ICMA Statement on Executive Orders Regarding Monuments and Federal Architecture

ICMA Statement on Executive Orders Regarding Monuments and Federal Architecture
July 31, 2020
 

The Trump Administration has authored a suite of executive orders concerning architecture and monuments: the proposed order "Make Federal Buildings Beautiful Again" announced February 5, 2020, intended to confirm Greek and Roman classicism as the default model for federal building commissions; and the signed orders "Protecting American Monuments, Memorials and Statues and Combating Recent Criminal Violence" of June 26, 2020, intended to criminalize the removal of public monuments, primarily those that glorify the Confederacy; and "Executive Order on Building and Rebuilding Monuments to American Heroes," of July 3, 2020, intended, in part, to establish a statuary park titled the "National Garden of American Heroes." Each of these orders raises grave concerns regarding the administration's conception of public space and the character of art and architecture. With this statement, we wish to promote critical understanding of both modern and historical works. As historians, we aim to emphasize the specific contexts that shape the construction, installation, use, and removal of monuments and buildings. We likewise advocate a plural and equitable perspective on public art and architecture.
 
The proposed order concerning architecture would mandate that the "Classical" building style associated with Greek and Roman temples should be preferred for federal commissions, along with "Gothic, Romanesque, and Spanish Colonial," which are deemed equally "traditional" and "beautiful" models. We wish to respond first on the basis of method. The stated stylistic preference is justified in part by data from a nationwide survey conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of AIA in 2007, soliciting the participating public's favorite examples from among 248 pre-selected buildings. We caution that to found contemporary national policy on the interpretation of a survey that queried 1,800 people (of unspecified demographics) more than a decade ago relies on a fundamentally misleading representation of data, which we strongly disavow on scholarly and scientific grounds.
 
Regarding the order's language and positions: the assumptions expressed in the draft order on the experience and meaning of architectural style are antithetical to what we know about the diverse communities of the past and present alike. The perspectives defined as "traditional" belong solely to European and colonial practices and therefore run counter to our understanding of the varied traditions that nourish modern pluralistic nations. The administration's limited characterization of the "traditional" is also false to our knowledge of the complex historic societies that developed the building conventions known as Classical, Gothic, and Romanesque in the first place. Moreover, the draft order defines Gothic, Romanesque, and Spanish Colonial as the "historic humanistic" styles. We fiercely object to this willfully narrow and Eurocentric definition. Historic humanism (as the term is commonly employed) encompassed myriad traditions that are neither European nor colonial.

The Society of Architectural Historians (SAH) responded to the executive order in a nimble defense of architectural pluralism; we affirm their convictions and add a historians' caution to interrogate the many contingencies carried into the present by any historic building style.

Alongside its definition and privileging of the "traditional," the order's blanket ascription of "beauty" and value to certain building styles is deeply troubling. This language assumes and imposes a single perspective on the experience of public space, which we as historians know cannot ever be claimed in universal terms. Specifically, to many people, the "traditional" architecture defined in the order cannot be identified with the ideals of a modern democratic nation in any incontrovertible way. This caveat includes people in contemporary society, in the early years of settler society in the lands that became the United States, and in the antique and medieval pasts referenced by the styles in question, no less. For many people, past and present, the historic orders connote oppression and denied rights, not the highest aspirations of equality and freedom codified in the US Constitution. Slave labor built the halls of Washington, DC on the ancestral land of the Anacostan (Nacotchtank) people; slavery and other forms of disenfranchisement defined the deep past as well. As such, the "tradition" embodied by the predominant use of Classical, historic European, or Colonial style includes denying most of the population the right to vote. In this and other respects, it is important to remember that the historic styles can represent an exclusive conception of citizenship and a violent denial of personhood.
 
We cannot countenance the perpetuation of colonialism and the blatant privilege of harmfully limited perspectives on history as the "visual embodiment of America's ideals" (to quote the order).
 
A related point about plural perspective pertains to historical monuments. Regarding the current challenges specifically to monuments to the Confederacy in the United States, the ICMA Advocacy Committee endorses the thoughtful, clear call for their removal from public space issued by the Heritage Conservation Committee of the SAH. We draw attention also to the fact that discussion of the place of monuments in public life is urgent and pertinent in various contexts (see, for example, the consideration of Museums and Archives by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada). In weighing the function and character of public monuments in broad perspective, we advocate heightened attention to several matters that we bring to bear in research on the past.
 
1. The subjects of monuments and their locations are not the only factors in what statues or installations represent and how they make the past a part of contemporary public space. Practices of patronage (who commissioned, designed, and paid for them) are pertinent as well, as are the circumstances of monuments' commission, construction, and modification. Also critical is the way monuments are contextualized and how dynamic the contextualization itself might be. An example whose development clearly illustrates each of these factors appears in the Dammtor war memorial in Hamburg, Germany (photos here). Here, debate resulted in the absorption of a First World War memorial, originally constructed in 1936, into a 1985–86 "counter-memorial" on the same ground. Information at the site clarifies the Nazi commission of the original, which restricted participation in the design contest by citizenship and racial categories. The site has been a focal point in modern anti-war demonstrations—a reminder that ephemeral events factor in the history and meaning of the monument alongside its origins and form.
 
