Call for Papers: A History of Textile Cleanliness: Washing and Perfuming Fabrics from the Medieval to the Modern Period (Bern, 28-29 May 2026), Due by 30 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers

A History of Textile Cleanliness: Washing and Perfuming Fabrics from the Medieval to the Modern Period

Institute of Art History, University of Bern, Switzerland, 28-29 May 2026

Due by 30 September 2025

Two Japanese Women Posing with Laundry, 1870s, silver print photograph from glass negative with applied colour, New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2005.100.505.1 (39b)

International conference organized by Moïra Dato (University of Bern) and Érika Wicky (Université Grenoble-Alpes / LARHRA).

Scientific committee: Olivier David (Institut Lavoisier / Paris Saclay), Aziza Gril-Mariotte (Musée des Tissus, Lyon / Université Aix), Raphaël Morera (CNRS-EHESS), Corinne Mühlemann (University of Bern), Helen Wyld (National Museum Scotland).

In 2024, the Sleeping Beauties exhibition at the MET (New York) engaged visitors in the museum experience by recreating the displayed dresses’ scents – identified through chromatographic analysis – to illuminate their history and relationship to bodily senses. The analyses and interpretations published in the catalogue reveal not only the presence of perfumes but also traces of cosmetics, sebum, polluted air, and wine, among other aromas. While the poetic resonance of these sensory traces may evoke the ephemeral existence of these garments, their scents have not always been perceived as desirable. On the contrary, the history of textiles and clothing is deeply intertwined with practices of washing, stain removal, deodorisation, and perfuming, all of which were designed to ensure their longevity and reusability. This international conference seeks to explore these practices and their significance in textile history.

The historical study of textile cleaning has emerged at the intersection of cultural history, material culture studies, sensory studies, economic history, and archaeology. While textile production, trade, and consumption have been well-documented, research into the maintenance and cleaning of textiles – both as part of everyday domestic practices and in the care of symbolically significant textiles (such as liturgical garments and ceremonial fabrics) – has only recently gained scholarly attention.

Studies on hygiene underlined the role of textiles in approaches to and conceptions of bodily cleanliness, especially through the relationship between undergarments and the body. As noted by Georges Vigarello in his book Le propre et le sale, white clothing has long been associated with personal hygiene. Researchers have particularly focused on the laundering of linens and their symbolic role as indicators of health, moral, and spiritual virtues (Vigarello, 1985; Roche, 1989). Subsequently, the study of cleanliness and the purity of linens has been extended to colonial contexts, where these notions were intertwined with concepts of race and whiteness while also highlighting regional differences in perceptions of cleanliness and body care (Brown, 2009; White, 2012). Concepts connected to health, bodily hygiene, and clean textiles are also closely linked with questions of smells and techniques for scenting fabrics, an area that has been explored by historians and art historians specializing in the senses (Dospěl Williams, 2019; Schlinzig, 2021).

The inception and evolution of cleaning materials and technologies, from the use of soap to spot-removal recipes and chemical innovations, have also attracted the interest of historians (Leed, 2006). For example, some studies have shown how cleaning methods were adapted based on fibre type and colour stability, as well as how the manufacturing of undergarments itself was conditioned by their future washing (North, 2020). These practices of cleanliness have also been addressed through the lens of social actors, particularly in relation to gendered labour. The work of laundresses, who are rarely documented in written records, has been discussed as a form of embodied knowledge and skills (Morera and Le Roux, 2018; Robinson, 2021). Advertising imagery has also served to explore the dynamic between collective perceptions of clean laundry and its commercial dimensions (Kelley 2010).

Building upon this previous research, this international conference seeks to explore textile cleaning from a global perspective and its interplay with hygiene, olfaction, social opinion, aesthetic preferences, quality expectations, ecological issues, and economic imperatives, all of which are inherent to fabrics. The conference aims to investigate these various practices and their part in the everyday experience of life in the past. Who were the people involved in the daily or extraordinary cleaning of fabrics, and which ingredients and tools were used? What knowledge about textiles and their care was shared at the time, and how was it transmitted? How did these practices evolve during the 18th and 19th centuries, a period of intense development in chemistry and industrial science?

The question of care and cleaning becomes even more significant when considering the many lives of textile objects. Cleaning and maintenance certainly varied not only by fabric type but also by purpose and context of use. Household linens and work clothes were used to the last thread – mended, transformed and repurposed. More expensive and refined garments and textile decorations were used more sparingly; some were eventually passed down – and even preserved until today. This aspect prompts an exploration of the wide variety of textiles and the differing care practices for under and outer garments, furnishings, and domestic fabrics. Were undergarments the primary focus of cleaning routines? How were sartorial and furnishing fabrics with complex patterning techniques and precious materials (from silk to metal threads) cared for? How was the shape of specific garments, such as ruffs, maintained through washing? How did the intended use of a textile – ranging from menstrual cloths to ceremonial gowns – influence the choice of cleaning methods? Additionally, given that fabric itself was often used as a cleaning tool, what were the interactions between textiles of varying value?

