Evaluating 2021: Race, Diversity, and Medieval Art History in the Classroom and the Museum
May 4
12–1:30 pm ET
More information coming soon!
Evaluating 2021: Race, Diversity, and Medieval Art History in the Classroom and the Museum
May 4
12–1:30 pm ET
More information coming soon!
University of East Anglia's Department of Art History & World Art Studies is thrilled to invite you to the Martindale Lecture 2022, our annual lecture from a world-renowned expert in medieval and renaissance art:
CROWNING WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR: ARCHBISHOP STIGAND AND THE TIBERIUS PSALTER
Prof. Sandy Heslop (UEA)
Thursday 12 May 2022, 17:30 BST
Lecture Theatre 4 at UEA and online
1066 was a momentous year in English history: two invasions, two bloody battles, and two coronations. The trauma has been written into the national narrative ever since, but we rarely have much insight into the mentality of the individuals involved. The Tiberius Psalter offers an exception, illuminating the character and predicament of Archbishop Stigand of Canterbury, a leading player in the drama.
The lecture will be followed by a drinks reception to toast Prof. Heslop on his retirement from the department. All are welcome, both in-person at UEA and online.
For more information and to register for a free ticket to the lecture, visit: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/277417933507.
ICMA Sessions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies
The 57th International Congress on Medieval Studies takes place online Monday, May 9, through Saturday, May 14, 2022, followed by two weeks of recorded content available to registrants from Monday, May 16, through Saturday, May 28. Special events include a series of behind-the-scenes museum visits.
More information: https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress
Monday, May 9, 9:00 a.m. EDT
From Prophet of Israel to Miracle-Working Saint: The Transformations of Elijah’s Story in Jewish and Christian Iconographic Traditions (ca. Third–Fifteenth Centuries)
Sponsor: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Barbara Crostini, Uppsala Univ.
Presider: Barbara Crostini
Witness and Redeemer: Elijah the Prophet as Envisioned by Jews in Medieval Europe
Chana Shacham-Rosby, Center for Jewish Studies, Harvard Univ.
Narrative Strategies and Sacramental Meanings: Picturing Elijah’s Story in the Thirteenth-Century Frescoes at Morača Monastery
Andrei Dumitrescu, Central European Univ./New Europe College
Witnessing Elijah and Elisha: The Sons of the Prophets as Monastic Exemplars
Erika Loic, Florida State Univ.
The Prophet Elijah and the Theme of Spiritual Filiation in Moldavian Iconography, ca. 1480–1530
Vlad Bedros, New Europe College
Monday, May 9, 1:00 p.m. EDT
Mining the Collection I: Aga Khan Museum (A Virtual Visit)
Sponsors: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA), Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Michael Chagnon, Aga Khan Museum
Presider: Michael Chagnon
Oliphant
Mariam Rosser-Owen, Victoria & Albert Museum
Raqqa Albarello
Marcus Milwright, Univ. of Victoria
Base of a Mosul Incense Burner
Ruba Kana’an, Univ. of Toronto–Mississauga
Tuesday, May 10, 1:00 p.m. EDT
Mining the Collection II: J. Paul Getty Museum (A Virtual Visit)
Sponsors: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA), Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Elizabeth Morrison, J. Paul Getty Museum
Shirin Fozi, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Presider: Elizabeth Morrison
Wenceslaus Psalter
Meredith Cohen, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Ovid, Excerpts from Heroides
Cynthia Brown, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Bifolium from the Pink Qur’an
Linda Komaroff, Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Wednesday, May 11, 1:00 p.m. EDT
Mining the Collection III: The Metropolitan Museum of Art (A Virtual Visit)
Sponsors: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA); Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: C. Griffith Mann, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Shirin Fozi, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Presider: C. Griffith Mann
Magdeburg Ivory
Jacqueline Lombard, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ivory Mirror Backs
Scott Miller, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ivory Panels with Peter and Paul and Ivory Mortar
Nicole Pulchene, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Thursday, May 12, 9:00 a.m. EDT
Naples and Beyond: World-Wide Cultural Networks I: Within Naples
Sponsor: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Denva Gallant, Univ. of Delaware
Presider: Janis Elliott, Texas Tech Univ.
