UCL Brainfood Jan–Apr 2017

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LONDON’S GLOBAL UNIVERSITY

BRAIN FOOD Public events at UCL: January–April 2017

ucl.ac.uk/events


01 Talks 06 Family 08  Lunch Hour Lectures 13  Activities & performances 18 Exhibitions Watch or listen online youtube.com/UCLTV soundcloud.com/uclsound Read our blog blogs.ucl.ac.uk/events Read our features medium.com/ucl-antenna Subscribe to our newsletter events@ucl.ac.uk Follow on Twitter @UCLEvents

Cover image: ‘Millions of galaxies’ © NASA/JPL–Caltech

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The events listed here are just a selection of what’s on offer, and are correct at time of going to press. For more information on each event and the most up-to-date listings, please visit our online events calendar: events.ucl.ac.uk Please note: all events are free unless otherwise stated.


Hilda Petrie, © UCL Creative Media Services

Talks

events.ucl.ac.uk 01


Legacy in conversation: who was Richard Cooper Jnr?

The secret life of objects: volunteer lunchtime talk

Tue 17 Jan 1–2pm PB UCL Art Museum

Thur 26 Jan & Thur 16 Mar 1:15–1:45pm PB UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Richard Cooper Jnr was a versatile and experimental artist, highly regarded by his contemporaries, yet no thorough study of his life and work exists. At this event, art dealer Tom Edwards tells us more about the artist and his influence.

We have more than 80,000 objects at the UCL Petrie Museum. Discover more about them through a series of short talks given by our team of wonderful volunteers. The stories that you’ll hear will be animated by discussions and object handling.

college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16079

events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16069

One pot per day lunchtime talk

Undead promenade: deconstructing the High Line

Tue 17 Jan 1:15–1:45pm PB UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Join UCL Slade School of Fine Art graduate, artist Kate Keara Pelen to hear about exhibition, ‘One pot per day’. For every day of 2015, Kate produced one soft, hand-made vessel using simple crochet techniques. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16068

02  events.ucl.ac.uk

Thur 26 Jan 6:30–7:30pm UCL Bartlett School of Architecture

The High Line, an innovative promenade created on a disused elevated railway in Manhattan, New York, is one of the world’s most iconic new urban landmarks, and is being used as a model for numerous urban redevelopment plans worldwide. This talk presents ideas developed in the forthcoming book Deconstructing the High Line: Postindustrial Urbanism. urbanlaboratory@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9402


Local roots/global routes: the legacies of slavery in Hackney

Maps and mapmaking in the 19th and early 20th centuries

Sat 28 Jan 11am–1pm 609, UCL Institute of Archaeology

Wed 1 Feb 6–8pm PB UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

This talk will discuss a partnership project between UCL Legacies of British Slave-ownership and Hackney Museum and Archives that aimed to connect Hackney’s global communities with the past through a local lens, and address questions of identity, home and belonging in the present. kyle.lee-crossett.14@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 7495

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

PB = Prebook

Mapping and maps have an important role in archaeological excavations, but during the First World War in Egypt, they had a more clandestine role to play. A panel will present a variety of views as part of our Archaeology and Espionage season. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16073

Mon 30 Jan, Mon 6 Feb, Mon 13 Feb, Mon 27 Feb, Mon 6 Mar, Mon 13 Mar, Mon 20 Mar & Mon 27 Mar 6–7:30pm The Warburg Institute

Housman Lecture 2017

A series of weekly public readings, in English and Italian, aiming to introduce the beauty, complexity and continuing significance of Dante’s Divina Commedia. The readings are accompanied by commentary and a rich visual display of medieval illuminations. Presented by Alessandro Scafi (Warburg Institute), John Took (UCL Italian), and Tabitha Tuckett (UCL Library Special Collections).

UCL Greek and Latin regularly host a public lecture named in honour of its most celebrated professor (and poet) A. E. Housman and delivered by a scholar of international distinction. Professor Judith Butler (University of California, Berkeley) will discuss the kinship trouble in The Bacchae.

