The Prentice Institute is pleased to host a range of guest speakers for the 2022-23 academic year.
Results from September 1st, 2022 to April 30th, 2023 for Guest Speaker & Public
Collapsing Worlds / Future Ecologies
Tracing a Set of Relations
Sean Morel joins us virtually in the recital hall for this artist talk.
Harvard University Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Dr. Steven Pinker presents Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters.
Dr. James Tagg, Professor Emeritus of the history department, will be joining the presentation as a special guest.
Join us for the first Music at Noon concert of the fall 2022 semester featuring jamani duo!
Arthur C. Erickson: The Image of the Modern Architect in Canada. This online talk is re-scheduled for October 3, due to the Sept.19 federal holiday being observed. Thank you.
A talk by Natalia Khanenko-Friesen
Are Language Documentation and Revitalization practices scientific and sustainable?
Laura Hynes (soprano) and Susanne Ruberg-Gordon (piano) will perform a recital featuring 'Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems of Bob Dylan' by Grammy Award-winning composer John Corigliano.
Please note: this lecture is postponed until further notice. We apologize for any inconvenience this causes.
LANDSCAPE: an approach to urbanism for the 21st century
This concert showcases new music for the guitar duo by some of the world's most exciting composers.
Bread + Roses - Survival + Inspiration
LBED Living Room presented by The School of Liberal Education
“I’m a little bit like a small-town preacher, these people are my congregation”: Conducting professional journalism in rural Alberta communities
Anthea Black is a Canadian artist, art-publisher and writer based in Oakland, USA and Toronto, Canada.
Trucking companies in Alberta must follow safety legislation meant to produce positive safety outcomes. This research will examine the consideration of equity in trucking safety.
Vincent Bonin joins us virtually in the University Recital Hall for this lecture and speaks about artistic practices whose mode of address aims to complexify our understanding of accessibility.
Indigenous, Radically!
A panel discussion on radical interventions in Indigenous art, art history, and pop culture with:
A talk presented by the Department of History Colloquium Series
This concert features composer and music curator Peter Hatch performing John Cage's historic 1949 lecture-performance accompanied by students and faculty from University of Lethbridge.
A talk brought to you by the Community Bridge Lab.
Roula Partheniou’s sculptural practice centers on an exploration of the replica, calling into question the language of everyday objects and the ways that we read and decipher our environment.