Conceived as a bodily experience, the cleanliness of fabrics carries significant implications tied to the senses. Indeed, integrating sensory studies with the history of cleanliness enables an exploration not only of the sensory experiences associated with washing or wearing clean linen or clothes but also of the sensory knowledge that developed around it. Thus, it becomes possible to examine which notions of pleasantness or discomfort were associated with textile washing or with specific practices such as drying laundry outdoors. How were the smells associated with cleanliness and the thresholds of sensory perception defined? How was the temperature of the washing water evaluated? In what ways were textural changes in fabric during washing assessed? Moreover, attention to sensorial experiences invites us to consider the significant tradition of perfuming laundry, whether placing sachets in linen drawers or sewing them into the hems of garments.

This conference will encompass geographical regions from the Atlantic world to Europe, Africa, the Islamic world and Asia. Adopting this approach raises numerous questions about cultural differences as well as the circulation of cleaning practices and techniques. It enables an examination of the differences and evolutions in conceptions of hygiene and their relationship to textiles across countries and cultures. Moreover, it highlights how these practices were influenced by factors such as available resources, climate, and social norms, shaping distinct traditions of textile care across different societies. Similarly, a longue durée perspective (from the medieval to the modern period) provides an opportunity to explore both changes and continuities in cleaning habits, shaped by advancements in technologies, evolving medical theories, socio-philosophical morals, and shifts in cosmetic and aesthetic preferences. This approach invites us to map out conceptions of cleanliness and identify thresholds of sensitivity: What is considered clean? What criteria are applied in making this assessment? When do clothes become unwearable? What scents are associated with cleanliness? In this regard, the study of representations – such as those found in art and fiction – can offer valuable insights into historical perceptions of cleanliness and its limits.

The conference will take place at the University of Bern’s Department of History of Textile Arts (Institute of Art History) on 28-29 May 2026. We invite proposals from all researchers, particularly doctoral students and early career scholars, on topics ranging from the medieval to the modern period and across all geographical regions. Proposals (300 words), along with a short biography (150 words max), should be sent to Moïra Dato (moira.dato@unibe.ch) and Érika Wicky (erika.wicky@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr) by 30 September 2025.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers and the Select Bibliography, click here.

Call for Papers: Baltic Bloodbaths. The Use of Political Violence in the Baltic Sea Region 1400–1600, Stockholm University (23-24 Apr. 2026), Due 29 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers

Baltic Bloodbaths. The Use of Political Violence in the Baltic Sea Region 1400–1600

Stockholm University, 23-24 April 2026

Due 29 September 2025

A workshop in 2021 discussed international perspectives on the Stockholm Bloodbath, an important event in the history of the Nordic countries. However, it asks for a follow-up, in order to understand the events in a broader perspective, focusing the use of political violence in the Baltic Sea Region in late medieval, early modern times.

In 2021, we organized a workshop on occasion of the 500th commemoration of the Stockholm Bloodbath in November 1520 (one year late due to Covid). The workshop aimed at presenting new research on the historical events, in particular focusing the international consequences (which previously had not received proper attention in the Danish and Swedish research). We also focused on the aftermath of the event. The workshop has been published, the anthology appeared just a few weeks ago. For more information, see https://www.aup.nl/en/book/9789463724197/the-stockholm-bloodbath-of-1520.

Whereas the workshop was able to present new sources and perspectives, we think that one vital aspect of the picture is still missing. The Stockholm Bloodbath of November 1520 takes up an iconic status in Sweden and Scandinavia as a decisive turning point in Scandinavian history. Therefore, it has mostly be researched as a singular event, despite different other bloodbaths taking place in Sweden and other realms in the Baltic Sea Region between 1400 and 1600.

With the present conference, we intend to broaden the perspective by applying a comparative approach to the use of political violence in the Baltic Sea Region from roughly 1400–1600. We are especially interested in comparative approaches on acts of political violence, both within a certain realm as well as between different realms. How where these acts of violence legitimized in their times? How are they explained by contemporary and modern historians? What is the role of religious dissent, dynastic conflicts and social uprisings? How can violence be explained as a political instrument?

Papers should be 20 minutes long and in English. The number of presenters is limited to 20. We hope to be able to cover travel and accommodation expenses for all invited speakers.

Are you interested in participating in the conference, please send a paper proposal, no later than 29 September 2025 to the conference secretary at sekreterare@medeltid.su.se.

Contact: heiko.droste@historia.su.se and kurt.villads.jensen@historia.su.se

Call for Applications: Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung / Rolf und Ursula Schneider-Stiftung, Doctorl Fellowship, Next Due by 1 October 2025

Call for Applications

Doctoral Fellowship

Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung / Rolf und Ursula Schneider-Stiftung

Annual application deadlines: April 1 and October 1

Thanks to the initiatives by private foundations (Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung/Rolf und Ursula Schneider-Stiftung) fellowships programmes for doctoral candidates have been established at the Herzog August Bibliothek. These programmes are open to applicants from Germany and abroad and from all disciplines.

