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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220707T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220707T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T074210Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T102329Z
UID:8541-1657193400-1657197000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Most Popular Pictures in British Collections
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/most-popular-pictures-in-british-collections/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220609T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220609T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T064853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122611Z
UID:8373-1654774200-1654777800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Georgia O’Keeffe in New Mexico
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/william-beckford-1760-1844-genius-romantic-notoriety/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Georgia_OKeeffe_-_Lake_George_Reflection-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220505T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220505T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T063637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122514Z
UID:8371-1651750200-1651753800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Peggy Guggenheim
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/peggy-guggenheim-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/PeggyGuggenheim.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220407T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220407T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T062326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122438Z
UID:8369-1649331000-1649334600@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Bloomsbury Group: The Art of Vanessa Bell
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/bloomsbury-group-the-art-of-vanessa-bell-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Vanessa-Bell.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220303T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220303T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T060657Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122355Z
UID:8367-1646305200-1646310600@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Manufactured Woman: The Story of Pandora and how she has inspired generations of artists to imagine how and why women came into the world
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-manufactured-woman-the-story-of-pandora-and-how-she-has-inspired-generations-of-artists-to-imagine-how-and-why-women-came-into-the-world/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/MarchImage.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220203T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220203T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210703T055648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251112T194547Z
UID:8364-1643887800-1643891400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Mystery of Holbein’s Ambassadors
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-mystery-of-holbeins-ambassadors-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Hans_Holbein_the_Younger_-_The_Ambassadors-e1628232289790.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220106T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220106T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210702T085156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251118T104508Z
UID:8362-1641468600-1641472200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:In the Kingdom of the Sweets
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/in-the-kingdom-of-the-sweets-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/NUTS-golden-couple-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211202T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211202T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210628T133110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251113T144834Z
UID:8360-1638444600-1638448200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Repton and the Picturesque
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/repton-and-the-picturesque-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211104T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211104T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210628T091035Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122052Z
UID:8466-1636025400-1636029000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Moorish Architecture – the legacy of a vanished kingdom
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/moorish-architecture-the-legacy-of-a-vanished-kingdom/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/landscape-1900673_1920-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211007T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211007T223000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20210628T124414Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250922T122149Z
UID:8358-1633606200-1633645800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Age of Jazz
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-age-of-jazz-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/LouisArmstrong.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210701T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210701T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20200408T183214Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251206T165141Z
UID:7128-1625139000-1625142600@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:A Design Evolution: Jewellery and Metalwork 1850-1940
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/a-design-evolution-jewellery-and-metalwork-1850-1940/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210603T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210603T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20200408T182558Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251206T165513Z
UID:7126-1622719800-1622723400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Cultral Heritage of the Huguenots
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-cultral-heritage-of-the-huguenots/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/4.-Spitalfields-e1614779363716.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210506T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210506T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20200108T160824Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251206T170400Z
UID:6522-1620300600-1620304200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Scottish Colourists
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-scottish-colourists/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/S-Peploe.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210401T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210401T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20200408T182056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251206T170557Z
UID:7124-1617276600-1617280200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The World in a Grain of Sand: William Blake
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-world-in-a-grain-of-sand-william-blake/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/256px-William_Blake_by_Thomas_Phillips-e1614777333733.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200305T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200305T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20200108T151324Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200216T095139Z
UID:6517-1583407800-1583411400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Pierre Bonnard: The Old Master of Modern Art?
