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About the CAA 94th Annual Conference in Boston
Dates
February 22–25, 2006
Location
The Hynes Convention Center
900 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02115
Attendance
In 2005, over 5,000 participants attended CAA’s Annual Conference, held
in Atlanta. Visual-arts professionals, including art historians, artists, students,
museum curators and directors, and art lovers, enjoyed a wide variety of sessions,
panel discussions, career-development workshops, exhibitions, and special events.
A similar turnout is anticipated in Boston.
Sessions
Conference sessions feature presentations from art-history scholars, graduate
students, artists, and curators from institutions across the country and internationally,
Conference sessions address a range of topics in art history and the visual arts.
In total, over 180 sessions are offered.
Career Fair
The Career Fair includes four days of mentoring and portfolio-review sessions,
career-development workshops, and job interviews. CAA’s Online Career Center,
an arts employment database, allows employers to post job openings during the
Conference; candidates can review continually updated listings and arrange interviews.
Book and Trade Fair
This year’s Book and Trade Fair presents 160 exhibitors displaying new publications,
artists’ materials, digital resources, and innovative products of interest
to artists, scholars, and the general public. The editors of The Art Bulletin,
Art Journal, and caa.reviews, CAA’s three journals, will be available on
Friday morning, February 24, to discuss and answer questions about their publications.
The Book and Trade Fair also features book signings, lectures and art-materials
demonstrations.
Exhibitions
CAA sponsors exhibitions at the Annual Conference. The reception for the annual
CAA exhibition will take place at the Boston Center for the Arts’ Mills
Gallery on Friday, February 24, at 6 pm. Organized by Laura Donaldson, director
of the Mills Gallery, and entitled After, the exhibition presents internationally
acclaimed artists whose work examines the aftermath of “events” that
range from professional and intimate to cataclysmic and world changing. The reception
for annual MFA exhibition reception will be held at the Massachusetts College
of Art, on Thursday, February 23 at 5:30 pm. The reception for the newly inaugurated
annual BFA exhibition will be held at Boston University, on Thursday, February
23 at 5:30 pm.
Special Events
The distinguished art critic and philosopher Arthur C. Danto of Columbia University
will deliver the keynote address at Convocation on Wednesday, February 22. Other
special events feature a number of receptions at Boston’s art museums and
galleries. Highlights include an opening-night gala reception at the Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston (following Convocation), hosted by the museum’s director,
Malcolm Rogers. Complimentary admission to the exhibition David Hockney Portraits
is included.
Awards and Fellowships
One of the Conference’s most anticipated events, CAA’s annual Awards
of Distinction will be presented to outstanding artists, teachers, scholars, critics,
conservators, and museum professionals. The award winners will be announced on
Wednesday, February 22, at Convocation. Past recipients include Ed Ruscha, Robert
Blackburn, Roberta Smith, Yve-Alain Bois, and Carol Mancusi-Ungaro, among others.
Business Meetings
Throughout the Conference, a large number of academic, professional caucuses,
societies, associations, and special-interest groups convene to discuss issues
affecting their discipline.