Confraternal Art and Architecture in Angevin Naples: The Hospital of Saint Eligio and the Compagnia della Croce at Saint Agostino
Stefano D’Ovidio, Univ. degli Studi di Napoli Federico II
Ribbed Domes in Naples and South Italy
Caroline A. Bruzelius, Duke Univ.
Naples outside Naples: Medieval Funerary Sculpture at the Abbey of Montevergine
Paola Vitolo, Univ. degli Studi di Napoli Federico II
De statua: Visualizing Fame in Early Renaissance Naples
Nicolas Bock, Univ. de Lausanne
Thursday, May 12, 1:00 p.m. EDT
Mining the Collection IV: Dumbarton Oaks Museum (A Virtual Visit)
Sponsors: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA); Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Jonathan Shea, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
Shirin Fozi, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Presider: Jonathan Shea
Seal of Constantine, Imperial Protospatharios
Nikos Kontogiannis, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
Seal of John, Metropolitan of Mytilene
Eric McGeer, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection
Seal of John, Candlemaker
Alex Magnolia, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Thursday, May 12, 3:00 p.m. EDT
Naples and Beyond: World-Wide Cultural Networks II: Beyond Naples I
Sponsor: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Janis Elliott, Texas Tech Univ.
Presider:Denva Gallant, Univ. of Delaware
Xmaltatis per totum: The “Church Reliquary” at San Nicola, Bari, in Context Jill Caskey, Univ. of Toronto–Mississauga
Kings in Heaven and Workers in Hell: A Civic Last Judgment Fresco in Sant’Agata de’ Goti
Claire Jensen, Univ. of Toronto
Court Art beyond Naples: The Frescoes of Santa Caterina, Galatina
Maria Harvey, James Madison Univ.
Thursday, May 12, 5:00 p.m. EDT
Naples and Beyond: World-Wide Cultural Networks III: Beyond Naples II
Sponsor: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Janis Elliott, Texas Tech Univ.
Denva Gallant, Univ. of Delaware
Gilbert Jones, International Center of Medieval Art
Presider: Cathleen A. Fleck, St. Louis Univ.
A Manuscript on the Move: The Kitāb al-Hāwī between Tunisia and Naples Nora S. Lambert, Univ. of Chicago
The Dynastic in the Monastic: Considering the Image of Robert of Anjou in Morgan MS M.626
Denva Gallant
The Hungarian Angevin Legendary: A Picture-Book of Saints Lives and Its Con- nection to Angevin Naples
Janis Elliott
Thursday, May 12, 7:00 p.m. EDT
New Approaches to the Art and Architecture of Angevin and Aragonese Naples (1265–1458)
Sponsor: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student Committee
Organizer: Gilbert Jones, International Center of Medieval Art
Presider: Emma Langham Dove, Univ. of Virginia
Gilbert Jones
A Christological Cycle Fit for a Queen in the Bible of Naples (BnF, MS fr. 9561)
Eilis Livia Coughlin, Rice Univ.
Joanna I of Naples: A Queen’s Visual Heritage
Paula van der Zande
Francisco Laurens, Ymagier du roi: Sculpting the King of Sicily in Provence during the Second Half of the Fifteenth Century
Françoise Keating, Univ. of Victoria
The Battle for Otranto: Adriatic Cultural Competition in the Wake of Ottoman Aggression
Jacob Eisensmith, Univ. of Pittsburgh Respondent: Denva Gallant, Univ. of Delaware
Janis Elliott, Texas Tech Univ.
Friday, May 13, 1:00 p.m. EDT
Mining the Collection V: Cleveland Museum of Art (A Virtual Visit)
Sponsors: International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA); Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Gerhard Lutz, Cleveland Museum of Art
Shirin Fozi, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Presider: Gerhard Lutz
Aṣṭasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā-sūtra Manuscript Reed O’Mara, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Fragment of an Icon of the Crucifixion
Elizabeth S. Bolman, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Death of the Virgin
Elina Gertsman, Case Western Reserve Univ.
More information: https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress
The Medieval Academy of America
Annual Meeting
March 10–13
General registration is now open for virtual attendance at the 2022 Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America, to be held March 10-13 on the grounds of the University of Virginia and online. Due to the overwhelming response by those on the program, we been forced to limit registration for in-person attendance to speakers, presiders, and officers, staff, and incoming Fellows of the Academy. While this will come as a disappointment to many of our colleagues, on-site institutional constraints during the pandemic have required us to cap the total number of in-person attendees at 175. Virtual participation, however, is available to the entire membership, and we hope that members will take some consolation in the hybrid format of this year's Annual Meeting as a promise of larger gatherings in years to come. Click here to register.
