maandag 23 november 2020

CONF: The Afterlife of Medieval Sculpture. 7th Annual Ards Conference (online webinar)

The Afterlife of Medieval Sculpture.
Ards 7th annual colloquium on Current Research in medieval and renaissance sculpture 
Online webinar
3, 4 and 10 December 2020

Image: The decorated ceiling and hanging rood in the Metropolitan Cathedral & Basilica of Saint Chad, Birmingham, by A.W.N. Pugin (detail)

The 7th ARDS annual colloquium, which celebrates new research in the field of renaissance and medieval sculpture will focus on the theme of the Afterlife of medieval sculpture. The Ards conference in 2017 in Paris already touched upon the theme of the Collecting of Medieval sculpture and at Ards 2018 in Utrecht, Michael Rief provided the participants with a very interesting keynote on the repurposing of (amongst others) some Mechelen Christ child statues. This year the organisation wants to explore the theme of the ‘nachleben’ (afterlife) of medieval sculpture in more depth. The idea of ‘nachleben’ is to be understood in a broader sense than the pure Warburgian interpretation. Not only the ‘nachleben’ of the image, but also that of the object is of interest for the study of sculpture.

How were medieval and late-gothic sculptures used, understood, copied, altered, re-used, recycled, repurposed and treated (or mistreated) in the centuries after the moment of their production? From the medieval period until the present, Gothic art has undergone shifts in taste and appreciation. Nowadays prices for medieval art are soaring at auctions but in the 17th and 18th centuries many churches and cloisters were refurbished in the style of the period and medieval art and furniture had to make room. And e.g. in the 1790’s many churches were stripped of their medieval furniture (if extant) and they were sometimes sold by the pound if not thrown away or burnt. Even in the fifteenth century, some sculptures made in the earlier Middle Ages were restored, remade, cleaned and polished, whereas others were neglected.

The conference committee consists of dr. Jessica Barker (The Courtauld Institute of Art), dr. Peter Carpreau (M Leuven/Ards), dra. Marjan Debaene (M Leuven/Ards), drs. Lloyd De Beer (The British Museum) and dra. Michaela Zöschg (Victoria and Albert Museum).

A record number of proposals allowed the organisation to select a fascinating and diverse program in 4 large thematic sessions, with 25 speakers, over 3 conference days via Teams, due to COVID-19 restrictions.

The full program is online.

Registrations for the webinar are now open.

donderdag 25 juni 2020

CFP: ESNA Talks 2020

CFP: ESNA Talks 2020
European Society for Nineteenth-Century Art (ESNA) & RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art
History

Filmed presentations on digital platform
CFP deadline: 4 September 2020


Théodore Géricault, Le Radeau de la Méduse, 1818, Paris, Musée du Louvre
Due to the worldwide pandemic, ESNA has had to postpone its conference Thinking in the Box to the spring of next year (27-28 May 2021). In lieu, it will initiate ESNA Talks, an online platform for the presentation of current research into the art and culture of the long nineteenth century.

Researchers are invited to submit an abstract for a digital presentation of between 10 and 20 minutes on a topic of their choice, to esnaonline@hotmail.com. In honor of the seventh anniversary of ESNA’s activities, ESNA will choose seven submissions to be presented online in mid-November. Ideally, abstracts should be submitted on film: one or two slides in a PowerPoint as a filmed presentation. The deadline is 4 September 2020.

The selection of talks will be made by the beginning of October, with the presentations themselves due on 6 November 2020. The talks will be published online via the ESNA website and the website of the RKD under one of the creative-commons licenses. Attention will be generated on social media, via the press and via ESNA's partners.

For ESNA's open letter, which includes the CFP, click here.

woensdag 10 juni 2020

JOB: Assistent Kunst-, Muziek- en Theaterwetenschappen UGent

Vacature voor assistent aan de vakgroep Kunst-, Muziek- en Theaterwetenschappen aan de UGent.

Deadline: aanstaande dinsdagavond 16/06/20.

dinsdag 19 mei 2020

JOB: Collectieonderzoeker 20ste eeuw (1880-1970) KMSKA

Het Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen zoekt een collectieonderzoeker die zal instaan voor het verzamelen, interpreteren, delen en verspreiden van kennis over de Europese kunst uit de periode 1880-1970, met een stevige focus op het oeuvre van James Ensor.

