas from around the world with professionals, practitioners, activists as well as the cultural sector in four online seminars.

You can join one or all of these free seminars to understand more about how the film and TV industries in Miami, Reykjavik, Cornwall and Venice are deeply connected to a watery sense of place, water pollution, water scarcity and water cultures.

For further details and to register click here.


Future of Fashion Webinar

A recent webinar is available to watch on the Future of Fashion. Join Rachel Sandby-Thomas, Registrar, and a panel of academic and alumni experts, including Professor of Global History and Culture, Giorgio Riello from the Department of History, to gain an insight into the world of fashion and retail through the lens of artificial intelligence and rich data, and learn more about the future of this globally-influential sector.

Tue 11 Jan 2022, 11:26 | Tags: Event History Global History and Culture

Faculty of Arts at Home 23 - Invention: Digitalisation and Cinema Projection in the UK

Tying in with the launch of the Resonate Festival, the University of Warwick’s year-long programme of events for City of Culture, and its focus on the idea of Invention throughout the month of May, Dr Richard Wallace (Film and Television Studies) brings us the film ‘Digitalisation and Cinema Projection in the UK’. Rick’s film explores his work on the AHRC funded ‘Projection Project’ and the history of film projection practices, reaching from the earliest days of cinema to the current digital revolution in film exhibition.


Faculty of Arts at Home 22 - Literature, Language and Translation: Building back Empathy: Research and Engagement during Lockdown

Dr James Hodkinson (German Studies, School of Modern Languages and Cultures) delivers a conversation with one of his key collaborators, the artist Mohammed Ali MBE (https://www.soulcityarts.com), explores the relationship between his research into Islam in Germany in the 19th Century and his public engagement projects including the Art of Empathy (2019) and Congregate (2020-), a collaborative livestream of visual art, film, music and conversation. James explores the concepts of kinship and empathy, and the power of art to allow us to view the world from alternate cultural perspectives.


Faculty of Arts at Home 21 - Literature, Language and Translation: Caribbean Artivism: Exploring the connections between environmental and racial justice

Dr Fabienne Viala (Director of the Yesu Persaud Centre for Caribbean Studies) explains the concept of ‘artivism’ to us, in its Caribbean context, as a fusion of art forms and practices through which artists confront and engage with a range of publics. Fabienne argues that artivism activates the empathetic imagination, and looks at how environmental and racial justice are brought into dialogue through her work with Caribbean artivists.


Faculty of Arts at Home 20 - Literature, Language and Translation: Literary Translation: A Guide for the Perplexed, Curious and Uninitiated

Dr Chantal Wright (Warwick Writing Programme) delivers the first of our ‘Literature, Language and Translation’ Faculty of Arts at Home films: ‘The Literary Translation: A Guide for the Perplexed, Curious and Uninitiated’. Chantal is an important advocate for translation as a profession and a practice, and she draws our attention here to the creative processes of literary translation. She highlights, for example, the significance of the #namethetranslator​ hashtag, and the campaign to properly credit translators for their work. Her film urges us, more broadly, to appreciate the fact that translated works are the result of the creative endeavours of two people.


Celebrate Chinese New Year with the Language Centre and SMLC (9th and 18th February)

The Spring Festival (called Chinese New Year outside China) is an important festival in China. In the Warwick Language Centre and SMLC, students of Chinese at Warwick use their creativity to celebrate it in a special way, facilitated by their teachers. Songs, Raps, Poems, Stories, Games - come and enjoy yourselves!

9th February, 5-7pm - Online Party

18th February, 6-8pm - Online Calligraphy workshop


For more details please see here.


Faculty of Arts at Home 19 - Ethics, Politics and Social Justice: Ethical Praxis and the Moving Image

In the third of our ‘Ethics, Politics and Social Justice’ Faculty of Arts at Home films, explore with Dr Michele Aaron (Film and Television Studies) ‘Ethical Praxis and the Moving Image’. Michele outlines here the power of film to affect and effect personal, social and political change. She discusses her projects, including the Screening Rights Film Festival (https://screeningrights.com) and Life:Moving (https://lifemoving.org), which looks at how film making might develop authentic and ethical representations of the experience of dying, and argues that film can be critical in feeling for, and feeling with, the suffering of others.

Latest news Newer news Older news