CALL FOR PAPERS: SOUNDSCAPES OF NAPLES: FROM THE MEDIEVAL TO THE EARLY MODERN, 8-9 JUNE 2023, NAPLES

CALL FOR PAPERS

SOUNDSCAPES OF NAPLES: FROM THE MEDIEVAL TO THE EARLY MODERN

CONFERENCE, 8-9 JUNE 2023, NAPLES

Due 31 January 2023

“La Capraia”; Image: Claudio Metallo

Musical practices are inherently woven into a city’s urban fabric: as marker of identity, expression of religious devotion, sonic manifestation of power, or form of entertainment, musicking punctuates the salient moments of a city’s culture. In Naples, for centuries a cultural and political capital and among the most densely populated cities in Europe, music making has always occupied a prominent position in the soundscape of public and private, sacred and secular spaces.


The interdisciplinary conference, Soundscapes of Naples: From the Medieval to the Early Modern, aims to map intersections between the performative dimension of music making and the city’s spaces and places. The organizing committee invites proposals that focus on physical venues (churches, monasteries, theaters, aristocratic palaces, schools, the public piazza, and so on, including their visual programs) as they interface with music performance and production. We welcome proposals on musicking as a cultural practice from musicologists as well as scholars from sister disciplines, including art and architectural history, archaeology, history, literary studies, and anthropology, on themes and approaches such as manuscript and print production, archival studies, music and gender, patronage/matronage, performance practice, history of the senses, acoustics, history of pedagogy, relationships between music and specific works of art, notions of ability/disability, and instrument making.


Proposals should include a curriculum vitae, a brief narrative biography (max. 150 words), and an abstract (max. 350 words), and may be in either Italian or English. The abstract should also indicate the topic’s relevance to the themes outlined above, and whether the proposed contribution could take the form of a presentation on-site at the monument under discussion. Final presentations (20 minutes) may be made in Italian or English. Please combine these materials in a single Word or PDF document with Lastname_Firstname as the title, and send to lacapraia@gmail.com by 31 January 2023. Selected participants will be notified in mid-February 2023.


Soundscapes of Naples: From the Medieval to the Early Modern is coorganized by the Center for the Art and Architectural History of Port Cities “La Capraia” (a partnership between the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History at the University of Texas at Dallas and the Museo e Real Bosco di Capodimonte) and the Butler School of Music at the University of Texas at Austin.

CALL FOR PAPERS: ‘ENCOUNTERS: CHRISTIANS, MUSLIMS, AND JEWS IN MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN ART,' 16TH ANNUAL IMAGO CONFERENCE, DUE 1 JANUARY 2023

CALL FOR PAPERS

‘ENCOUNTERS: CHRISTIANS, MUSLIMS, AND JEWS IN MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN ART’

16TH ANNUAL IMAGO CONFERENCE

DUE 1 JANUARY 2023

Encounters between Christians, Muslims, and Jews were manifold in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period. In recent decades scholarship has increasingly begun to acknowledge the significance of such encounters for the development of artistic production and visual culture in each of these societies. For example, a shared culture of luxury goods common to the elite of both Christian and Muslim principalities, and the rich dialogue between Jews and Christians pertaining to the production of illuminated manuscripts, have been comprehensively studied. The 16th Annual IMAGO conference consequently aspires to examine the impact of encounters between Jews, Muslims, and Christians on the visual culture and art of the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period. We hope that the resulting papers will not only shed new light on the artistic, social, religious, and political mechanisms involved in such encounters throughout this period, but will also produce fresh insights into the cultural and artistic outcomes of these encounters.

We invite papers in English from diverse points of view: case studies of iconographies resulting from such encounters; studies of the artistic responses to specific conditions of encounters and dialogues; comparative studies on the connections between the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic worlds, etc. Interdisciplinary studies and those engaging with the production, reception, and interpretation of art produced through such encounters are of particular interest. Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

• Artists, artisans, and workshops
• Luxury goods, portable objects, and trade
• Manuscript illumination
• Visual elements in everyday life and the domestic sphere
• Visual agency in acculturation, mission, conversion,
interfaith debates, and polemics
• Images of Jews, Muslims, and Christians
• Use, reuse, misuse, and appropriation of objects
• Quotation, citation, and the migration of pictorial and
architectural motifs

The conference will take place on Thursday, March 2, 2023, at Bar-Ilan University.

Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be sent to Dr. Gil Fishhof (gfishhof@staff.haifa.ac.il) no later than January 1, 2023. Abstracts should include the applicant’s name, professional affiliation, contact details, and a short CV. Each paper should be limited to a 20-minute presentation, to
be followed by a discussion and questions. All applicants will be notified by January 20, 2023, regarding the acceptance of their proposal. For additional information or further inquiries, please contact Dr. Fishhof.

Organizing committee: Dr. Gil Fishhof, Dr. Zvi Orgad, Prof. Jochai Rosen, Ms. Mazi Kuzi, Ms. Masha Goldin

FLYER FOR PANEL

Call for Applications: Short-Term Residential Fellowships for Individual Research at The Newberry, APPLICATION DUE 15 December 2022 11:59 PM CT (16 December 2022 12:59 AM ET)

Short-Term Residential Fellowships for Individual Research

The Newberry, 60 West Walton Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610

Due 15 December 2022 11:59 PM CT (16 December 2022 12:59 AM ET)

Researchers with short-term fellowships spend one to two months investigating specific collection items that are essential to their scholarship.

Supporting scholars who demonstrate a specific need for the Newberry collection.

Stipend: $3,000/month

Length: 1 month

Who can apply: Scholars working in any field. Short-term fellowships are open to faculty members and postdoctoral scholars; PhD candidates with “All But Dissertation” (ABD) status; and scholars with terminal degrees in areas that do not offer a PhD, such as an MFA, MLIS, MSW, or JD.

Short-term fellowship applications are due by 11:59 pm (CT) on December 15.

    • There's a ten-day grace period for recommenders to submit their letter of recommendation. Letters will not be accepted after December 25.

    • Applicants will be notified of their status in late April/early May.


For more information on how to apply and requisite application materials: https://www.newberry.org/research/fellowships/how-to-apply

New Video: Friends of the ICMA presents Medieval Coming Attractions, 15 November 2022

Friends of the ICMA

presents

Medieval Coming Attractions

15 November 2022

The Friends of the ICMA held their latest in a series of special online events on Tuesday, November 15, 2022 at 12:00pm ET (9:00am PT; 5:00pm GMT; and 6:00pm CET). The hour-long program previewed three medieval exhibitions scheduled to open in 2023, each introduced by its curator in charge.

The event can now be viewed on the Special Online Lectures page of the ICMA website: https://www.medievalart.org/special-online-lectures

THE CHRISTMAS STORY IN RENAISSANCE ART, Dr. Paula Nuttall, The Arts Society North Bucks, Newport Pagnell, UK, 8 December 2022, 11:00 AM (In-Person)

Welcome to The Arts Society North Bucks

THE CHRISTMAS STORY IN RENAISSANCE ART

Dr. Paula Nuttall

Thursday, December 8, 2022, 11:00 AM

Lovat Hall, Silver Street, Newport Pagnell, UK MK16 0EJ (In-Person)

The Christmas story is related through a series of well-loved paintings and illuminated manuscripts by Flemish and Italian artists.

This lecture tells the Christmas story through a selection of well-loved paintings and illuminated manuscripts by Italian and Flemish artists, including Botticelli, Fra Angelico and Jan van Eyck, together with many less well-known images.

From the Annunciation to the Nativity, the Journey of the Kings and the Flight into Egypt, it explores the rich symbolism of Christmas imagery, highlights the ways in which spiritual ideas and devotional practice shaped the depiction of the narrative, and introduces some less familiar aspects of the story, such as the Midwives and Joseph’s stockings. 


THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

DR PAULA NUTTALL - Director of V&A Medieval and Renaissance Year Course. Specialist in Renaissance art, both Italian and northern European, on which she has published widely, notably From Flanders to Florence: the Impact of Netherlandish Painting 1400-1500 (Yale, 2004). Has collaborated on major exhibitions including Jan van Eyck: an Optical Revolution (Ghent, 2020). Formerly lecturer at the Courtauld Institute and the British Institute of Florence.


For more information: https://theartssociety.org/events/christmas-story-renaissance-art

Call for Papers: Visualizing Infrastructure in the Middle Ages, Special Session for the 2023 Midwest Art History Society Conference, Due 9 December 2022

Visualizing Infrastructure in the Middle Ages

Special Session for the 2023 Midwest Art History Society Conference

Deadline 9 December 2022

Roads, bridges, aqueducts, canals: all were part of the impressive infrastructural, environmental, and ecological legacy that the Roman Empire left to the medieval world. This session aims to explore that inheritance and subsequent developments in medieval infrastructure through the visual, material, and textual record. The organisers invite submissions that examine remains or representations of infrastructure as well as related matters including but not limited to political power and symbolism, construction or repair practices, materials and media, financing and taxation, and practicalities of transportation and communication. The organisers welcome papers that deal with any period in the Middle Ages with a focus on Europe, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East.

