MURRAY SEMINAR: GILDED SUNS AND PEACOCK ANGELS: THEATRICAL MATERIALITY AND ART IN FIFTEENTH-CENTURY FLORENCE, LAURA STEFANESCU, London & Online, 14 June 2023, 17:00-18:30 BST/12:00-13:30 EDT

MURRAY SEMINAR

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

LAURA STEFANESCU

14 June 2023, 17:00-18:30 BST/12:00-13:30 EDT

Birbeck, University of London & Online

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.

This seminar was previously scheduled for December 2022, then February 2023 but had to be cancelled both times. If you booked for either of these cancelled events, we apologise but you will need to book again as your old tickets will no longer be valid. The seminar will be delivered before an audience and livestreamed. Separate booking links are posted on Eventbrite for each form of attendance.

Booking Link to Eventbrite for Livestreamed Seminar

Booking Link to Eventbrite for In-person Seminar

Contact: Laura Jacobus

For more information, https://www.bbk.ac.uk/events/remote_event_view?id=34633

Call for Papers: BAA Biennial International Romanesque Conference, ROMANESQUE AND THE MONASTIC ENVIRONMENT, Valladolid (8-10 April 2024), Proposals Due by 30 June 2023

Call for Papers

British Archaeological Association

BIENNIAL International Romanesque Conference

ROMANESQUE AND THE MONASTIC ENVIRONMENT

VALLADOLID, 8-10 APRIL 2024

Proposals Due BY 30 June 2023

The British Archaeological Association will hold the eighth in its series of biennial International Romanesque conferences in Valladolid from 8-10 April, 2024. The theme of the conference is Romanesque and the Monastic Environment, and the aim is to examine how and why monastic spaces were created, embellished and used in the 11th and 12th centuries. While a particular approach to monastic planning can be observed in Carolingian Benedictine circles in the second quarter of the 9th century – one in which ranges were organized on three sides of a garden with the church on a fourth – the extent to which this type of arrangement was widely adopted before the second half of the 11th century is unclear. Nor was it the only type of monastic plan in circulation. Semi-coenobitic orders, such as the Carthusians, had little use for ranges, even if the adoption of a garden surrounded by covered walks on four sides became more or less de rigeur in Latin monastic planning by c. 1100. When cloisters, chapterhouses, refectories, dormitories and work-rooms were established with clear relationships to each other and to the monastic choir, it becomes possible to speak of a core precinct, but what of other facilities, or precincts; infirmaries, outer courts, cemeteries, secondary cloisters, kitchens and gatehouses?

We welcome proposals for papers concerned with the design and functioning of monastic space in architectural, iconographical and liturgical terms, along with proposals which address choirs, their furnishings (stalls, pavements, altars), definition (screens, pulpita, railings), liturgical provision, and accessibility. Is processional use widely shared or locally specific? How and where is imagery used, or avoided? Should symbolic significance be attached to the appearance of buildings in monasteries beyond the church? Where and how was artistic production arranged? What are the preconditions for change?

Proposals for papers of up to 30 minutes in duration should be sent to Fernando Gutiérrez Baños and John McNeill on romanesque2024@thebaa.org by 30 June, 2023. Papers should be in English. Decisions on acceptance will be made by the end of July. The Conference will be held at Valladolid University’s Palacio de Congresos ‘Conde Ansúrez’ from 8-10 April, with the opportunity to stay on for two days of visits to Romanesque buildings in the surrounding area on 11-12 April.

Index of Medieval Art Conference: Whose East? Defining, Challenging, and Exploring Eastern Christian Art, 11 November 2023

Index of Medieval Art Conference

Whose East? Defining, Challenging, and Exploring Eastern Christian Art

November 11, 2023

More Details Will be Available in September 2023

Personification of Sunrise, State Historical Museum, Moscow, Chludov Psalter, gr. 129, fol. 48v

This conference asks how the concept of “the East” has shaped perceptions of Eastern Christianity generally and Eastern Christian Art more specifically, in Euro-American scholarship as well as in the popular view. Building on or dismantling such historical divisions as Western/Eastern Roman Empire, Latin/Orthodox, or simply East/West, speakers will explore what “East” and “East Christian” mean, how the boundaries of these concepts changed over time, and where exactly are the edges of the geographic, political, and religious “East.” This conference will offer a new understanding of the eastern Christian world by examining its cultural production in its own right and demonstrating that its rich, complex, and significant artistic production was not at the periphery of somewhere else, but rather at the center of an interconnected world.

The conference will focus on the regions of medieval Syria, the Caucasus, and Eastern Europe. These territories are often neglected in medieval and early modern scholarship as regions that are merely “East” of somewhere more important. The material culture produced in the regions “east” of Western Europe—such as modern-day Ukraine, Serbia or Romania, to mention only a few—has for a long time been considered of “lesser” value or importance compared to France or Italy; the Caucasus is often considered only in relation to Byzantium; and art produced in Armenia, Georgia and Anatolia has often been discussed in terms of a center/periphery dichotomy. Rarely is the visual production of these areas allowed to speak for itself.

Speakers will include:

Anthi Andronikou (University of St Andrews)

Jelena Bogdanović (Vanderbilt University)

Jana Gajdošová (Sam Fogg)

Christian Raffensperger (Wittenberg University)

Gohar Savary (Université de Fribourg)

Erik Thunø (Rutgers University)

Tolga Uyar (Nevsehir Haci Bektas Veli University)

Margarita Vulgaropoulou (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)

Respondents:

Antony Eastmond (Courtauld Institute of Art)

Mirela Ivanova (University of Sheffield)

The conference will be hosted in person as well as live-streamed. The conference schedule, location details, and live stream registration link will be posted in September.

For more information and future details, https://ima.princeton.edu/2023/05/15/save-the-date-for-the-fall-2023-conference-at-the-index-of-medieval-art-whose-east/

Call for Papers EXTENDED: 2023 Australian Early Medieval Association, 'The Natural and the Unnatural in the Early Medieval World,' Sydney & Online (28-29 September 2023), Due By 15 July 2023

Call for Papers

2023 Australian Early Medieval Association

The Natural and the Unnatural in the Early Medieval World

University of Sydney & Online, 28-29 September 2023

Submission Deadline: 15 July 2023

Confirmed Keynote Speakers:

• Dr Elizabeth Boyle (Maynooth University)

• Professor Roland Fletcher (The University of Sydney)

In the largely rural and agrarian landscape of the medieval world, fauna and flora were highly regarded, as is evidenced by the importance of agriculture, the popularity of bestiaries, and the legacy of the elder Pliny’s Naturalis historia. The dynamics of the natural environment and social life has become an increasingly important topic in scholarship in recent years as we grapple with the impact of climate change.

For most people in the early Middle Ages, a supernatural world existed alongside the natural one and interacted with it. Indeed, the presence of the unnatural, whether in terms of bizarre creatures or disease and other environmental disasters, was taken as proof of the impact of the supernatural on the natural world and fed into philosophical and religious discourse.

Potential themes include:

• Cosmology and astrology

• Climate and natural disasters

• Disease and medicines

• Technologies and superstitions

• Paganism and Christianity

• Biological cycles and human culture

• The natural and the supernatural

• Wilderness and domestication

• Life and the afterlife

• Daylight and darkness

• Monsters and totems

• Art and the imagination

Papers that focus on the dimensions of any or all of these worlds and their interplay in the early medieval period (c. 400 – 1100 CE), which either confirm or challenge this notion are invited to be presented at our annual conference to be held in September 2023 in hybrid mode.

