brain food april – august 2013

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www.ucl.ac.uk/events Brain Food Public Events at UCL: April – August 2013 LONDON’S GLOBAL UNIVERSITY

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UCL's public events for summer term 2013, featuring lectures, exhibitions, film screenings, workshops, concerts and festivals.

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Page 1: Brain Food April – August 2013

www.ucl.ac.uk/events

Brain FoodPublic Events at UCL: April – August 2013

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Page 2: Brain Food April – August 2013

Welcome to UCL’s public events leaflet, showcasing a range of public talks, lectures, exhibitions, workshops, film screenings and performances taking place at the university throughout summer 2013.

Take advantage of the warmer summer days and join us for a walking tour of Egyptological Bloomsbury (p9) or head down to the Museum of London for our Lunch Hour Lectures on Tour, taking place every Tuesday in June (p10). There’s also the opportunity to visit the annual UCL Slade School of Fine Art degree shows (p18-19), featuring work by top up and coming artists.

The events listed here are only a selection of what’s on offer; for more information on each event or for a full listing, please visit our online events calendar:

www.ucl.ac.uk/events

Cover image: Slade School of Fine Art MA/MFA degree show Everyday pattern 7-W1W 6DN Kitchen (detail) Minkyung Kim, 2012 www.minkyungkim.com

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Talks 02

Events diary 22

Lunch Hour Lectures 10

Activities 07

Performances 12

Venues/Maps 24

Exhibitions 16

Please note: all events are free and open to all, unless otherwise stated.

Watch onlinewww.youtube.com/UCLTVhttp://itunes.ucl.ac.uk

Read our blog http://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/events Subscribe to our newsletter [email protected]

Follow on Twitter @UCLEvents

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on Tour

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Talks Lectures Discussions

Holding the peace since the Korean War? The Armistice at 60

To mark the 60th anniversary of the Korean Armistice, Professor Bruce Cumings, distinguished scholar of the Korean War, assesses the significance of the conflict and its historical legacy for the global system and today’s Asia.Wed 24 April | 3.30–5pm UCL Institute of the Americas, Room 103 Pre-booking essential Followed by a drinks reception [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 9721

Book launch: Urban Encounters: Affirmative Action and Black Identities in Brazil

The issue of racial identity and equality in contemporary Brazil will be explored in the launch of this book by Dr André Cicalo with the participation of Professor Denise Ferreira da Silva (Queen Mary, University of London) and Dr David Lehmann (University of Cambridge) as discussants.Mon 22 April | 5.30–7.30pm UCL Institute of the Americas, Room 103 Pre-booking essential [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 9721

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Rio de Janeiro, 22 April

Affirmative action in Brazilian universities: ethnography of a social movement

In 2012, Brazil permitted the establishment of quotas for black, low-income and indigenous students in its federal universities. We will present an account of the ‘quotas movement’ based on interviews and other sources collected over a two-year period in numerous Brazilian areas. Mon 29 April | 5.30–8pm UCL Institute of the Americas, Room 103 Pre-booking recommended Followed by a drinks reception. [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 9721

2013 Barlow Memorial Lecture: Energy – 2050 Pathways

How easy is it to kick our fossil fuel habit? How does our current energy consumption compare with our sustainable energy options? Professor David MacKay FRS (Chief Scientific Advisor, Department of Energy & Climate Change) will offer a straight-talking assessment of the numbers.Thurs 25 April | 2.30–6.30pm Pre-booking essential Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre North and South Cloisters (poster exhibition) http://uclbarlowlecture2013.eventbrite.co.uk +44 (0)20 7679 3976

The US deficit habit: what are its causes and what lessons does history offer for breaking it

This lecture looks at why the US has a deficit habit, why it has failed to achieve prolonged fiscal responsibility, despite the pledges of successive presidents and Congresses, and what contemporary policymakers can learn from the past in the quest for balanced budgets.Tues 30 April | 6.30–8pm UCL Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 9721

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Talks/Lectures/Discussions

Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration – in conversation

The Slade/UCL Art Museum collaboration artists talk about their influences and the people who have been instrumental in helping them shape their practice. See exhibition on p16.Tues 14, 21 & 28 May, 4 June | 1–2pm UCL Art Museum [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2541

