Inaugural Conference

Voices through Art & Culture: Identity Formation in Central Asia, from Music to Architecture

The first Central Asian Studies Conference at the University of Chicago
April 17–18, 2026
Ida Noyes Library, University of Chicago

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About the Conference
Central Asian Studies Conference

We are excited to announce the first-ever Central Asian Studies Conference at the University of Chicago, organized by the university's Central Asian Studies Society and taking place on April 17–18, 2026.

Throughout Central Asia, embodied culture is expressed through art and culture: oral traditions, written poetry and literature, textiles, music, and many other media. Creative acts and works have been intertwined with collective experiences ranging from celebrations to invasions to revolutions, working to represent and shape memory and identity.

Our conference centers reflections on art, music, oral traditions, literature and other cultural practices as not only objects of study, but also as sources of inspiration, tangible connections to the past and means to understand the present. We are creating a space for young researchers interested in matters of culture and identity to meet, learn about, and learn from each other.

"What can art and culture tell us about the process of identity formation? What is the relationship between culture and politics? How does art and culture reflect Central Asianness, whether as a unified identity and/or a condition of great diversity and difference?"

Keynote Speakers
Distinguished Voices

Scholars and artists whose work bridges Central Asian heritage with global conversations.

Dr. Theodore C. Levin
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Theodore C. Levin
Arthur R. Virgin Professor of Music, Dartmouth University
Theodore Levin is a longtime student of music, expressive culture, and traditional spirituality in Central Asia and Siberia. He served as the first executive director of the Silk Road Project, founded by cellist Yo-Yo Ma. His research and advocacy activities focus on the role of arts and culture in international development, and on the preservation and revitalization of musical heritage. Author of The Music of Central Asia.
Faculty Profile →
Gulnur Mukazhanova
Keynote Speaker
Gulnur Mukazhanova
Contemporary Artist · Kazakhstan / Berlin
A distinguished artist born in Kazakhstan and based in Berlin, Gulnur Mukazhanova weaves together Central Asian heritage with contemporary artistic enquiry. Through textiles and symbolic materials, she evokes layers of cultural and historical memory. Her works unfold as dialogues between suppressed traditions and today’s shifting realities, reflecting on postcolonial experience, feminism and globalization. Recent solo exhibitions include Bosaga – Transition (Tselinny Center, Almaty, 2025) and Öliara: The Dark Moon (Mimosa House, London, 2022).
Artist Website →
Program Schedule
Conference Program

Two days of panels, keynote addresses, and conversation across disciplines.

Ida Noyes Library · 1212 E 59th St, Chicago, IL 60637
8:00 AM – 9:00 AM
Registration, Opening Remarks & Breakfast
9:00 AM – 10:15 AM
Panel 1: Continuations of Traditional Culture: Performance, Patronage and Heritage
Moderator: Dr. Theodore C. Levin
Diana Wang (University of Chicago) – “Between Minority and Nationalism: Transnational UNESCO Intangible Heritage Inscriptions in the Case of Khöömei and the Epic of Manas.”
Aibek Baiymbetov (Wesleyan University) – “Living Tradition in Action: The Chronotope of the Manas Epic Performance.”
Damon R. Postle (Independent Scholar) – “There Will Always Be Khöömei if Tyvans Are on the Land.” Modern Identity and Transmission of Folksong in the Center of Asia.
10:30 AM – 11:45 AM
Panel 2: Culture and Textile: Visual Representations of Identity
Moderator: Dr. Erica Warren
James Nee (University of Chicago) – “Fashioning the Nation in Central Asia, 1886–1968.”
Ekaterina Kulinicheva (Northwestern University) – “‘Eastern’ Textiles, Identity Formation, and Agency in Early Soviet Central Asia.”
Dr. Elmira Gyul (The Silk Road International Research Institute) – “Voices in Thread: Sufi Visual Codes and Spiritual Identity in the Art of Suzani.”
12:00 PM – 1:15 PM
Panel 3: Colonial Encounters in the Soviet Period
Moderator: Dr. Leah Feldman
Elena Leonenko (University of California, Berkeley) – “Cutting Siberia, Assembling Central Asia: Viktor Ufimtsev’s Collages.”
Aleksandra Khuzina (University of Illinois-Chicago) – “Still Life or Landscape?: Nature in Turin’s Turksib (1929).”
Ivan Cherniakov (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) – “The Soviet Plantation: Was the Soviet Landscape Colonial?”
1:15 PM – 2:30 PM
Lunch
2:30 PM – 3:45 PM
Panel 4: Memory and Loss in Central Asia
Moderator: Dr. Holly Shissler
Saadat Musabaeva (Independent Scholar | Kellogg Institute for International Studies) – “Building Home in the Throat: Kyrgyz Folk Singing, Embodied Memory, and Intergenerational Trauma.”
Lolisanam Ulugova (Independent Scholar | Art Curator) – “Animating Silence: Animation, Trauma, and Cultural Voice in Tajikistan.”
Zhaina Meirkhan (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) – “The Forced Migrations of Kazakhs in 20th Century Eurasian Steppe and Beyond.”
4:00 PM – 5:15 PM
Panel 5: Beyond the External Gaze: Challenging Marginalized Identity
Moderator: Dr. Michael Bechtel
Dimitri Staszewski (Independent Scholar | Documentary Photographer) – “The World at Night: The Spiritual Place of Wolves in Kazakh Herding Culture.”
Michael Lindsey (University of California, Santa Cruz) – “Heritage, Chops, and Humor: Glimpses of Identity among Professional Drummers in Kabul.”
Byambasuren Enkhee (Independent Researcher) – “Finding one’s own color,” or, gender politics within the stand-up comedy industry in Ulaanbaatar.
5:30 PM – 6:45 PM
Keynote Address — Gulnur Mukazhanova
“Contemporary Art from Kazakhstan: Identity, Memory and Cultural Transformation”
6:45 PM – 7:45 PM
Dinner, Cello and Viola Performance
* Panels #8 and #9 will occur concurrently.