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/pierre-bonnard-the-old-master-of-modern-art/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/1889-sp-1889-e1578500803795.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200206T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200206T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20191208T170402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200221T105525Z
UID:6422-1580988600-1580992200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:FABER & FABER: 90 years of excellence in cover design
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/faber-faber-90-years-of-excellence-in-cover-design/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200109T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200109T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20190603T093652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191219T164051Z
UID:5617-1578569400-1578573000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Rebuilding Ypres
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/rebuilding-ypres/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/IMG_20190312_172544-e1559558172861.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191205T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191205T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20190602T161536Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190603T163700Z
UID:5589-1575545400-1575549000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Origins of our English Christmas
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-origins-of-our-english-christmas/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Gilbert-and-Sullivan-Cartoon.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191107T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191107T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20190304T104030Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251011T093058Z
UID:5094-1573126200-1573129800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Velázquez - 'The Great Magician of Art'
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/2019-11-07/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/RokebyVenus-e1557299228589.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191003T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191003T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20190603T083005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190603T083632Z
UID:5110-1570102200-1570105800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Girls Behaving Badly: Jane Austen's Wicked Women
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/girls-behaving-badly-jane-austens-wicked-women/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/jane-austen-garticle-614x920.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190704T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190704T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20180412T151314Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190512T162431Z
UID:3397-1562239800-1562243400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Gilded Glories - the fascinating history of gilded decoration
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/gilded-glories-the-fascinating-history-of-gilded-decoration/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/JM-Image-2-002-e1530442686395.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190606T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190606T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20180630T202156Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251011T092740Z
UID:3393-1559820600-1559824200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Women behind the Lens
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/women-behind-the-lens-2/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/Brian-Stater-Lecture.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190509T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190509T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20180412T143739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190525T082158Z
UID:3389-1557401400-1557405000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Role of the Arts in the Cycle of Crime\, Prison and Re-offending
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-role-of-the-arts-in-the-cycle-of-crime-prison-and-re-offending/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/image002-1-002.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190404T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190404T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074823
CREATED:20180412T141223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T195013Z
UID:3381-1554377400-1554381000@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Art UK: Uncovering the Nation’s Hidden Oil Paintings
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/art-uk-uncovering-the-nations-hidden-oil-paintings/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Alma-Tadema-1-002.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190307T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190307T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T164505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T183837Z
UID:3281-1551958200-1551961800@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel - the black brow’d cantor
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/fanny-mendelssohn-hensel-the-black-browd-cantor/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/jjfinhhamfokadpg-002.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190207T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190207T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T161636Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T183131Z
UID:3275-1549539000-1549542600@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:From Bronzes to Banksy
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/from-bronzes-to-banksy/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Ian-Swankie-002.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190103T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190103T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T161244Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T182430Z
UID:3271-1546515000-1546518600@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Inspired by Stonehenge
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/inspired-by-stonehenge/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/stonehenge.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181206T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181206T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T155659Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T144525Z
UID:3268-1544095800-1544099400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:Post War British Theatre: a second Golden Age?
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/post-war-british-theatre-a-second-golden-age/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/john-osborne-1-getty-002.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181101T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181101T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T152105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T160840Z
UID:3263-1541071800-1541075400@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:The Music and Life of Johann Sebastian Bach
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/the-music-and-life-of-johann-sebastian-bach/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Johann-Sebastian-Bach-002.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20181004T113000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20181004T123000
DTSTAMP:20260717T074824
CREATED:20180406T145021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180630T154119Z
UID:3251-1538652600-1538656200@theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk
SUMMARY:19th Century British Marine Painting
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Description\n\n	Deep blue is the most popular colour in the world.  Perhaps it is redolent of velvety night skies and starry Summer evenings. It is thought to symbolize strength and wisdom. It has always stood for the cosmos and the Virgin Mary\, as a colour of the intellect and spiritual healing and was the colour of heaven for the Ancient Egyptians. This colour\, made from ground-down lapis lazuli that travelled over the Silk Route  from Afghanistan to Florence was more precious than gold.  On the great altarpieces it came to symbolize the wisdom of God. But in the search for a cheaper blue\, an entirely artificial chemical compound led to a deeply sinister result. Fashionable though it was\, Prussian Blue\, used in the Prussian court and in fashionable portraiture was the same chemical compound as the deadly poison – cyanide. Prussic acid was a key ingredient of Zyklon B\, the gas used in the extermination camps. Finally\, there is a return to the glories of ultramarine in the stained glass windows of Chagall. \n\n\n\n	\n\nLecturer: Hilary Guise\nHilary Hope Guise is Director of Art History for Florida State University on the London Campus. She has also taught courses for universities in North Carolina\, Montana\, Aix-en-Provence\, and Cambridge University. She was an invited Guest Speaker in Classics at the International MENSA conference also held in Cambridge.   She has toured widely in the USA as Evelyn Wrench Speaker for the English-Speaking Union of America\, and lectured for the Smithsonian Institute in Washington DC.   She tours regularly for The Arts Societies around the UK and Europe\, and has been as far as New Zealand on the Australasia circuit. She returns regularly to her home city of Cape Town to lecture at the University of Cape Town Summer School.  She has post-graduate degrees in Classics as well as in Fine Art\, and combines a passionate love of Classical Greek culture\, with a life-long career in the visual arts as a practising artist. \nHer artwork can be seen on her website: www.hilaryguise.com through which you can also send a message.
URL:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/event/19th-century-british-marine-painting/
LOCATION:Stalbridge Hall\, Stalbridge Hall\, Lower Road\, Stalbridge\, Sturminster Newton\, Dorset\, DT10 2NF\, United Kingdom.
CATEGORIES:Monthly Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://theartssocietyblackmorevale.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Felicity-Herring-002.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR