Sep
19
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: The Spatial Turn in Medieval Studies, IMC Leeds 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

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Sep
20
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Leeds 2026: Funerary Art, Memory, and Contexts in Medieval Iberia: Bishops and Cathedrals

Call for Papers

IMC Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Funerary Art, Memory, and Contexts in Medieval Iberia: Bishops and Cathedrals

Due by 20 September 2025

Studies on cultural memory are revolutionising ongoing scholarly debates in Premodern art history and heritage. The Middle Ages in Spain offer countless examples of overlooked figures, settings, and sources barely studied from this point of view in the country. Bishops were at the centre of this phenomenon. They were prolific patrons of the arts, and many cathedrals were prime settings and unparalleled repositories of both written testimony and spaces of belief and performance. The death of a famed bishop became a window into a carefully conceptualised world of ritual, visual, and textual remembrance, planned often years in advance and with implications far beyond this individual figure.

This IMC panel, part of the project FUNART (University of León / PIs: Prof. María Dolores Teijeira Marcos & Prof. Jose Alberto Morais Morán), aims to bring together scholars from all different career stages to analyse the intrinsic relationship between art and memory in regards to bishops, their patronage, and cathedrals in Iberia, c. 1000-1500.

Please, send a paper proposal of no more than 500 words, alongside a short bio, to Dr. Jesús Rodríguez Viejo (j.rodriguez.viejo@rug.nl) before September 20, 2025.

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Sep
20
9:00 AM09:00

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

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Sep
20
9:00 AM09:00

Conference: Boccaccio 650: 1375-2025, Newberry Library, Chicago, 18-20 Sept. 2025

Conference

Center for Renaissance Studies

Boccaccio 650: 1375-2025

Organized by the American Boccaccio Association

Newberry Library, Chicago, IL September 18–20, 2025

Portrait of Boccaccio from Il Decamerone di messer Giovanni Boccaccio, Venice: 1547 (Wing ZP 535 .G4)

Join us for the sixth triennial conference of the American Boccaccio Association.

The year 2025 marks the 650th anniversary of the death of Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-1375), author of the Decameron and foundational author of the European narrative prose tradition. To commemorate this milestone, the American Boccaccio Association (est. 1974) and the Newberry Library, in collaboration with the Istituto Italiano di Cultura of Chicago will celebrate the Certaldese author with a series of scholarly events.

For more information, visit https://www.newberry.org/calendar/boccaccio-650-1375-2025

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Sep
21
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Participants for Workshop: Studying East of Byzantium XII: Spaces (24 Oct., 2025, 13 Feb., 2026, & 3-5 June 2026), On Zoom

Call for Participants for Workshop

Studying East of Byzantium XII: Spaces

24 October 2025, 13 February 2026, and 4–5 June 2026

On Zoom

Due 21 September 2025

The Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard University and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture at Hellenic College Holy Cross in Brookline, MA, are pleased to invite abstracts for the next Studying East of Byzantium workshop: Studying East of Byzantium XII: Spaces.

Studying East of Byzantium XII: Spaces is a three-part workshop that intends to bring together doctoral students and very recent PhDs studying the Christian East to reflect on the usefulness of the concept of Spaces” in studying the Christian East, to share methodologies, and to discuss their research with workshop respondents, Darlene Brooks Hedstrom, Brandeis University, and Timothy Greenwood, University of St. Andrews. The workshop will meet on 24 October 2025, 13 February 2026, and 4–5 June 2026 on Zoom. The timing of the workshop meetings will be determined when the participant list is finalized.

We invite all graduate students and recent PhDs working in the Christian East whose work considers, or hopes to consider, the theme of spaces in their own research to apply.

Participation is limited to 10 students. The full workshop description is available on the East of Byzantium website (https://eastofbyzantium.org/upcoming-events/studying-east-of-byzantium-xii-spaces/). Those interested in attending should submit a C.V. and 200-word abstract through the East of Byzantium website no later than 21 September 2025.

For questions, please contact East of Byzantium organizers, Christina Maranci, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies, Harvard University, and Brandie Ratliff, Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, at contact@eastofbyzantium.org.

EAST OF BYZANTIUM is a partnership between the Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard University and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture at Hellenic College Holy Cross in Brookline, MA. It explores the cultures of the eastern frontier of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique and medieval periods.

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Sep
23
6:00 PM18:00

Lecture: Mirror of Eternity: The Croce Dipinta and the Franciscans Between Medieval and Renaissance, Holly Flora, at Boston College

The Annual Josephine von Henneberg Lecture in Italian Art

Mirror of Eternity: The Croce Dipinta and the Franciscans Between Medieval and Renaissance

Professor Holly Flora

Tuesday, September 23

6:00–7:00 pm, with reception to follow

McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA

Free; Open to the public; McMullen Museum of Art, 2101 Commonwealth Avenue, Room 111

The McMullen Museum and the Art, Art History & Film Department welcome Holly Flora, Professor of Art History at Tulane University, whose work sheds new light on the legendary artist Cimabue, revealing his sophisticated engagement with complicated intellectual and theological ideas about materials, memory, beauty, and experience. 

Holly Flora's scholarly work explores the themes of narrative, imagination, materiality, and gender in the devotional art of late medieval and early Renaissance Italy. Flora authored The Devout Belief of the Imagination: the Paris Meditationes Vitae Christi and Female Franciscan Spirituality in Trecento Italy (Brepols, 2009) and was recently awarded the Premio San Francesco from the Pontifical University of Saint Anthony (Antonianum) in Rome for her book Cimabue and the Franciscans (Brepols, 2018). She is also co-editor, along with Sarah S. Wilkins, of Art and Experience in Trecento Italy: Studies from the Andrew Ladis Memorial Conference in New Orleans, and is co-editor of the book series Trecento Forum. She is also co-editor with Peter Toth of The Meditationes Vitae Christi Recosidered: New Perspectives on Text and Image (Brepols, 2021). Her articles have appeared in a number of journals, including Gesta, Ikon, Studies in Iconography, Art History, and I Tatti Studies, as well as several edited volumes of essays. She has received a number of research fellowships, including awards from the American Association of University Women, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy, the Samuel Kress Foundation, and the International Center of Medieval Art. In 2010-11 she was appointed the Millicent Mercer Johnsen Rome Prize Fellow in Medieval Studies at the American Academy in Rome and in 2015-16 she was the Jean-Francois Malle Fellow at the Harvard Center for Renaissance Studies at Villa I Tatti in Florence.

Co-sponsored by the Art, Art History, & Film Department and the McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College

For more information, click here.

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Sep
24
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Opening: Gothicisms, Musée du Louvre Lens, France, September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

Exhibition Opening

Gothicisms

Musée du Louvre Lens, Lens, France

September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

From the birth of the cathedrals to the Goth counterculture and fantasy, Gothic art truly has traversed the centuries. In ground-breaking fashion, the Louvre-Lens is presenting its first ever panorama of Gothic art from the 12th to the 21st century, from its emergence through to the neo-Gothic style and right up to the “Goths” of today. 

Gothic art is closely associated with the age of the cathedral builders. As the first pan-European movement, it inspired exceptional artistic forms endowed with unparalleled expressive force. Sculptures, art objects, graphic arts, painting, photography, installations and furniture are gathered here in a journey through some 200 works of art. Together they reveal the recurrences and continuity of these Gothic languages, which blossomed during medieval times, came to life again in the 18th and 19th centuries, and still inspire us now. But where does the word Gothic come from? Why is this colourful art today associated with a dark aesthetic of black, night and the fantastic? How can this endlessly recurring attraction be explained? This chronological journey is interspersed with forays into specific topics, touching on the Gothic script, music, film and literature. It is an immersion into history and into society’s collective imagination to understand the origins and singularity of the Gothic movement: unique, multifaceted and very much alive today.  