Flaxman Exchange lecture

Artist Marcia Farquhar reflects on the creation and the legacy of the Flaxman Exchange project, UCL Art Museum’s inaugural Flaxman Gallery artist commission. Wed 8 May | 6.30–8.30pm Chadwick Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2541

The theatre that moved the soul: understanding the power of ancient Greek drama through modern cognitive science

Can neuroscientific studies and modern cognitive theories be applied to the ancient Athenian brain? In this illustrated talk incorporating live demonstrations, Professor Peter Meineck will suggest a new method for approaching ancient drama.Wed 8 May | 6–7pm Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 7522

Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly

Students from Central St Martin’s University of Arts London, working in response to the Petrie Collection, present their work at the opening of this exhibition with drinks. Doors open at 6pm; the event starts at 6.30pm.Thurs 16 May | 6–8.30pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

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The flea circus – the smallest show on Earth, 5 June

Community-based maternal and newborn care

Community-based strategies to improve maternal and newborn health are receiving policy attention, yet sometimes the evidence is grouped as if all community-based strategies were the same. What does the latest evidence show (or not show) and what is actually being scaled up?Tues 21 May | 5.15–6.30pm John Snow Lecture Theatre, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT Pre-booking essential [email protected] +44 (0)20 7905 2352

Rick Battarbee Lecture Series – Trophic dynamics and biodiversity in freshwaters

This lecture will be given by Professor Erik Jeppesen (Aarhus University, Denmark), who specialises in lake restoration and re-establishment, ecosystem modelling, biomanipulation, palaeoecology and biological interactions with nutrient dynamics and climate in lakes. Thurs 30 May | 5–7pm G22 Lecture Theatre, Pearson Building [email protected] +44 (0)20 7670 0558

The flea circus – the smallest show on Earth

Fleas pulling chariots and duelling with perfectly crafted, miniature swords. Don’t believe it? Well roll-up, roll-up and let Tim Cockerill, zoologist/sideshow performer persuade you how the spectacle of the flea circus amazed audiences. Join us afterwards for a free drinks reception at the Grant Museum of Zoology. Wed 5 June | 6.30–8.30pm JZ Young Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

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Talks/Lectures/Discussions

Show ‘n’ tell

We have invited the people who work and research here at UCL to showcase an object from the Grant Museum’s collection and tell you what they know about it. Join us at our first show ‘n’ tell where Dr Brendan Clarke (UCL Science & Technology Studies) will be presenting our fascinating wax model collection.Tues 18 July | 1–2pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

The art of reading: drop-in and read with researchers at UCL Art Museum

Where do researchers find their inspiration? How can lines of text, a conversation, a sound or a cultural phenomenon spark years of research? UCL researchers, lecturers and PhD candidates curate a series of drop-in reading groups in UCL Art Museum. Part of the UCL Festival of the Arts.Fri 11–Sun 13 June | 1–10pm UCL Art Museum [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2541

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Activities Workshops Family events

It’s elemental! UCL Museums treasure hunt

Hunt for objects related to the four elements in UCL Museums and win prizes for solving and collecting all the elements and locating every artefact required from art, geology, Egyptian archaeology and zoology. Followed by a free drinks reception and a private view of the Grant Museum of Zoology. Fri 17 May | 6.30–8.30pm | activity Chadwick Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

The UCL Festival of the Arts

This celebration of the huge variety of research based at UCL will include debates, exhibitions, film screenings, lectures and poetry plus ‘Something Else for the Weekend’ – three days of participatory, hands-on activities. Contributors include both current academics and alumni who have gone on to excel in their own fields.Tues 7–Fri 17 May | all day | activities Various venues, UCL Pre-booking recommended, prices vary www.ucl.ac.uk/festival-of-the-arts +44 (0)20 7679 1350

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Activities/Workshops/Family events

Midsummer rites: Timekeeper in residence

Mark the turn of the year with seasonal rites in the Wilkins Roof Garden in celebration of the temporary Timekeeper installation in the Petrie Museum. Sat 22 June | 12–4pm | drop-in activity Wilkins Roof Garden [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Status, luxury and celebrity – ancient Egypt through a night of perfume exploration