Join Us at the Conference

Register now to attend the inaugural Central Asian Studies Conference at the University of Chicago.

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Explore the Neighborhood
Hyde Park Guide

Visiting the University of Chicago? Explore everything Hyde Park has to offer — dining, culture, and local landmarks.

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Music Festival
Central Eurasian Music Festival

Chicago's First Central Eurasian Music Festival

Organized by the UChicago Central Asian Studies Society

Two days of extraordinary performances featuring masters of traditional and contemporary Central Eurasian music, from Tuvan throat singing to Kazakh kobyz, Uzbek tor, Kyrgyz komuz, and Tibetan gorshey dance.

Day 1 — Saturday, April 18

Rockefeller Memorial Chapel

5850 S Woodlawn Ave · Doors at 5:30 PM
Accessibility & Parking Info
6:15 PMTuvergen, Chicago's own "modern nomadic music" trio
7:00 PMAlash Ensemble, three masters of Tuvan music
Day 2 — Sunday, April 19

Smart Museum of Art

5550 S Greenwood Ave · Doors at 11:00 AM
Accessibility & Parking Info
12:00 – 4:20 PM (Intermission 1:50–2:30)
Featuring: Akmaral Akbaeva (Kazakh kobyz) · Behzod Raxmon (Uzbek tor) · Buryad Heritage Chicago · Jenishbek Jumakadyr & Baktybek Shatenov (Kyrgyz akyn & komuz) · Tatar Chicago · Tibetan Alliance of Chicago gorshey dancers
Your order confirmation will serve as your ticket. No refunds or exchanges.
Questions? Contact James Nee at [email protected]
Organizing Committee
The Team Behind the Conference
Lead Organizer
Yelnura Tynysbekova
MA, Middle Eastern Studies · University of Chicago
Organizing Member
Atikah Adzhar
PhD, Divinity School · University of Chicago
Organizing Member
James Nee
PhD, History · University of Chicago
Organizing Member
Adam Laten Willson
PhD, Slavic Languages and Literatures · Northwestern University
Organizing Member
Banu Kayır
PhD, Middle Eastern Studies · University of Chicago
Organizing Member
Diana Wang
MA, Divinity School · University of Chicago
Faculty Advisor
Dr. Kağan Arık
Ayaslı Instructional Professor in Modern Turkish and Turkic Languages · University of Chicago
Dr. Kağan Arık is the coordinator for the Modern Turkish language program at the University of Chicago since 2008. He has also been active as Lecturer in Uzbek and Central Asian Studies since 2000.
Sponsors & Partners
Supported By
Central Asian Studies SocietyCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesCenter for East Asian StudiesUChicago Department of MusicFranke Institute for the HumanitiesCEERESDepartment of Art HistoryDepartment of Visual Arts

Central Asian Studies Conference 2026 · University of Chicago
Organized by the Central Asian Studies Society

Artwork by Karina Gimalova, "Harmony," used with permission. @carinagimalova

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