Please contact the Program Committee <MAA2022cville@gmail.com> with questions. Check this page regularly for updates and for a PDF of the program.
We look forward to seeing you in Charlottesville, whether in-person or online!
More information: https://www.medievalacademy.org/page/2022AnnualMeeting
‘The Guest of the Body – Visualising Souls in Medieval Europe, 1100-1200’
Shirin Fozi
The Courtault Institute via Zoom
27th April 2022
17:00-18:30 (BST)
The art of medieval Europe emphasizes the eschatological future in terms that can often surprise contemporary viewers. Christian anxieties about the apocalypse – the longing for resurrection, the fear of eternal damnation, the hopes of attaining a place in paradise – hinged on the desire for a successful reunification of the bodies and souls of the dead. These two aspects of the self were seen as diametrically opposed in many ways; the flawed, mortal, ephemeral reality of the body could not be more different than the abstract and ineffable qualities of its invisible pendant. In order to represent these contrasts, however, medieval artists visualized the soul in forms that would be recognizable for their audiences, favoring the anthropomorphic soul that could take flight with the assistance of angels. This talk looks at a series of medieval images, particularly funerary monuments, that reflect on the departure of the soul and emphasize its fraught relationship to the body that is left behind, and to which it shall return. Even as bodies were present throughout medieval Christian spaces – buried in chapels and crypts, or raised as relics in altars and shrines – souls occupied a strange position in between presence and absence, dissolving deep divides between heaven and earth, or between the mundane experience of daily life and the end of days, that distant and yet rapidly approaching frontier of Christian time.
Shirin Fozi is Associate Professor in History of Art and Architecture at the University of Pittsburgh. She is the author of a monograph titled Romanesque Tomb Effigies: Death and Redemption in Medieval Europe, 1000-1200 (2021), which received a Millard Meiss Grant from the College Art Association, and co-editor of Christ on the Cross: The Boston Crucifix and the Rise of Medieval Wood Sculpture (2020). Fozi has also published several articles on modern collections of medieval art, and her most recent Museum Studies seminar culminated in a student-curated online exhibition called A Nostalgic Filter: Medieval Manuscripts in the Digital Age (2020).
Organised by Dr Tom Nickson (The Courtauld) and Dr Jessica Barker (The Courtauld)
Booking will open shortly via this link.
Dear ICMA Members,
An ICMA Pop-Up event is taking place near you soon!
The exhibition Le Bon, le Téméraire et le Chancelier - Quand flamboyait la Toison d’Or in Beaune, is a major event in which artworks and objects from the Burgundian court in the 14th and 15th centuries are displayed in three locations in the city. On view are over one-hundred-and-fifty exhibits – including paintings, sculptures, goldsmith's and silversmith's work, tapestries, manuscripts, archival documents, and armor – from private and public collections in Europe. Taking place in buildings and spaces that were founded and used by members of the court, the exhibition emphasizes the three key figures of Duke Philip the Good (1396-1467), Duke Charles the Bald (1433-1477), and the chancellor Nicolas Rolin.
Le Bon, le Téméraire et le Chancelier closes on 31 March. Further information regarding the exhibition is found in this link.
You are invited to join other ICMA Members at the exhibition on Saturday 19 March, from 14:00 until 18:00.
This gathering is informal:
Attendees are responsible for their own travel bookings, museum reservations & admission fees, and compliance with local pandemic restrictions.
The purpose of this event is to introduce ICMA members from the area to one another, to strengthen the social and professional ties in our community, and to celebrate our mutual interest in medieval art, while exploring the exhibition together.
The event organizer, Masha Goldin, will be in touch with those who register with details on meet up spots.
Please register HERE. We hope to see you there!
For inquiries, please contact Masha Goldin, ICMA Membership Committee: masha.goldin@unibas.ch
Organized by
Masha Goldin
Register HERE
Symposium celebrating Charles Little
Columbia University
Details to come
Join us for the second of three workshops on inclusion, diversity and equity in the editing and publishing of peer-reviewed journals. Presentations will focus on the mechanics, ethics, and economics of journal publishing, including the organization and distribution of labor within journal publications; the many people involved in editing and production; the costs of processes; the roles and challenges of digital platforms; the respective advantages and disadvantages of open access vs. firewall, etc. The workshop will also discuss the relationships between journals and their sponsoring or hosting institutions. This event will take place virtually.