Take a trip back to ancient Egypt with fragrance expert Odette Toilette and find out how the pharaohs influenced perfumery and glassware in later centuries, and which incense Queen Hatshepsut was so keen on importing.Thurs 23 May | 6–8pm | activity UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Pre-booking essential [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Incredible invertebrates

This half-term, the Grant Museum will be celebrating the wonderful world of invertebrates. Come face-to-face with some of our deadly scorpions, beautiful octopi and incredible sea mice. Join us for some fun hands-on, specimen-based activities, including designing your very own insect. Mon 27 May–Sat 1 June | 1–5pm | activity UCL Grant Museum of Zoology [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

Life and death drawing

This workshop questions how the nature of the model affects the practice of drawing and the understanding of drawing itself. Join Dr Chiara Ambrosio (Lecturer in History and Philosophy of Science) to practise your drawing skills using a life model, anatomical models and other works of art.Sun 18 May | 6–9pm | workshop UCL Art Museum [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2541

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Petrie’s set: a walking tour of Egyptological Bloomsbury

Join Egyptologist John J. Johnston as he takes you around the regular haunts of Professor Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie and shares tales of the Egyptologists who lived and worked in Bloomsbury between 1882 and 1933. Sat 6 July | 12–2pm | walk UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Pre-booking essential [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

London in slow motion – a walking tour: Timekeeper in residence

Petrie’s Timekeeper Cathy Haynes joins alternative tour guide Rosie Oliver (Dotmaker Tours) for a special version of her tour of ‘London in slow motion’, looking for pockets of the city where time flows to a different beat. Meet at the red postbox by the taxi rank outside Charing Cross station.Sat 13 July | 11am–1pm | walk The Strand, London WC2 5HS Pre-booking essential [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Midsummer rites, 22 June

UCL Open Day

An opportunity to visit the campus and attend subject talks and general presentations. This event is primarily for Year 12 students about to make UCAS decisions. Thurs 27 June |10am–4pm UCL main campus Pre-booking essential [email protected] www.ucl.ac.uk/openday

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Lunch Hour Lectures on Tour at the Museum of London

Each Tuesday in June 2013, UCL’s free, public Lunch Hour Lectures will take up residence at the Museum of London.1.15–1.55pm, no need to book.Places are on a first-come, first-served basis. Please arrive by 1pm to avoid [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 3839Museum of London and Museum of London DocklandsWatch online www.youtube.com/ucllhlWatch live www.ucl.ac.uk/lhl/streamed

www.ucl.ac.uk/lhl

Dinosaurs in Crystal Palace ParkProfessor Joe Cain, UCL Science & Technology Studies

The famous ‘monsters’ in Crystal Palace have been on display since the park opened in 1854. These are the first-ever life-sized, three-dimensional sculptures of dinosaurs and other prehistoric beasts, but there is a lot more to them than meets the eye. Discover the ideas behind them with science historian Professor Cain.Tues 4 June | 1.15–1.55pm The Weston Theatre, Museum of London 150 London Wall, EC2Y 5HN

Britain and the legacies of slaveryProfessor Catherine Hall, UCL History

After abolition, Britons were keen to overlook slavery and emphasise the memory of emancipation. But Britain and Britons benefited in multiple ways from slavery. By focusing on the role of the many slave-owners who lived here, should our history be reconsidered to take slavery into full account? Tues 11 June | 1.15–1.55pm The Wilberforce Theatre, Museum of London Docklands West India Quay, London E14 4AL

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Plague bones: how London’s Black Death became a tropical diseaseDr Carole Reeves, UCL History of Medicine

At its height, the Black Death claimed the lives of 7,000 Londoners every week. The Museum of London excavated a plague cemetery in the 1980s, but it was not until 2011 that technology revealed the true identity of the disease. UCL researchers are examining similar burial grounds to prove that another ‘English’ pestilence – marsh fever – was actually malaria. Tues 18 June | 1.15–1.55pm The Weston Theatre, Museum of London 150 London Wall, EC2Y 5HN