Wed 8 Feb 6–8pm PB Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre

d.alabaster@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 5576

t.tuckett@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2827 All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 03


Artefacts of excavation lunchtime tour

Legacy in conversation: innovation in printmaking

Thur 9 Feb 1:15–1:45pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Wed 15 Feb 1–2pm PB UCL Art Museum

Join us for a lunchtime tour of this new exhibition charting the politics of distribution of decades of British excavations between the 1880 and the 1980s. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16074

The secret life of objects: volunteer lunchtime talk Valentine’s Day special Tue 14 Feb 1:15–1:45pm PB UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Love on the Nile: join us for a Valentine’s Day special volunteer lunchtime talk, where we will be discussing love, sex and marriage in ancient Egypt. We will be bringing artefacts to life with stories, discussions and object handling. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16070

04  events.ucl.ac.uk

Learn about innovation in printmaking at the UCL Art Museum, directly from the artists. college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16081

Objects of desire Wed 22 Feb 6–8pm PB £5 UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Join Egyptologist John J.Johnston and a panel of guests as they delve into the UCL Petrie Museum’s collections to find their objects of desire. Part of LGBTQ History Month. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16075


Legacy in conversation: Liz Rideal on Rome and the Campagna Tue 28 Feb 1–2pm PB UCL Art Museum

Artist and UCL Slade School of Fine Art lecturer Liz Rideal talks about her Leverhulme research project to create images, curate period photographs and organise these into an interactive digital map of Rome and the Campagna, in relation to the Legacy exhibition (p19). college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16082

Awesome archaeologists: women in archaeology

Artefacts of excavation: ideas slam

PB = Prebook

Wed 22 Mar 6–8:30pm PB UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Join UCL Petrie Museum curator Alice Stevenson as she invites you to judge our ideas slam. Two Egyptologists will present their theories on the origins and purposes of objects in our collection. You’ll become the jury as you decide which theory you prefer, so be prepared to join in the debate and share your ideas. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16077

Wed 8 Mar 6–8pm PB £5 UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Come and celebrate the trailblazing women of archaeology. Our panel will look at the who’s who of women in archaeology, both past and present. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16076

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 05


06  events.ucl.ac.uk

© Matt Clayton

Family


PB = Prebook

Creature creations

Spy speak

Sat 14 Jan, Sat 11 Feb, Sat 11 Mar & Sat 8 Apr 1:30–4:30pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

Tue 14–Thur 16 Feb 2–4pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Create art inspired by the weird and wonderful animals in the UCL Grant Museum, or invent a brand new animal in our family art day with our museum artist.

Join in activities that will you have you cracking codes, deciphering doodles and being fluent in spy speak before the day is over!

zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052

Explore zoology Sat 28 Jan, Sat 25 Feb, Sat 25 Mar & Sat 22 Apr 1–4pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

Ever wondered how heavy an elephant tusk is? How sharp a shark’s tooth is? Or how many teeth a dolphin has? Bring along budding zoologists to be inspired by the natural world. zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052

events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Weird and wonderful wildlife Tue 14 Feb–Sat 18 Feb 1:30–4:30pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

Flying lizards, giant starfish, duck-billed platypuses, thorny devils & spiny anteaters: the UCL Grant Museum is home to weird and wonderful wildlife. Take part in hands-on, specimen-based activities and come face-to-face with these beasts! zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 07


Lunch Hour Lectures 1:15–1:55pm Tuesdays & Thursdays Darwin Lecture Theatre

Watch live ucl.ac.uk/lhl/streamed Watch online youtube.com/ucllhl Twitter @ucllhl

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© Johanna Buchler

Bring your lunch and your curiosity!


The neurobiology of beauty

Panel – spotlight on emerging research

Tue 17 Jan

Tue 24 Jan

The experience of beauty, whether derived from perceptual sources, as in visual or musical beauty, or cognitive ones, as in mathematical beauty, correlates with activity in the same part of the brain: field A1 of the medial orbito-frontal cortex. Professor Semir Zeki discusses the questions this raises about the uses of beauty.

Since 1826, UCL has championed independent thought by attracting and nurturing the world’s best minds. Join us as three of our researchers present their ideas to tackle the most pressing challenges of the 21st century.

Professor Semir Zeki UCL Division of Cell & Developmental Biology

Various speakers; facilitated by UCL Culture

The Arctic on the fast track of change

Cosmic archaeology

Thur 26 Jan

Thur 19 Jan

Telescopes may be the closest thing that we have to time machines: the farther in space we look, the earlier in the history of the universe we get to see. Dr Amelie Saintonge shows how, by observing galaxies across cosmic time, we can deduce which mechanisms are key in driving their evolution.