The link to register is here. Registrants who attended the October 18, 2021 workshop will receive a link automatically and do not need to re-register.
Panelists:
Susan Boynton (organizer) coeditor of Gesta
Callum Blackmore, editor of Current Musicology
Alex Gil and Kaiama Glover, coeditors of archipelagos
Michelle Wilson (Digital Publishing, Columbia University Libraries)
Shannon Wearing (University of Toronto, managing editor of RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics)
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The third and final workshop will take place on April 4, 2022: Working towards Equity and Inclusion in Journal Publication: What does it take to make journal publishing function more inclusively and transparently? In this workshop, participants will discuss their perspectives on future paths for greater equity and inclusion in authorship, the division of labor, peer review, the constitution of editorial boards, and consider the ways in which journals can foster the diversity of all participants. Presenters will address the ways in which institutional contexts (universities, university presses, scholarly societies) shape journal operations, and consider how the relationships between journals and institutions can lead to support for enhanced inclusion and equity.
What can we do to help humanistic studies thrive? In the Luce Design Workshop at ACLS, teams from six schools developed practical solutions to the challenges we face, from declining undergraduate enrollments to faculty diversification. Our lesson: great experiments are going on around the country, but change must be ambitious, connected, systemic, and swift. This event showcases their results and sets the stage for further exchange and collaboration.
The aim of the event is to make our work visible, to invite collaboration and exchange with others trying to bring about change in the academy, and to determine together what collaborative work is needed (transcending any single organization or initiative) to bring about systemic change.
Moderated by Joy Connolly, ACLS President and James Shulman, ACLS Vice President and Chief Operating Officer.
Speakers:
Jasmine Alinder, Dean of Humanities and Professor, Department of History, University of California, Santa Cruz
Amy Cook, Associate Dean for Research and Innovation, College of Arts and Sciences and Professor, Department of English, Stony Brook University
Christopher Heath “Kit” Wellman, Dean of Academic Planning for the College of Arts & Sciences and Professor, Department of Philosophy, Washington University in St. Louis
Ari Kelman, Chancellor’s Leadership Professor, Department of History, University of California, Davis
Claire M. Waters, Professor and Chair, Department of English, University of California, Davis
Maria J. Donoghue Velleca, Dean, Faculty of Arts & Sciences, Professor, Department of Biology, College of William & Mary
Special thanks to Treviene Harris for her work and assistance.
REGISTER HERE.
The ICMA congratulates Elina Gertsman and Joan Holladay for their recent book awards.
Charles Rufus Morey Book Award - College Art Association
Elina Gertsman, The Absent Image: Lacunae in Medieval Books, Penn State University Press, 2021.
Countering the customary interpretation of late medieval art as relentlessly profuse and exuberant, Elina Gertsman’s The Absent Image: Lacunae in Medieval Books, explores different constructions of emptiness ranging from the presentation of voids in illustrations to represent the unrepresentable to the deliberate inclusion of physical holes in manuscript pages designed to reveal portions of other pages. Gertsman’s investigation of the “fecundity of emptiness” is a generative and compelling topic for scholars of art history/visual studies across areas, both within and outside Medieval Studies. She argues and demonstrates that, between 1200s and 1500s, the broad circulation of scientific thought and its engagement with theology and formal and literary discourses on emptiness, absence, and negation account for visual, cognitive, and material expressions on the pages of medieval books. Cross-disciplinary in its approach, Gertsman’s book simultaneously draws attention to the visual and material aspects of the manuscripts, phenomenological experience, and philosophical, religious, and scientific theories of the period. In doing so she uncovers an unexpected kinship between the medieval artists and the modernist avant-garde, where the void is regarded as the locus of the sublime and of boundless possibility. Her erudite writing and compelling approach to the subject poses questions throughout that magnify the relevance of her study and stimulate personal inquiry—as a reader reflects on other areas of consideration across time called out in the text. The book is lavishly illustrated and artfully designed with a shape and size complementary to the subject of study.