Applicants may apply for a fellowship of between 2 and 10 months, if research on their dissertation topic necessitates the use of the Wolfenbüttel holdings. The fellowship is € 1.300 per month. Fellowship holders are housed in library accommodation for the duration of the fellowship and pay the rent from their fellowship. There is also an allowance of € 100 per month to cover costs of copying, reproductions etc. Candidates can apply for a travel allowance if no funds are available to them from other sources.

Candidates who already hold fellowships (eg. state or college awards or grants from Graduiertenkollegs) or are employed can apply for a rent subsidy (€ 550) to help finance their stay in Wolfenbüttel.

New: Thanks to generous financial support by the Anna Vorwerk-Stiftung, the monthly fellowship will be increased by € 150 per month until further notice.

Please request an application form, which details all the documents that need to be submitted, at ed.bah@gnuhcsrof. Reviewers will be appointed to evaluate the applications. The Board of Trustees of the foundations will decide on the award.

Application deadlines: October 1st or April 1st. The Board holds its selection meetings in February and July. Successful applicants can take up the award from April 1st or October 1st onwards each year.

If you send your applications by mail, please submit only unstapled documents and no folders.

You can find more information about the foundation here

Fellowship Programme Expanded: Footnote Fund

Former holders of fellowships from the foundations can apply for further financial support. The Footnote Fund supports scholars who are either at the final stage of their doctorate or are working on the revision for the publication and wish to return to the library for a short stay – for example, should they need to review or add further source material. The fellowship is € 500 for Germans and € 750 for international applicants.

New: Thanks to generous financial support by the Anna Vorwerk-Stiftung, the fellowship will be increased by € 100 until further notice.

Please request an application form at ed.bah@gnuhcsrof.

This expansion to the doctoral programme was made possible thanks to the generous response to an appeal for financial support launched on the occasion of the anniversary of the Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung in 2013. Further contributions are of course welcome.

Call for Future Host Institution: 26th Vagantes Conference on Medieval Studies 2027, Due By 8 September 2025

Call for Future Host Institution

26th Vagantes Conference on Medieval Studies, 2027

Due by 8 September 2025

We are now soliciting applications for the Host Institution of Vagantes 2027!

Vagantes is an interdisciplinary conference focusing on the Middle Ages that is entirely organized and run by graduate students. This is a unique opportunity to showcase the Medieval Studies community at your institution, and to gain valuable professional development experience in planning and organizing the event. It is also an excellent opportunity to meet and network with other graduate students interested in medieval studies! Since 2002, Vagantes has been hosted by twenty-two different universities in the US and Canada. Is your institution next?

Applications should be submitted via email to vagantesboard@gmail.com and will be reviewed by the Vagantes Board of Directors. Submissions are due Monday, 8 September 2025.

You can access the application template, view past applications and programs, and learn more here: http://vagantesconference.org/hosting-vagantes/.

Please reach out to vagantesboard@gmail.com with any questions!

Conference: Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXVIII, University of Virginia College At Wise, 18-20 Sept. 2025

Conference

Center for Medieval-Renaissance Studies of the University of Virginia’s College at Wise

Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXVIII

September 18-20, 2025

Founded in 1986 by Professors Richard H. Peake and the late Jack Mahony, both of the Department of Language and Literature, the Medieval-Renaissance Conference began as a way of promoting scholarly activity on campus and providing visibility for the College in the larger academic community. The first conference was a success, hosting twelve speakers from mainly area colleges. Welcoming papers on all areas of medieval and renaissance studies, including literature, history, philosophy, art and music, the conference has enjoyed steady growth and increased national presence, with speakers representing institutions across the country – and the occasional international speaker. By the late 1990s it had grown to a gathering of thirty or forty presentations per year, growth that continues the legacy of Professors Peake and Mahony and confirms the value of an academic conference at the College. In spite of this growth, the conference remains small enough to foster a sense of academic community, generating lively discussions and feedback not always achievable at larger conferences. We also work to maintain an open, informal and friendly setting for participants. Many younger scholars, presenting their first academic paper, find their experience with the conference encouraging and helpful to their academic growth.

Sponsored by the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, the University of Virginia’s College at Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference promotes scholarly discussion in all disciplines of Medieval and Renaissance studies. The conference welcomes proposals for papers and panels on Medieval or Renaissance literature, language, history, philosophy, science, pedagogy, and the arts.  Abstracts for papers should be 300 or fewer words.  Proposals for panels should include: a) title of the panel; b) names and institutional affiliations of the chair and all panelists; c) a 200-250 word description of the panel).  A branch campus of the University of Virginia, the University of Virginia’s College at Wise is a public four-year liberal arts college located in the scenic Appalachian Mountains of Southwest Virginia. 