Hidden no longer: community history-making in London Dr Andrew Flinn, UCL Information Studies

Over the past 50 years many independent projects have attempted to tell London’s hidden histories. This talk will examine the origins and motivations behind community history-making, some of the changes and controversies that have occurred and how mainstream history may be challenged in the digital age.Tues 25 June | 1.15–1.55pm The Wilberforce Theatre, Museum of London Docklands West India Quay, London E14 4AL

Hackney Peace Carnival Mural, Ray Walker

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Performances Film screeningsMusic

UCL Chamber Music Club concert

The concert will feature works for viola and piano by Richard Rodney Bennett and Robert Keeley, together with Ravel’s Sonatine for piano, and songs by Vaughan Williams, Finzi and Warlock.Tues 30 April | 5.30–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764

Land of the Pharaohs (1955)

Starring Jack Hawkins as the builder of the Great Pyramid and Joan Collins as his decadently ambitious young wife, this classic slice of Hollywood kitsch is a fascinating attempt by Nobel Prize-winner William Faulkner to breathe new life into the genre. Introduced by John J. Johnston.Wed 17 April | 6–9pm | film screening Pre-booking essential UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

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Antiquity in silent cinema

A late afternoon and evening screening of two rarely-seen, yet remarkable, silent feature films brought over especially from the archives of the Netherlands Film Institute, with piano accompaniment.

5–6pm: The Odyssey 7–9.15pm: Julius CaesarFri 3 May | 5–9.15pm | film screening UCL Bloomsbury Theatre Pre-booking recommended http://antiquityinsilentcinema.eventbrite.co.uk +44 (0)20 7679 7522

Bright Club: Reading

As part of the ‘Something Else for the Weekend’ section of the UCL Festival of the Arts, UCL researchers become stand-up comedians for one night only. Join us for a night all about reading: from books and art, to reading bodies and cities.Thurs 9 May | 7.30–10pm UCL Bloomsbury Theatre Pre-booking essential £8 (plus booking fee) www.brightclub.org +44 (0)20 3108 1198

Quatermass and the Pit (1967) on the big screen

Deep beneath the streets of London, a construction team discovers ancient human remains alongside a missile of unknown origin, revealing more horror than the mind can bear. Hosted by Professor Joe Cain (UCL Science & Technology Studies) and followed by a free drinks reception at the UCL Grant Museum. Thurs 2 May | 6.30–9pm | film screening JZ Young Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

Antiquity in silent cinema, 3 May

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The Gorgon (1964)

Ancient evil and early 20th-century science collide as Peter Cushing battles both Christopher Lee’s archaeology professor and the baleful gaze of the Gorgon herself. Join us for this screening marking the 100th anniversary of Cushing’s birth and introduced by John J. Johnston (UCL Institute of Archaeology).Thurs 9 May | 6–8.30pm | film screening UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Focus on the positive

The world is full of problems, but it’s also full of brilliant people, chipping away at those problems with their ideas and expertise. With the help of the host, a professional stand-up comedian, you, the audience, can decide which of those ideas to fund.Thurs 23 May | 7–9.30pm The Phoenix, 37 Cavendish Square, London W1G 0PP Pre-booking recommended, £5 full/£3 concession http://is.gd/focusmarch +44 (0)20 3108 1198

UCL Chamber Music Club concert

Following its AGM, the club’s 61st season finishes with a concert featuring extravagantly scored works by Mozart and Salieri, with guest conductor Chris Petrie from the Royal Academy of Music. Refreshments will be served after the concert.Tues 4 June | 5–6.30pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764

UCL Chamber Music Club concert

The Chamber Music Club Choir will present a range of a cappella works, including Elizabethan madrigals, excerpts from William Byrd’s four-part Mass and present-day repertoire.Fri 31 May | 1.10–1.55pm Haldane Room www.ucl.ac.uk/chamber-music +44 (0)7903 104764

Performances/Film screenings/Music

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London Student Drama Festival

