Next Talks & More | Artist Talks

Cécile Fromont

Lambert Family Lecture 

Q&A and reception follow

Collage image of Cécile Fromont and a large tapestry of an African king surrounded with courtiers and kneeling visitors.

Join acclaimed art historian Cécile Fromont for a lecture exploring the intersection of artistic creation and scholarship. 

Cécile Fromont specializes in the visual, material, and religious cultures of Africa, Latin America, and Europe between 1500 and 1800. In this free talk, she offers powerful perspectives on how research shapes contemporary art and how exhibitions can tell complex, cross-cultural stories. You’ll be invited to consider how global histories can be reframed and made newly meaningful. 

Fromont will reflect on her collaborations with artists in which the boundaries between scholar and artist blur. These include projects with Sammy Baloji and Gloria Cabral on view this fall as part of Baloji’s exhibition. Fromont’s research on early modern Atlantic World connections and the movement of people, objects, and beliefs—often under conditions of violence—contributes directly to the creative process. The resulting artworks highlight the ways African expressive and spiritual cultures shaped artistic life across continents and into the present.

A public reception with light hors d’oeuvres follows the lecture.

IMAGE CAPTION
From left to right: Cécile Fromont, photo: Stephanie Mitchell, Harvard University. Sammy Baloji and Cécile Fromont, Rethreaded Indies, 2025. Wool, cotton, and linen, 11 ft. 3 1/16 in. x 15 ft. 1 1/2 in. Installation view of Shapeshifters: On Wounds, Wonders and Transformation at Framer Framed, Amsterdam, 2025. Designed by Silvana de Bari. Produced by Textiellab, Tilburg. Supported by the Mondrian Prize. Image courtesy of the artist and Galerie Imane Farès, Paris. Photo © Ben Yau.

"How do we make a decision as a society about what we make visible and what we make invisible, what we choose to see and what we choose not to see in these objects?"

More about the series

Established in 2004 through the generosity of Bill and Sheila Lambert, the Lambert Family Lecture Series invites experts to explore global issues in art and contemporary culture with the community’s diverse audiences, often to illuminate the works on view in our galleries. To date the series has featured an impressive roster of cultural luminaries, including art historians, critics, and curators T. J. Clark, Douglas Crimp, Arthur Danto, Greil Marcus, Diana Widmaier Picasso, Robert Storr, and Lynne Tillman; filmmakers Julia Reichert and John Waters; and visual artists Dawoud Bey, Teju Cole, Carroll Dunham, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Christian Marclay, Josiah McElheny, Taryn Simon, and Luc Tuymans.

About the speaker

Cécile Fromont

Cécile Fromont is an art historian specializing in the visual, material, and religious cultures of Africa, Latin America, and Europe in the early modern period (1500–1800). Her scholarship sheds light on the cross-cultural ebbs and flows that unfolded during this period across and around the Atlantic Ocean. Her research and writing center on African expressive, spiritual, and material cultures and their ramifications in Latin America and Europe, demonstrating how the often violent but vital connections between the three continents gave contours to the early modern world and continue to shape our own times.

Program Support

The Lambert Family Lecture is made possible by generous support from the Lambert Family Lecture Series Endowment Fund, which promotes dialogue about global issues in art and contemporary culture.

WEXNER CENTER PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY
Greater Columbus Arts Council

Ohio Arts Council, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts

CampusParc

The Columbus Foundation

The Ohio State University
Wexner Center Foundation Board
With special thanks to our members
 

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Cécile Fromont