Committee:
John Cunnally, Iowa State University
Christina Hellmich, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Laura Anne Kalba, University of Minnesota
Lisa D. Schrenk, University of Arizona
Dorothy Wong, University of Virginia (Chair)
2022 Karen Gould Book Prize in Art History - Medieval Academy of America
This is the first book to deal exclusively with medieval genealogical imagery. While paying attention to historical precedents in Roman and Carolingian times, and covering a wide range of examples in multiple media, Joan Holladay does full justice to a distinctive and important visual genre which, from the twelfth century, developed rapidly across medieval Europe. Through diagrams, monumental painted cycles, tomb sculpture and stained glass, the author’s sweeping and authoritative analysis is driven by admirable attention to the structural and formal qualities of the imagery, which throughout the book emerge as a visual genre in their own right. Equally focused on the genre’s ideological dimensions, Holladay persuasively demonstrates, for example, how genealogical imagery was produced to solidify lineal claims -- both real and imagined -- and assist memory in contexts of discontinuity and stress in transition lines. By touching on a great variety of stimulating topics, this fluently written and generously illustrated book offers a unique and seminal contribution to the field, one destined to inspire a broad interdisciplinary audience of medievalists.
CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Byzantine-related content for Mapping Eastern Europe
Mapping Eastern Europe is a platform intended to promote study, teaching, and research about Eastern Europe between the 13th and 17th centuries through historical and thematic overviews, case-studies and videos of monuments and objects, ongoing projects, as well as reviews of books and exhibitions.
This year, we are expanding our content with more Byzantine-related entries!
If you are interested in contributing to this project with a case study and/or a historical or thematic overview, please let us know by completing this FORM by February 15, 2022.
Please enter your name, affiliation, and email. In the comments section, specify the topic, title, and entry type (long-form case study, video case study, historical overview, or thematic overview) that you would be interested in submitting. Entries are in the range of 1000-2000 words, and video case studies are ~10min long.
We will make final decisions and will be in touch with each author by March 1, 2022. Authors will then be asked to follow a template, and entries will be thoroughly reviewed and edited prior to publication. Each author will receive a modest honorarium for each contribution. Final submissions will be due May 1, 2022.
We look forward to hearing from you!
Maria Alessia Rossi, PhD | Princeton University
Alice Isabella Sullivan, PhD | Tufts University
ICMA ANNUAL BOOK PRIZE
WE ARE DELIGHTED TO ANNOUNCE THE RECIPIENT OF THE 2021 ICMA ANNUAL BOOK PRIZE:
Boydell Studies in Medieval Art and Architecture, Boydell Press, 2020.
Click here for the Boydell site
Throughout the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in medieval England, double tomb brass memorials and recumbent effigies of couples supplied far more than monuments to deceased lay patrons or matrons. The double tomb, as Jessica Barker compellingly argues in this first holistic volume devoted to the topic, Stone Fidelity: Marriage and Emotion in Medieval Tomb Sculpture, materializes entangled records of fluid social boundaries during an age of social transformation following the Black Death. These funerary monuments complicate biographical readings as the depicted are diachronically to be counted both amongst the living and the dead, supply the mise-en-scène for grief and public funerary practices, and commemorate multiple marital unions or various forms of homosocial and perhaps even homosexual bonds. Rather than pure funerary monuments, double tombs by their very nature became sites of veneration recalling the exploits of deceased royals, extreme dissonance as surviving spouses witnessed their effigies for up to a generation, and an idealized fantasy of affective devotion, as both pre- and postmortem couples clutched to medieval funerary tradition and often one another. This impeccably researched book offers a pristine model of how a kaleidoscopic, holistic reexamination of medieval funerary practice, and in particular the visual culture of the double tomb, can unveil the affections and aspirations of late medieval men and women, resurrect portions of their lost identities, exemplify the legal bonds of medieval matrimony, and empathetically invigorate the changing theological and socio-political ideals to which these funerary monuments allude.
We thank the ICMA Book Prize Jury:
Eric Ramirez-Weaver (Chair), Péter Bokody, Till-Holger Borchert, Dorothy Glass, and Julie Harris
Symposium—Rethinking the Wearable in the Middle Ages
28–29 April
Bard Graduate Center
Location: Zoom
Covering, protecting, and adorning the body count among the most fundamental of human concerns, at once conveying aspects of an individual’s persona while also situating a person within a given social context. Wearable adornment encompasses materials fashioned by human hands (like fabric, metalwork, or even animal bones) and modifications to the body itself (such as tattoos, cosmetics, or hairstyles), which beautify the body while simultaneously conveying social, political and protective functions and meanings. The wearable is thus the most representational and at the same time most intimate product of material culture.