Nowhere else on Earth are we witnessing such dramatic changes in response to a warming climate. Join Professor Julienne Stroeve as she discusses the transforming of the Arctic Ocean, including the impact on native communities, shipping, fishing, natural resource extraction, weather patterns and sea levels across the globe.

Dr Amelie Saintonge UCL Physics & Astronomy

Professor Julienne Stroeve UCL Earth Sciences

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 09


The global reach of EU law Tue 31 Jan

Given the global reach of EU law, it may be harder for the UK to ‘take back control’ than those who favoured withdrawal from the EU might have supposed. This lecture will explore the techniques that the EU uses to extend the application of its laws to countries outside of the EU. Professor Joanne Scott UCL Faculty of Laws

Planetary economics: getting to a stable climate with a healthy economy Thur 2 Feb

Why has it been so hard to get to grips with climate change? This scientific, but also deeply moral, problem challenges our thinking: it is psychologically distant, yet caused by local actions; solutions are technological, yet politically loaded. Professor Michael Grubb will discuss why we require economic policy that transcends normal economic theories. Professor Michael Grubb UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources

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Can we ever have a crime-free world? Tue 7 Feb

Professor Kate Bowers will discuss how crime rates have dropped over the past few decades and what we need to do to keep them down. Some research on crime control challenges our assumptions about blame and responsibility, the role of the police and our own impact. Professor Kate Bowers UCL Security & Crime Science

“The youth of our middling rich”: how egalitarian were UCL’s founders? Thur 9 Feb

When the plan for a university for London was outlined by the poet Thomas Campbell in 1825 in a letter to The Times, the establishment unleashed a storm of controversy. We are proud of our radical roots, but how accurate is UCL’s self-image? Learn about our founders and their relationship with England’s establishment. Mr Colin Penman UCL Library Services


The battle within: mobilising our immune system to fight cancer

Knowledge and law: exploring landscape in the context of wind energy

Tue 21 Feb

Tue 28 Feb

For more than 100 years, scientists have tried to use the immune system to control cancer. A number of high-profile clinical trials have now finally shown this is a valid approach. Find out about the science that led to these new therapies and where this area of research is likely to take us.

Landscape is not just physical, but also filled with symbolic, social and cultural attachments. The impacts of large wind energy projects on landscapes can be enormously contentious to the communities asked to host them. This lecture will examine how the legal process for consenting ‘nationally significant’ wind farms shapes our knowledge of landscape.

Dr Sergio Quezada UCL Cancer Institute

Cooling babies to protect the brain: one of the success stories for baby care Thur 23 Feb

Cooling babies deprived of oxygen at birth improves their chances of growing up without disabilities such as cerebral palsy, blindness and epilepsy. Professor Nicola Robertson of the UCL Institute for Women’s Health will present her pioneering work with the Neonatal Neuroprotection Group on cooling therapy. Professor Nicola J Robertson UCL EGA Institute for Women’s Health

Professor Maria Lee UCL Laws

Adventures in the seventh dimension Thur 2 Mar

In seven dimensions there exist special shapes that may help us unlock the mysteries of the universe. Looking for this unique geometry is challenging, but nature holds a possible solution (specifically, bubbles and thermodynamics). Dr Jason Lotay takes us on a mathematical journey across multiple dimensions, exploring their role in art, science and popular culture. Dr Jason Lotay UCL Mathematics

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 11


Women against pit closures: women in the miners’ strike of 1984–5 Tue 7 Mar (to mark International Women’s Day)

The miners’ strike of 1984–5 was able to continue for as long as it did because of a support network run by women in mining communities. They fundraised, fed miners and their families, went on picket lines and spoke in support of the strike. Find out about their politics and their interactions with feminist supporters. Dr Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite UCL History

Swearing as a second language: should we teach ‘bad language’ to language learners? Thur 9 Mar

The language learner is often well-versed in polite phrases, but lacks the necessary guidance on how to be rude. Swearing can shock and offend, yet this powerful form is largely ignored in foreign language learning. Dr Horan will discuss swearing practices in different languages, and whether we could teach the art of swearing. Dr Geraldine Horan UCL German 12  events.ucl.ac.uk

Heads you win: tails you lose – the leadership gamble Tue 14 Mar In a volatile and uncertain world where everybody and everything is on the move, Kathryn Riley, Professor of Urban Education, asks are we getting the leaders that we need to head up our schools? Are we recruiting leaders who focus on short term results, or those who offer our youngsters a world of possibilities? Professor Kathryn Riley UCL Institute of Education

How can 21st century research on autism empower London’s teachers? Tue 16 Mar

The wealth of new knowledge that we are developing on autism tends to stay within the lab. Yet teachers are the most important people working with children who have autism. Dr Mintz will explore how this research can be made accessible, discussing current practices and how two London schools have tried out an innovative approach. Dr Joseph Mintz UCL Institute of Education


Š Guinevere Poncia

Activities & performances

events.ucl.ac.uk 13


Dead, life drawing Thur 12 Jan, Thur 23 Feb, Thur 16 Mar & Thur 27 Apr 6:30–9pm PB £8 UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

With our cabinets full of (not so alive) life models from across the animal kingdom, in some remarkable poses: come and join us for a lively evening of drawing. The price of the ticket includes wine and all materials will be provided. zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16063

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: piano Tue 17 Jan 5:30–6:30pm Haldane Room

A concert of piano music, showcasing the talents of pianist members of the UCL Chamber Music Club. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

14 ​ events.ucl.ac.uk

In the dark x Grant Musuem of Zoology Tue 24 Jan 7–9pm PB £8 UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

‘In the dark x Grant Museum of Zoology’ is a year-long collaboration celebrating the natural world through sound. Join us for an evening of audio cinema as we explore the sounds of ponds with Helen Greaves (UCL Geography) and sound artist Action Pyramid. zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16067

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: baroque Thur 26 Jan 5:30–6:30pm Haldane Room

A programme of baroque music, including music for recorder. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic


Sophocles’s Antigone Wed 1–Fri 3 Feb 7:30–10pm & 2:30–5pm PB £10 Shaw Theatre

UCL Greek and Latin and the UCL Bloomsbury Theatre present an amateur production of Sophocles’s Antigone. This play explores the struggle between state and familial responsibility. Obligations to the state and to traditional religious practice are strained, in a dedicated attempt by Antigone to transgress the traditional gender values by which she is bound. t.mackenzie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 8792

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: new performers Thur 2 Feb 5:30–6:30pm Haldane Room

New performers’ concert: an opportunity to hear up-and-coming talent from the UCL Chamber Music Club. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: American experimental

PB = Prebook

Fri 10 Feb 1:10–1:55pm Haldane Room

A lunchtime concert of American experimental music, including a performance of Terry Riley’s minimalist classic In C. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

Valentine’s at the Grant Museum of Zoology Tue 14 Feb 6:30–9pm PB £6 UCL Grant Museum of Zoology

Birds do it, bees do it, even educated fleas do it: so where better to do it yourself than with us? Whether you’re looking for love, or seeking to impress your Valentine date, join us for this Valentine’s-themed late opening. zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052

All events are free unless otherwise stated

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Voicing the past – an enactment of Petrie’s war lectures

UCL Art Museum Film Club: The Draughtman’s Contract

Wed 15 Feb 6–8pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Tue 21 Feb 6:30–8:30pm PB £2 UCL Art Museum

Join us as we take you back 100 years and re-enact some of the lectures that Petrie gave during the First World War. Come dressed up and join in the war effort by knitting some socks for our boys. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: Zoltán Kodály Mon 20 Feb 5:30–6:30pm Haldane Room

“Music should belong to everyone”: this concert will present a musical portrait of the Hungarian composer and pedagogue Zoltán Kodály on the 50th anniversary of his death. It will include chamber music for string and vocal ensembles, and extracts from his educational work. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

Join us for a screening of Peter Greenaway’s disquieting interpretation of an artist’s relationship to his patrons on the eve of the 18th century. The film will be introduced in the context of the ‘Legacy’ exhibition (p19) and Richard Cooper Jnr’s landscape drawings. college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16083

Your Universe 2017 Thur 2–Sat 4 Mar Various times UCL Main Campus

Come to UCL’s 12th festival of astronomy and particle physics, featuring lectures, panel discussions, live demonstrations and telescopes looking at the Sun, Venus, the Moon and Jupiter (weather permitting). Our 2017 theme is ‘Giant worlds and their moons’: a celebration of remote exploration and astonishing discoveries, showing our solar system as never before. f.diego@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0) 79749 17878 ucl.ac.uk/youruniverse

16  events.ucl.ac.uk


UCL Chamber Music Club concert: Stabat Mater

UCL Art Museum Film Club: A Room with a View

Fri 3 Mar 1:10–1:55pm Haldane Room

Tue 21 Mar 6:30–8:30pm PB £2 UCL Art Museum

A concert centred on a performance of Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater, scored for soprano, alto, strings and basso continuo.