Keynote Address

Frederick de Armas, University of Chicago
Cervantes’ Architectures: Windows, Holes, Corners and Fissures

For more information and to register, visit https://www.uvawise.edu/academics/departments/language-literature/medieval-renaissance-conference

Call for Papers for Session: The Spatial Turn in Medieval Studies, IMC Leeds 2026, Due 19 Sept. 2026

Call for Papers For Session

The Spatial Turn in Medieval Studies

International Medieval Congress, Leeds 6-9 July 2026

Deadline: 19 September 2026

Space offers a valuable lens through which to rethink the practices in which religious rituals, material objects and written narratives, such as hagiography and historiography, were embedded. Scholars working within the spatial turn have emphasized that the location and physical spatial contexts of events are inseparable from the way in which they unfolded and the outcomes they produced. Space, both physically and socially constructed, plays a critical role in shaping human experiences, alongside other historical and social factors. This session explores how spatial configurations impacted medieval ways of knowing, by examining how space was conceptualized, structured, and transformed. In doing so, it aims to shed light on the ways in which spatial experience shaped the perceptions and actions of those who occupied it.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

Digital reconstruction of medieval objects in their historical space

  • Performative actions within the context of their space in which they were performed

  • Medieval liturgy and its spatial dimensions and signs for meaning-making

  • Space and locations and its influence on medieval audiences

  • Descriptions of the use of space in medieval written narrative sources

  • Spatial dimensions in medieval manuscripts and its effect on its reader

  • Depictions of space in medieval visual images and artworks

  • The influence of space and location on the practices surrounding material (ritual) objects

If you are interested in joining these sessions, please send an abstract of max. 250 words, a short bio with affiliation details (institution, department, email address) and an indication if you are joining online or in-person, to Anne Sieberichs (Utrecht University) a.p.sieberichs@uu.nl and Imke Vet (Yale University) imke.vet@yale.edu.
Deadline: 19 September 2025

Call for Papers for Journal: Church Archaeology, Vol. 2026, Due 20 Feb. 2026

Call for Papers for Journal

Church Archaeology

Deadline 20 February 2026

The SCA’s peer-reviewed journal Church Archaeology is seeking submissions for its Vol. 26 (2026) issue. We welcome and provide initial editorial feedback on main research articles, shorter articles, news pieces, and book reviews about all kind of ecclesiastical places of worship, their burial grounds, and material culture.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers, click here.

For more information on the journal, visit https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/journal/churcharch

Contact: editorchurcharchaeology@outlook.com

NEW VIDEO! FRIENDS OF THE ICMA PRESENTS MEDIEVAL COMING ATTRACTIONS 2025-2026, Wednesday 21 May 2025, 11am ET (15:00 CET)

NEW VIDEO

FRIENDS OF THE ICMA PRESENTS MEDIEVAL COMING ATTRACTIONS 2025-2026

Wednesday 21 May 2025, 11am ET (15:00 CET)

The Friends of the ICMA held the latest in a series of special online events on Wednesday 21 May 2025, 11am ET (15:00 CET). The hour-long program previeweed three medieval exhibitions, each introduced by its curator.

Mathieu Deldicque, Director of the Château de Chantilly, presented on the exhibition that he curated, “Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry Musée Condé”, which is running from 7 June 2025 to 5 October 2025.

Melanie Holcomb (Manager of Collection Strategy at The Met Cloisters) and Nancy Thebaut, (Associate Professor in the History of Art at the University of Oxford), both Curators of “Spectrum of Desire: Love, Sex, and Gender in the Middle Ages”, introduced the exhibition, which will be at the MET Cloisters from 16 October 2025 to 29 March 2026.

Michael Rief, Assistant Director of the Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum Aachen and Custodian of the Collection, and Till-Holger Borchert, Director of the Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum Aachen, spoke on the exhibition, “Praymobil. mittelalterliche kunst in bewegung”, which will run from 29 November 2025 to 15 March 2026

The panel was introduced and moderated by Stephen Perkinson, Professor of Art History, Bowdoin College, President of the ICMA.

To watch the video, visit the Special Online Lectures section of the ICMA website.

Call for Applications: AVISTA Graduate Student Research Grant, Due By 15 Oct. 2025, 5pm ET

Call for Applications

AVISTA Graduate Student Research Grant

Due by 15 October 2025, 5:00pm ET

Our application for the Graduate Student Research Grant for the study of art and architecture across borders in the medieval world is open!

This grant of $750 is intended to support an early-stage graduate student’s research on the theme of art that crosses the borders or peripheries of the medieval world. Funds should support research and/or dissemination of scholarship, which may include expenses for conference travel, site visits, or archive visits. The award includes a one-year gift membership to AVISTA.

We are grateful to Robert E. Jamison, Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Clemson University, for underwriting this grant.

The deadline for submitting your application is October 15, 2025, 5:00pm ET.
For the full application instructions and guidelines please see the link here: https://www.avista.org/opportunities-prizes-and-grants

Call for Papers for Session: Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out: Psychedelic Approaches to Medieval Objects, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026, Due by 15 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Session

Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out: Psychedelic Approaches to Medieval Objects

International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, May 14-16, 2026

Due By Monday, September 15th, 2025

Psychedelic art, an outgrowth of mid-century counterculture, features numerous motifs that may resonate with medievalists. Surreal imagery, animation, bright colors, and the cross-pollination of disparate media all conspire to evoke a hallucinogenic or heightened response in the viewer. We invite proposals for 20-minute papers considering medieval material culture through a psychedelic lens, or vice versa. A sampling of topics may include devotional objects and visionary or mystical encounters; medievalism in 1960s fashion and design; artistic representations of or, artifacts associated with, psychoactive plant and fungi cultivation; or the synesthetic/multisensory impact of objects.