Submissions may be in the form of individual papers of 20 minutes duration, themed panels of three 20-minute papers, or Round Tables of up to six shorter papers (total of one hour). All sessions will include time for questions and general discussion.

Please send proposals (150–200 words per paper), along with author’s name, paper/panel/RT title, and academic affiliation (if any) to conference@aema.net.au by 15 July 2023. Please also provide a note in your submission as to whether you intend on presenting in person or online.

Current AEMA graduate and ECR members (located outside of Sydney, Australia) are eligible to apply for a travel bursary up to the value of $300 AUD. For more details, or to apply for a bursary, please contact the AEMA committee at conference@aema.net.au.

Conference website: https://aema.org.au/conference/

For a copy of the call for papers, click here.

2023 Conference Convenors:

Call for Applications: Census Fellowship in the Reception of Antiquity, Berlin, Rome, and London, Due By 31 May 2023

Call for Applications

Census Fellowship in the Reception of Antiquity

Humboldt-Universität x Bibliotheca Hertziana x Warburg Institute

Application dUE By 31 May 2023

The Institut für Kunst- und Bildgeschichte, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, the Bibliotheca Hertziana – Max Planck Institute for Art History, and the Warburg Institute, School of Advanced Study, University of London, are pleased to announce a fellowship in Berlin, Rome, and London, offered at either the predoctoral or postdoctoral level.

These fellowships grow out of the longstanding collaboration between the Humboldt, the Hertziana, and the Warburg in the research project the “Census of Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance” (https://www.census.de).

The fellowships extend the traditional chronological boundaries of the Census and are intended for research and intellectual exchange on topics related to the reception of antiquity in the visual arts between c. 1350 and c. 1900. In the context of the fellowships, the topic of the reception of antiquity is also broadly conceived without geographical restriction. Proposals can optionally include a digital humanities perspective, engage with the database of the Census (https://database.census.de), or make use of the research materials of the Census project available in Berlin, Rome, and London.

The Humboldt, the Hertziana, and the Warburg co-fund a research grant of 6–9 months for students enrolled in a PhD program, or 4–6 months for candidates already in possession of the PhD. Fellows can set their own schedule and choose how to divide their time between the three institutes, but they should plan to spend at least one month in residence at each of the three institutions.

The stipend will be set at c. 1,500 EUR per month at the predoctoral level and c. 2,500 EUR per month at the postdoctoral level, plus a travel stipend. The fellowship does not provide housing.

Candidates can apply via the portal available on the Hertziana website (https://recruitment.biblhertz.it). They should upload the requested PDF documents in English, German, or Italian by 31 May, 2023, with details of their proposed dates for the fellowship during the academic year 2023/24 (July 2023–July 2024).

For more information, click here.

From Simone Martini (briefly) to Donatello: Recreating the Objects of the Goldsmith’s Art, The Courtauld, 17 May 2023 5:00-6:30 PM BST

The Courtauld

From Simone Martini (briefly) to Donatello: Recreating the Objects of the Goldsmith’s Art

Amy Bloch

Wednesday 17th May 2023, 5pm - 6.30pm BST

Vernon Square campus, Lecture Theatre 2, London

Donatello’s St. Louis of Toulouse, Orsanmichele. Photograph by Amy Bloch.

Donatello’s background and apparent training in goldsmithing make it unsurprising that he often represented examples of the goldsmith’s art in his large-scale sculptures. This lecture will consider, in reliefs and statues Donatello fashioned for Florentine, Sienese, and Paduan contexts, his recreation of objects typically produced by goldsmiths, including miters, chalices, processional crosses, parade armor, and framed and unframed medallions worn as personal adornment. It will explore how attention to Donatello’s representations of items crafted by goldsmiths can deepen our understanding of his art. Such items enrich the meaning of his sculptures through their iconography and, this lecture will suggest, because they can be experienced not only as constituent parts of artworks but also as independent objects. In the latter sense, their significance relies on the figures and/or the decoration that embellish them and on knowledge of how they were assembled, of the rich variety of materials employed in their production, and of how and when they were used. This lecture will begin with a brief discussion of several paintings by Simone Martini, who engaged in a variety of ways the art of goldsmithing and, in one conspicuous case, crafted an object that likewise straddles the line between representation and actuality.

Amy Bloch is a scholar of Italian Renaissance art whose current research focuses on the practice and regulation of goldsmithing in early Renaissance Italy. She has published, in addition to essays and a book on Lorenzo Ghiberti and his Gates of Paradise (Cambridge, 2016), articles and chapters on Donatello (including several contributions to the V&A exhibition catalogue), Jacopo della Quercia, Fra Angelico, Michelangelo, and on the decoration of the Florence Baptistery. She has also co-edited, and contributed to, two volumes of essays, the most recent (Cambridge, 2020) a collection of original studies of fifteenth-century Italian sculpture. She is Associate Professor of Art History at the State University of New York in Albany.

Organised by Dr Guido Rebecchini (The Courtauld)

This is an in person event at our Vernon Square campus. Booking will close 30 minutes before the event begins.

For more information, click here.

Call for Applications: Ad Astra Fellows - School of History, University College Dublin, Applications due by 26th May 2023, 17:00 IST/12:00 ET

Call for Applications

Ad Astra Fellows - School of History

University College Dublin

Applications due by 26th May 2023, 17:00 IST/12:00 ET

Applications are welcome from excellent candidates whose expertise expands and strengthens the School’s research and its undergraduate and graduate teaching programmes. The School has identified the history of the Middle Ages as a strategic area of interest in which it would particularly like to receive applications.

UCD School of History is Ireland's pre-eminent centre for historical teaching and research.  The School has been a core part of the University since its foundation, and today it is home to a large and diverse group of historians, who teach and research the people, events and processes of the past.  We are ranked amongst the top 100 history schools in the world (QS, 2020)   

Application Procedure

Applications will consist of a cover letter, in which the applicant will describe how their academic and research profile aligns with one or more of the UCD strategic themes (1. Creating a Sustainable Global Society, 2. Transforming through Digital Technology, 3. Building a Healthy World, 4. Empowering Humanity), a complete CV including all research publications and research grants to date together with any publications submitted for publication but not yet published, and the names and the contact details of three potential referees. Further details on the UCD strategic themes can be found at the following link http://www.ucd.ie/adastrafellows/

95 Lecturer/Assistant Professor (above the bar) Salary Scale:  €58,206 - €92,172 per annum

Appointment will be made on scale and in accordance with the Department of Finance guidelines.

Closing date: 17.00hrs (Local Irish Time) on 26th May 2023.

Applications must be submitted by the closing date and time specified. Any applications which are still in progress at the closing time of 17:00hrs (Irish Local Time) on the specified closing date will be cancelled automatically by the system. UCD are unable to accept late applications.

For more information and to apply, https://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/CZE797/ad-astra-fellows-school-of-history

Call for Applications: Residential Fellowship Programmes, 2024-25, Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study, Applications Due By 1 June 2023 23:59 CET/18:00 ET

Call for Applications

Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study

Residential Fellowship Programmes, 2024-25

Deadline for Applications: 1st June, 2023 (23:59 CET/18:00 ET)

The General Fellowship Programme

Programme and Eligibility Criteria
The Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study (SCAS) offers a General Residential Fellowship Programme, mainly in the humanities and social sciences, open to scholars from all countries. The programme gives fellows the opportunity to concentrate on their own research interests, free from the teaching and administrative obligations of ordinary university life. Fellows are, however, expected to be active members of the scholarly community of the Collegium and to participate in seminars and other academic events beyond their own fields of specialization. The Collegium encourages scholars from diverse backgrounds,
institutions, and countries to apply.
At the time of application, the candidate must have held a PhD (or equivalent degree) for at least three years. Early career scholars must have a promising track record of independent achievements beyond the postdoctoral level, including significant publications, and be active in international fora.
Senior candidates (those who have held a PhD for at least ten years) must have demonstrated a track record of significant and original research achievements over a sequence of years and be active at the international forefront of their research fields.
As an applicant, you are not required to hold a university position at the time of application. Scholars may apply for a full academic year (September – June) or one semester.

Remuneration
Fellows receive a monthly salary. Applicants may want to consider seeking additional financial support from other sources, such as sabbatical leave. The Collegium will provide and pay for accommodation for fellows who do not live in the Stockholm–Uppsala region.

Application Instructions and Deadline
Final decisions are taken by the Principal of the Collegium in consultation with a selection committee composed of Long-term Fellows. This means that all applications (including personal data) will be downloaded by members of the selection committee, and may also be sent to external referees, outside of the EU/EEA.
The application deadline for the academic year 2024 - 2025 is on 1 June 2023 (23:59 CET). Apply through the Varbi application system by filling in the online form and submitting as PDF-files the following required application documents:

  1. A curriculum vitae (not exceeding 4 pages)

  2. A description of your intended research project (not exceeding 1500 words, excluding bibliography if any)

  3. A list of your major articles (up to ten) in international peer-reviewed journals and/or major research monographs or edited volumes

  4. One article of your choice (or chapter in an edited book, or chapter from a monograph by you), representing your scholarship. The article does not have to be related to your proposed research project. 

  5. An account of why you wish to be at SCAS (not exceeding 100 words)

  6. (Optional) up to 3 letters of reference (Please note that letters of reference must be
    uploaded by the candidate by the application deadline. It is not possible for referees
    to upload references into the online application system or send them to SCAS.)

APPLY HERE (Varbi) >>

Once your application has been submitted, you will receive a confirmation email from the Varbi online application system. Candidates are advised to submit their applications well ahead of the deadline. It may take a few days to receive assistance should you have questions or need technical support.
Applicants will be notified of the results through Varbi no later than 28 February 2024. If you get a new email address, please make sure to update it in your Varbi account.
If you have any questions related to the Varbi online application system, please contact Varbi’s support: varbi@uadm.uu.se
If you have any questions about the General Fellowship Programme, please contact the secretariat: fellowselection@swedishcollegium.se

FAQs >>

The Barbro Klein Fellowship Programme

Programme and Eligibility Criteria
The Barbro Klein Fellowship Programme intends to advance the study of cultural diversity in a global perspective. The fellowship is open to scholars from across disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, with an emphasis on research on cultural and social diversity, cultural heritage and creativity, societal structures and public resistance, and varieties of cultural expressions in local and global perspective.
The programme gives fellows the opportunity to concentrate on their own research interests, free from the teaching and administrative obligations of ordinary university life. Fellows are, however, expected to be active members of the scholarly community of the Collegium and to participate in seminars and
other academic events beyond their own fields of specialization.
The fellowship programme encourages, but is not limited to, applications from talented younger scholars in non-Western countries and of underrepresented gender. At the time of application, the candidate must
have held a PhD (or equivalent degree) for at least three years. Applicants must have a promising track record of independent achievements beyond the post-doctoral level, including significant publications, and be active in international fora. As an applicant, you are not required to hold a university position at
the time of application.
Scholars may apply for a full academic year (September – June) or one semester.

Remuneration
Fellows receive a monthly salary.
 Applicants may want to consider seeking additional financial support from other sources, such as sabbatical leave. The Collegium will provide and pay for accommodation for fellows who do not live in the Stockholm–Uppsala region.

Application Instructions and Deadline

Final decisions are taken by the Principal of the Collegium in consultation with a selection committee composed of Long-term Fellows. This means that all applications (including personal data) will be downloaded by members of the selection committee, and may also be sent to external referees, outside
of the EU/EEA.
The application deadline for the academic year 2024 - 2025 is on 1 June 2023 (23:59 CET).
Apply through the Varbi application system by filling in the online form and submitting as PDF-files the following required application documents:

  1. A curriculum vitae (not exceeding 4 pages)

  2. A description of your intended research project (not exceeding 1500 words, excluding bibliography if any)

  3. A list of your major articles (up to ten) in international peer-reviewed journals and/or major research monographs or edited volumes

  4. One article of your choice (or chapter in an edited book, or chapter from a monograph by you), representing your scholarship. The article does not have to be related to your proposed research project. 

  5. An account of why you wish to be at SCAS (not exceeding 100 words)

  6. (Optional) up to 3 letters of reference (Please note that letters of reference must be uploaded by the candidate by the application deadline. It is not possible for referees to upload references into the online application system or send them to SCAS.)

APPLY HERE (Varbi) >>

Once your application has been submitted, you will receive a confirmation email from the Varbi online application system. Candidates are advised to submit their applications well ahead of the deadline. It may take a few days to receive assistance should you have questions or need technical support.
Applicants will be notified of the results through Varbi no later than 28 February 2024. If you get a new email address, please make sure to update it in your Varbi account.
If you have any questions related to the Varbi online application system, please contact Varbi’s support: varbi@uadm.uu.se
If you have any questions about the Barbro Klein Fellowship Programme, please contact the secretariat: fellowselection@swedishcollegium.se

FAQs >>

The Global Horizons Fellowship Programme

Programme and Eligibility Criteria
The Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study (SCAS) offers the Global Horizons Residential Fellowship Programme open to scholars from all countries, engaged in research in the field of global governance. The programme is funded by Riksbankens Jubileumsfond (RJ).
The purpose of the Global Horizons Programme is to advance multidisciplinary frontline research on global future governance issues, focusing on large-scale challenges. The programme aims to attract research fellows pursuing research on contemporary aspects of globalization and to promote a thematic collaboration across faculty lines. The programme revolves around three thematic areas: Global Knowledge Cultures and Regimes; Global Political Predicaments; and Global Futures. The programme is future-oriented in its ambition to contribute to the advancement of knowledge on contemporary forms of governance and
their future implications.
The programme gives fellows the opportunity to concentrate on their own research interests, free from the teaching and administrative obligations of ordinary university life. Fellows are, however, expected to be active members of the scholarly community of the Collegium and to participate in seminars and
other academic events beyond their own fields of specialization.
The Fellowship Programme offers one Advanced Fellowship, and one Young Scholar Fellowship per year during a five-year period. For the Advanced Fellowship, the candidate should, at the time of application, have held a PhD (or equivalent degree) for at least seven years, have a track record of significant and original research achievements, and be active at the international forefront of his/her research field. Early-career scholars applying for the Young Scholar Fellowship should have a promising track record of independent achievements at the post-doctoral level (at the most seven years from PhD degree), including significant publications, and be active in international fora. As an applicant, you are not required to hold a university position at the time of application.
Scholars may apply for a full academic year (September – June) or one semester.