Klik hier voor de vacature.

woensdag 1 april 2020

JOB: Curatorial Fellow within Getty Paper Project (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels)

The Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium 
are recruiting a Curatorial Fellow 
within the framework of the Getty Paper Project 
Application deadline: 23 April 2020

Project and Content of the Position 

We are looking to recruit a RMFAB-Getty Curatorial Fellow with a special interest in Belgian art on paper of the period 1868 – 1914 (Fin-de-Siècle Museum).

The position and project are integrated in the collection “Works on Paper Modern Art (19th to 21st – century)” which holds about 9.000 works in total and comprises mainly drawings, pastels and watercolors, as well as photographs and prints from artist born 1748 and later. Prints and photographs held in the collection are mainly from the period after 1945. The strengths of the collection are the late 19th century in Belgian art, Belgian abstract art of the 1920s as well as the young generation after 1945 with ‘La Jeune Peinture Belge’ and CoBrA. Highlights are large collections of works by Fernand Khnopff, James Ensor, Léon Spilliaert, Jean Delville, Rik Wouters, Jozef Peeters, Felix De Boeck, René Magritte, Paul Delvaux, Pierre Alechinsky, Gaston Bertrand, Marcel Broodthaers and main works by foreign artists such as Vincent Van Gogh, Odilon Redon or Marc Chagall. They are currently shown to the public through temporary exhibitions and rotating displays in the Magritte and Fin-de-Siècle Museum.

The Fellowship funded by the Getty Foundation will enable the Fellow to participate in a range of curatorial activities related to the collection of ‘works on paper modern art’ in the Department Collection and Research and to assist the curator of the collection in general. Accordingly, the grant will support full curatorial training in areas such as cataloguing in order to complete the digital catalogue, collections management, research, rotating temporary displays and acquisitions. In particular, the fellow will follow the preparation of the rotations in the Fin-de-Siècle Museum. The fellowship will primarily involve to inventory in detail larger compounds of works as well as reviewing and building catalogue entries and object files related to the collection of art on paper of the period 1870 - 1910.

Key areas of responsibility

• Cataloguing (detailed description of the works, including attribution, and as far as possible provenance, exhibition history and bibliography)

• Adding new information to the museum’s collection database, Fabritius, after training by the Digital Museum team, and to hard copy object files

• Maintenance, updating and improving the on-line records of the collection as well as assisting in the Digitization of the holdings

• Curatorial assistance for the rotations and writing of label texts

• Contribution to a publication

More information on institutional profile and context, required skills, work conditions and application instructions can be found on the museum's website.

Application deadline: 23 April 2020

Additional information 
... about the project and the position:
Mrs. Inga Rossi-Schrimpf - project administrator (inga.rossi@fine-arts-museum.be)

... about working conditions: 
Mr Jan Stalpaert (phone 02/508.32.86; jan.stalpaert@fine-arts-museum.be)

vrijdag 13 maart 2020

CFP: EXTENDED DEADLINE: Cultures of Belgian Space / Cultures de l'espace belge, 1850-1924 (Hingene)

The organization of the Cultures of Belgian Space / Cultures de l'espace belge, 1850-1924 conference (Hingene, 16-17 October 2020) has decided to extend the deadline for paper proposals to the end of this month, i.e. 31 March 2020

This decision should allow those colleagues who currently struggle with corona virus-related, practical issues to send in their abstract.

On the conference: see our post of 20 February 2020.

More information can be found here.

woensdag 11 maart 2020

LECT: CANCELLATION Anthea Callen, Enduring Masculinity (Ghent)

Unfortunately, due to the effect of the corona outbreak on international travel, the lecture by Anthea Callen, Enduring Masculinity: the academic nude and ideals of male perfection, foreseen for Friday 13 March 2020 at 18:00 at Vandenhove, is cancelled.

If possible, a new date will be communicated.