2. The physical and visual form of monuments can and should be treated as a question separate from the identities or themes of their subjects. Materials, genre, composition, and style have strong significance. In other words, whether someone or something should be permanently commemorated in public space is a matter distinct from how that commemoration is handled and what form it takes. The July 3 order specifies that "When a statue or work of art commissioned pursuant to this section is meant to depict a historically significant American, the statue or work of art shall be a lifelike or realistic representation of that person, not an abstract or modernist representation." Caveats equivalent to the SAH objections to the overly determinate order on architecture apply here. One might look to the National Memorial for Peace and Justice founded by the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, AL to find a contemporary monument whose design embodies the power of both figural and more abstract forms to involve a visitor in a complex experience of commemoration. It is essential also to note that "realistic" style is not to be confused with documentation. Finally, we would reiterate the need to understand that forms and styles themselves have histories, and that these are part of the creation of any new work.
 
3. We recognize the current moment of interrogating, challenging, defending, and even breaking images as something vitally important in and of itself. The power of images in public space should never be underestimated. Throughout our histories, episodes of both iconoclasm and iconophilia (actions attacking or asserting support for images, respectively) have laid bare issues essential to the definition of particular communities and even to the definition of whole societies. Images, their forms, their presence, and their absence all broker convictions, ideas, and power. We must all attend to the urgency with which people now call—in various places and from diverse positions—for us to take the nature and work of images in public space profoundly seriously. Moreover, we must remember that monuments, as images and as products of visual cultures, have histories of their own. That history is to be distinguished from the subject a monument represents. To contest a monument is not necessarily to erase its historical subject, but to engage directly with fashioning the object's own history. In other words, moments of destruction are as much a part of monuments' histories as are their original conceptions, constructions, and commemorative agendas.
 
 
— ICMA Advocacy Committee, Board of Directors, and Executive Committee, with thanks to all colleagues who contributed to authoring and revising the statement

ICMA News, Summer 2020 now available online

ICMA News               

Summer 2020
Melanie Hanan, Editor

Click here to read.
Also available on www.medievalart.org

INSIDE

Statement of Solidarity and Action

Commemorations
Walter Cahn, 1933 – 2020
Paul Crossley, 1945-2019
Robert Suckale, 1943-2020

Special Features
Reflections: Thoughts on Medieval Art and Two Pandemics, by Judith Steinhoff
Pivoting to Online Learning During COVID-19, by Anne Rudloff Stanton
Graduate Teaching During COVID-19, by Matthew M. Reeve
Medieval Collections in the Time of a “Great Plague,” by Gerhard Lutz
Reflections on the Moment: The Met, the Pandemic and the New Imperatives, by Griff Mann

Exhibition Report
Earthquakes and Photography––An Overview of the Online Exhibition “Amatrice in Focus,”  by Francesco Gangemi

Exhibition Review
The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction, by Katherine Werwie

Events and Opportunities

The deadline for the next issue of ICMA News is 15 October 2020. Please send information to newsletter@medievalart.org 

If you would like your upcoming conference, CFP, or exhibition included in the newsletter please email the information to EventsExhibitions@medievalart.org.

ICMA SPONSORED SESSION AT AAH: CFP - THE VIRGIN AS AUCTORITAS: THE AUTHORITY OF THE VIRGIN MARY AND FEMALE MORAL–DOCTRINAL AUTHORITY IN THE MIDDLE AGES, DUE 2 OCTOBER 2020

ICMA at the Association for Art History’s 2021 Annual Conference
Wednesday 14 - Saturday 17 April 2021

Call for Papers
The Virgin as Auctoritas: The Authority of the Virgin Mary and female moral–doctrinal authority in the Middle Ages
ICMA sponsored session

Organized by
Francesca Dell’Acqua,
 Università degli studi di Salerno, fdellacqua@unisa.it

The International Center of Medieval Art invites paper proposals for our session at the Association for Art History’s 2021 Annual Conference, held in Birmingham, Wednesday 14 - Saturday 17 April 2021.

This session aims at exploring a fundamental issue: female authority through the lens of visual/material culture. It involves prominently the Virgin Mary – as well as figures of female authority in the medieval world – because in the late decades of the 20th century, feminist thinkers pointed at the ‘negative model’ offered by the Virgin Mary since for centuries she had been branded by the Catholic Church as a role model for modesty, submission and virginity. However, between late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, the Virgin Mary emerged as Queen of Heaven through preaching and liturgical texts, visual arts and public assemblies – that is, the ‘mass media’ of that time. Mary was pictured as a very strong, authoritative figure, rather than weak and compliant.