Remuneration
Fellows receive a monthly salary. Applicants may want to consider seeking additional financial support from other sources, such as sabbatical leave. The Collegium will provide and pay for accommodation for fellows who do not live in the Stockholm–Uppsala region.

Application Instructions and Deadline
Final decisions are taken by the Principal of the Collegium in consultation with a selection committee composed of Long-term Fellows. This means that all applications (including personal data) will be downloaded by members of the selection committee, and may also be sent to external referees, outside of the EU/EEA.
The application deadline for the academic year 2024 - 2025 is on 1 June 2023 (23:59 CET). Apply through the Varbi application system by filling in the online form and submitting as PDF-files the following required application documents:

  1. A curriculum vitae (not exceeding 4 pages)

  2. A description of your intended research project (not exceeding 1500 words, excluding bibliography if any)

  3. A list of your major articles (up to ten) in international peer-reviewed journals and/or major research monographs or edited volumes

  4. One article of your choice (or chapter in an edited book, or chapter from a monograph by you), representing your scholarship. The article does not have to be related to your proposed research project. 

  5. An account of why you wish to be at SCAS (not exceeding 100 words)

  6. (Optional) up to 3 letters of reference (Please note that letters of reference must be uploaded by the candidate by the application deadline. It is not possible for referees to upload references into the online application system or send them to SCAS.)

APPLY HERE - Advanced Fellowship (Varbi) >>
APPLY HERE - Young Scholar Fellowship (Varbi) >>

Once your application has been submitted, you will receive a confirmation email from the Varbi online application system. Candidates are advised to submit their applications well ahead of the deadline. It may take a few days to receive assistance should you have questions or need technical support.
Applicants will be notified of the results through Varbi no later than 28 February 2024. If you get a new email address, please make sure to update it in your Varbi account.
If you have any questions related to the Varbi online application system, please contact Varbi’s support:
varbi@uadm.uu.se
If you have any questions about the Global Horizons Fellowship Programme, please contact the secretariat: fellowselection@swedishcollegium.se

FAQs >>

For more information, http://www.swedishcollegium.se/subfolders/Calls.html#

Call for Applications: British Academy/ Leverhulme Small Research Grants, Applications Due By 31 May 2023 17:00 BST/12:00 EST

Call for Applications

British Academy/Leverhulme Small Research Grants

Applications Due By 31 May 2023 - 17:00 BST/12:00 EST

The BA/Leverhulme Small Research Grants are available to support primary research in the humanities and social sciences. These awards, up to £10,000 in value and tenable for up to 24 months, are provided to cover the cost of the expenses arising from a defined research project.

Career stage: Postdoctoral or equivalent research

Earliest start date: 1 Sep 2023

Scheme opens date: 5 Apr 2023

Deadline date: 31 May 2023 - 17:00 BST

Duration of award: Up to 24 months

Contact details: 020 7969 5217/ grants@thebritishacademy.ac.uk

For more information and to apply: https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/funding/ba-leverhulme-small-research-grants/

Workshop: Materializing Transparency, Basel, Switzerland, 26 May 2023, 09:00-18:00

ÖFFENTLICHE VERANSTALTUNG

Materializing Transparency

Workshop organized by Ruth Ezra, NOMIS Fellow and eikones, University of Basel

26 May 2023, 09:00  - 18:00
Forum eikones, Rheinsprung 11, 4051 Basel

The history of transparency can be summed up as a progression in materials from the mined to the man-made: by the early modern period, rock crystal and alabaster — celebrated in the ancient and medieval worlds for their vitreousness and translucency — could no longer compete with the increasingly reliable clarity of factory-produced flint glass, which would in turn cede its primacy as see-through matter to that of manufactured plastics, made fully synthetic by 1907. Tracing but also challenging such a narrative of technological change and obsolescence, this workshop investigates the possibilities and limitations of transparency in all its material instantiations, and from perspectives both transhistorical and theoretical. Case studies include gauze, celluloid, varnish, openwork caskets, optical lenses, polaroid film, mordants, and witch balls. Taking these examples as starting points for wide-ranging discussion, we will think together about how the physical properties of a clear substrate, glaze, or surface might prompt reflection on concepts such as in/visibility, opacity, transcendency, distortion, obstinancy (Eigensinn), racialization, disclosure, and access.

Scheduled to coincide with the release of two important new books on transparency, The Varnish and the Glaze: Painting Splendor with Oil, 1100-1500 (Chicago, 2023), by Marjolijn Bol, and Transparency: The Material History of an Idea (Yale, 2023), by Daniel Jütte, this workshop engages with current scholarship in the history of art, science, architecture, religion, museology, and conservation. 

Confirmed speakers: Manuela Beer, Marjolijn Bol, Jennifer Y. Chuong, Leena Crasemann, Patrick R. Crowley, Kirsty Sinclair Dootson, Arne Leopold, Yanning Ma, Elizabeth Rice Mattison, Aïcha Revellat, Phillip Roberts

Supported by eikones, the NOMIS Foundation, and the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. 

Program:

From 08:30 - Welcome - coffee in the foyer

09:00 - Ruth Ezra, Introduction

09:20 - Patrick Crowley, ‘The Wrong Side of Things’: Roman Reverse-Engraved Glass

10:00 - Manuela Beer, Difference in Transparency: Rock Crystal in Medieval Artefacts

10:40 - Coffee break

11:00 - Arne Leopold, Veiling the Gaze, Veiling the Material: Openwork Caskets and the Pretence of Transparency in the 13th Century

11:40 - Leena Crasemann, Veiling Space: Textiles’ Anti-matter

12:20 - Lunch break

13:20 - Elizabeth Rice Mattison, Acid, Water, Rust, and Process in Dürer’s Etchings

14:00 - Phillip Roberts, Richard Reeve and Alice Grove: A Night Language

14:40 - Coffee break

15:00 - Jennifer Y. Chuong, Tricky Transparency: Witch Balls in Nineteenth-Century America

15:40 - Yanning Ma, Can a picture be a terrarium? Transparency, vitality, and confinement in Victorian Britain (presenting online)

16:20 - Coffee break

16:40 - Kirsty Sinclair Dootson, Celluloid Skin: Transparency, Sensitivity, and the Racialization of Film

17:20 - Aïcha Revellat, So Transparent, So Opaque: Hannah Villiger’s Early Polaroid Pictures

18:00 - Comfort break

18:15 - Book talk: Marjolijn Bol, The Varnish and the Glaze (Chicago 2023), in conversation

19:00 - Apéro

NB. The workshop is open to all, and no registration is required to join in person. Papers will not be streamed online.

For more information, https://eikones.philhist.unibas.ch/en/news/events/event-details/materializing-transparency/

ICMA AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MEDIEVAL STUDIES 2023

ICMA AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MEDIEVAL STUDIES 2023


For a full listing of the sessions, consult the ICMS program, available here:
https://wmich.edu/sites/default/files/attachments/u385/2023/2023CongressProgram.pdf

Mining the Collection: Kalamazoo Edition

Thursday, May 11, 12:00 p.m.
A behind-the-scenes visit to the Walters Art Museum (Baltimore) with Christine Sciacca and Lynley Herbert.

