Depending on your personal interests, time, and budget, you may
pick and chose which parts you wish to attend. No exams, you can
learn as much or as little as you wish to.
Part I: General Introduction to
the art and archaeology of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.
Part II: The sacred Maya
ballgame: fact versus popular fiction.
Part III: Maya architecture and
principles of construction.
Part IV: Monumental Maya Art: aesthetics,
connoisseurship, art appreciation, and iconography (the study
of meaning in art). Learn how to identify the different gods and
distinguish them from one another.
Part V: Learning how to recognize
style, content, and iconography of Maya elite ceramics. How to
recognize pots of the Preclassic, Proto classic, Early Classic,
and Late Classic and distinguish one from another.
Part VI: Maya artifacts: jade,
flint, bone, seashell, and related materials.
Part VII: Rollout photography: what
fascinating equipment produces a circumferential rollout. You
yourself do not need to know anything about photography to enjoy
this learning experience. FLAAR has three rollout camera systems
and plenty of practical tips for you.
Part VIII: Art & Artifact photography,
featuring learning how to photograph jade, polychrome vases, monumental
sculpture (stelae and altars), and arxchitecture.
Part IX: Nature photography, flora
and fauna.
Part X: Introduction to the wonders
of digital photography.
If you are primarily interested in archaeology,
there is no requirement to take the photography sessions. If you
just want to learn photography, you do not have to take any archaeology.
If you want just to learn rollout photography
of Maya vases, you can sign up for this session with no obligation
to take anything else.
To get more information, e-mail us:ReaderService@FLAAR.org.
No previous experience in archaeology is
required. No strenuous activity required (other than your brain,
and we will help you active this).
You do not have to be an archaeology student,
or a student of anything, but it does help to have intellectual
curiosity and a desire to learn more about foreign cultures and
ancient civilizations.
Ideal for ages 7 to 77, but we recommend
you be in good health.
Recommended for people who want to escape
the office routine, escape family squabbles, and generally for
individuals who are tired of the urban rat race. Archaeology is
especially helpful for individuals who want to invigorate their
life by doing something cerebral and entirely for their mental
enjoyment.
Warning: the study of Maya esoterica
has been known to be habit forming.
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