Already during late Antiquity, Mary was commonly perceived as the mighty protector and spiritual stronghold of capital cities in the Mediterranean. Between the 8th and the 11th centuries, the role of royal women came to the fore, especially in Byzantium and in Ottonian Germany. Very striking is also the case of a number of major Italian city-states between the 12th and the 15th centuries where the Virgin Mary came to be identified with political and economic supremacy. But how did the preaching and missions of mendicant orders affect her image? How has a prominent role for female authorities been transmitted through visual arts and material culture? And what about the roles that women held in Africa and Asia and in other religious traditions?

In sum, this session can help understand what bearing the figure of the humble Virgin Mary eventually had on female leadership, and also how female leadership evolved or not. Topics may include but are not limited to:

  • The Virgin Mary as a figure of authority and wisdom in texts and images

  • The Virgin Mary in medieval preaching/arts: ‘only’ a model for humility and mercy?

  • Female political authority and the Virgin Mary as a role model in texts and images

  • Female moral, doctrinal, political and religious authority within and without the Christian oecumene in texts and images

  • Women and power: a difficult relationship.

https://eu-admin.eventscloud.com/website/2065/the-virgin-as-auctoritas/

Click here to download a PDF of this abstract

More Info on submitting: https://eu.eventscloud.com/website/2065/sessions-2021/.

Papers are due to Francesca Dell’Acqua, fdellacqua@unisa.it, by 2 October 2020. Further information on how to submit is here.

Register for the virtual ICMA Mentoring Event by Monday 6 July 2020

Upcoming ICMA Mentoring Event


A few of our committees have come together to organize a virtual mentoring session for Thursday, July 9th from 1-3 ET in lieu of the mentoring lunch that was originally scheduled to take place during the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds. The IMC is now virtual, but you do not need to be registered for the virtual conference to attend our event.

This session is the first of a series of virtual mentoring events that we'll be holding. Later in the summer and fall we will have virtual gatherings focused on topics pertinent to rising scholars. But for this inaugural session we will keep the discussion open-ended and more casual. You don't have to come for the whole time. There will be ICMA members in attendance whenever you are able to drop in, for however long you have.

If you want to participate, please answer this Google poll by Monday, July 6th, 5pm ET with your

  • research interests and 

  • professional areas you would like to discuss (job market, promotion, getting published, gender/LGBTQI+/race inequalities, work/life balance etc.),

  • or we can just shoot the breeze about the crazy world we are living in (no, we should try to make it a little medieval and a bit focused on mentoring)

And while this is intended as a mentoring event for students and junior faculty we welcome any ICMA member who wishes to come along.

We'd love to see all your virtual faces!

Employment Opportunity: ICMA Coordinator for Digital Engagement

Employment Opportunity: ICMA Coordinator for Digital Engagement

Job Description:
The International Center of Medieval Art (“the ICMA”) seeks applications for a 6-month part-time position as ICMA Coordinator for Digital Engagement, a post supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) emergency relief response to COVID-19. The Coordinator will work with the ICMA President, Vice President, Chairs of our committees on Advocacy, Digital Resources, and Programs & Lectures, and our Executive Director to develop and oversee online offerings that serve the needs of scholars, instructors, museum professionals, and other enthusiasts and specialists in medieval art history at a time when we cannot gather in person. The ICMA Coordinator for Digital Engagement will be the contact person for a suite of online initiatives that include: a repository of resources for online teaching; digital events with museum professionals; virtual classroom visits with experts in the field; mentoring sessions; and an oral history project with podcast interviews.

Applicants must hold or be pursuing a PhD in medieval art history, be eligible to work in the United States, currently be without full-time employment, and have experience with and curiosity about digital platforms for meetings, pedagogy, and collaborative work (such as Zoom, Crowdcast, Perusall, and Voicethread). We underscore that the individual hired may hold another paid position, but it should not qualify as “full-time” under the legal US definition.

Please send a CV and letter of interest (no more than two pages, single spaced), specifying your research expertise; history of engagement, if any, with the ICMA; and knowledge of relevant digital platforms; as well as several ideas for initiatives that you believe could serve the community of medieval art historians in this challenging moment. These documents can be uploaded here.

Also, please arrange for one brief letter of reference, specifying your digital proficiencies and capacity for teamwork. This document can be uploaded here.

The International Center of Medieval Art is a 501 (c) (3) organization whose Executive Committee, Board of Directors, Committee members, Associates, and other officers work volunteer. For information on the ICMA, please visit www.medievalart.org

Compensation: $9,000 (6 months @ $1,500 per month; average 10 hours per week); technology subsidy: $600 (6 months @ $100 per month); no fringe benefits

Applications due July 1, 2020, 5pm ET; position runs July 15 – December 31, 2020. Finalists will be invited for an online presentation and interview in early July 2020.