The inaugural London Student Drama Festival celebrates the creative theatrical talent across London universities. The night will consist of plays from UCL, King’s, SOAS and LSE that are between 30–40 minutes in length and written, directed, produced and performed by students from their respective universities. Wed 19 June | 7–10pm Pre-booking recommended £12/ £10 student concession UCL Bloomsbury Theatre www.thebloomsbury.com +44 (0)7792 001891

The Killer Shrews (1959) on the big screen

Working on a remote island, Dr Radford Baines attempts to solve world hunger by shrinking people to half the size. His work has sinister consequences, as visitors to the island discover. Hosted by Professor Joe Cain (UCL Science & Technology Studies) and followed by a free drinks reception in the UCL Grant Museum of Zoology.Tues 4 July | 6.30–9pm | film screening JZ Young Lecture Theatre [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

Open City Docs Fest, 20–23 June

Open City Docs Fest

London’s documentary film festival with filmmaker Q&As, panel discussions, live scores, theatre, guided documentary walks, live music and workshops for industry, students and the public. The awards jury will be chaired by Jeremy Irons (actor and producer, Trashed) and featuring Professor Malcolm Grant (UCL President & Provost) and Anne Applebaum (Pulitzer Prize-winning author).Thurs 20–Sun 23 June | 12–11pm UCL campus Pre-booking recommended, price tbc www.opencitydocsfest.com +44 (0)20 7679 4907

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Exhibitions Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration exhibition

The fifth annual Slade/UCL Art Museum collaboration began with an invitation to today’s artists to develop their own practices while exploring and responding to art from the past.Mon 6 May–Fri 7 June | 1–5pm UCL Art Museum [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2544

Sequel, Slade by Ryan Riddington

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Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly

An exhibition by students from Central St Martin’s, University of Arts London working in response to the Petrie Collection.Tues 14 May – Thurs 30 May | 6–8pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Artefacts from the Petrie Museum Top: Lulu MacDonald, Becca Djan, Hannah Morley, Mo Wang. Below: Robin Monies (BA/BFA 2012)

Slade BA/BFA degree show

The annual Slade BA/BFA degree show, featuring artworks by graduating students from the UCL Slade School of Fine Art.Sat 18–Sun 19 May | 10am–5pm and Mon 20–Thurs 23 May | 10am–8pm UCL Slade School of Fine Art [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2313

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Exhibitions

Art students in the Grant Museum

Slade MA/MFA degree show

The annual Slade MA/MFA degree show, featuring artworks by graduating students from the UCL Slade School of Fine Art.Thurs 6–Weds 12 June | 10am–8pm, Sat 8–Sun 9 | 10am–5pm UCL Slade School of Fine Art [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2313

She Could Not Handle Herself, part of installation, 2012. Nina Edling (MFA 2012)

Sculpture season at the Grant Museum

Sculpture students from the UCL Slade School of Fine Art create works in response to the museum’s collections, integrating them with the museum’s own specimens or making other spatial interventions such as walks, recordings or texts for visitors to experience.Wed 5 June–Sat 31 Aug | Mon–Sat, 1–5pm UCL Grant Museum of Zoology [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052

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Where to Go in Europe

Pop-up display and book launch: Wendy Bracewell on travel writing

In the context of the launch of her book, Where to Go in Europe, Professor Wendy Bracewell (UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies) presents a pop-up display that explores the notion of travel writing.Thurs 6 June | 6–8.30pm UCL Art Museum [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2540

Timekeeper installation

Timekeeper installation: Timekeeper in residence

Petrie’s temporary Timekeeper installation explores the many different ideas, from across history and cultures about what time is and how to picture it.Tues 18 June–Sat 13 July | Tues–Sat, 1–5pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2313

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Exhibitions

Gallstone with a safety pin

Foreign bodies exhibition

The term ‘foreign body’ has been used in medicine since the mid-1700s to mean an object of external origin found within the human body. Since then, collections of these items have fascinated and intrigued doctors and patients alike. How and why do objects end up inside the human body?Until Sun 14 July | 9am–5pm North Cloisters, Wilkins Building [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2354