Friday, May 12, 12:00 p.m.
A behind-the-scenes visit to the Art Institute of Chicago with Jonathan Tavares.


The Medieval Institute and the International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) are
teaming up to offer a series of virtual museum visits during the International Congress on Medieval Studies. These visits will be broadcast live on the meeting site, and recordings be made available to all registrants Monday, May 15 through Wednesday, May 31.

Organized by Shirin Fozi (Metropolitan Museum of Art) in collaboration with curators at the participating museums, the events highlight carefully selected medieval objects from the permanent collections, with commentary by museum professionals and other experts. Ample time is allowed for questions from and discussion with attendees.
 

Blurring the Sacred and the Secular in Late Medieval Visual Culture I: Material Mediations

An International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student Committee Sponsored Session

Friday 12 May 2023
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. EDT


Session 212
Fetzer Center 2030


Presider: Nina Gonzalbez, Florida State Univ.
Organizer: Shannah Rose, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
Gabriela Chitwood, Univ. of Oregon

St. Agnes’ Roundel: A Site for Sienese Material Translations and Transformations
Brooke Hannah Wrubel, Univ. of Pennsylvania

Materiality and Spirituality in the Urbino Studiolo of Federico da Montefeltro
Matan Aviel, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem

The Artist-Saint Joins the Painted Saint? Religious and Art Historical Pietas as
Factors in the Care of a Fra Angelico Altarpiece, ca. 1500
Annika Svendsen Finne, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.

Blurring the Sacred and the Secular in Late Medieval Visual Culture II: Spatial Mediations

An International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student Committee Sponsored Session

Friday 12 May 2023
3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. EDT


Session 261
Fetzer Center 2030


Presider: Nina Gonzalbez, Florida State Univ.
Organizer: Shannah Rose, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
Gabriela Chitwood, Univ. of Oregon

The Nest of the Silver-Winged Dove: The Transmutation of Sacred Space at San
Damiano in Assisi and the Early Eucharistic Culture of the Poor Clares
Michael Shane Harless, Rice Univ.

Fitting Concepts: “Secular” and “Sacred” Elements at the Papal Court of Avignon
Tanja Hinterholz, Univ. Wien

Poised for Devotion: The Nave Stone Relief Icons of St. Mark’s Basilica
Sarah F. Cohen, Columbia Univ.

New Critical Terms for “Medieval” Art History (A Roundtable)

Friday 12 May 2023
3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. EDT

Session 289
Schneider Hall 2345 (hybrid)


Presider: Elizabeth Dospel Williams, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and
Collection
Organizer: Heather A. Badamo, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara

A roundtable discussion
“Visuality,” Diliana Angelova, University of California, Berkeley (VIRTUAL)
“Sensory,” Patricia Blessing, Princeton University (VIRTUAL)
“Sexuality,” Bryan Keene, Riverside Community College
“Labo(u)r,” Christina Normore, Northwestern University (VIRTUAL)
“Eclecticism,” Alice Sullivan, Tufts University (+ Alessia Rossi, VIRTUAL)
“Object-based art histories,” Nancy Wicker, University of Mississippi
 


ICMA STUDENT RECEPTION
FRIDAY 12 MAY 2023
6:00–7:00 P.M. 

FETZER CENTER 1040/1050
DRINK TICKETS PROVIDED



ICMA RECEPTION
FRIDAY 12 MAY 2023
7:00 P.M. - 9:30 P.M. 

FETZER CENTER 1040/1050
CASH BAR

The Visual and Literary Legacy of Hrabanus Maurus: Interdisciplinary Examinations

Saturday 13 May 2023
10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. EDT

Session 324
Bernhard Center 212


Presider: Jennifer Awes Freeman, United Theological Seminary of the Twin
Cities
Organizer: Kelin Michael, Emory Univ.

The Pseudo-Hrabanus Tractatus on Acts and the Glossa ordinaria
Bill Schipper, Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland

Copying from the “Original”: Emperor Rudolf II, Hrabanus’s Carmina figurata,
and the Power of Legacy
Kelin Michael
 

Medieval California: A Case Study of the Middle Ages in America (A Roundtable)

Saturday 13 May 2023
3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. EDT

Session 443
Schneider Hall 1340 (hybrid)


Presider: Bryan C. Keene, Riverside City College
Organizer: Bryan C. Keene; Roland Betancourt, Univ. of California–Irvine; Larisa Grollemond, J. Paul Getty Museum; Alison Locke Perchuk, California State Univ.–Channel Islands

A roundtable discussion with Wallace Thomas Cleaves II, Univ. of California–Riverside; Larisa Grollemond; Alison Locke Perchuk; Abby Ang, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington; and Roland Betancourt

Call for Submissions: Eikón / Imago, Vol. 13 2024, The frontiers of art history and visual studies. Thoughts on their object of study, Due 30 June 2023

Call for Submissions

Eikón / Imago, Vol. 13 2024

The frontiers of art history and visual studies. Thoughts on their object of study

Special Guest Editor: Gorka López de Munain (UNED – Vitoria-Gasteiz)

Due 30 June 2023

The journal Eikón / Imago, indexed in Scopus and awarded with the Quality Seal of Scientific Journals by FECYT, is open to receive original contributions for its monographic issue until June 30, 2023

In recent decades, reflections on the nature of the object of study of art history and visual studies have intensified in an extraordinary way. Parallel to this, numerous disciplines have undertaken a profound theorization of the status of the image that, with the advent of digital images, has questioned the very essence of many of these branches of knowledge. However, as Mieke Bal has already warned, while the object of study of a given field of knowledge is constantly changing, the way in which it is carried out –the disciplinary methodology– is not being updated at the same pace.

In this dynamic, as agitated as it is stimulating, art history has been shaken and questioned, offering answers in different directions. On the one hand, the impulse of other ways of thinking about images, with pioneering studies such as those of David Freedberg, Margaret Olin, Svetlana Alpers, Michael Camille or Hans Belting, widened the field of interest towards new practices, many of which had hitherto remained relegated to the margins. On the other hand, the impetus with which Visual Studies or the German Bildwissenschaft emerged seemed to threaten the very foundations of art history, offering alternative ways of approaching images. A narrative was thus emerging in which this longed-for opening of the disciplinary field towards new objects of study seemed to be possible only from these innovative proposals. However, other thinkers such as Horst Bredekamp strove to reclaim an "abandoned tradition" of art history as Bildwissenschaft (science of the image), of Warburgian inspiration, in which the newly created media have always had a place. An approach to art history that not only focused on the great masters, but looked with scholarly interest at photography, advertisements, film, video, political iconography and also at the so-called minor arts through a broad chronological framework ranging from the earliest prehistoric productions to the present day.

In all this torrent of conflicting and even contradictory forces scholars are faced with several questions: What is the role of art history? What is its responsibility with respect to the emergence of new digital media? How should it adapt to the demands that seek to interrogate the objects of the past from updated optics and methodologies? What links should it draw with other emerging fields and disciplines such as visual studies or the science of the image? How can we address the rupture of the epistemological differential, as José Luis Brea stated, between the extended field of visual culture and that of artistic practices?