Direct any questions to Ryan Frisinger, Executive Director, at icma@medievalart.org.

Premodern Women Artists and Patrons: A Global Bibliography

Premodern Women Artists and Patrons: A Global Bibliography: a bibliography on women artists and patrons, with sections on Asia, the Americas, Islamic Cultures, and Europe from antiquity–c. 1700, individual women, topics like “Textiles and Needlework,” and online and teaching resources. Additions, corrections, and feedback on its structure (from new entries to Sub-Saharan Africa) are welcome via Comments on the Google Doc. Submitted by Pat Simons (University of Michigan) and Tracy Chapman Hamilton (Virginia Commonwealth University, Affiliate).

A Statement of Solidarity and Action

A Statement of Solidarity and Action
June 5, 2020


We add our voices to the chorus of scholarly and cultural institutions standing in solidarity with the tens of thousands of people who are protesting the systemic racism manifest in the killing of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, David McAtee, Tony McDade, and countless other Black individuals in recent months and over the 400-year history of what has become the United States. We offer a full-throated commitment to the declaration that Black Lives Matter.
 
In this moment of national and international crisis, we also wish to recognize the local impacts of both racism and the current pandemic, which in many cases intertwine. The ICMA’s headquarters is at The Cloisters, located in Fort Tryon Park in northern Manhattan, and the surrounding neighborhoods of Washington Heights and Inwood have been ravaged by COVID-19. Despite the challenges of the day, on Sunday, May 29, roughly 1,500 members of the community came out for a vigil against police brutality held on the Cloisters Lawn. That gathering brought solace and redoubled commitment to productive change and healing.
 
In the same spirit, we encourage our members to undertake self-reflection and action, and to that end, we direct you toward this document of anti-Racism resources. It is beyond our capacity at this moment to review and vouch for every one of the links included; so please recognize that our aim in sharing this collection is to stimulate your own engagement and discernment. We also direct your attention to suggestions for Expanding the Discourse of Medieval Art, compiled by Andrea Achi (ICMA Board Member and Assistant Curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art) and Meseret Oldjira (PhD Student, Princeton), which appeared in ICMA News (winter 2017) and inspired initiatives of our Advocacy and Programs & Lectures committees. That document will continue to guide us as we move forward with our work aiming to highlight issues of race and social justice as they pertain to the study and exhibition of medieval culture. We welcome input that will help us expand the resources available on the section of the ICMA website dedicated to Teaching a Global Middle Ages, and we are eager to undertake new initiatives supporting inclusive practices in pedagogy and scholarship. Please be in touch with your ideas.
 
The International Center of Medieval Art is in a moment of transformation, with the recent confirmation of a new mission statement that articulates our commitment to supporting research of the visual and material cultures of “every corner of the medieval world,” broadening the definition of our field. Moreover, we have initiated programs proactively aimed at nurturing scholars identified with groups traditionally excluded from the academy. The panel “Expanding the Medieval World,” held at the ICMA Annual Meeting during CAA in February in Chicago; the workshop on “Considering Race in the Classroom,” co-organized with the Material Collective, to be held at the ICMS at Kalamazoo in May 2021; and research by many members of the ICMA community that increasingly expands our knowledge of interconnected medieval communities, including work on various facets of medieval Africa, the museological presentation of African-American experiences, and modern racist appropriations of the medieval past exemplify productive directions in our discipline.
 
As historians of art and architecture, we are particularly attuned to the ways in which images and structures can bolster assertions of authority, and we understand that the creative work of artists equally can shine a light on ugly truths. Though most in our community specialize in the culture of the distant past, we can use our expertise and critical skills to educate and inspire as we analyze the photographs and videos documenting the demonstrations, memorial gatherings, marches, and clashes of the past weeks.
 
We in the leadership of the ICMA hope that you will join us as we continue to promote and pursue projects being advanced worldwide aimed at education and social justice.


Executive Committee of the ICMA
Nina Rowe, President
Stephen Perkinson, Vice President
Warren Woodfin, Treasurer
Richard Leson, Secretary

 
Board of Directors of the ICMA
Andrea Achi
Kirk Ambrose
Jennifer Borland
Paroma Chatterjee
Jennifer Feltman
Cathleen Fleck
Holly Flora
Shirin Fozi
Heidi Gearhart
Tracy Chapman Hamilton
Anne Heath
Anne D. Hedeman
Joan Holladay
Erik Inglis
Bryan Keene
Beatrice Kitzinger
Asa Mittman
Linda Safran
Sasha Suda
Thelma K. Thomas
Nancy Wu
 
Executive Director of the ICMA
Ryan Frisinger

Nominations for Board of Directors, Associates, and Nominating Committee due June 26, 2020

Dear Fellow ICMA Members,

In these difficult days, it is especially important to think about fashioning the future. I write to remind you that the deadline to propose candidates for nomination to ICMA leadership positions is June 26. The Nominating Committee is eager to hear from you.