This conference seeks to expand our current understanding of the wearable in the Middle Ages. Current scholarship on the topic in Byzantine, western medieval, Eurasian art, as well as Islamic traditions tends to encompass clothing and jewelry, and is frequently medium-specific, with minimal regard to the interrelatedness of different aspects of appearance. On the one hand, work on medieval textiles has tended to approach questions of identity, consumption, and appearance by comparing textual sources and visual depictions with surviving textiles. The study of medieval jewelry, on the other hand, largely focuses on the classification and attribution of precious metal pieces from excavations and museum collections, as scholars make sense of pieces long removed from the bodies they once adorned. Tattoos, prosthetics, cosmetics and headgear are almost entirely absent in our understandings of medieval dress practices. This separation was not always so, however, and indeed nineteenth-century art historians such as Gottfried Semper integrated all aspects of bodily adornment in their considerations of the nature of ornamentation and surface decoration.
This conference will reimagine the wearable in similarly holistic terms. Bringing together varied forms and different media to help scholars better understand how the surfaces of medieval bodies not only presented social values and norms, but also operated within a designated spatial environment.
This event will be held via Zoom. A link will be circulated to registrants in advance of the event. This event will be live with automatic captions.
Fragment of a Hanging with Nereids, Egypt, 5th-6th c. Tapestry weave, wool and linen. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Washington, DC, Byzantine Collection, BZ.1932.1.
Wood: Between Natural Affordance and Cultural Values in Eurasia
Mar 31–Apr 2, 2022
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich / online
Organised by Aleksandra Lipińska (Professor for Art of the Early Modern Period, Institute for Art History, LMU Munich) and Ilse Sturkenboom (Professor for Islamic Art History, Institute for Art History, LMU Munich)
In ‘The Theory of Affordances’ of 1977, the American psychologist James J. Gibson coined the term affordance to denote that which environment offers an animal [or a human for that matter] for good or ill. This concept resonated broadly within humanities and, more recently, especially within material culture studies. Wood can be understood as a natural affordance that is one of the most universally available materials in a vast area of the world. Wood comes with its natural and physical characteristics that determine its workability. The use of various kinds of wood is, however, not only determined by the availability and applicability of the material itself but also by cultural values and specific requirements within a society.
This conference aims at bringing together scholars from diverse fields within humanities and science to discuss similarities and differences, continuities and discontinuities in the notions surrounding wood in various cultural contexts within Eurasia until the “material revolution” that followed after 1900. We would like to address the question of the relationships or tensions between the naturally determined affordances of timber and their cultural coding.
Image and Narrative in Romanesque Art
28 – 30 Mar 2022
British School at Rome
The British Archaeological Association will hold the seventh in its biennial International Romanesque conference series in conjunction with the British School at Rome on 28-30 March, 2022. The theme is Image and Narrative in Romanesque Art, and the aim is to examine the use of imagery in the Latin Church between c.1000 and c.1200. The Conference will take place at the British School, with the opportunity to stay on for two days of visits to Romanesque monuments on 31 March and 1 April.
While illustrated codices, sequential pictorial narratives, apse mosaics, and devotional statues were well established before c.1000, several important new image types and settings came into being over the Romanesque period – figuratively enriched portals, historiated cloisters, moralizing programmes, imagery in glass. The conference will consider imagery in its various manifestations, exploring narrative modes, the significance of spatial positioning and visibility, the uses and physical trappings of devotional images, the relationship between political or reformist agendas and the rhetorical power of imagery, and the extent to which media play a role in the development or importation of new iconographical formulae. Are images invested with singular meanings, or are they intentionally polysemous? Does the interest in architectural ‘articulation’ initiate a new understanding of the expressive and aesthetic potential of imagery, and/or emphasise its didactic purpose? Are viewers provided with guidance as to interpretation – through inscriptions, or compositional and visual triggers? How does material and setting affect imagery? How might we understand image and narrative in the Latin West between c.1000 and c.1200?