Please keep in mind that this is an in-person session, which means that only people who plan to attend the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo next May (May 14 - 16, 2026) will be able to participate.

All proposals should be submitted as abstracts no longer than 300 words to the ICMS Confex site: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi/Session/7248

Please contact Sophie Durbin (sophiekhdurbin@gmail.com) or Clara Poteet (clara.poteet@yale.edu) with questions. 

Call for Papers for Session: Agencies and Temporalities in Complex Artefacts from Religious Communities (c. 1000-1600), IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 19 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Session

AGENCIES AND TEMPORALITIES IN COMPLEX ARTEFACTS FROM RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES (C. 1000–1600)

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Special Thematic Strand: TEMPORALITIES

Deadline for proposals: 19 September 2025

Reliquary panel from the Benedictine Convent of St George at Prague Castle (I). The Meuse or Rhine region, 1280-1300, Bohemia after 1300, additions after 1330 and circa 1800; oak wood, gilded silver, gilded copper, niello, parchment, fabric, rock crystal, pearls, gemstones. Prague, The Royal Canononny of Premonstratensians at Strahov, Inv. No. 1310.

The proposed session(s) will focus on the multifaceted relationship between time, matter, and religious practice. More specifically, the sessions will examine medieval multi-material and multimedia artefacts that challenge our conception of a “finished” object. The materialities and meanings of these complex artefacts have evolved throughout their lives and afterlives. They must therefore be understood as “works in progress” or organic entities that hold multiple narratives, identities, agencies and temporalities.
These sessions will focus on complex artefacts that have received little scholarly attention or have been misinterpreted due to discipline-bound approaches from a single perspective, overlooking their fluid or hybrid nature. The analysis will encompass reliquaries and other ornamenta sacra, devotional diptychs or triptychs, manuscripts as written artefacts, etc., from religious communities in a global perspective.
We welcome proposals for 20-minute papers in English from a variety of disciplines, including art history, material culture, archaeology, history, cultural history, anthropology, gender studies, musicology, literary studies, theology and the history of emotions. Contributions that facilitate a broader interdisciplinary, transdisciplinary or transregional approach to the study of materiality and religious practice are particularly encouraged.

Suggested topics may include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Case studies of complex written and material artefacts resulting from the assembly of different elements that have been incorrectly labelled and studied. Particular attention will be given to objects from communities that have not been well integrated into mainstream scholarship, such as communities of hermits, non-cloistered religious women and communities belonging to understudied orders and territories.

  • Embodied agencies. How complex artefacts resulting from the assembly of different elements, materials and media functioned as new media, shaping and reshaping the relationship between humans and matter, between individuals and communities.

  • Objects embodying overlapping, nonlinear or anachronic temporalities. The interactive relationship between things and humans created an individual and communal sense of time that was not strictly linear.

  • The potential of multi-material objects to display fluid religious identities, transcending binary divisions and boundaries that have defined religious life and practice.

  • Textual materialities and temporalities. How inventories (and other sources containing 'textual things', i.e. descriptions of objects) facilitate the fluid and non-linear temporality of objects.

Please submit an abstract (max. 300 words) and a short biography (max. 150 words) to mercedes.pvidal@uam.es by 19 September. All proposals should include your name, email address, academic affiliation and preferred presentation format (in-person or virtual).

Speakers will be informed by 23 September.

Call for Papers for Session: A Sensory History of Devotion in the Late Medieval Meditteranean World, ICMS Kalamazoo, 14-16 May 2026, Due by 15 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Session

A Sensory History of Devotion in the Late Medieval Meditteranean World

International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI

14-16 May 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

This panel invites papers on Christian devotional practices in the late medieval Mediterranean that foreground the senses. How did touch, sight, sound, smell, and taste shape how people encountered the divine? We welcome papers on themes such as material culture, gendered piety, cross-cultural devotional exchange, institutional attempts to regulate sensory worship, and the politics of embodied spirituality. Scholars working with diverse Christian communities and sources—from relics to processions, from tears to incense—are encouraged to apply. Together, we aim to explore how sensory experience made the sacred tangible between 1300 and 1550.

This session is organised by Clair Becker (PhD Student, University of Rochester), Emmarae Stein (PhD Student, University of Rochester), Vittoria Magnoler (PhD Student, University of Genoa, EHESS), and sponsored by Hagiography Society.