We seek nominees (and self-nominees) for the following posts:
-7 seats on the Board of Directors (3-year term, 2021-24)
-5 seats on next year’s Nominating Committee (1-year term, 2021-22)
-4 seats as Associates (usually based outside of North America; 3-year term, 2021-24)

Duties of and qualifications for ICMA positions are outlined in the organization bylaws and can be downloaded at: https://www.medievalart.org/s/ICMA-Bylaws.pdf

Our goal is to foster the continued vitality of ICMA by including among its leaders colleagues at every career stage, with a broad range of research specialties, and from diverse professional and geographic origins.  In addition to traditional research strengths, we also seek nominees who query the “edges” of our discipline and the boundaries around research topics, who engage in the theorization of our methods and objects of study, and who might help us build a broad and inclusive membership in the future.

To achieve that diversity through a robust pool of candidates, we need your help.

Please share your ideas for candidates with me by June 26.  And please take a moment to consider adding your own name: self-nominations are welcome.

For the sake of convenience, we have created two online forms for nominations and self-nominations, which you can access using the links below. In either case, I would also be happy to hear your ideas and answer any questions via e-mail (eshortell@massart.edu).  

Nominations: click here
Self-nominations: click here

Should you want to speak about potential nominations, please feel free to contact me or, if you prefer, any of my fellow committee members:
Joseph Salvatore Ackley jackley@wesleyan.edu
Sonja Drimmer sdrimmer@arthist.umass.edu
Elina Gertsman exg152@case.edu
Eva Hoffman Eva.Hoffman@tufts.edu 

 
Many thanks and best wishes,
Ellen Shortell
Chair, ICMA Nominating Commitee 2020-21

Professor Emeritus, History of Art
Massachusetts College of Art and Design

We Mourn the Passing of Walter Cahn, President of the ICMA, 1990-93

The ICMA Community mourns the passing of Walter Cahn.

Walter Benedict (Baruch ben Otto) Cahn
September 24, 1933-May 29, 2020


Walter Benedict (Baruch ben Otto) Cahn died on May 29, 2020, at his home in Hamden, CT, USA, at the age of 87.

Walter was born on September 24, 1933, in hospital in Karlsruhe, Germany. He was the second son of Otto and Frieda [b. Kahn] Cahn of R?lzheim (Rheinland Palatinate), his older brother being Norbert Simon Cahn (later Mason), born on February 10, 1930. The family had a history of many centuries in the Rhineland.
In the days following the events of 10 November 1938 (Reichspogromnacht), the family home was seized and the family expelled from R?lzheim, moving to a flat at 166 Kaiserstrasse in Karlsruhe.
In the immediate wake of Germany's invasion of France in October 1940, the Cahns were expelled, together with a number of thousands of other Rhineland Jews into what subsequently became Vichy France. They were placed in an internment camp at Gurs, near Oloron (Pyrenées-Atlantiques) in southwest France, and subsequently transferred to another camp, at Rivesaltes (Pyrenées-Orientales) near Perpignan.

In 1941, Walter and his brother Norbert were placed for reasons of safety with the children's home of the Éclaireurs Israëlites de France at 18 rue du Port, Moissac (Tarn-et-Garonne). Walter attended the École Saint-Benoît primary school. The two brothers remained in Moissac until 1943.
On September 11, 1942, Walter and Norbert's parents Otto and Frieda Cahn were deported from Rivesaltes to Drancy, and presumably on to Auschwitz, where they were killed. Otto and Frieda Cahn are officially listed as "Verschollen" ("lost").

During the period 1943-1945, Walter and his brother lived in hiding places provided by the French resistance at Le Sappey (Isère) near Grenoble, La Grave (Hautes-Alpes), and the Duplan family farm at Poët-Laval (Drôme). They fitfully attended local primary schools.

Following liberation, during 1945-1947, orphaned, the brothers returned to Moissac children's home, re-established at the Hôtel du Vieux Moulin. They attended the Collège de Moissac (secondary school), and with the assistance of the Red Cross made contact with family in the United States who had succeeded in fleeing Germany before it had become impossible.

In January 1947, Walter and Norbert immigrated to the United States. He lived at 141 Rogers Avenue, Brooklyn, home of Siegmund and Paula Kallmann (b. Cahn), Paula being one of his father's sisters. He also stayed during summers with Louis and Lucie Willstätter (b. Cahn), one of his father's sisters, in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he held summer jobs at a local movie theater and department store.