Proposals from graduate students or early-career scholars are especially welcome. Please send abstracts of no more than 200 works and a two-page CV to leson@uwm.edu by December 9.

The 49th Annual Conference of the Midwest Art History Society will be held from March 30 to April 1, 2023 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Those attending will find an iconic example of contemporary architecture and leading research universities within a vibrant cultural setting along Lake Michigan. On Thursday, March 30, the Haggerty Art Museum at Marquette University will host sessions at the Raynor Memorial Library and will offer tours of the museum. That evening, the Milwaukee Art Museum will host the keynote speaker—internationally recognized multidisciplinary artist and member of the Lac Seul First Nation (Anishinaabe) Rebecca Belmore—and a reception. On Friday, March 31, sessions will be offered at the Art History Department of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and tours will be available of the Art History Department’s Emile H. Mathis Art Gallery. For weekend events and more information, click here for the Fall 2022 edition of MAHS eNews.

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: TUCHER-FELLOWSHIP AM GERMANISCHEN NATIONALMUSEUM, DUE 1 FEBRUARY 2023

TUCHER-FELLOWSHIP AM GERMANISCHEN NATIONALMUSEUM

DUE 1 FEBRUARY 2023

Veit Stoß, Drachenleuchter, Nürnberg, 1522 - Auftraggeber: Anton II. Tucher

Every two years the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung und das Germanische Nationalmuseum award a fellowship to a doctoral candidate for research on a topic in German art and/or cultural history and, if possible, with a connection to the history of the patrician family Tucher. Applications from abroad receive priority.

The fellowship pays a monthly stipend of € 1,500 and makes possible a six-month research stay at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum. The earliest possible start date for the next fellowship is 6th June 2023.

While at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum (GNM), the fellow will:
• be supported by the museum’s curatorial and research staff,
• will have open access to the museum’s facilities,
• be welcome to participate in the museum’s various events.
Furthermore, they will be involved in the museum’s trainee program.

Prerequisites for a fellowship application are a master’s degree (or equivalent) with high marks, candidacy for a doctoral degree, and a very good and proven knowledge of the German language.

Required application materials (preferably in German):
• Research proposal (3 pages, 1.5 spaced), explaining one’s own interest in the topic, sketching the current state of the questions, describing preliminary work already completed, explaining how a stay at the GNM would advance the dissertation project and how it relates to the von Tucher family.
• Abstract of the research proposal (10–15 lines), which, if the fellowship is awarded, may be posted on the website of the GNM.
• Curriculum vitae, list of publications, study and work certificates (as applicable)
• 2 letters of recommendation

The fellow is required to present their findings at the Germanisches Nationalmuseum and also to present a final report at a meeting of the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung, to which the Stiftung will invite guests and, as the case may be, the press. Furthermore, they agree to provide both the Germanisches Nationalmuseum and the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung with a written final report and a copy of the dissertation (paper or electronic).

A travel allowance can be requested from the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung.

Fellows from abroad must be in possession of a health insurance policy that covers possible costs of medical treatment in the Federal Republic of Germany. Proof of coverage must be submitted before the start of the fellowship period. The fellowship cannot be commenced without health insurance coverage.

A residence permit, if required, must be applied for by the fellow themself. The responsible authority in Nuremberg is the foreigners’ registration office (Ausländerbehörde) in the residents’ registration office. (Contact: Einwohneramt/Ausländerbehörde, Äußere Laufer Gasse 29, 90403 Nürnberg, Tel.: 0911/231-45000; https://www.nuernberg.de/internet/auslaenderbehoerde-/aufenthaltstitel.html)

Please submit applications with the requested materials via e-mail (as a single PDF file) by 1st February 2023 to one of the following addresses:

Germanisches Nationalmuseum
Personalabteilung
Kornmarkt 1
90402 Nürnberg
Germany

E-Mail: Bewerbungen@gnm.de

The decision to award a fellowship lies with the Tucher’sche Kulturstiftung and the Germanisches Nationalmuseum. Applicants have no legal claim to a fellowship.