Bartlett Summer Show

UCL Bartlett School of Architecture Summer Show

The annual celebration of architecture degree projects. More than 450 students will show innovative drawings, models, devices, texts animations and drawings Sat 22–Sat 29 June 2013 | 10am–5pm Opening night: Fri 21 June 6pm UCL campus (check online for further details) www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk

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In and out of the Nile Valley

An exhibition of the winning images from the Friends of the Petrie Museum anniversary photographic competition. A special preview and drinks reception will be held on 18 July.Preview | Thurs 18 July | 6–8pm Pre-booking essential Exhibtion | Tues 16 July–Thurs 10 Oct Tues–Sat | 1–5pm UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138

Egyptian papyrus

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Events diary

22

17 April 6–9pm Land of the Pharaohs (1955) p12

22 5.30–7.30pm Urban Encounters: Affirmative Action and Black Identities in Brazil

p02

24 3.30–5pm Holding the peace since the Korean War? The Armistice at 60

p02

�25 2.30–6.30pm 2013 Barlow Memorial Lecture: Energy – 2050 Pathways p03

29 5.30–8pm Affirmative action in Brazilian universities: ethnography of a social movement

p03

30 5.30–6.30pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert p12

30 6.30–8pm The US deficit habit: what are its causes and what lessons does history offer for breaking it

p03

2 May 6.30–9pm Quatermass and the Pit (1967) on the big screen p13

3 5–9.15pm Antiquity in silent cinema p13

6 May –7 June

1–5pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration exhibition p16

7 1–2pm Pop-up display: Jane Darcy and the Flaxman Exchange p177–17 All Day The UCL Festival of the Arts p078 6–7pm The theatre that moved the soul: understanding the

power of ancient Greek drama through modern cognitive science

p04

8 6.30–8.30pm Flaxman Exchange lecture p04

9 6–8.30pm The Gorgon (1964) film screening p14

9 7.30–10pm Bright Club: Reading p13

14–30 1–5pm Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly p17

14 May 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

16 6–8.30pm Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly opening event p04

17 6.30–8.30pm It’s elemental! UCL Museums treasure hunt p07

18 6–9pm Life and death drawing workshop p08

18-23 10am–5/8pm Slade BA/BFA degree show p18

21 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

21 5.15–6.30pm Community-based maternal and newborn care p05

23 6–8pm Status, luxury and celebrity – ancient Egypt through a night of perfume exploration

p08

23 7–9.30pm Focus on the positive p14

27 May –1 June

1–5pm Incredible invertebrates p08

28 May 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

30 5–7pm Rick Battarbee Lecture Series – trophic dynamics and biodiversity in freshwaters: a climate change perspective

p05

31 1.10–1.55pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert p14

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23

17 April 6–9pm Land of the Pharaohs (1955) p12

22 5.30–7.30pm Urban Encounters: Affirmative Action and Black Identities in Brazil

p02

24 3.30–5pm Holding the peace since the Korean War? The Armistice at 60

p02

�25 2.30–6.30pm 2013 Barlow Memorial Lecture: Energy – 2050 Pathways p03

29 5.30–8pm Affirmative action in Brazilian universities: ethnography of a social movement

p03

30 5.30–6.30pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert p12

30 6.30–8pm The US deficit habit: what are its causes and what lessons does history offer for breaking it

p03

2 May 6.30–9pm Quatermass and the Pit (1967) on the big screen p13

3 5–9.15pm Antiquity in silent cinema p13

6 May –7 June

1–5pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration exhibition p16

7 1–2pm Pop-up display: Jane Darcy and the Flaxman Exchange p177–17 All Day The UCL Festival of the Arts p078 6–7pm The theatre that moved the soul: understanding the

power of ancient Greek drama through modern cognitive science

p04

8 6.30–8.30pm Flaxman Exchange lecture p04

9 6–8.30pm The Gorgon (1964) film screening p14

9 7.30–10pm Bright Club: Reading p13

14–30 1–5pm Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly p17

14 May 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

16 6–8.30pm Magic Assemblage Magic Assembly opening event p04

17 6.30–8.30pm It’s elemental! UCL Museums treasure hunt p07

18 6–9pm Life and death drawing workshop p08

18-23 10am–5/8pm Slade BA/BFA degree show p18

21 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

21 5.15–6.30pm Community-based maternal and newborn care p05

23 6–8pm Status, luxury and celebrity – ancient Egypt through a night of perfume exploration