From 1947-1948, Walter attended P.S. 138 in Brooklyn, NY, and then from 1948-1952, he attended the School of Industrial Arts (now School of Art and Design) in New York. Walter held part-time jobs at a second hand bookstore on Fourth Avenue, the Ted Moskowitz art studio, and other commercial art studios. He graduated as Valedictorian from the School of Industrial Arts in May 1952. He was admitted to Cooper Union and Pratt Institute with a full scholarship, and he attended Pratt from 1952-1956.

During the 1950s, concurrently with his studies, Walter worked at Emet Advertising, as a packaging designer for Norbert Jay, Empire State Building (1953); as a part-time designer at William Douglas McAdams Advertising Agency (1955-1956); and as a part-time designer at William Douglas McAdams (1958-1960).

From 1956-1958, Walter served in the United States Army Medical Corps, stationed at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, DC.

Following the end of his military service, during the period 1958-1962, Walter undertook graduate study in Art History, at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. He was awarded a Master of Arts degree in 1961, and a Ph.D. in Medieval Art History in 1967. His doctoral dissertation was published in 1976 as The Romanesque Wooden Doors of Auvergne.

Walter's professional career was spent primarily at Yale University where he rose from Acting Instructor (1965-1967) to Assistant Professor (1967-1968) to Associate Professor (1968-1976) to Professor (1976- 1986). In 1986, he was named Carnegie Professor of the History of Art, a position he held until 2002. He several times served as Chair of the Yale Art History Department. Walter retired from active teaching in 2002, but continued to serve as Emeritus, including continuing to publish and advise the work of younger professionals.

Walter served as editor or on the editorial boards of publications including Gesta, Art Bulletin and Arte medieval, including a term as Editor-in-Chief of Art Bulletin (1988-1991). He also acted as scientific adviser to the journal Histoire de l'art (1997-2002).

During the course of his career Walter also undertook Fulbright Fellowship in Paris (1962-1963); was Senior lecturer at Ravensbourne College of Art, Bromley, Kent (England) (1963-1965); Visiting Associate Professor, Columbia University (1974); John Simon Guggenheim Fellow (1981); and Lecturer, Centre d'Études Romanes, University of Poitiers (1981).

Among high honors, in 1989, Walter was elected Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America. An exhibition at Yale's Beinecke Library was held in 2003 to in his honor. In 2014, Walter was elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Walter was widely published. His works include comprehensive studies in his field of expertise such as Romanesque Bible Illumination (1982) (also published as Die Bibel in der Romantik and as La Bible romane), as well as theoretical explorations into the Philosophy of Art, most notably Masterpieces: Chapters in the History of an Idea (1988). Throughout his life he remained relentlessly both curious and whimsical, exploring the fringes of artistic interpretation, once for example lecturing on the symbolism of the Starbuck's logo. In later life, he increasingly explored Jewish themes, including both in medieval art, as well as ranging out of exclusively medieval themes, undertaking research for example on the modernist German Jewish painter Max Liebermann (2007). He also paid extensive tribute in writing to his intellectual forebears such as Henri Focillon, as well as contemporaries such as Jonathan Alexander and James Marrow.

Walter was twice a widower: he married Annabelle Simon on May 29, 1960. Walter died on their 60th wedding anniversary.

Walter and Annabelle had one son – Claude – born on April 7, 1968. Walter and Annabelle remained married until her death in January 1996. Walter married Brenda Lee Danet in 2001, and remained married to her until her death in 2008. At the time of his death, Walter was romantically involved with Rosalyn Muskovits (nee Bloomfield), whom he first met while attending Pratt Institute in the 1950s. Walter's brother Norbert predeceased him in 2017.

Walter is survived by his son Claude Cahn and grandchildren Sarah Kali Cahn (b. March 25, 2008) and Johannah Shai Cahn (b. December 26, 2009), the children of Claude and his wife Cosmina Novacovici. His grandchildren knew him as "Papo Dude".

Private Funeral Services for Immediate Family only will be held at Mishkan Israel cemetery in New Haven, CT, in a plot adjoining his second wife, Brenda Lee Danet. A memorial service for Walter will be held in the Spring or Summer of 2021. The Robert E. Shure & Son Funeral Home, New Haven is in care of Arrangements. To sign an online registry book or to leave a message of condolence, please visit; www.shurefuneralhome.com.

To Plant Memorial Trees in memory, please visit our Sympathy Store.

(See the original post here)

Call for applications - ICMA Viewpoints Series Editor(s), due 15 July 2020

ICMA Viewpoints

Call for applications - ICMA Viewpoints Series Editor(s)
 
Applications due July 15, 2020, for position beginning January 1, 2021

The International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) invites applications for the position of Series Editor(s) for our recently-established book series, Viewpoints, co-published with the Pennsylvania State University Press.  The Viewpoints series aims to instigate new conversations and engage with fresh perspectives on medieval art and visual-material culture.  (Please see the description below.) The new Series Editor(s) will collaborate closely with Eleanor H. Goodman, editor at the Pennsylvania State University Press.  The successful Series Editor(s) will be effective, efficient, and driven; they should share the established vision for this book series and have the energy and time to commission thought-provoking contributions that engage with current debates in the fields of medieval studies and art history.  We underscore that Viewpoints breaks with traditional modes for the scholarly monograph.  Books in the series will be short and idea driven and will not be heavily illustrated. Viewpoints volumes should be attuned to the social and historiographical stakes of scholarship (bound, for instance to issues of race, gender, or power dynamics) and address both the original functions and modern re-uses of medieval material.
 
