1200 Getty Center Drive Los Angeles, CA 90049-1687
Wednesday, October 6 at 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Ends Oct 6, 2021
The early 14th century was a revolutionary moment in the history of timekeeping, when the first mechanical clocks were invented and hourglasses first appeared in the historical record. The era coincided with the popularization of a type of book called a "book of hours," which helped segment hourly, daily, and yearly time for its owners. These technologies radically changed how people structured personal and communal time, conducted business, and fashioned worldviews. In this conversation, professor Elly Truitt and curator Larisa Grollemond discuss the intersecting histories of many types of time-keeping technologies, from manuscripts to clocks, exploring how time was described and experienced in the Western medieval world. This program complements the exhibition Transcending Time: Medieval Book of Hours.