Contact persons:
For questions relating to research: Herr Dr. Markus T. Huber (m.huber@gnm.de)
For administrative questions: Frau Rita Wolkersdorfer (r.wolkersdorfer@gnm.de)

For more information: https://www.gnm.de/museum/tucher-fellowship/

Murray Seminar: A BEAUTIFUL LIE: MEDIEVAL ART FORGERIES IN CATALONIA, ALBERTO VELASCO (IN-PERSON AND ONLINE), 6 December 2022, 17:00-18:30 GMT (12:00-13:30 ET)

A BEAUTIFUL LIE: MEDIEVAL ART FORGERIES IN CATALONIA

ALBERTO VELASCO

MURRAY SEMINAR SERIES AT BIRBECK

Tuesday, 6 December 2022, 17:00 – 18:30 GMT

History of Art Department, Birkbeck 43, Gordon Sq. London WC1H 0PD United Kingdom

A forgery, regardless of the criteria we may apply when studying it - evaluating its artistry or establishing its significance as an illustrative document of a given period - is a deception. The reasons for the production and commercialization of medieval fakes in Catalonia during the first half of the twentieth century are unique and specific, and they are explained by cultural, political and social conditions that, nevertheless, find points of contact in other parts of Europe. Similarities are found especially in those regions and states where medieval past forms a significant part of national historical roots. Catalan nationalism, the fascination with the Middle Ages and the general interest of the Barcelona bourgeoisie in medieval art has led to the appearance in Catalonia of a market for fakes that attempted to meet the growing demand. These are some of the issues addressed in the lecture, where we will deal with some of the most successful forgers, such as the Junyer brothers, and with fake works which, in their day, were certified as genuine by important scholars. Today some of them are in museums, while others make stellar appearances on the art market.

In-Person Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-beautiful-lie-medieval-art-forgeries-in-catalonia-tickets-468335392767

Online Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-beautiful-lie-medieval-art-forgeries-in-catalonia-livestream-tickets-468320829207

MURRAY SEMINAR: GILDED SUNS AND PEACOCK ANGELS: THEATRICAL MATERIALITY AND ART IN FIFTEENTH-CENTURY FLORENCE - LAURA STEFANESCU, 13 December 2022, 16:45 - 18:30 GMT (11:45-13:30 ET), Online

MURRAY SEMINAR:

GILDED SUNS AND PEACOCK ANGELS: THEATRICAL MATERIALITY AND ART IN FIFTEENTH-CENTURY FLORENCE

LAURA STEFANESCU

13 December 2022

16:45 — 18:30 GMT (11:45-13:30 ET) Online

Birbeck University of London

Book your place

In fifteenth-century Florence, the phenomenon of religious theatre and ritual performance, promoted by adult and youth confraternities throughout the city, reached an unparalleled popularity, transitioning from the realm of devotion to that of the spectacular. The highlight of these performances was the materialisation of a multi-sensory heaven on stage and the appearance of its living angels (young Florentine boys) in their dazzling costumes. Painters living in the Santo Spirito quarter, where most of these activities took place, were actively involved in the creation of the apparatus for sacred plays. They were sometimes even members of the confraternities that produced the plays, as was, for example, Neri di Bicci, one of the most successful Florentine painters of the period.

Contact name: Laura Jacobus

Speakers

IN-PERSON AND ONLINE LECTURE: "THE CLEVELAND FOUNTAIN (PARIS, CA. 1320) AND MULTISENSORY ART HISTORY", 30 NOVEMBRE 2022, 15:00 CET (11:00 ET), AULA 11, COMPLESSO B. PELLEGRINO

"THE CLEVELAND FOUNTAIN (PARIS, CA. 1320) AND MULTISENSORY ART HISTORY"

30 NOVEMBRE 2022

AULA 11, COMPLESSO B. PELLEGRINO

Il giorno mercoledì 30 novembre 2022, presso l’Aula 11 del Complesso Beato Pellegrino, alle ore 17:00, Philippe Cordez (DFK - Deutsches Forum für Kunstgeschichte, Paris) e Gerhard Lutz (Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland) terranno una conferenza sul tema “The Cleveland Fountain (Paris, ca. 1320) and multisensory art history”.

The hydraulic and musical fountain in the Cleveland Museum of Art offers a perfect opportunity for theoretical reflection and pratical experimentation in multisensory art history. It is a unique device of gilt and enamelled silver made in Paris ca. 1320. As exposed in a recent essay, a close comparison with the Fountain of Youth presented in text, image, and music in the Roman de Fauvel – a political satire recorded in a manuscript of 1317 (Bibliothèque nationale de France, ms. fr. 146) – suggests that the same group of intellectuals and artists was involved with both creations. Indeed, the Cleveland fountain multisensorially evokes the Parisian royal palace as a divine Fountain of Youth rejuvenating the French Kingdom. Collaborative research with the Cleveland Museum of Art, using digital tools, aims at deepening our knowledge of the fountain’s material constitution, historical context, and festive performance.