The exhibition Strike a pose at Vandenhove remains open and can still be visited on Thursday 12, Friday 13, and Saturday 14 March 2020, between 14:00 and 18:00.

woensdag 4 maart 2020

LECT: Anthea Callen: Enduring Masculinity: The Academic Nude and Ideals of Male Perfection (Ghent)

Anthea Callen: Enduring Masculinity: the academic nude and ideals of male perfection
Vandenhove, Centrum voor Architectuur en Beeldende Kunst
Rozier 1, 9000 Gent.

Friday 13 March 2020, 6:00 p.m.

The Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent, like many art academies throughout Europe, was founded in the 18th century in emulation of the French Académie Royale de peinture et sculpture. Academic art’s aesthetic ideal and its highest form, the male nude, was central to the French curriculum, which began with copying the casts after Antique sculptures acquired by all such academies. Classical ideals of male bodily perfection whether Herculean or Apollonian were thus ingrained when pupils began Life classes: drawings by men, from the male nude. In conjunction with training in artistic anatomy (including dissection), classicism endowed academic artists with the powerful authority of both science and Greco-Roman ‘truth’. The rise and spread of these macho, racialised and ‘othering’ ideals coincided with the rise of colonisation, and their enduring tenacity from Winkelmann to Hitler is still manifest now in men’s health magazines, and body-building through to cage fighting and white (or black) supremacy.

Anthea Callen

Art historian, art expert, lecturer and painter, Anthea Callen FRSA is Professor Emeritus of the Australian National University, Canberra, and Professor Emeritus of Visual Culture, University of Nottingham, UK. Internationally recognised as a specialist on Impressionist painting materials and techniques, her classic volume The Art of Impressionism: Painting Technique and the Making of Modernity has now been released as a Yale University Press e-book. Her latest book on landscape painting methods, The Work of Art: Plein Air Painting and Artistic Identity in Nineteenth-Century France is published by Reaktion Books (2015). Her new book Looking at Men: Art, Anatomy and the Modern Male Body (Yale, 2018), examines the close relationship of art and anatomy in the formation of modern ideals of masculinity and the male body. Callen appears regularly as an art expert on television, radio and in film. www.antheacallen.co.uk

maandag 2 maart 2020

EXH: Strike a Pose: negentiende-eeuwse academische naakten in Gentse verzamelingen

Strike a Pose: negentiende-eeuwse academische naakten in Gentse verzamelingen
Een initiatief van de UGent Vakgroep Kunst-, Muziek- en Theaterwetenschappen / Onderzoeksgroep ThIS - The Inside Story
Vandenhove (Rozier 1, 9000 Gent)
28 feb 2020 - 14 mrt 2020
Open op do-vr-za, 14-18u


Félix De Vigne, Liggend mannelijk naakt, in profiel, [1842]. UBGent, TEK.003659

In de negentiende eeuw vormde het naaktmodel een hoeksteen van de kunstpraktijk. Bewaarde tekeningen en schetsen geven een intieme inkijk achter de schermen van de academie en het atelier van toen. Ze getuigen van een dubbelzinnige blik: één die slingert tussen theorie en praktijk, tussen traditie en vernieuwing, tussen bewondering en afstandelijkheid, tussen een esthetisch ideaal en de ongefilterde indruk van een lichaam van vlees en bloed.

Strike a Pose toont naaktstudies gemaakt in en rond de Gentse Koninklijke Academie voor Schone Kunsten, en belicht zo de rol van het naakt in de negentiende-eeuwse tekenklas. Daarvoor doet ze een beroep op de rijke collecties van twee nabijgelegen instellingen: de Universiteitsbibliotheek-Boekentoren en het KASK (Hogeschool Gent-School of Arts). De uitgekozen werken zijn o.a. van de Gentse kunstenaars Félix de Vigne, Théodore Canneel, Jan Baptist Lammens en Jean Delvin, alsook van de Fransman Jules Breton en de Japanner Torajiro Kojima, die in Gent studeerden.

De tentoonstelling is tot en met zaterdag 14 maart te bezichtigen in Vandenhove, het interfacultaire studiecentrum voor Architectuur en Kunst van de UGent. Meer informatie is te vinden op de website van Vandenhove.