Exhibition curators:
General curator: Annabelle Ténèze, director of the Louvre-Lens
Scientific curator: Florian Meunier, chief heritage curator at the Department of Art Objects, Musée du Louvre
Scientific advisor: Dominique de Font-Réaulx, general heritage curator, specialising in the 19th century, special advisor to the President-Director of the Musée du Louvre
Associate curator: Hélène Bouillon, general heritage curator
Assisted by Caroline Tureck, head of publications and documentation at the Louvre-Lens
Scenography: Mathis Boucher, scenographer, Louvre-Lens

This project was made possible thanks to the support of the Musée de Cluny – Musée national du Moyen Âge, Cité de l’architecture et du Patrimoine, Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Musée des Arts décoratifs de Strasbourg.

For more information, visit https://www.louvrelens.fr/en/exhibition/gothicisms-2/

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Sep
26
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Opening: Fra Angelico, Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy, 26 Sept. 2025 - 25 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Opening

Fra Angelico

Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy

26 September 2025 - 25 January 2026

Beato Angelico, Trittico francescano (det.), 1428-1429. Su concessione del Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana – Museo di San Marco

From September 26, 2025, to January 25, 2026, the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco present Fra Angelico, an extraordinary and unprecedented exhibition devoted to an artist who symbolises fifteenth-century Florentine art and stands out as one of the greatest masters of Italian art of all time.

The exhibition, organized in collaboration between the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, the Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana and Museo di San Marco in a close dialogue between cultural institutions and the region, is one of the leading cultural events of 2025. It celebrates a father of the Renaissance in two venues: the Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco.

The exhibition explores Fra Angelico’s art, development and influence and his relation to painters such as Lorenzo Monaco, Masaccio, and Filippo Lippi, as well as sculptors like Lorenzo Ghiberti, Michelozzo, and Luca della Robbia. Curated by Carl Brandon Strehlke, Curator Emeritus of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with – for the Museo di San Marco – Angelo Tartuferi, former Director of the Museo di San Marco, and Stefano Casciu, Regional Director of Musei nazionali Toscana, Fra Angelico marks the first major exhibition in Florence dedicated to the artist exactly seventy years after the monographic show of 1955, creating a unique dialogue between institutions and the region.

For more information, visit https://www.palazzostrozzi.org/en/archivio/exhibitions/angelico/.

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Sep
26
2:30 PM14:30

Lecture: The Materiality of the Voynich Manuscript, Lisa Fagin Davis, at University of Toronto

Carl Sheppard Memorial Lecture in Medieval Art History

Beyond Text: Objects and Manuscripts in Sacred Storerooms across Medieval Africa

Dr. Ariel Fein

1210 Heller Hall, 271 19th Ave S, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Thursday 6 November 2025 | 7 - 8:30 PM

Voynich Manuscript f. 71r Photo credit: Beinecke

The Centre for Medieval Studies welcomes Lisa Fagin Davis (Executive Director, Medieval Academy of America) to present "The Materiality of the Voynich Manuscript", a talk on her recent work using forensic evidence to hypothesize the original sequence of bifolia in the codex. Register for either in-person or virtual attendance.

For more information and to register, visit https://www.medieval.utoronto.ca/events/lisa-fagin-davis-materiality-voynich-manuscript

Lisa Fagin Davis received her PhD in Medieval Studies from Yale University in 1993. She has catalogued medieval manuscript collections at Yale University, the University of Pennsylvania, the Walters Art Museum, Wellesley College, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, the Boston Public Library, and several private collections. Her publications include: the Catalogue of Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, Vol. IV (with R. G. Babcock and P. Rusche, Tempe, 2004); The Gottschalk Antiphonary (Cambridge University Press, 2000); numerous articles in the fields of manuscript studies and codicology; and the monograph, La Chronique Anonyme Universelle: Reading and Writing History in Fifteenth-Century France (a translation, critical edition and detailed study of a fifteenth-century French world chronicle, published by Brepols Publishers in 2015). Dr. Davis was a member of the EAMMS working group that established initial standards for electronic cataloguing of pre-1600 manuscript material and is currently serving on the Advisory Boards of Digital Scriptorium and of the Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts. With Melissa Conway, Davis is co-author of the Directory of Pre-1600 Manuscripts in the United States and Canada, published online by the Bibliographical Society of America and as Volume 109:3 of the Papers of the BSA. She regularly teaches an introduction to manuscript studies at the Simmons College Graduate School of Library and Information Science and is the author of "The Manuscript Road Trip," a blog devoted to promoting collections of medieval and Renaissance manuscripts in North America. In 2016, she co-curated the major exhibition "Beyond Words: Illuminated Manuscripts in Boston Collections" at the Houghton Library at Harvard University, the McMullen Museum of Art at Boston College, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Dr. Davis is currently serving as Executive Director of the Medieval Academy of America.

