Years |
Lecturer |
Title |
Published
|
1926–1927 |
Gilbert Murray |
The Classical Tradition in Poetry |
1927
|
1927–1928 |
Eric Maclagan |
Italian Sculpture of the Renaissance |
1935
|
1929–1930 |
H. W. Garrod |
Poetry and the Criticism of Life |
1931
|
1930–1931 |
Arthur Mayger Hind |
Rembrandt |
1932
|
1931–1932 |
Sigurður Nordal |
The Spirit of Icelandic Literature (8 lectures: ???—The Old Poetry—The Sagas of Iceland—...—The World of Reality—The World of Dreams...)[1][2][3][4] |
|
1932–1933
|
T. S. Eliot
|
The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism: Studies in the Relation of Criticism to Poetry in England (The Relation of Criticism and Poetry—Poetry and Criticism in the Time of Elizabeth—The Classical Tradition: Dryden and Johnson—The Theories of Coleridge and Wordsworth—The Practice of Shelley and Keats—Arnold and the Academic Mind—The Modern Mind: I—The Modern Mind: II)[1][5]
|
1933
|
1933–1934 |
Laurence Binyon |
The Spirit of Man in Asian Art |
1935
|
1935–1936 |
Robert Frost |
The Renewal of Words (The Old Way to Be New—Vocal Imagination, the Merger of Form and Content—Does Wisdom Signify—Poetry as Prowess (Feat of Words)—Before the Beginning of a Poem—After the End of a Poem)[6] |
|
1936–1937 |
Johnny Roosval |
The Poetry of Chiaroscuro |
|
1937–1938 |
Chauncey Brewster Tinker |
Painter and Poet: Studies in the Literary Relations of English Painting |
1938
|
1938–1939 |
Sigfried Giedion |
Space, Time and Architecture: The Growth of a New Tradition |
1941
|
1939–1940 |
Igor Stravinsky |
Poetics of Music in the Form of Six Lessons |
1942
|
1940–1941 |
Pedro Henríquez Ureña |
Literary Currents in Hispanic America |
1945
|
1947–1948 |
Erwin Panofsky |
Early Netherlandish Painting: Its Origins and Character |
1953
|
1948–1949 |
C. M. Bowra |
The Romantic Imagination |
1949
|
1949–1950 |
Paul Hindemith |
A Composer's World: Horizons and Limitations |
1952
|
1950–1951 |
Thornton Wilder |
The American Characteristics in Classic American Literature (Adapting an Island Language to a Continental Thought—Thoreau, or the Bean-Row in the Wilderness—Emily Dickinson, or the Articulate Inarticulate—Walt Whitman and the American Loneliness)[7][8][9] |
|
1951–1952 |
Aaron Copland |
Music and Imagination |
1952
|
1952–1953 |
E. E. Cummings |
i: six nonlectures |
1953
|
1953–1954 |
Herbert Read |
Icon and Idea: The Function of Art in the Development of Human Consciousness |
1955
|
1955–1956 |
Edwin Muir |
The Estate of Poetry |
1962
|
1956–1957 |
Ben Shahn |
The Shape of Content |
1957
|
1957–1958 |
Jorge Guillén |
Language and Poetry: Some Poets of Spain |
1961
|
1958–1959 |
Carlos Chávez |
Musical Thought |
1961
|
1960–1961 |
Eric Bentley |
The Springs of Pathos[10] |
|
1961–1962 |
Félix Candela |
The Paradox of Structuralism, Comments on the Collaboration Between Architects and Engineers, The Creative Process and the Expressiveness of Inner Space[11] |
|
Buckminster Fuller
|
|
|
Pier Luigi Nervi
|
Aesthetics and Technology in Building[12] |
1965
|
1962–1963 |
Leo Schrade |
Tragedy in the Art of Music |
1964
|
1964–1965 |
Cecil Day-Lewis |
The Lyric Impulse |
1965
|
1966–1967 |
Meyer Schapiro |
Romanesque Architectural Sculpture |
2006
|
1967–1968 |
Jorge Luis Borges |
This Craft of Verse |
2000
|
1968–1969 |
Roger Sessions |
Questions about Music |
1970
|
1969–1970 |
Lionel Trilling |
Sincerity and Authenticity |
1972
|
1970–1971 |
Charles Eames |
Problems Relating to Visual Communication and the Visual Environment
|
|
1971–1972 |
Octavio Paz |
Children of the Mire: Modern Poetry from Romanticism to the Avant-Garde |
1974
|
