Hosted by the museum and funded by the Terra Foundation for American Art, this symposium will feature lectures by scholars and specialists from a host of academic disciplines and professional fields ranging from art history to environmental ethics, from literature and poetry to environmental activism. Speakers will key their lectures to one of the exhibition's themes: bounty, manifest destiny, and manifest responsibility. Speakers include Alan Braddock, Peter Brownlee, William French, John Gatta, Benjamin Goluboff, Michael Hogue, and Adam Schwerner.Â
The Loyola University Museum of Art (LUMA) was founded in 2005 on the Water Tower Campus of Loyola University Chicago. LUMA is located on the Magnificent Mile at the Water Tower in Lewis Towers, an historic 1927 Gothic Revival building. The museum with 35,000 sq. feet contains eight exhibition main galleries, the William G. and Marilyn M. Simpson Lecture Hall, the Solomon Cordwell Buenz Library of Sacred Art and Architecture and the Museum Store, the Push Pin Gallery and the Harlan J. Berk Ltd. Works on Paper Gallery. LUMA welcomes new members and volunteers at all levels of participation.
The mission of the museum is illustrated and introduced in the first floor lobby with the Windows of Faith representing the five major world faiths of Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam.
The museum operates as part of the educational mission of the University and is a 501(c)3 cultural institution receiving public and private support and with an elected board of advisors.
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