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Sep
28
2:00 PM14:00

Lecture: Virtue and Adornment in Byzantium: Beautiful Bodies in the Christian East, Alicia Walker, At The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Dr. John and Helen Collis Lecture

Virtue and Adornment in Byzantium: Beautiful Bodies in the Christian East

Alicia Walker

Professor of History of Art and Director of the Graduate Group in Classics, Archaeology, and History of Art at Bryn Mawr College

Gartner Auditorium, Suzanne and Paul Westlake Performing Arts Center, The Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Sunday, September 28, 2025, 2:00–3:00 p.m

Nereid (Sea-Nymph) from a Hanging (detail), late 300s–400s CE. Byzantine Empire (Egypt).

Free; Ticket Required - To book, click here.

Join Alicia Walker as she explores attitudes toward women and adornment in the Byzantine world. Walker discusses how jewelry and clothing decorated with Christian signs offered women ways to ornament the body while still conforming to religious values that censured personal embellishment and promoted modest piety. At the same time, Byzantine society remained connected to pre-Christian cultural traditions, allowing for Greco-Roman goddesses and other female mythological characters to persist as models for the cultivation of physical beauty and allure. Walker shows how Byzantine women navigated these diverse possibilities, displaying moral virtue and social refinement—but also captivating charm—through their dress and adornment.

For more information, visit https://www.clevelandart.org/events/virtue-and-adornment-byzantium-beautiful-bodies-christian-east

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Sep
29
12:00 AM00:00

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

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

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Sep
29
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Cambridge Medieval History Graduate Workshop for Michaelmas Term 2025 (Virtual and In-Person)

Call for Papers

Cambridge Medieval History Graduate Workshop for Michaelmas Term 2025

Virtual and In-Person

Due by 29 September 2025

The Cambridge Medieval History Graduate Workshop is inviting paper submissions for Michaelmas term 2025. We host presentations on the cultures, economies, literature, material cultures, politics, thought, religions, and reception of the medieval world, which we define as broadly as possible as the global period between c.500 and c.1500. We welcome interdisciplinary scholarship and encourage submissions which stretch our conception of ‘medieval’ in
time or space, from late antiquity to modern reception and from Scandinavia to the Middle East and beyond, or which deal with the practice of medieval history.

These short 15–20-minute workshop papers are excellent ways to share your work, gain presentation experience, and receive constructive feedback in a supportive environment run for and by graduate students. In terms of scope, we are looking for focused studies that offer snapshots into ongoing graduate research, and particularly encourage primary source work and case studies, rather than sweeping overviews of large topics or summaries of entire dissertations/theses.

We welcome submissions from Master’s and PhD students from any discipline or university, but especially encourage graduate students based in or around Cambridge to submit. Accepted speakers will have the opportunity to be featured on our blog, Camedieval. The Workshop meets alternate Thursdays, 4–5 :30pm, with the option of virtual attendance on Microsoft Teams for audience members. In each session we will have two 15–20-minute papers, followed by in-person socialising and refreshments.

Please send abstracts of not more than 250 words and a short bio by 29th September 2025 to: cambridgemedieval@gmail.com.

For more information, visit https://medieval.ox.ac.uk/2025/09/11/cfp-cambridge-medieval-history-graduate-workshop/

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Sep
30
12:00 AM00:00

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

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.

