ESNA Congress 2016
City of Sin: Representing the Urban Underbelly in the Nineteenth Century
Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museum
19-20 May 2016
The pageant of fashionable life and the thousands of floating existences - criminals
and kept women - which drift about in the underworld of a great city […] all prove to
us that we have only to open our eyes to recognize our heroism […]. The life of our
city is rich in poetic and marvelous subjects.
– Charles Baudelaire, Salon of 1846
In the spring of 2016 Amsterdam will host two major exhibitions:
Easy Virtue: Prostitution in French Art, 1850-1910 (Van Gogh Museum, previously
Musée d’Orsay) and Girls in Kimono: The Breitner Variations (Rijksmuseum). Both
exhibitions explore the depiction of women in the margins of urban life – the
prostitute, the model, working (class) women, and the women of the entertainment
industry. In cooperation with the two museums, ESNA (European Society for
Nineteenth-Century Art) will take this occasion to organize its annual two-day
international conference around the topic of the “urban underbelly” and its depiction
in nineteenth-century art. The conference seeks to broaden the perspective of the
two exhibitions by inviting papers that deal with urban marginality in the widest
sense.
The conference takes as its motto Baudelaire’s 1846 call to artists to open their eyes
to the darker side of nineteenth-century metropolitan life, not usually a topic of
serious art historical study. In this sense, the conference aims to form a countercanon
that will provide a fuller picture of the “painting of modern life”. Rather than the
daylight scenes featuring the typical flâneur so well known to the broader public, the
conference will focus on the depiction of things that occur in the shadows.
Topics to be explored may include, but are certainly not limited to: crime and
punishment; criminals and their pursuers; gambling and other clandestine activities;
female and male prostitutes; alcoholics and drug addicts; hobos and bohemians; the
homeless and those who care for them; the (working) urban poor and the
unemployed; the insane and the hysterical; the ill and the dying; the gay community,
dandies, cross-dressers and transgenders avant-la-lettre; and practitioners and
practices considered sexually morally deviant. Contributions may deal with images in
any medium, created in any urban center and at any time during the (long)
nineteenth century (we especially welcome papers focusing on the early nineteenthcentury).
Please send proposals (max. 300 words) for a 20-minute paper (in English) for this
conference to esnaonline@hotmail.com by 18 December 2015 at the latest.
Selected speakers will be contacted in the course of January 2016.
Organizing committee: Rachel Esner (University of Amsterdam) and Jenny
Reynaerts (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam); Lisa Smit (Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam)
Scientific committee: Nienke Bakker (Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam); Richard
Thomson (University of Edinburgh); Marjan Sterckx (Ghent University); Rachel Esner
(University of Amsterdam); Jenny Reynaerts (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam); Jan Dirk
Baetens (Rijksuniversiteit Nijnmegen); Mayken Jonkman (RKD); Maite van Dijk (Van
Gogh Museum)
http://www.esnaonline.wordpress.com
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