Curator: Thijs Dekeukeleire. Wetenschappelijk comité: Marjan Sterckx, Stefan Huygebaert, Malika M’rani Alaoui, Henk de Smaele.

vrijdag 28 februari 2020

COUR: International Summer School: Art Markets: an Integrated Perspective (Antwerp & Brussels)

International Summer School: Art Markets: an Integrated Perspective
Antwerp & Brussels, Belgium
6-10 July 2020
registration: 1 April 2020

Following in the success of the first Art Markets Summer School held in Lyon in June 2019, this unique research, training and networking experience will also take place in 2020.

Participants with an academic or professional interest in the mechanics of the art market will join European and American specialists in art history, economics, sociology, finance,and digital humanities. Together, they will present, share, workshop and discuss theoretical approaches, conceptual frameworks and methodological tools in an amical and relaxed atmosphere.

This immersive experience will inspire and shape new interdisciplinary thinking about the emergence, history and governance of art markets around the world.

The art market is essentially a multidisciplinary object of study. While it is now a significant sector of the global economy, it has long played a seminal role in the circulation and reception of art, and provided the context within which artists created their work. Researchers from disciplines as diverse as economics, finance, law, history, art history or sociology have contributed to a better understanding of the complexity and specificity of this market arena. However, despite the advances made in each of these fields, research on the art market still too often suffers from a compartmentalization by discipline.

The Art Markets thematic school aims to bring together the international community of researchers working on the art market and to offer participants the opportunity to better understand the scientific approaches of other disciplines. Sharing a common knowledge base and concepts is a necessary condition for developing transdisciplinary collaborations. To this end, this training offers an interdisciplinary theoretical approach and familiarizes the participants with methodological tools in line with the most up-to-date analytical methods. The interaction between historical and contemporary analyses from the point of view of economics, finance, and sociology is particularly innovative.

In the era of globalization and digital technology, art markets are undergoing profound changes that are leading to a reconfiguration of the modalities of interaction between actors and intermediaries. Issues related to artistic exchanges, the emergence or decline of markets, financial speculation, the concentration of actors and the role of agents in building the economic and social value of art have accelerated the need to use robust analytical techniques to better understand these issues. It is also worthwhile questioning whether these developments are so new. For instance, the role of various institutions such as auction houses or art fairs benefit from being re-examined in the light of their historical roots in order to understand their function in an increasingly global art market system . At the same time, the analysis of contemporary art markets allows us to shed light with the advantage of hindsight on the practices, mechanisms and strategies put in place since the emergence of markets for visual arts from the 16th century onwards. In addition, quantitative analytical methods, data modelling and visualization have paved the way for important methodological and epistemological explorations.


More information on the 2020 Summer School can be found on the website.

donderdag 20 februari 2020

CFP: Cultures of Belgian Space / Cultures de l'espace belge, 1850-1924 (Hingene)

CFP: Cultures of Belgian Space / Cultures de l'espace belge, 1850-1924
Kasteel d'Ursel/ d'Ursel Castle, Hingene, Belgium

16-17 October 2020
CFP deadline: 15 March 2020

Keynote speaker: Patrick McGuinness (St Anne's College, Oxford, UK)

The second half of the nineteenth century witnessed the emergence of a modern city culture within a globalised economy, built on industrial mass production, an early consumer society, and colonial expansion. Both modernism and colonialism led to the creation of otherness. Non-industrial, pre-modern or exotic societies, and furthermore the racial, moral or female other were not just conceived in reaction to the emergence of modernism, but were also interiorised. Otherness, for example, surfaced in the modern world's own pre-modern past as well as in the unconscious of the modern self, where the remains of the primitive lurked, as both a threat and a source of creativity and primeval meaning. These ambiguities at the very core of modernism continuously reconfigured the relationship between the public and private dimensions of the self, between domesticity and sociability. They equally affected the self-image and the (re)construction of the history of the modern nation states.

The way in which spaces and spatial contexts were experienced, and disciplined their occupiers, or were represented and imagined in art, literature and various types of discourses, is revealing of this process of reconfiguration. Belgium has proven itself particularly susceptible to this process, sometimes in radical and even unique ways. Its position at the crossroads between different traditions and languages, its peripheral situation vis-à-vis French modernism, and its radical sense of self-exoticisation and resilience to self-definition, contributed largely to this susceptibility. In this context, the representation of otherness through imageries of distant or past places, the voyeuristic dimensions of exteriority, the uncanny and ambiguous depictions of domesticity, the masses and the self in the city, shifts in the definition of gender identities and the expectations thereof in public and private spheres, and the interconnections between the home, the museum, the city are but a few of the most salient examples of how spaces and spatial imageries reveal this significant cultural change.

