Beneath the Buddha — art talk
Beneath the Buddha — art talk
Cynthea J. Bogel (Kyushu University / Clark Fellow) examines motifs on the pedestal of a key eighth-century sculpture: a colossal gilt-bronze Buddha.
Cynthea J. Bogel (Kyushu University / Clark Fellow) examines motifs on the pedestal of a key eighth-century sculpture: a colossal gilt-bronze Buddha.
Poetry at Bennington welcomes Mary-Alice Daniel and Cindy Juyoung Ok for a public reading of their poetry, free and open to all.
Simon's Rock welcomes acclaimed poet Ama Codjoe, winner of the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize and finalist for the NAACP Image Award and the Paterson Poetry Prize.
A neurosurgeon has sixty days to live. He decides to take his fate in his own hands and finishes building an enigmatic structure on an empty swimming pool that a biologist before him had left unfinished ...
A Clark educator will lead a tour of the permanent collection galleries to talk about the Institute's history and work.
Presented as part of the Clark's Artists' Books Day, Alexandra J. Gold discusses artist book collaborations between contemporary painters and poets.
Giuseppina Forte, professor of architecture and environmental studies at Williams College, discusses her new book project, The Self-Built City: Material Politics and Ecologies of Difference in São Paulo.
Writer and journalist Tamar Sarai, a Philadelphia features writer at Prism, will deliver the annual free Hardman Journalist talk at MCLA.
Michelle Foa explores Edgar Degas as an artist whose career-long fixation on materials informed his work in unexpected ways.
A Clark educator will lead a tour of the permanent collection galleries to talk about the Institute's history and work.
What would happen if a library could hold every book that ever can be written? Everyone is invited to a free, open conversation about the mystical library in Jorge Luis Borges' story, 'The Library of Babel.'
The Clark invites visitors to look contemplatively as a way to engage with works of art from the museum’s collection.
Acclaimed poet and novelist and former Bennington faculty Phillip B. Williams gives a reading from his new novel, Ours, followed by a Q&A and book signing at Bennington College.
Julia Alvarez, one of America’s most acclaimed and best-loved fiction writers and poets, reads from her magical new novel, The Cemetery of Untold Stories, exploring what happens to tales left unfinished.
A Williams College graduate student takes a new look at the Clark’s permanent collection, sharing their take on an object (or two).
A Clark educator will lead a tour of the permanent collection galleries to talk about the Institute's history and work.
A Clark educator will lead a tour of the permanent collection galleries to talk about the Institute's history and work.
What are the plants that tie us to our ancestors and sense of place? Brooke Bridges, Twink Williams Burns and Rebecca Guanzon share intimate stories about their relationships with the land and their ancestors.
Igor Simões (State University of Rio Grande do Sul / Clark Fellow) explores the absence of Black Brazilian artists in the international debate on art and the history of Afro-Diasporic art.
Fady Joudah, an awardwinning a Palestinian American poet, translator, essayist and physician, will read from his work.
A Clark educator will lead a tour of the permanent collection galleries to talk about the Institute's history and work.