This session is hybrid. Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be submitted via the Confex proposal portal by 15 September 2025. Organizers will not be able to add abstracts to their sessions manually. If you have any technical questions about using Confex, please contact icms@confex.com. Apply via the International Congress on Medieval Studies website: https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call

New Exhibition Talk: Spectrum of Desire: Medieval Art, Eroticism, and the Museum, Melanie Holcomb, The MET Cloisters, 6 Nov. 2025

New Exhibition

New Exhibition

Spectrum of Desire: Medieval Art, Eroticism, and the Museum

Melanie Holcomb, Co-Curator

Nancy Thebaut, Co-Curator

The Met Cloisters, New York, NY

October 17, 2025–March 29, 2026

Thursday, November 6, 2025, 6pm

Aquamanile in the Form of Phyllis and Aristotle, Netherlandish, late 14th or early 15th century. Copper alloy, 12 ¾ x 7 x 15½ in. (32.5 x 17.9 x 39.3 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Robert Lehman Collection, 1975 (1975.1.1416)

On October 16, 2025, a landmark exhibition called Spectrum of Desire: Love, Sex, and Gender in the Middle Ages will open at The Met Cloisters. Visitors to this institution, or to the medieval galleries of museums in general, tend to associate the Middle Ages with images that uphold traditional beliefs and hierarchies – paintings and sculptures celebrating Christ and the Virgin, tapestries and other precious objects exalting royal authority, for instance. The Spectrum of Desire will upend such expectations. The exhibition will explore how medieval objects reveal and structure the performance of gender, understandings of the body, and erotic encounters, both physical and spiritual. Featuring approximately fifty objects, most of which are from the museum’s permanent collection, it will offer new readings of otherwise familiar objects in which gender, sexuality, relationships, and bodies are central themes. Although firmly grounded in the Middle Ages, the exhibition will also encourage modern audiences to reflect on the ways that gender, sex, and desire structure their own lives and identities today. In this talk, Curator Melanie Holcomb will speak on the goals of the exhibition and discuss specific works in the show, demonstrating how asking new questions about the past can reveal sometimes surprising answers about the present.

For more information about the exhibition, visit https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/spectrum-of-desire-love-sex-and-gender-in-the-middle-ages

Call for Papers for Session(s): Session in Honor of William “Bill” Clark, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026, Due 15 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Session(s)

Session in Honor of William “Bill” Clark

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan - May 14-16, 2026

Due 15 September 2025

AVISTA invites paper proposals for Session(s) in Honor of William “Bill” Clark, which will be in-person sessions at the 61st International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Michigan (May 14-16, 2026). Paper proposals will be accepted through the Confex proposal portal through September 15, 2025.

We invite papers celebrating the life and work of William “Bill” Clark, Gothic architectural historian and founding member of AVISTA. In addition to his significant contributions on the historiography and methodology for medieval art history, Bill Clark wrote extensively on twelfth- and thirteenth-century architecture and sculpture at sites including the Abbey of Saint Denis, Notre Dame in Paris, and the cathedrals of Laon and Reims. Papers responding to Bill’s research or reflecting on Bill’s legacy as mentor, professor, and collaborator are welcome.

For more information, visit https://www.avista.org/opportunities-cfp.

Call for Papers: Disability Studies in Byzantium: Toward Inclusive Futures, IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 12 Sept. 2026

Call for Papers

Disability Studies in Byzantium: Toward Inclusive Futures

Leeds International Medieval Congress, 6–9 July 2026

Due by 12 September 2026

Organisers: Yorgos Makris (University of British Columbia), Maroula Perisanidi (University of Leeds), and Maria Alessia Rossi (Princeton University)

Disability Studies offers powerful tools for interrogating embodiment, normativity and lived experience, all of which can be traced in the textual, material and visual record of Byzantium. Despite this potential, the field has only just begun to be explored. This panel seeks to highlight the richness of Byzantine evidence and to showcase how productive disability-focused approaches can be.

Disability in Byzantium was neither fixed nor uniform. This panel foregrounds the historical and cultural specificity of how disabled bodies were perceived, represented, and regulated across time. By tracing these shifting understandings—in texts, art, and archaeology—we also engage the broader theme of temporality, asking how disability in Byzantium shaped and was shaped by change over time, whether at the scale of history or individual lives.

We welcome proposals from all disciplines within Byzantine studies, including but not limited to history, art history, theology, archaeology, philology, and manuscript studies.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
● Disability and social status
● Disability and gender
● Disability and the lifecycle
● Disability, pain, suffering, and violence
● Disability, gain, pleasure, and aesthetics

Please send proposals for 20-minute papers (in English), including a title, an abstract (max. 250 words) and a brief CV (max. 2 pages) to marossi@princeton.edu by September 12, 2025. Include “Disability Studies in Byzantium: Proposal” in the email subject line.

For a PDF of the Call for Papers, click here.

Call for Papers for the Session: Troubling Desires: Queer and Trans Approaches to Medieval Art, 6th Swiss Congress for Art History (Geneva, 7-9 Sept. 2026), Due 12 Sept. 2025

CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE SESSION

Troubling Desires: Queer and Trans Approaches to Medieval Art

6th SWISS CONGRESS FOR ART HISTORY
7 – 9 SEPTEMBER 2026, UNIVERSITY OF GENEVA, UNI MAIL

Due: 12 September 2025

Over the past several years, gender and sexuality studies have been casting new light on the history of medieval art. Madeline Caviness has shown that medieval theories of gender and sexuality have the potential to reconfigure the modern linking of (binary) gender and (homo/hetero) sexuality, paving the way for a recognition of the fluidity of identities across time. Robert Mills has identified and studied a visual culture of the medieval concept of “sodomy” (Mills 2015). Roland Betancourt has considered the ways that several Byzantine manuscripts demand an intersectional approach through the lens of trans and queer theories (Betancourt 2020). Leah DeVun has in turn analyzed images of animals that question the binarity of gender in medieval thought (DeVun 2020). Ostensibly well-known images have been enriched with new interpretations, and previously unpublished sources have been brought to light. In response to and as a continuation of this research, various exhibition projects on these topics and methods are emerging, including Spectrum of Desire: Love, Sex, and Gender in the Middle Ages (The Met Cloisters, October 2025 – March 2026).