Join us for a screening of James Ivory’s lavish vision of the Grand Tour with an introduction contextualising the importance of European travel in the work of Richard Cooper Jnr and the ‘Legacy’ exhibition (p19).

j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: ensembles

PB = Prebook

college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16084

Tue 14 Mar 5:30–6:30pm Haldane Room

A concert showcasing ensembles formed by the UCL student, staff and alumni members of this year’s UCL Chamber Music Club. j.house@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104764 ucl.ac.uk/chambermusic

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 17


Exhibitions

Watch live ucl.ac.uk/lhl/streamed Watch online youtube.com/ucllhl

18  events.ucl.ac.uk

© UCL Library Services

Twitter @ucllhl


Cabinets of consequence Wed 1 Jun 2016–Fri 21 April 2017 9am–7pm Octagon Gallery

This exhibition explores the interplay between human, animal, environmental and technological activity, within the context of ecological change – drawing upon UCL’s research and collections to trace the multiple effects of everyday materials and artefacts. Produced by the UCL Public & Cultural Engagement Unit and designed by artists Helena Hunter and Mark Peter Wright. sussanah.chan@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3163

Legacy: an exhibition of prints, drawings and artist albums by Richard Cooper Jnr Mon 9 Jan–Fri 14 Mar 1–5pm (Mon–Fri) UCL Art Museum

Richard Cooper Jnr was a versatile and experimental artist, highly regarded by his contemporaries, yet no thorough study of his life and work exists. Our exhibition ‘Legacy’ addresses this by bringing together his innovative prints and drawings, including albums compiled by the artist himself. college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000

All events are free unless otherwise stated

events.ucl.ac.uk 19


Artefacts of excavation Tue 31 Jan–Sat 29 Apr 1–5pm (Tue–Sat) UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology

Join us for a launch of a new exhibition that charts the politics of distribution of British excavations from Egypt between the 1880s and the 1980s. events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138

East side stories: Londoners in transition Mon 30 Jan–Fri 15 Dec 9:30am–5pm (Mon–Fri) UCL Main Library

East London has a long and fascinating history of regeneration and change. This exhibition provides snapshots of everyday lives as the metropolis expanded and new communities emerged over the centuries. Touching on education, trade, leisure and health, ‘East side stories’ draws on the collections and archives held by UCL Library Services. k.cheney@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 4306

20  events.ucl.ac.uk

Pop-up exhibition: printing innovation at UCL Wed 1 Feb 1–5pm PB UCL Art Museum

UCL Art Museum’s volunteers have put together a pop-up exhibition of highlights from the collection with a focus on printing innovation at the UCL Slade School of Fine Art. Brought to you by UCL Culture and the UCL Slade School Fine of Art. college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 1000 ucl.ac.uk/event-ticketing/ booking?ev=16080


Diary Wed 1 Jun 2016 –Fri 21 April 2017

9am–7pm

Cabinets of consequence

p19

Mon 9 Jan –Fri 14 Mar

1–5pm (Mon–Fri)

Legacy: an exhibition of prints, drawings and artist albums by Richard Cooper Jnr

p19

Thur 12 Jan

6:30–9pm

Dead, life drawing

p14

Sat 14 Jan

1:30–4:30pm

Creature creations

p07

Tue 17 Jan

1–2pm

Legacy in conversation: who was Richard Cooper Jnr?

