Seandálaíocht - Irish for Archaeology
 
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The CFP for the annual AYIA conference 2010 has just been announced by the organisers in Cork. My first conference presentation was at the AYIA conference in 2004 and I was one of the organisers of the 2007 conference, as well as an editor of the proceedings.

Its highly recomended for anybody starting out on their research careers who wants to present in a professional but relaxed atmosphere. And its usually good craic as well!
 
 
I came across this on the Irish Art blog just now. I had been aware that there was an artist-in-residence at WAC-6 last year and wondered what would come out of it. And this tripartite piece of angular sculpture is it.
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Photo via Irish Art Blog
I'm not too sure what the relationship really is between Art and Archaeology although there must of course be some. Archaeology has a relationship with pretty much everything done by people but, considering its strong art-historical roots, art theory would seem obviously linked to archaeological theory.

I am by no means qualified or interested enough to comment on such things but the UCD Scholarcast Series does have some interesting discussions including a great piece by Blaze O'Connor on the archaeological excavation of Francis Bacon's studio.

As to the aesthetics of the sculpture, as with most of the art on the UCD campus I am ambivalent at best. Its not offensive in the slightest (though it might be if I knew how much it cost) but I'm not sure it inspires me or even gets a reaction which is how I personally judge a piece of art.

There is an interesting video below of the installation of the sculpture with a commentary by the artist that may or may not leave the meaning of the piece clearer in your mind.

 
 

We have recently launched the TAT t-shirt shop here. Having been to many conferences where you could take away a little memory to wear on site, to the pub or wherever else you enjoy being gently derided for your geeky fashion sense, we thought it might be nice to do the same for TAT.

We thought about having the t-shirts on sale during the conference but we simply didn't have the money to buy in a load of them on the off-chance they would sell. The alternative was an excellent site called Zazzle.com that allows participants (and anyone else) who want a t-shirt before or after the conference to order theirs in whatever size, shape or colour they prefer.

The organisers and volunteers will be sporting their own snazzy designs during the three-day event. We'll see how often they're worn after that...


 
 

The TAT programme has now been confirmed and launched. Preparations are well under way with the next phase being selection of chairs for the various sessions.

We are also working on putting together a decent social schedule to make sure people learn about more than just material culture when they come to Dublin!

Download the programme here and remember to log on to the TAT website and register asap.


 
 

My review of the 2009 World of Iron Conference, written in haste and at short notice has just appeared in HMS News:

Dolan, B. 2009 World of Iron Conference 2009 HMS News 71, 5-6.


 
 

At the moment I am heavily involved, along with my colleagues Emmett O'Keeffe and Terry O'Hagan in the organisation of TAT 2009. TAT, or to give it its full title Thinking About Things: Interdisciplinary Futures in Material Culture, was a response by the three of us to a call for proposals for conference funding from the UCD Graduate School of Arts and Celtic Studies. All three of us being perennial volunteers and always looking for something to distract attention from actual PhD work, we were immediately on the look out for some ideas.

With a little help along the way from Dr. Graeme Warren and Dr. Jo Bruck we realised there was an existing college research strand on material culture. A subject central to archaeology but also lots of other disciplines. We decided to go with it, making it a truly inter-disciplinary effort (I don't think the website even mentions archaeology).

Preparations are well under way and in fact we are meeting to go through the submitted abstracts tomorrow. Its a big job because we have received about double the number we expected, from all across Europe and America. Hopefully the programme will be up soon. In the meantime make sure you register and come to Dublin from the 5th to the 7th May 2009!