This session aims to foster exchanges between those who work on gender and sexuality in the field of medieval art history. It is premised on the idea that the tools required to study premodern sexuality and gender in and as related to the visual arts are not necessarily those that have been so central to modern and contemporary histories of these topics. As such, this session aims to present a series of case studies that offer new approaches to works of art and explore medieval configurations of sexuality and gender that are distinct from and complementary to contemporary studies in this field.

Head of section : Clovis Maillet, HEAD – Genève ; Nancy Thebaut, University of Oxford ; Pauline Guex, Centre Maurice Chalumeau en sciences des sexualités de l’Université de Genève (CMCSS)

Congress details & practical information: https://www.vkks.ch/fr/activites/congres

For more information: https://rmblf.be/2025/07/30/appel-a-contribution-desirer-et-troubler-approches-queer-et-trans-en-art-medieval-troubling-desires-queer-and-trans-approaches-to-medieval-art/


APPEL À COMMUNICATIONS POUR LA SECTION

Désirer et troubler : approches queer et trans en art médiéval

6e CONGRÈS SUISSE EN HISTOIRE DE L’ART
7 – 9 SEPTEMBRE 2026, UNIVERSITÉ DE GENÈVE, UNI MAIL

Délai de soumission des propositions : 12 septembre 2025

Depuis plusieurs années, les études sur les sexualités et le genre posent un nouveau regard sur l’histoire de l’art médiéval. Madeline Caviness a montré que les spécificités des agencements du genre et des sexualités dans les théories médiévales ont le potentiel de reconfigurer la construction moderne de l’entrelacement entre genre (binaire) et sexualité (homo/hetero), en ouvrant la voie à des fluidités et pénétrabilités complexes. Robert Mills a donné au concept médiéval de « sodomie » une véritable culture visuelle (Mills 2015). Sous la plume de Roland Betancourt, plusieurs manuscrits byzantins ont pu dévoiler ce qu’ils apportent à la conceptualisation de l’intersectionnalité trans (Betancourt 2020). Analysées par Leah DeVun, certaines pages des bestiaires médiévaux interrogent la non-binarité des genres dans la pensée médiévale (DeVun 2020). Des corpus connus s’enrichissent de nouvelles interprétations, et des sources inédites s’en trouvent révélées. À la lumière de ces recherches, des projets d’exposition voient le jour, tels que Spectrum of Desire: Love, Sex, and Gender in the Middle Ages (The Met Cloisters, cur. Melanie Holcomb et Nancy Thebaut, oct. 2025 – mars 2026).

Cette section vise à créer des échanges au sein des recherches sur les sexualités et le genre dans le domaine de l’histoire de l’art médiéval. Elle se fonde sur l’idée que l’étude des agencements prémodernes en termes de sexualité et de genre n’est pas un décalque de ce que les études contemporaines ont produit comme élaboration théorique. De ce fait, cette section tend à présenter des dossiers singuliers qui permettent de renouveler l’approche des oeuvres, ainsi qu’à penser et explorer des configurations originales de l’articulation sexualité/genre, distinctes et complémentaires des études contemporaines en la matière.

Dir. de section : Clovis Maillet, HEAD – Genève ; Nancy Thebaut, University of Oxford ; Pauline Guex, Centre Maurice Chalumeau en sciences des sexualités de l’Université de Genève (CMCSS)

Détails du congrès & informations pratiques: https://www.vkks.ch/fr/activites/congres

Pour plus d’information: https://rmblf.be/2025/07/30/appel-a-contribution-desirer-et-troubler-approches-queer-et-trans-en-art-medieval-troubling-desires-queer-and-trans-approaches-to-medieval-art/

ICMA News, Summer 2025 now available online

ICMA News               

summer 2025
Melanie Hanan, Editor

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


INSIDE

SPECIAL FEATURES

Report and Resource
Medieval Art Embodied: Performing the York Mystery Cycle at Brooklyn College, The Met Cloisters, and the University of Toronto
, By Lauren Mancia

Research and Teaching Tools from the Making and Knowing Project, By Pamela H. Smith


Exhibition Reports 
Medieval Women: In Their Own Words
, By Gabriela Chitwood

Siena: The Rise of Painting, 1300–1350 (National Gallery, London), By Judith Steinhoff


EVENTS AND OPPORTUNITIES


The deadline for the next issue of ICMA News is 15 October 2025. Please send information to newsletter@medievalart.org 

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

Call for Papers for Panel: Performing Faith in Romance Epics and Chivalric Romances, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026, Due by 10 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Panel

Société Rencesvals - American-Canadian Branch

Performing Faith in Romance Epics and Chivalric Romances

International Congress on Medieval Studies

Kalamazoo, May 14-16, 2026

Due by 10 September 2025

The Société Rencesvals (American-Canadian Branch) is pleased to offer a sponsored session titled "Performing Faith in Romance Epics and Chivalric Romances." We are particularly interested in papers that explore how such texts present the practices and ideas of medieval religion across a wide and interdisciplinary spectrum.