We seek applications from individuals or teams of two, and we are particularly eager to work with scholars who identify with groups that historically have been underrepresented in the academy.  Applications consist of a CV and a cover letter.  The cover letter should explain your vision for the series, including ideas for particular volumes, and delineate your editorial experience and/or why you are well-suited to an editorial appointment.  The position is unpaid, but you will have the satisfaction of making an important mark on the field.  Please email requested materials to Amanda Luyster, Chair of the ICMA Publications Committee (aluyster@holycross.edu), and Nina Rowe, President of the ICMA (nrowe@fordham.edu).
 



The International Center of Medieval Art and the Pennsylvania State University Press announce a new book series: ICMA Books—Viewpoints. This series aims to engage with and instigate new conversations, debates, and perspectives not only about medieval art and visual-material culture, but also in relation to the critical practices employed by medieval art his­torians. Books will typically be data-rich, issue-driven, and even polemical. The range of potential subjects is broad and varied, and each title will tackle a significant and timely problem in the field of medieval art and visual-material culture. The Viewpoints series is interdisciplinary and actively involved in providing a forum for current critical developments in art historical methodology, the structure of scholarly writing, and/or the use of evidence. Books in the ICMA Books—Viewpoints series will be short: ca. 45,000–75,000 words, illustrated by no more than 20–30 black-and-white images, and will be written to engage specialists and students alike.
 

Gesta Volume 59, Number 1 is now available online!

Gesta  v59n1 is now available online!

Inside:
Racetrack to Salvation: The Circus, the Basilica, and the Martyr
Lynda L. Coon and Kim Sexton

Suger and the Abbey Church of Saint-Denis, 1144–51
Elizabeth A. R. Brown

The Font of the Interdict: Reconsidering the Function of Ornament on the Baptismal Font of San Giovanni in Pisa
Isabelle Dolezalek

ICMA membership provides exclusive online access to the full run of Gesta in full textPDF, and e-Book editions – at no additional charge. Print editions should arrive in your mailbox soon. Not a member yet? Join here

To access your members-only journal subscription, log in to the ICMA site here with your username and password.  If you have any questions, please email icma@medievalart.org

#AskGetty - opportunity for anyone anywhere to ask questions related to the history of art

The Getty has launched #AskGetty, a social media opportunity for anyone anywhere to ask questions about anything related to the history of art.

They can be about anything—your favorite painting, how to preserve mosaics, who painted the first unicorn, how do you keep sculptures from falling in an earthquake?

You send The Getty your questions, they’ll find the right Getty specialist who can weigh in. Once a week they will answer a question, on video, on social media.

Click here for more info.

With Libraries Closed, Try ICMA's Scholarship Sharing

If you’re looking for a resource that you cannot access because of library closures, please consult the ICMA Scholarship Sharing plan (many thanks to Sarah Guérin and Richard Plant!), an active Google Spreadsheet that members of our community. In this challenging time without library access, you can regularly consult the spreadsheet in the coming months to either (a) request yourself or (b) fulfill colleagues' requests for PDF'd texts and high-resolution images of artworks.

ICMA's Resources for Online Teaching

Many of us are suddenly facing the challenges of online teaching. We recognize that this shift can be disorienting, and we want to do what we can to offer support.
 
So, on the ICMA website, we have compiled resources in the hope that they help clarify the issues and provide useful information and guidance.
 
Click this link. Or visit our site, medievalart.org, go to RESOURCES on the menu bar, and in the dropdown you will find RESOURCES FOR ONLINE TEACHING.
 
We hope all of you are managing okay during this period of upheaval.

LAST CHANCE - ICMA Annual Book Prize, submit your title by 31 May 2020

The ICMA Book Prize

deadline:  31 May 2020

The ICMA invites submissions for the annual prize for best single- or dual-authored book on any topic in medieval art. To be eligible for the 2020 competition, books must have been printed in 2019. No special issues of journals or anthologies or exhibition catalogues can be considered. 

The competition is international and open to all ICMA members. To join or renew, click here.

Languages of publication: English, French, German, Italian, or Spanish

Jury (2019-2021): Eric Ramirez-Weaver (chair), Péter Bokody, Till-Holger Borchert, Dorothy Glass, Julie Harris

Prize: US $1,000 to a single author, or $500 each to two co-authors


Submission of books: only printed books with one or two authors are eligible for the prize. A statement of current ICMA membership must accompany each submission. 