p02

Tue 17 Jan

1:15–1:45pm

One Pot Per Day lunchtime talk

p02

Tue 17 Jan

1:15–1:55pm

The neurobiology of beauty

p09

Tue 17 Jan

5:30–6:30pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: piano

p14

Thur 19 Jan

1:15–1:55pm

Cosmic archaeology

p09

Tue 24 Jan

1:15–1:55pm

Panel – spotlight on emerging research

p09

Tue 24 Jan

7–9pm

In the dark x Grant Musuem of Zoology

p14

Thur 26 Jan

1:15–1:45pm

The secret life of objects: volunteer lunchtime talk

p02

Thur 26 Jan

1:15–1:55pm

The Arctic on the fast track of change

p09

Thur 26 Jan

5:30–6:30pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: baroque

p14

Thur 26 Jan

6:30–7:30pm

Undead promenade: deconstructing the High Line

p02

Sat 28 Jan

11am–1pm

Local roots/global routes: the legacies of slavery in Hackney

p03

Sat 28 Jan

1–4pm

Explore zoology

p07

Mon 30 Jan –Fri 15 Dec

9:30am–5pm (Mon–Fri)

East side stories: Londoners in transition

p20

Mon 30 Jan

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 31 Jan – Sat 29 Apr

1–5pm (Tue–Sat)

Artefacts of excavation

p20

Tue 31 Jan

1:15–1:55pm

The global reach of EU law

p10

Wed 1 Feb

1–5pm

Pop-up exhibition: printing innovation at UCL

p20

Wed 1 Feb

6–8pm

Maps and mapmaking in the 19th and early 20th centuries

p03

Wed 1 –Fri 3 Feb

7:30–10pm & 2:30–5pm

Sophocles’ Antigone

p15

Thur 2 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

Planetary economics: getting to a stable climate with a healthy economy

p10

Thur 2 Feb

5:30–6:30pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: new performers

p15

Mon 6 Feb

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 7 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

Can we ever have a crime-free world?

p10

Wed 8 Feb

6–8pm

Housman Lecture 2017

p03

Thur 9 Feb

1:15–1:45pm

Artefacts of excavation lunchtime tour

p04

events.ucl.ac.uk 21


Diary Thur 9 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

“The youth of our middling rich”: how egalitarian were UCL’s founders?

p10

Fri 10 Feb

1:10–1:55pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: American experimental

p15

Sat 11 Feb

1:30–4:30pm

Creature creations

p07

Mon 13 Feb

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 14 Feb

1:15–1:45pm

The secret life of objects: volunteer lunchtime talk Valentine’s Day special

p04

Tue 14 –Sat 18 Feb

1:30–4:30pm

Weird and wonderful wildlife

p07

Spy speak

p07

Tue 14 2–4pm –Thur 16 Feb Tue 14 Feb

6:30–9pm

Valentine’s at the Grant Museum of Zoology

p15

Wed 15 Feb

1–2pm

Legacy in conversation: innovation in printmaking

p04

Wed 15 Feb

6–8pm

Voicing the past – an enactment of Petrie’s war lectures

p16

Mon 20 Feb

5:30–6:30pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: Zoltán Kodály

p16

Tue 21 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

The battle within: mobilising our immune system to fight cancer

p11

Tue 21 Feb

6:30–8:30pm

UCL Art Museum Film Club: The Draughtman’s Contract

p16

Wed 22 Feb

6–8pm

Objects of desire

p04

Thur 23 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

Cooling babies to protect the brain: one of the success stories for baby care

p11

Thur 23 Feb

6:30–9pm

Dead, life drawing

p14

Sat 25 Feb

1–4pm

Explore zoology

p07

Mon 27 Feb

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 28 Feb

1–2pm

Legacy in conversation: Liz Rideal on Rome and the Campagna

p05

Tue 28 Feb

1:15–1:55pm

Knowledge and law: exploring landscape in the context of wind energy

p11

Thur 2 –Sat 4 Mar

Various times

Your Universe 2017

p16

Thur 2 Mar

1:15–1:55pm

Adventures in the seventh dimension

p11

Fri 3 Mar

1:10 –1:55pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: Stabat Mater

p17

Mon 6 Mar

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 7 Mar

1:15–1:55pm

Women against pit closures: women in the miners’ strike of 1984–5 (to mark International Women’s Day)

p12

Wed 8 Mar

6–8pm

Awesome archaeologists: women in archaeology

p05

Thur 9 Mar

1:15–1:55pm

Swearing as a second language: should we teach ‘bad language’ to language learners?