L’evento è organizzato da Valentina Baradel e Zuleika Murat, nell’ambito del progetto ERC “The Sensuous Appeal of the Holy. Sensory Agency of Sacred Art and Somatised Spiritual Experiences in Medieval Europe (12th-15th century) - SenSArt” (grant agreement No. 950248).

Scarica la locandina dell'evento.
Sono invitati a partecipare i dottorandi, gli specializzandi, gli studenti e tutti gli interessati.
E’ possibile seguire la conferenza online; gli interessati sono invitati a contattare via mail Valentina Baradel (valentina.baradel@unipd.it) per ottenere il link al meeting Zoom.

Il Direttore del Dipartimento
Jacopo BONETTO

For more information: https://www.beniculturali.unipd.it/www/dbc-news/conferenza-the-cleveland-fountain-paris-ca-1320-and-multisensory-art-history-30-novembre-2022-aula-11-complesso-b-pellegrino/

Conference: Vernacular Architecture Group, 7-8 January 2023 (Bursaries 3 December 2022; Registration 15 December 2022)

Vernacular Architecture Group

Winter Conference

Trans-National Connections - Vernacular Architecture in Britain & Beyond

College Court, University of Leicester, 7-8 January 2023

The winter conference takes a theme of current interest and explores it in depth through papers given by experts in the field. This year we welcome bookings from non-members as well as members (although we hope that non-members would like to join the group - please see the Membership page for details). Enquiries: please email winter-conference@vag.org.uk.

Vernacular architecture studies in the UK have often focused on local places and regions within the nations of England, Scotland and Wales. This conference aims to widen our horizons and look at the connections between architecture in Britain and patterns of building in Europe, Scandinavia and across the Atlantic. Speakers will address the theme of building traditions in Britain and their relationship to patterns elsewhere. Papers focusing on Sweden, Dutch houses, France, and the Channel Islands, sit alongside investigations into roof and wall construction in Britain and Europe, and 'trans-national' connections within Britain on the Anglo-Welsh and Anglo-Scottish Borders, as well as around the Irish Sea, and in Shetland and the North Atlantic Isles.

The programme includes:

  • ATLANTIC CONNECTIONS

    • Matthew Johnson - “English” Building and Landscape in the Northern Atlantic.

    • Alison McQuitty - Houses of the Green Caribbean: Vernacular Architecture in Suriname.

    • Ian Tait - What Made North Atlantic Buildings (Dis)Similar?

  • NORTH SEA CONNECTIONS

    • Gabri van Tussenbroek - The Dutch urban housing landscape (c.1150-1650): timber-frames, bricks and stones, geographical similarities and differences.

    • Karl-Magnus Melin - Twelfth-Century Carpentry Art in the Diocese of Lund and England: Similarities and Differences in Craft.

  • EVENING LECTURE

    • Lee Prosser - Timber Imports into England.

  • ROOFS (& WALLS) IN EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVE

    • Nat Alcock - Cruck Buildings in Europe: Coincidence or Connection?

    • Chris Currie - Crown-posts and Box-Frames in South-East Britain: French, German, native, or what? – and why?

    • Paul Reed - How Medieval Carpenters Set Out Roofs and Buildings in European Perspective.

  • TRANS-NATIONAL ARCHITECTURE IN BRITAIN & THE ISLES

    • Duncan James - Patterns of Vernacular Building on the Anglo-Welsh Border.

    • Catherine Kent - “Neither Castle nor Tower, but a House of Convenient Strength and Defence”: Classifying Buildings on the Anglo-Scottish Border.

    • Alex Gibbons - Earth Building as a Conscious Choice – Craftsmanship and Tradition Shared Throughout the Celtic and Irish Seas.

  • CONNECTIONS ACROSS THE CHANNEL

    • Nicolas Vernot - Magico-religious Marks and Practice in Vernacular Architecture: A French perspective.

    • Callum Tostevin-Hall - “Hearth and Home” A Comparison of Early Integrated Houses in the Channel Islands and Elsewhere.

    • Philippe Favre - Moullins Aisled Hall: So French, or Not?

    • John Allan - Breton Woodworkers in South-West England, 1500-50.

The conference is open to all, and full details and booking form can be downloaded here (booking closes 15 December 2022):

A small number of bursaries are available for students or early career professionals to enable their attendance at the conference. For details, see Winter Conference Bursaries. Due by 3 December 2022

For more information: https://www.vag.org.uk/conferences.htm