This conference will bring together a number of papers that focus on how spaces can be read as the communication, disruption, counterpoint or subtext of modernism in Belgium. To this end, the chronological scope, from the 1850's and 1860's, when the generation of late nineteenth-century city culture was born, to the publication of the magazine Correspondance in 1924/1925, suggests an open beginning and ending around the central last decades of the nineteenth century. It aims to detect and explore the reshaping and (dis)continuity of legacies, such as that of German subjectivist idealism, as well as to bear in mind, at the same time, the particularly Belgian continuity towards a modernist future and surrealism, towards Flemish expressionism and (proto-) modernist literature.

We expect that proposals will deal with space and focus directly on Belgium and/or Belgian culture. Belgium need not be invoked directly as the topic; but the persons, problems, output and / or spaces, for example, discussed in these presentations will be Belgian. Within this rubric, some suggested topics, themes, and fields of interest might include:
  • Architecture and art
  • Urban design
  • Design
  • Space and objects
  • Gendered space
  • Space and narrative
  • Poetic space/ space in poetry
  • Interstices
  • Liminal spaces
  • 'Entrevisions'
  • 'Le non-lieu'
  • The void and emptiness
  • Hidden spaces
  • Interior spaces
  • Public spaces
  • Religious spaces
  • Landscape and countryside
  • Exhibition and exposition spaces
  • Collections
  • 'Hausmusik'
  • Spaces in music(al) criticism
  • Particular spaces/places (town, country, The house, the home, the factory, the greenhouse, the salon, the (theatre) stage, the concert hall, the museum, the studio, the wasteland…)
  • Spaces of leisure and spectacle (e.g. the cinema, the zoo, the theatre)
  • Etc.
Deadline for submission of abstracts: 15 March 2020. Abstracts for a 20-minute paper in English, French, or Dutch should be sent to: belgianspaces2020@gmail.com

Abstracts should be between around 250-300 words. They can also include up to two images.

Scientific committee: Dominique Bauer (KULeuven), Jason Hartford (University of Dundee), Laurence Brogniez (Université Libre de Bruxelles), Claire Moran (Queen's University Belfast), Marjan Sterckx (Universiteit Gent), in conjunction with the Emile Verhaeren Museum at Sint-Amands (Rik Hemmerijckx)

Organising committee: Dominique Bauer (KULeuven), Laurence Brogniez (Université Libre de Bruxelles), Marjan Sterckx (Universiteit Gent).

All other information about the conference can be found here.

donderdag 6 februari 2020

CONF: Verzamelen, herwaarderen en schenken: Het belang van private kunstcollecties in België en Nederland, 19de eeuw tot vandaag

CONF: Verzamelen, herwaarderen en schenken: Het belang van private kunstcollecties in België en Nederland, 19de eeuw tot vandaag
Museum Mayer van den Bergh, i.s.m. het KMSKA, Rubenianum, UAntwerpen & FARO
Rubenianum, Kolveniersstraat 20, 2000 Antwerpen
13 maart 2020, 09:00-18:15


Private kunstcollecties zijn vandaag een veelbesproken en boeiend item. Er is een groeiende belangstelling voor samenwerkingen en partnerships met private collectioneurs. Het Museum Mayer van den Bergh – zelf ontstaan als een privéverzameling – organiseert samen met Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen een studiedag hierover in Antwerpen.

Op 13 maart vindt de studiedag ‘Verzamelen, herwaarderen en schenken. Het belang van private kunstcollecties in België en Nederland, van de 19de eeuw tot vandaag’ plaats in het Antwerpse Rubenianum. Specialisten uit Nederland en België gaan dieper in op de oorsprong en de ontwikkeling van het private verzamelen en schenken van 15de- en 16de-eeuwse kunst in België en Nederland. Er wordt bekeken welke rol private verzamelaars en schenkers van (oude) kunst in het hedendaagse culturele leven spelen en hoe relevant hun activiteit vandaag is.