Speakers include Kristen Aavitsland, Marcello Angheben, Claude Andrault-Schmitt, Giulia Arcidiacono, Yael Barash, Tancredi Bella, Jessica Berenbeim, Armin Bergmeier, Irene Caracciolo, Manuel Castiñeiras, Gaetano Curzi, Barbara Franzé, Deborah Kahn, Wilfried Keil, Robert Maxwell, John McNeill, Mina Miyamoto, Alison Perchuk, Claudia Quattrocchi, Arturo Carlo Quintavalle, Serena Romano, Carles Sanchez, Béla Zsolt Szakács, Rose Walker, and Andrea Worm.
The 2022 conference will be held in the British School at Rome from 28-30 March, 2022 on the theme Image and Narrative in Romanesque Art. Given continuing restrictions on numbers in Italian lecture theatres, however, numbers are restricted and we will operate a waiting list in the hope that the cap on numbers – currently 60 – will rise to 90.
41st Annual Conference of Fordham’s Center for Medieval Studies "Cultures of Exchange: Mercantile Mentalities Between Italy and the World"
March 26-27, 2022
Fordham University, Lincoln Center Campus, 113 W. 60th St., New York, NY 10023, United States
Recent scholarship has shed light on the complexity of medieval Italy’s multifaceted political and intellectual landscape and attempted to place it within a Mediterranean and global context. At the heart of this landscape was an innovative, linguistically and culturally diverse mercantile culture, fundamentally urban and rooted in a culture of exchange, which integrated merchants and mercantile mentalities into the fabric of government, politics, and society. Positioned at the crossroads of many cultures of exchange, Italy’s mercantile culture was embedded within and contributed to broader, global networks. This conference aims to investigate the practices and values pioneered by merchants, both in Italy and beyond, their impact on political and economic life, as well as on the development of the arts and society’s response to catastrophic upheaval.
“The Egyptian Red Monastery Church in Early Byzantium: The Agency of Visual Culture”
Elizabeth Bolman
25th January 2022
7:15 pm CET
Spätantike Archäologie und Byzantinische Kunstgeschichte e. V.
© Elizabeth Bolman
The Ziyareti of Kykkos: The Kykkotissa Meets the Ottomans
Annemarie Weyl Carr, Southern Methodist University (emerita)
Respondent: Robert S. Nelson, Yale University
Zoom lectures begin at 12 noon Eastern Time; registration is required.
Register here
You can register at any time to join a lecture. Your registration is valid for the whole series; attend as many as you like. You will automatically receive reminders for the lectures.
Lecture series organized by Robert S. Nelson, Robert Lehman Professor in the History of Art, and Vasileios Marinis, associate professor of Christian Art and Architecture at the ISM and YDS.
Presented in collaboration with Yale Department of Classics and Yale Department of the History of Art.
Solidus of Emperor Herakleios, Constantinople, 7th century, Yale University Art Gallery
Staging Late Antiquity: An 11th Century Revolution in Ethiopian Architecture
Mikael Muehlbauer, American Council of Learned Societies
Respondent: Jacopo Gnisci, University College London
Zoom lectures begin at 12 noon Eastern Time; registration is required.
Register here
You can register at any time to join a lecture. Your registration is valid for the whole series; attend as many as you like. You will automatically receive reminders for the lectures.
Lecture series organized by Robert S. Nelson, Robert Lehman Professor in the History of Art, and Vasileios Marinis, associate professor of Christian Art and Architecture at the ISM and YDS.
Presented in collaboration with Yale Department of Classics and Yale Department of the History of Art.
Solidus of Emperor Herakleios, Constantinople, 7th century, Yale University Art Gallery
“Towards a Higher Vision” and “Inside the Depth of Words”: The Aesthetics of Layering in Byzantine Art and Literature
Panagiotis Agapitos, University of Cyprus
Respondent: Emmanuel Bourbouhakis, Princeton University
Zoom lectures begin at 12 noon Eastern Time; registration is required.
Register here
You can register at any time to join a lecture. Your registration is valid for the whole series; attend as many as you like. You will automatically receive reminders for the lectures.
Lecture series organized by Robert S. Nelson, Robert Lehman Professor in the History of Art, and Vasileios Marinis, associate professor of Christian Art and Architecture at the ISM and YDS.
Presented in collaboration with Yale Department of Classics and Yale Department of the History of Art.
Solidus of Emperor Herakleios, Constantinople, 7th century, Yale University Art Gallery