Presses and self-nominations: books must be sent directly to the jury members. Please fill out this form here. After the form is submitted, an email with addresses will be sent.

Note: Deadline for the submission form is 31 May. Shipment will be coordinated separately; books do not need to be received by 31 May.

Email icma@medievalart.org with any questions.

ICMA News, Spring 2020 now available online

ICMA News               

Spring 2020
Melanie Hanan, Editor

Click here to read.
Also available on www.medievalart.org

INSIDE

Commemorations
David Jacoby, 1928 – 2018
Danielle Valin Johnson, 1938 – 2019
Martin Warnke, 1937 – 2019
Georgia Wright, 1937 – 2019

Reflection 
HBK Symposium and Doha Museum Review, by Tracy Chapman Hamilton

Resources
Creation of Gothic Architecture, the site, by John James

Exhibition Review
Van Eyck: An Optical Revolution, by Joseph R. Kopta

Events and Opportunities


The deadline for the summer issue of ICMA News is 15 June 2020. Please send information to newsletter@medievalart.org 

If you would like your upcoming conference, CFP, or exhibition included in the newsletter please email the information to EventsExhibitions@medievalart.org.

CFPs due 10 May 2020: ICMA at the 6th Forum Medieval Art (Forum Kunst Des Mittelalters), Frankfurt

ICMA AT 6th Forum Medieval Art (Forum Kunst Des Mittelalters): Senses
Frankfurt am Main, Sept 29 – Oct 2, 2021
Call for Sessions (due 10 May 2020)
 
The International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) seeks proposals for sessions to be held under the organization’s sponsorship in 2021 at the 6th Forum Medieval Art, which will take place in Frankfurt. Intended as an open colloquium occurring biennially at rotating sites and organized by the Deutsche Verein für Kunstwissenschaft e.V, the Forum seeks to bring together research and researchers on different fields, regions and periods and to serve—as its name suggests—as a forum for ideas pertaining to the study of medieval art.
 
The 6th Forum will focus on the theme of the senses or sensual perception (full description here).
 
Proposals for ICMA sponsorship should include the following:

  • Title

  • Abstract

  • CV of the organizer(s).

  • Please upload all session proposals seeking ICMA sponsorship in a single Word doc or PDF with name in the title by 10 May 2020 here

The organizer(s) will have until 1 June 2020 to send their approved proposals to mail@mittelalterkongress.de.

The Forum will send out a Call for Papers once the selection of sessions has been made. Session organizers and speakers must be ICMA members. Thanks to a generous grant from the Kress Foundation, funds may be available to defray travel costs of sponsored session speakers.

For inquiries, contact the Chair of the ICMA Programs and Lectures Committee: Bryan C. Keene, Getty Museum, bkeene@getty.edu

(Deadline Extended!) Call for Proposals: ICMA at CAA 2021, due 10 May 2020

ICMA AT COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION ANNUAL CONFERENCE
New York City, 10-13 February 2021
Call for ICMA Sponsored Session Proposals
due 10 May 2020

The International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) seeks proposals for sessions to be held under the organization’s sponsorship in 2021 at the annual meeting of the College Art Association. Session organizers and speakers must be ICMA members.

The 2021 CAA conference will focus on the CLIMATE CRISIS and we encourage submissions related to the theme and which address a global Middle Ages. Possible topics might include (but are not limited to): The “medieval warm period” of the 10th-13th centuries, which were followed by cooling temperatures beginning around 1300; catastrophes, such as storms and earthquakes; regional climatic differences; issues of patrimony, preservation, and climate change as it affects medieval monuments globally, including architecture, sculpture, painting, manuscripts, etc.


Proposals must include the following in one single Doc or PDF with the organizer’s name in the title:

  • Session abstract

  • CV of the organizer(s)

  • Session organizers may also include a list of potential speakers

 
Please upload all session proposals as a single DOC or PDF by 10 May 2020  here.

The organizer(s) will have until 19 May 2020 to upload their approved proposals on the CAA website here.

For inquiries, contact the Chair of the ICMA Programs and Lectures Committee: Bryan C. Keene, Getty Museum, bkeene@getty.edu


A note about the ICMA-Kress Travel Awards
Thanks to a generous grant from the Kress Foundation, funds may be available to defray travel costs of speakers in ICMA sponsored sessions up to a maximum of $600 for domestic travel and of $1200 for international travel. If available, the Kress funds are allocated for travel and hotel only. Speakers in ICMA sponsored sessions will be refunded only after the conference, against travel receipts.  In addition to speakers, session organizers delivering papers as an integral part of the session (i.e. with a specific title listed in the program) are now also eligible to receive travel funding.  

Visit:  http://www.medievalart.org/kress-travel-grant/