Verschillende vragen komen hierbij aan bod. Wat zijn de motivaties van verzamelaars en schenkers? Hoe zien hun persoonlijke profielen en netwerken eruit? In welke historische en politieke context handel(d)en zij? Wat zijn de meest recente trends en ontwikkelingen in die verzamel- en schenkingscultuur? En welk juridisch en fiscaal kader is er voor schenkingen en legaten?

De dag wordt afgesloten met een keynote lezing en een debat over wat private verzamelaars, schenkers en openbare musea vandaag en in de toekomst voor elkaar kunnen betekenen.

Aanleiding is de tentoonstelling Madonna ontmoet Dulle Griet. Verzamelaars in topstukken gevat, een expo over collectioneurs Fritz Mayer van den Bergh en Florent van Ertborn, en de publicatie van een nieuw boek dat gewijd is aan 200 jaar kunstschenkingen aan het KMSKA.

Hier vindt u het volledige programma, en kan u uw ticket reserveren.

De studiedag is een gezamenlijke realisatie van Museum Mayer van den Bergh, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen (KMSKA), Rubenianum, Universiteit Antwerpen – Centrum voor Stadsgeschiedenis en FARO – Vlaams Steunpunt voor cultureel erfgoed vzw.

vrijdag 17 januari 2020

CONF: ESNA Winter Seminar 2020 (Den Haag)

ESNA Winter Seminar 2020
Eyeopeners: Inspirerende inzichten voor de studie van negentiende-eeuwse kunst
RKD, Den Haag
Vrijdag 31 mei 2020

Programma:

13:00 Inloop en registratie

13:30 Welkom en inleiding

13:45 Sessie 1 – “Klassiekers in nieuw licht”
Rachelle van den Broek: David Lowenthal, “Fabricating Heritage” in History and Memory, 10 (1998).
Mariëlle Ekkelenkamp: Pierre Bourdieu, “The Field of Cultural Production, or: The Economic World Reversed”, in The Field of Cultural Production (1993)
Naomi Bisping: Tentoonstelling en catalogus L’Invention du Passé, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon en Monastère royal de Brou, Bourg-en-Bresse (2014)
Maaike Rikhof: tv-serie John Berger, Ways of Seeing (1972)
Evelien de Visser: Charles Dumas, “De Haagse School verzameld”, in De Haagse School: Hollandse meesters van de 19de eeuw (1983)

14:15 Discussie

14:30 Sessie 2 – “De impact van popular culture”
Anne-Marie Segeren: Tentoonstelling en catalogus L’impressionisme et la mode, Musée d’Orsay Parijs (2013)
Stefan Huygebaert: Delcampe.net als eyeopener binnen de postcard studies
Lotte Kremer: Tentoonstelling Prints in Paris 1900. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (2017)

14:45 Discussie

15:00 Koffie/thee

15:45 Sessie 3 – “Buiten de grenzen van de canon”
Jorien Soepboer: Linda Nochlin. “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?” (1971)
Thijs Dekeukeleire: Queer: een nuttige categorie in kunsthistorische analyse
Malika M’rani Alaoui: Diary of H.M. the Shah of Persia. Europa door de ogen van de ‘ander’
Lisa Lambrechts: Denise Murrell, Posing Modernity. The Black Model from Manet and Matisse to Today (2018)
Myrthe Krom: Jan Koenderink en Andrea van Doorn, “Assemblage and Icon in Perception and Art”, in Art & Perception 1 (2013)

16:15 Discussie

16:30 Afsluiting

16:45 Borrel

Inschrijven:
Op de website van ESNA en het RKD staat vanaf heden het programma voor het ESNA Winter Seminar Eyeopeners: Inspirerende inzichten voor de studie van negentiende-eeuwse kunst.
Het seminar vindt plaats in het Nederlands Instituut voor Kunstgeschiedenis (RKD), Den Haag, aanvang 13.00 uur.
Tickets €15,-, voor studenten €10,-, verkrijgbaar via de webshop van het RKD.
Voor studenten uit Vlaanderen is er een reisvergoeding beschikbaar, voor meer informatie mail esnaonline@hotmail.com