Faithful to the spirit of Bredekamp, this volume aims to reflect on the place of art history in the present, on its boundaries and, ultimately, on the nature of its object of study. The arrival of artificial intelligences such as Dall-E, Midjourney or Stable Diffusion, capable of creating progressively more complex and challenging images, the increasingly solid impulse of immersive experiences with which we relate in totally new ways (virtual, expanded or mixed reality), or the development of new artistic practices such as bio-art, pose an extraordinary challenge that forces Winckelmann's old discipline not only to update itself permanently, but also to establish unavoidable interdisciplinary working guidelines.

But this monographic issue does not only seek to analyze how new media and digital technologies impact art history and the reflection on its object of study. It also seeks to question this problem from a broader chronological perspective, addressing the way in which other images (both past and present), traditionally considered minor or non-artistic and which have been relegated to the margins, should be fully integrated into the discipline’s field of interest, either by posing new questions or by approaching historic debates through new methodologies. This opening of the framework of study is justified not only because these forgotten images can be the pieces that improve our understanding of the visual cultures of the past, but also because their incorporation constitutes the only way to enter the thresholds of an authentic experiential culture.

In addition, our Miscellany section is available for all interested authors who want to submit contributions related to all areas of the journal’s thematic coverage and remains open all year round.

This complete issue will be published on January 2024 and it will be the first in which our journal adopts the continuous publication model, in which articles will be available on our open access platform right as they successfully pass our double-blind peer review evaluation and the editorial process, without waiting for the publication of the full issue.

 

Proposals can concentrate on the following subjects, as well as other related themes:      

- Theoretical reflections on the actuality of Visual Studies, Bildwissenschaft, Bildanthropology or similar fields and their relationship with art history.

- The role of interdisciplinarity in art history studies.

- The relationship between artistic practices, biology and technology (bio-art, immersive images and experiences, images created by artificial intelligences, etc.).

- The development and assessment of new methodologies oriented to the integration of the so-called minor arts or non-artistic works within the fields of interest of art history and visual studies.

- The chronological framework of this monograph does not contemplate closed limits, since it seeks to know and explore the current state of disciplinary reflections on the object of study through the widest possible perspective; from the remote prehistoric artistic manifestation, through classical antiquity and the medieval and modern ages until contemporary productions.

For more information about submitting, https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/EIKO/announcement/view/494

Call for Sessions: ASSOCIATION FOR ART HISTORY 2024 ANNUAL CONFERENCE, University of Bristol (3-5 April 2024), Sessions Proposals Due BY 30 June 2023

Call for sessions

ASSOCIATION FOR ART HISTORY 2024 ANNUAL CONFERENCE

University of Bristol, 3-5 April 2024

Session proposalS DUE BY Friday 30 June 2023

University of Bristol

2024 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the Association for Art History. We are delighted to announce that next year’s conference will be held in collaboration with the History of Art department at the University of Bristol.

The Association for Art History’s Annual Conference brings together international research and critical debate about art history and visual culture. A key annual event, the conference is an opportunity to keep up to date with new research, hear leading keynotes, broaden networks and exchange ideas.

The Annual Conference attracts around 400 attendees each year and is popular with academics, curators, practitioners, PhD students, early career researchers and anyone engaged with art history research. Members of the Association get reduced conference rates, but non-members are welcome to attend and propose sessions and papers.

Scope/Provocation

History of Art at the University of Bristol originally emerged from the Department of Modern Languages, and we continue to be particularly invested in an interdisciplinary approach to transcultural exchange, across a period ranging from the middles ages to the present day. With an increasingly global focus, accounting for histories often marginalised in visual art, our framework includes materials, objects, bodies and institutions. For a ‘history of art’ department not much older than the AAH itself, the association’s fiftieth anniversary represents an opportunity to reflect on the transformation – and diversification – of the field, and to chart its future together. We particularly invite session proposals that address the state of the discipline, as well as those that engage with the broad theme of cross-cultural exchange. 

Session Proposals

The 2024 Annual Conference is open to all, members and non-members of the Association for Art History. Anyone can submit a session proposal. Please include in your session proposal:

  • Title of your session proposals

  • Brief abstract (max 250 words)

  • Name of session convenor(s)

  • Affiliations (or if independent/freelance)

  • Email of session convenors

  • Social media accounts (optional)

Please refer to the CALL FOR SESSIONS 2024 guidance for details on what to  include in your session proposal, complete the SESSION PROPOSAL FORM 2024 and email it to: conference2024@forarthistory.org.uk by Friday 30 June 2023.

Key Dates

30 June 2023 - Sessions proposal deadline

28 July 2023 - Sessions confirmed and convenors notified  

September 2023 - Sessions announced on AAH website and social media

October-November 2023 - Call for papers

December 2023 - Session convenors select papers and contact speakers

31 January 2024 - Session and paper abstracts deadline

February 2024 - Tickets go online

3 -5 April 2024 - AAH Conference  


For more information, https://forarthistory.org.uk/events/cfs-association-for-art-history-2024-annual-conference/

British Archaeological Association Travel Grants, Applications Due 15 May 2023

British Archaeological Association

Travel Grants

Applications Due 15 May 2023

Applications for travel grants are invited from students registered on post-graduate degree courses (at M.A., M.Litt., M.St., M.Phil., and Ph.D. level). Grants of up to £500 are available to cover travel for a defined purpose (such as essential site visits, attendance at an exhibition/conference, short research trip, etc). The awards will be made twice yearly, with deadlines for applications on 15 March and 15 May.

Applicants are required to provide one reference, together with a timetable and travel budget, and the objective of the travel must fall within the Association’s fields of interest (as defined below). Applicants should either be registered at a UK University or be undertaking work on material from, in, or related to the art, architecture or archaeology of the British Isles. Applicants are also responsible for asking their nominated referee to forward a reference directly to the Hon. Secretary within one week of the closing date for applications.

An application form follows on the second page. Once complete, this should be sent as an email attachment to the Hon. Secretary on secretary@thebaa.org Funds are limited, so the awards are competitive. If successful, the Association expects candidates to write a short account (150-350 words) of the travel facilitated by the award that could be posted on the BAA website.

BAA STATEMENT OF INTEREST

The Association’s interests are defined as the study of archaeology, art and architecture from the Roman period to the present day, principally within Europe and the Mediterranean basin. The core interests of the BAA are Roman to 16th century. We only entertain applications that cover the 17th to 21st centuries if they are of a historiographical, conservationist or antiquarian nature and link back to the BAA’s core interests.
For more information, https://thebaa.org/scholarships-awards/travel-grants/

New Publication: God's Own Language: Architectural Drawing in the Twelfth Century, by Karl Kinsella, MIT PRESS, 13 June 2023

New Publication

God's Own Language: Architectural Drawing in the Twelfth Century

By Karl Kinsella

Published: June 13, 2023

Publisher: The MIT Press

Hardcover, 240 pp., 6 x 10 in, 44 b&w illus., 16 color plates

ISBN: 9780262047746

How modern architectural language was invented to communicate with the divine—challenging a common narrative of European architectural history.

The architectural drawing might seem to be a quintessentially modern form, and indeed many histories of the genre begin in the early modern period with Italian Renaissance architects such as Alberti. Yet the Middle Ages also had a remarkably sophisticated way of drawing and writing about architecture. God's Own Language takes us to twelfth-century Paris, where a Scottish monk named Richard of Saint Victor, along with his mentor Hugh, developed an innovative visual and textual architectural language. In the process, he devised techniques and terms that we still use today, from sectional elevations to the word “plan.”

