Skip to main content
Portraiture, Enslavement, and Locating Black Women

In this talk, Jennifer L. Morgan shares her efforts to understand the woman painted holding a clock in Bologna in 1585. The talk engages both with scholarship on Art History, the Early Modern Black Atlantic world, and the provocation of critical fabulation.

Presented by: Faculty of Arts & Science
Black History Month
Social & Fun
event title

In this talk, Jennifer L. Morgan shares her efforts to understand the woman painted holding a clock in Bologna in 1585. The talk engages both with scholarship on Art History, the Early Modern Black Atlantic world, and the provocation of critical fabulation.

Jennifer L. Morgan is Professor at the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis and Department of History, New York University.

The lecture will be followed by a reception at 5:30 PM ET at the Faculty Club, Main Lounge, 41 Willcocks St, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3.


Have questions about this event?

Contact Department of History, Executive Assistant to the Chair at history.ea@utoronto.ca

Photo of Eddie Lartey.

This event is part of

Black History Month 

Join us in celebrating the change makers of African descent who shaped the fabric of Canadian society and beyond this Black History Month.

Three alumni smiling together at Canada's Wonderland.

This event is part of

Social & Fun 

Reap the benefits of U of T’s incredible network as you play, learn, and build your career with your fellow alumni.

Close