p12

Sat 11 Mar

1:30–4:30pm

Creature creations

p07

22  events.ucl.ac.uk


Mon 13 Mar

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 14 Mar

1:15–1:55pm

Heads you win: tails you lose – the leadership gamble

p12

Tue 14 Mar

5:30–6:30pm

UCL Chamber Music Club concert: ensembles

p17

Tue 16 Mar

1:15–1:45pm

The secret life of objects: volunteer lunchtime talk

p02

Tue 16 Mar

1:15–1:55pm

How can 21st century research on autism empower London’s teachers?

p12

Thur 16 Mar

6:30–9pm

Dead, life drawing

p14

Mon 20 Mar

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Tue 21 Mar

6:30–8:30pm

UCL Art Museum Film Club: A Room with a View

p17

Wed 22 Mar

6–8:30pm

Artefacts of excavation: ideas slam

p05

Sat 25 Mar

1–4pm

Explore zoology

p07

Mon 27 Mar

6–7:30pm

On the peak of darkness: from the abyss to the light

p03

Sat 8 Apr

1:30–4:30pm

Creature creations

p07

Sat 22 Apr

1–4pm

Explore zoology

p07

Thur 27 Apr

6:30–9pm

Dead, life drawing

p14

events.ucl.ac.uk 23


Contacts 01     UCL main

campus Gower Street London WC1E 6BT +44 (0)20 7679 2000 ucl.ac.uk

02     UCL Institute

of Archeology 31–34 Gordon Square London WC1H 0PY +44 (0) 20 7679 7495 03     UCL Art

Museum South Cloisters, Wilkins Building, Gower Street London WC1E 6BT Mon–Fri, 1–5pm college.art@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 2540 ucl.ac.uk/museums/uclart 04     UCL Bartlett

School of Architecture 22 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0QB architecture@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 9646 05     Darwin Lecture

Theatre Darwin Building (accessed via Malet Place) London WC1E 6BT Tuesday and Thursdays 1:15–1:55pm events@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 3840 ucl.ac.uk/lhl 24  events.ucl.ac.uk

06     Gustave Tuck

Lecture Theatre Wilkins Building Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT 07     Haldane

Room Wilkins Building Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT jhouse@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)7903 104 764 08     UCL Grant

Museum of Zoology Rockefeller Building 21 University Street London WC1E 6DE Mon–Sat, 1–5pm zoology.museum@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 3108 2052 ucl.ac.uk/museums/zoology 09     Octagon

Gallery Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT sussanah.chan@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3163 10     UCL Petrie Museum

of Egyptian Archaeology Malet Place, London WC1E 6BT Tues–Sat, 1–5pm events.petrie@ucl.ac.uk +44 (0)20 7679 4138 ucl.ac.uk/museums/petrie

11     Shaw

Theatre 100-110 Euston Road London NW1 2AJ +44 (0)20 7666 9037 info@shaw-theatre.com 12     The Warburg

Institute Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB +44 (0)20 7862 8949 warburg.sas.ac.uk


Map

11 Euston Square

Euston

P

GOW ER

PLACE

G 04

02

06

08

TAVITON STREET

Bloomsbury Theatre

GORDON GORDON STREET

03

UCL Main Library

South Cloisters

GOWER STREET

Octagon 09 Gallery

ST E T

Wilkins

01

T

07

North Cloisters

Y

STREET

GOWER CT

E

E

SQUARE

WOB URN

12

SQUARE

TORRINGTON PLACE

BYNG PLACE

WOBURN SQUARE

GORDON

05

MALET PLACE

GOWER

Darwin

CHENIES MEWS

GORD

Anatomy

10

events.ucl.ac.uk 25


Getting to UCL By tube

Underground stations near UCL’s main campus: Euston Square (Circle, Metropolitan, Hammersmith & City Lines) Goodge Street (Northern Line) Warren Street (Northern and Victoria Lines)

Accessibility

UCL aims to make all its events accessible. If you require any information about any accessibility requirements, please contact UCL Disability Services on: +44 (0)20 7679 0100 disability@ucl.ac.uk

By rail

Mainline railway stations near UCL’s main campus: Euston, King’s Cross and St Pancras International

By bus

Buses serving Gower Street: 134, 390, 10, 73, 24, 29, 14

By car

The Bloomsbury area has metered parking and visitors are strongly advised not to travel to UCL by car.

Produced by:

COMMUNICATIONS & MARKETING

26  events.ucl.ac.uk

University College London Gower Street London WC1E 6BT +44 (0)20 7679 2000 For further information about any of our events, please visit our website:

ucl.ac.uk/events


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