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Begins Wednesday, Oct. 4
The Johns Hopkins University's
Homewood House
Museum presents Repast as Ritual: The Objects of
Entertaining at Homewood House Museum, a series of six
lectures relating to the art of 18th-century dining to be
held each Wednesday in October, and Nov.1 and 8.
Lectures begin at 2 p.m. and last approximately 90 minutes.
The cost of the six-lecture series is $146 ($124 for museum
members; $75 for students and museum volunteers). Because
seating is limited, advance pre-paid registration is
required. For more information, the public may call 410-
515-05589, email
homewoodhouse@jhu.edu, or visit
www.jhu.edu/historichouses.
What unusual entertaining customs were practiced in the
fledgling American republic? What types of objects did
Baltimore's prominent Carroll family use on their dining
table? Where did they come from? How were they purchased?
At Homewood House Museum's Repast as Ritual lecture
series, distinguished experts examine the spectacle of
18th-century dining, with particular focus on the social
meanings and fashionable forms of the silver, ceramic, and
glass objects in Homewood's collections.
Speaker Schedule
Oct. 4: Barbara Carson explores the art of dining
and socializing customs in the new republic in her talk,
"Strange Customs Prevail: Entertaining at Home in the Early
National Period." Carson is the author of Ambitious
Appetites: Dining, Behavior, and Patterns of Consumption in
Federal Washington, and former professor of material
culture at the College of William and Mary.
Oct. 11: Catherine Rogers Arthur, curator of
Homewood House Museum, discusses Homewood's ceramics
collections — English, French, and Chinese —
some of which are known to have a Carroll family provenance
and others that were owned by related and contemporary
families.
Oct. 18: Edward Papenfuse, Maryland state archivist,
offers a fascinating account of how objects for food and
dining were ordered from agents in London. The author of
In Pursuit of Profit: The Annapolis Merchants in the Era
of the American Revolution, 1763-1805, Papenfuse
teaches courses at the University of Maryland Law School
and Johns Hopkins University.
Oct. 25: Mark Letzer, regional silver scholar and
curator of the Maryland Historical Society's exhibition on
Annapolis silversmith William Faris, considers the
relationship of Homewood's silver collection to pieces
known to have been used by the Carrolls.
Nov. 1: Amanda Lange, curator of historic interiors
at Historic Deerfield, discusses the tableware and
specialty glass in Homewood's collections. Lange formerly
was the assistant curator of ceramics and glass at the
Winterthur Museum, and is the curator of the special
exhibition, The Canton Connection: Art and Commerce of
the China Trade 1784-1860.
Nov. 8: Robin Emmerson, author of British Teapots
and Tea Drinking 1700-1850, provides insights into the
art of tea and tea drinking rituals. Emmerson is head of
decorative arts at the Walker Art Gallery, National Museums
Liverpool (UK).
Visitor Information
Homewood House Museum, a National Historic Landmark on
Johns Hopkins University's Homewood Campus, is open 11
a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, and noon-4 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday. Tours of Homewood are offered every half-hour with
the last tour beginning at 3:30 p.m. Museum admission is
free throughout October and November. Call 410-516-5589 or
visit
www.jhu.edu/historichouses for additional
information.
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