Surprisingly, however, Richard's detailed drawings appeared not in an architectural treatise but in a widely circulated set of biblical commentaries. Seeing architecture as a way of communicating with the divine, Richard drew plans and elevations for such biblical constructions as Noah's ark and the temple envisioned by the prophet Ezekiel. Interpreting Richard and Hugh's drawings and writings within the context of the thriving theological and intellectual cultures of medieval Paris, Karl Kinsella argues that the popularity of these works suggests that, centuries before the Renaissance, there was a large circle of readers with a highly developed understanding of geometry and the visual language of architecture.

Karl Kinsella is a lecturer in art history at the University of Aberdeen, having previously held positions at the universities of York and Oxford. A specialist in medieval architectural history and manuscripts, he received the Hawksmoor Essay Medal in 2013 for his work on architectural drawing.

For more information, https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262047746/gods-own-language/

XIII Colloquium Ars Mediaevalis 2023: Secular Knowledge in Medieval Art/Saberes seculares en el arte medieval, Aguilar de Campoo, 6-8 October 2023

XIII Colloquium Ars Mediaevalis 2023  

 Secular Knowledge in Medieval Art

Saberes seculares en el arte medieval

6-8 October 2023

Aguilar de Campoo, Spain

Dirección: Gerardo Boto Varela – Alejandro García Avilés – Herbert L. Kessler

A substantial part of the scientific knowledge developed in the Middle Ages was inherited from Roman (in Western Europe) and Greek (in the Byzantine and Islamic domains) culture. However, new cognitive procedures were also developed in medieval societies, among them some related to vision, astronomy or zoology. Knowledge of the secular world was translated and codified in the three domains of the Middle Ages (Latin, Greek and Arabic) through complex and varied visual devices. These ingenious images allow us to understand how the procedures of thought and memory were established. With these iconic creations, the most dynamic cultural centres sought to provide themselves with didactic and mnemonic tools to say, think or remember the universe, earthly creatures or celestial realities more efficiently. Both the European continent and the Mediterranean shores witnessed the fluid communication between different domains in order to advance in the knowledge of the created and populated space, translating, codifying or reinterpreting what others had proposed before, or else enlightening new formulas and channels to solve the questions of people who intensified their self-awareness.

 

Una parte sustantiva del conocimiento científico cultivado en la Edad Media fue heredado desde la cultura romana (en la Europa occidental) y griega (en los dominios bizantino e islámico). Sin embargo, en las sociedades medievales también se desarrollaron procedimientos cognitivos nuevos, entre ellos algunos referidos a la visión, la astronomía o la zoología. El conocimiento del mundo secular se tradujo y codificó en los tres dominios de la Edad Media (latino, griego y árabe) a través de complejos y variados dispositivos visuales. Esas ingeniosas imágenes nos permiten comprender cómo se establecían los procedimientos de pensamiento y memoria. Con esas creaciones icónicas los centros culturales más dinámicos procuraron proveerse de herramientas didácticas y mnemotécnicas para decir, pensar o recordar de modo más eficiente el universo, las criaturas terrenales o las realidades celestes. Tanto el continente europeo como las riberas mediterráneas fueron testigos de la fluida comunicación entre dominios diferentes para avanzar en el conocimiento del espacio creado y poblado, traduciendo, codificando o reinterpretando lo que otros habían propuesto antes, o bien alumbrando nuevas fórmulas y cauces para resolver interrogantes de unas personas que intensificaron su conciencia de sí mismas.

PROGRAMA

Viernes, 6 de octubre (Aguilar de Campoo: Sede Fundación Sta. M" la Real)

Presidencia de sesión: Alejandro García Avilés (Universidad de Murcia) 08.45 h.: Recepción de asistentes
09.15 h.: Presentación e inauguración del Coloquio

09.30 h.: Kathrin MUUer (Humboldt-Universitat, Berlin): Fundamental Knowledge. Personificotions of the artes liberales on High Medieval Liturgicol Objects
10.15 h.: Licia Butta (Universitat Rovira i Virgili): Lo danzo en los trotados morales y de cortesía y su visualización en el relato poético narrativo en lo Edad Medio

11.00 h.: Debate
11.30 h.: Pausa-café
12.0 0 h.: Comunicación/Free paper

12.20 h: Martín Schwarz (Universitat Basel): The Crucifixion Eclipse ond the /lluminotion of Philosophy in the Vie de Saint Oenis (BnF, fr. 2090)
13.05 h: Debate

Sesión de tarde (Aguilar de Campoo: Sede Fundación Sta. M" la Real) Presidencia de sesión: M1 Teresa López de Guereño (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid)
15.30 h.: Laura Fernández Fernández (Universidad Complutense de Madrid): Entre fábulas y estrellas errantes. Lo luna en el imaginario alfonsí 16.15 h.: Comunicación/Free paper
16.35 h.: Debate
17.15 h.: Visita al monasterio de Santa María la Real

Sábado, 7 de octubre (Saldaña. Villa romana La Olmeda)

Presidencia de sesión: Susana Clavo Capilla (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
09.15 h: Desplazamiento en autobús a la villa romana La Olmeda
10.30 h.: Anna Caiozzo (Université d'Orleans): Entre images scientifiques, merveilles (terrestres) de la Créatian et imaginaires religieux
11.15 h.: Comunicación/Free paper
11.35 h.: Comunicación/Free paper
11.55 h.: Debate
12.30 h.: Visita a la villa romana La Olmeda
14.00 h.: Comida (a cargo de la organización)
16.00 h.: Visita al arte medieval de Cisneros

Domingo, 8 de octubre (Aguilar de Campoo: Monasterio Sta. M" la Real)

Presidencia de Sesión : Fernando Gutiérrez Baños (Universidad de Valladolid)
09.30 h.: Marius Hauknes (University of Notre Dame): Representing the Origins of Human Knowledge

10.15 h.: Hanna Wimmer (Universitat Hamburg): Visualising Lagic in the MiddleAges
11.00 h.: Debate
11.30 h.: Descanso

12.00 h.: Rosa Rodríguez Porto (Universidad de Santiago de Compostela): lncidentiae: Tiempo, espacio y sincronía en la historiografía medieval
12.45 h.: Debate
13.00 h: Conclusiones y perspectivas

13.15 h.: Clausura y entrega de certificados

For more information, click here.

Call for Papers: 2023 Southeastern Medieval Association Annual Conference, Construction and Reconstruction, Winthrop University (12-14 October 2023), Applications Due 15 June 2023

Southeastern Medieval Association (SEMA)

2023 Southeastern Medieval Association Annual Conference

Construction and Reconstruction

Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC
October 12–14, 2023

Applications Due 15 June 2023

The mission of the Southeastern Medieval Association (SEMA) is to promote the study and enjoyment of the Middle Ages by students at every level of expertise. Professional and independent scholars from various branches of medieval studies—history, arts, science, philosophy, archaeology, paleography, theology, language, and literatures—make the Association’s annual meeting a forum for scholarly and pedagogical growth within those disciplines as well as a platform for interdisciplinary exchange and collaboration.