p08

23 7–9.30pm Focus on the positive p14

27 May –1 June

1–5pm Incredible invertebrates p08

28 May 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

30 5–7pm Rick Battarbee Lecture Series – trophic dynamics and biodiversity in freshwaters: a climate change perspective

p05

31 1.10–1.55pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert p14

4 June 1–2pm Duet: Fifth annual Slade collaboration: in conversation p04

4 1.15–1.55pm Dinosaurs in Crystal Palace Park p10

4 5–6.30pm UCL Chamber Music Club concert p14

5 June –31Aug

1–5pm Sculpture season at the Grant Museum p18

5 6.30–8.30pm The flea circus – the smallest show on Earth p05

6–12 10am–5/8pm Slade MA/MFA degree show p19

6 6–8.30pm Wendy Bracewell on travel writing p19

11–13 1–10pm The art of reading p06

11 1.15–1.55pm Britain and the legacies of slavery p10

18 June –13 July

1–5pm Timekeeper installation p20

18 1.15–1.55pm Plague bones: how London’s Black Death became a tropical disease

p11

19 7–10pm London Student Drama Festival p15

20–23 12–11pm Open City Docs Fest p15

22–29 10am–5pm Bartlett School of Architecture Summer Show p20

22 12–4pm Midsummer rites: Timekeeper in residence p08

25 1.15–1.55pm Hidden no longer: community history-making in London p11

27 10am–4pm UCL Open Day p09

4 July 6.30–9pm The Killer Shrews (1959) on the big screen p15

6 12–2pm Petrie’s set: a walking tour of Egyptological Bloomsbury p09

13 11am–1pm London in slow motion – a walking tour p09

14 9am–5pm Foreign bodies exhibition p20

16 July –10 Oct

1–5pm In and out of the Nile Valley p21

18 1–2pm Show ‘n’ tell p06

18 6–8pm In and out of the Nile Valley preview p21

23

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24

Venues/Map

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1 UCL main campus Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT +44 (0)20 7679 2000 www.ucl.ac.uk

2 Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture theatre (G06) Malet Place, London WC1E 6BT

3 UCL Institute of the Americas 51 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PN +44 (0)20 3108 978 www.ucl.ac.uk/americas

4 UCL Art Museum South Cloisters, Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT Mon–Fri, 1–5pm [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 2540 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/uclart

5 UCL Bloomsbury Theatre 15 Gordon Street, London WC1H 0AH +44 (0)20 7388 8822 www.thebloomsbury.com

6 Chadwick Lecture Theatre Chadwick Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

7 UCL Grant Museum of Zoology Rockefeller Building, 21 University Street, London WC1E 6DE Mon–Fri, 1–5pm [email protected] +44 (0)20 3108 2052 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/zoology

8 Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre Wilkins Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

9 Haldane Room Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

10 JZ Young Lecture Theatre Anatomy Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

11 Pearson G22 Lecture Theatre Pearson Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

12 UCL Slade School of Fine Art Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT +44 (020) 7679 2313 www.ucl.ac.uk/slade

13 UCL Main Library Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

14 UCL Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Malet Place, London WC1E 6BT Tues–Sat, 1–5pm [email protected] +44 (0)20 7679 4138 www.ucl.ac.uk/museums/petrie

15 Wilkins Roof Garden Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT

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Page 28: Brain Food April – August 2013

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:

www.ucl.ac.uk/events

ACCESSIBILITY

UCL aims to provide accessibility to all its events. If you require any information about any accessibility requirements, please contact UCL Disability Services on:

+44 (0)20 7679 0100 [email protected]

BY TUBE

Underground stations near to UCL’s main campus:

Euston Square (Circle, Metropolitan, Hammersmith & City Lines)

Goodge Street (Northern Line)

Warren Street (Northern and Victoria Lines)

BY RAIL

Mainline train stations near to 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.

Getting to UCL