Romance-epics and chivalric romances not only shed light on the societies (local, regional, and global) in which they were produced, also inform us of those who kept them at the forefront of their national backbone. These texts are sites of religious performance in which devotional prayers and rituals, as well as discussions of spiritual matters (like conversion and apostasy), are brought to the forefront. This session aims to consider how these poets understood and presented the performance of their faith-and of the non-Catholic faiths that their subjects (and perhaps they themselves) encountered.

We invite submissions that explore the representation of performed religion in Romance language epics, especially papers that examine the theme from a non-Catholic perspective or that reflect interdisciplinary and comparative approaches including (but certainly not limited to) history, art history, literature, and material culture in relation to the study of epics and chivalric romances in Romance languages.

Please, submit your 250-word abstract to this link by September 10, 2025. Scholars interested in participating, especially those who may not benefit from standard forms of academic funding, are welcome to apply to our grant program. See our webpage for further information.

Call for Papers for Panel: NEW APPROACHES TO MEDIEVAL OFFICE LITURGY, IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 31 Aug. 2025

Call for Papers for Panel

NEW APPROACHES TO MEDIEVAL OFFICE LITURGY

Leeds International Medieval Congress (6-9 July 2026)

Thematic Focus: ‘Temporalities’

Due by 31 August 2025

The past decades have seen exciting developments in medieval liturgical scholarship, moving beyond analysis of texts to examining liturgical practices as diverse, lived, localised, and contested devotional frameworks. Perhaps nowhere is this more apparent than in the study of the Divine Office or Liturgy of the Hours: the cycle of daily prayers structured around the eight canonical hours (Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline) central to the spiritual, intellectual, temporal and communal life of the medieval Christian world.

This panel invites proposals for 15-20 minute papers on any aspect of Medieval Office Liturgy, especially those that address new perspectives, methodologies, or understudied sources.

Topics may include (but are not limited to):

  • Office Manuscripts

  • Intersections with visual and material culture

  • Lay experiences of the Divine Office

  • Liturgical Reform

  • Performance Practices and/or Prescriptions

  • The Liturgy of the Hours in Medieval Literature

  • Temporality and the Canonical Hours

  • Saints lives, cults and offices

Please send an abstract of up to 250 words and short biography including your affiliation(s) to Rhiannon Warren (rlow2@cam.ac.uk) by the 31st of August 2025

Call for Papers for Panel: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Study of Medieval Roofing Systems from Europe to the Christian East, IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 14 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Panel

Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Study of Medieval Roofing Systems from Europe to the Christian East

INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL CONGRESS (IMC)

Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Due by 14 September 2025

Sponsor: @ Archaeological Research Unit, UCY - Ερευνητική Μονάδα Αρχαιολογίας, ΠΚ of the Πανεπιστήμιο Κύπρου | University Of Cyprus

Organizers: Angelo Passuello and Michalis Olympios (Univ. of Cyprus)

One of the most important structural elements in the formulation of the architectural language of sacred space in the Middle Ages was the creation of varied roofing systems (wooden roofs, stone vaults, domes). It is the roofs that decisively conditioned the internal spatiality and assumed a primary importance also in formulating the external form of the churches, because the entire construction is based on the shape that the roof will have.

Roofing systems, therefore, have an enormous potential for the study of sacred spaces: if these structures are studied with an interdisciplinary approach they can be compared, contextualised and better understood

The aim of this session is to delve deeper into some case studies from Europe to the Christian East in a multidisciplinary perspective, integrating seamlessly elements of the history of architecture and restorations, archaeometry, archaeology, and art history. Although these methods are native to different disciplines, they constitute indispensable and complementary approaches for a holistic analysis of medieval roofing systems.

Potential topics include, but need not be limited to, the following:

  • The structure of roofing systems and the construction phases of individual buildings

  • Analysis of groups of buildings: contextualization and regional or international comparison of building ensembles

  • Dating and structural analysis of timber roof frameworks

  • Stereotomy and construction techniques of vaulted stone structures

  • Nineteenth- and twentieth century restoration campaigns

This session forms part of the activities of the CaMeRoofs (Cataloguing Medieval Roofs) project, coordinated by the University of Cyprus and funded by the European Commission under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions.

If you are interested in participating, please send an abstract of max. 200 words, 2-4 relevant index terms (https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-index-terms/), a short bio with full affiliation details (department, institution, email address) to: passuello.angelo@ucy.ac.cy

Deadline: 14 September 2025

This is planned as a hybrid session. Please make sure to indicate whether you intend to participate in person or online