As we watch the new silhouette of Notre-Dame rising from the burned ruins of its past, participate in vigorous debates about how the study of the Middle Ages will be pursued now and in the future, and plan to meet on a campus where medieval buildings have literally been rebuilt, we invite proposals for individual papers, whole sessions, or round tables on the conference theme of “construction and reconstruction.” Papers might consider the notions of

  • How identities and places have been constructed in various periods of medieval history, literature, politics, art, and culture;

  • The ways in which medieval systems of belief, value, and thought have been constructed, deconstructed, appropriated, and/or reconstructed;

  • The relationships between form and construction (whether they be verse, literary, political, musical, architectural, artistic, ideologic, etc.);

  • Ways in which modern society, countries, organizations, and/or individuals have re-made the medieval in their modern images;

  • The ongoing debates about how we conceptualize, pursue, and further the study of the Middle Ages in the 21st century.

The organizers are extremely proud that Rock Hill was home to one of the earliest of the “sit-in” lunch counter protests that sparked the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s. The conference will be held only a few blocks where the Friendship Nine were arrested for their lunch counter sit-in in February 1960, and a short drive from the tribal lands of the Catawba Indian Nation. In respect of these important historical and cultural contexts, we particularly invite papers and panels that focus on the ways in which diverse and/or indigenous religious, social, physical, political, legal, and/or economic identities have been constructed and reconstructed in the Middle Ages and beyond.

Submission guidelines: Proposals for individual papers must be limited to 300 words. Complete session proposals must include an overview and abstracts for the 3-4 papers for the panel, or 5-8 bios and an overview for a roundtable, as well as the contact information for all presenters. The SEMA 2023 conference organizers welcome proposals from all medieval disciplines and geographical regions, but preference will be given to abstracts that pertain to the conference theme.

To access the application and for more information, click here.

British Archaeological Association Research Awards, Applications Due 1 June 2023

British Archaeological Association

Research Awards

Applications Due 1 June 2023

The BAA invites applications for research awards of up to £1,500. These are designed to assist those who might otherwise have difficulty in funding or completing a research project and is therefore not open to students registered on degree courses, or those in full-time employment for whom research is an expectation written into their employment contract. The awards cover research with a defined outcome, such as publication, mounting of an exhibition, scientific analysis (in the case of scientific and/or technical analysis, we require the results of the analysis to be publicly available). Research proposals for which some funding has already been obtained are eligible, though it should be shown that the additional funds for which you are applying to the BAA are sufficient to complete the research. Proposals contingent on additional future funding will not be supported. The deadline for applications is 1 June 2023.

Applicants are required to provide one reference, along with an anticipated research schedule and budget. The research proposal must fall within the Association’s fields of interest (as defined below). Applicants should either be ordinarily resident in the UK, or work on material from, in, or directly related to the art, architecture or archaeology of the British Isles.

An application form can be downloaded below. Once complete this should be sent as an email attachment to the Hon. Secretary on secretary@thebaa.org Funds are limited, so the awards are competitive.

BAA STATEMENT OF INTEREST
The Association’s interests are defined as the study of archaeology, art and architecture from the Roman period to the present day, principally within Europe and the Mediterranean basin. The BAA’s core interests run from the Roman era to the 16th century and embrace the study of these periods (historiographical, antiquarian, conservationist).

For the application and more information, click here.

Call for Papers: DIGITALLY MAPPING THE MIDDLE AGES, 2024 99th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America, Abstracts Due By 30 May 2023

CALL FOR PAPERS

DIGITALLY MAPPING THE MIDDLE AGES

2024 99th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America

Abstracts Due By 30 May 2023

Since the Spatial turn in the late 1980s, theorists and historians alike have championed the insights geospatial analysis can lend to historical research. The digital age produced a robust array of digital Geographical Information Systems (GIS) for just that purpose. And yet, the most significant obstacle most scholars interested in GIS face is knowing how to get started.

The papers in this panel chart, from start to finish, the process of mapping the Middle Ages. The panel brings together researchers from across disciplines to reflect upon the possibilities of spatial modes of analysis as well as the process for constructing digital visualizations of spatial relationships to advance historical arguments. Each panelist will present ongoing research that involves substantial digital visualizations, tracing their work from conception, to research design, to data collection, to visualization program selection, to modeling and analysis.

Panelists will candidly discuss their processes for turning messy historical evidence into refined datasets and digital visualizations. To make the panel widely accessible, the panelists will assume no specific knowledge of the digital humanities or experience with GIS. This panel questions how the process of spatial analysis and GIS outputs can aid in historical inquiry, particularly research into the medieval period.

Please send abstracts of no more than 250 words together with a short bio to Eileen Morgan (emwmorgan@nd.edu) and Brittany Forniotis (brittany.forniotis@duke.edu) by May 30. Please include your name, title, and affiliation.

Rituals of Power Through the Centuries at the Society of Antiquaries, Society of Antiquaries of London, Burlington House, London, 5 May 2023, 5:00-8:00 pm BT

Society of Antiquaries of London

Rituals of Power Through the Centuries at the Society of Antiquaries

5 May 2023, 5:00-8:00 pm BT

Burlington House, London

To coincide with the Coronation of Charles III on Saturday 6 May, we will be welcoming visitors to a rolling programme of show and tell sessions, tours, workshops, performances and demonstrations all exploring rituals of power through the ages.

Come and see some of our portraits of Kings and Queens and learn more about what a 1225 copy of the Magna Carta, the Great Seal of Henry VIII, Civil War pamphlets, and a colourful panorama of Queen Victoria’s coronation procession, among many others, tell us about rituals, symbols, and transfers of power.

Join us for sessions of Early Modern poetry and music. Fellow Linda Grant will be reading two poems, one each from the courts of Henry VIII and Charles II, by Thomas Wyatt and John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester – the latter extremely bawdy and obscene so adults only! Each reading will be accompanied by live music from the period – and we’ll consider how these poems might contest and subvert ideas of monarchy and authoritative power.

We are also offering activities to get creative and inky with lino block printing and the chance to create your own printed badge, postcard or tote bag to take away. We have commissioned lino cut replicas of ‘royal themed’ 18th-century printing blocks, which were used to illustrate the Society’s early publications. Visitors will be guided in inking one of these blocks to print onto their chosen object.

The programme of activities will be repeated on the hour throughout the evening to give people plenty of time to experience what the Royal Society of Chemistry, The Linnean Society of London and The Royal Astronomical Society have to offer.

Cocktails and victuals throughout the evening.

You can book your free time slot for this in-person event. Please note that each time slot will have the same activities so please only book one slot for yourself or one slot per person in your group as we expect this event to be over-subscribed.

Please note:

  • Tours will start on the hour, each hour. Places are limited to 20 and these will be allocated on a first come, first served basis, regardless of if you’ve registered to come.

  • The poetry readings contain graphic, sexual and explicit content that will not be appropriate for minors.

For those with accessibility needs, the show and tell session in our Library can be reached via our lift, which can fit one standard wheelchair inside it, without a carer.

To book your place at the other Society’s events please visit their websites: The Royal Society of Chemistry, The Linnean Society of London, The Royal Astronomical Society

If you have any questions, please contact us at communications@sal.org.uk and visit https://www.sal.org.uk/event/rituals-of-power/.