1973–1974 |
Leonard Bernstein |
The Unanswered Question |
1976
|
1974–1975 |
Northrop Frye |
The Secular Scripture: A Study of the Structure of Romance |
1976
|
1977–1978 |
Frank Kermode |
The Genesis of Secrecy: On the Interpretation of Narrative |
1979
|
1978–1979 |
James Cahill |
The Compelling Image: Nature and Style in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Painting |
1982
|
1979–1980 |
Helen Gardner |
In Defence of the Imagination |
1982
|
1980–1981 |
Charles Rosen |
The Romantic Generation |
1995
|
1981–1982 |
Czesław Miłosz |
The Witness of Poetry |
1983
|
1983–1984 |
Frank Stella |
Working Space |
1986
|
1985–1986 |
Italo Calvino |
Six Memos for the Next Millennium |
1988
|
1987–1988 |
Harold Bloom |
Ruin the Sacred Truths: Poetry and Belief from the Bible to the Present |
1989
|
1988–1989 |
John Cage |
I-VI |
1990
|
1989–1990 |
John Ashbery |
Other Traditions |
2000
|
1992–1993 |
Umberto Eco |
Six Walks in the Fictional Woods |
1994
|
1993–1994 |
Luciano Berio |
Remembering the Future |
2006
|
1994–1995 |
Nadine Gordimer |
Writing and Being |
1995
|
1995–1996 |
Leo Steinberg |
"The Mute Image and the Meddling Text" |
|
1997–1998 |
Joseph Kerman |
Concerto Conversations |
1999
|
2001–2002 |
George Steiner |
Lessons of the Masters (published as: Lasting Origins—Rain of Fire—Magnificus—Maîtres à Penser—On Native Ground—Unaging Intellect)[13] |
2003
|
2003–2004 |
Linda Nochlin |
Bathers, Bodies, Beauty: The Visceral Eye (published as: Renoir's Great Bathers: Bathing as Practice, Bathing as Representation—Manet's Le Bain: The Déjuner and the Death of the Heroic Landscape—The Man in the Bathtub: Picasso's Le Meutre and the Gender of Bathing—Monet's Hôtel des Roches Noires: Anxiety and Perspective at the Seashore—Real Beauty: The Body in Realism—More Beautiful than a Beautiful Thing: The Body, Old Age, Ruin, and Death)[14] |
2006
|
2006–2007 |
Daniel Barenboim |
Sound and Thought (published in Music Quickens Time as: Sound and Thought—Listening and Hearing—Freedom of Thought and Interpretation—The Orchestra—A Tale of Two Palestinians—Finale)[15][16] |
2008
|
2009–2010 |
Orhan Pamuk |
The Naive and the Sentimental Novelist (What Happens to Us as We Read Novels—Mr. Pamuk, Did You Really Live All of This?—Character, Time, Plot—Pictures and Things—Museums and Novels—The Center)[17] |
2010
|
2011–2012 |
William Kentridge |
Six Drawing Lessons (In Praise of Shadows—A Brief History of Colonial Revolts—Vertical Thinking: A Johannesburg Biography—Practical Epistemology: Life in the Studio—In Praise of Mistranslation—Anti-Entropy)[18] |
2012
|
2013–2014 |
Herbie Hancock |
The Ethics of Jazz (The Wisdom of Miles Davis—Breaking the Rules—Cultural Diplomacy and the Voice of Freedom—Innovation and New Technologies—Buddhism and Creativity—Once upon a Time...)[19] |
|
2015–2016 |
Toni Morrison |
The Origin of Others - The Literature of Belonging (Romancing Slavery—Being and Becoming the Stranger—The Color Fetish—Configurations of Blackness—Narrating the Other—The Foreigner's Home)[20] |
2017
|
2017-2018 |
Frederick Wiseman |
Wide Angle: The Norton Lectures on Cinema (The Search for Story, Structure, and Meaning in Documentary Film: Part I—The Search for Story, Structure, and Meaning in Documentary Film: Part II)[21][22] |
|
Agnès Varda |
(The 7th Art and Me—Crossing the Borders)[23][24] |
|
Wim Wenders |
(Poetry in Motion—The Visible and the Invisible)[25][26] |
|
2021-2022
|
Laurie Anderson
|
Spending the War Without You: Virtual Backgrounds[27]
|
|
2023-2024
|
Viet Thanh Nguyen
|
To Save and To Destroy: On Writing as an Other[28]
|
|