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Oct
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Sarasota, Florida, 5-7 Mar. 2026), Due by 1 Oct. 2025

Call for Papers

New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies

Sarasota, Florida, 5-7 March 2026

Due by 1 October 2025

The twenty-third biennial New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies will take place 5–7 March 2026 in Sarasota, Florida.  The program committee invites 250-word abstracts of proposed twenty-minute papers on topics in European and Mediterranean history, literature, art, music and religion from the fourth to the seventeenth centuries. Planned sessions are welcome (see guidelines below), and interdisciplinary work is particularly appropriate to the conference’s broad historical and disciplinary scope. The deadline for all abstracts is 1 October 2025

Junior scholars whose abstracts are accepted are encouraged to submit their papers for consideration for the Snyder Prize (named in honor of conference founder Lee Snyder), which carries an honorarium of $400.

The Conference is held on the campus of New College of Florida, the honors college of the Florida state system. The college, located on Sarasota Bay, is adjacent to the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, which will offer tours arranged for conference participants. Sarasota is noted for its beautiful public beaches, theater, food, art and music. Average temperatures in March are a pleasant high of 77f (25c) and a low of 57f (14c).

More information will be posted here on the conference website as it becomes available, including plenary speakers, conference events, and area attractions. Click here for a downloadable PDF of this CFP.

For more information, click here.

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Oct
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for International Conference: 'Instrumenta altaris': Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy, Madrid (20-22 Jan. 2026)

Call for Papers

CONGRESO INTERNACIONAL

'Instrumenta altaris': Los objetos rituales y sus imágenes para la liturgia medieval/Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy

Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Campus de Madrid

20-22 January 2026

Quintana Organized by Project Thesauri Rituum

Due 1 October 2025

In the Middle Ages, Christian liturgy was far more than a sequence of prayers and ceremonies: it structured religious practice, shaped sacred space, and gave material form to the expression of faith. Objects, vestments, and books played a central role in this framework, endowed with a visual, tactile, and symbolic language that embodied the theology of the sacred. The International Conference Instrumenta altaris: Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy seeks to refocus attention on the material dimension that, throughout the medieval centuries, rendered the invisible visible and preserved —often in fragmentary form— a tangible legacy of devotion.

For several decades, medieval art historiography has moved towards a reassessment of what was once pejoratively labelled as “minor arts”, no longer regarded as decorative appendices to the dominant monumental tradition, but as essential components for understanding the spaces, gestures, and imagery that shaped Christian liturgy. This shift owes much to the work of scholars such as Colum Hourihane, Eric Palazzo, Cécile Voyer, Klaus Gereon Beuckers, and Elisabeth Crouzet-Pavan, who have drawn attention to the luxurious, performative, and sensory dimensions of medieval liturgical art.

Organised by the research project Thesauri Rituum at Rey Juan Carlos University (Madrid), this conference focuses on three main categories of liturgical artefacts: ritual objects —sacred vessels, reliquaries, crosses, censers— whose craftsmanship reveals a theology of materials; sacred vestments, textiles that not only clothed liturgical ministers but transformed them into figures of transcendence endowed with graces bestowed through ordination; and liturgical books, often illuminated manuscripts, which contained not merely the order of prayer but a spiritual choreography of Christian time. These elements were not autonomous but interdependent, belonging to a practice in which art was not simply contemplated, but activated and handled within liturgical performance —something difficult to reconstruct solely from written sources.

The International Conference Instrumenta altaris: Ritual Artefacts and Their Images for Medieval Liturgy is therefore also an invitation to reconsider the status of medieval art through the vitality of liturgical practice. It calls for a dialogue between form and function, between aesthetics and rituality, between the history of images and the presence of objects. This approach reflects a historiographical sensibility that no longer accepts the nineteenth-century hierarchy between the “major arts” and objects of worship, but instead pays renewed attention to those voices excluded from traditional academic classifications. For in the Middle Ages, the sacred was not confined to grandeur; it was equally revealed in the refinement of the minute and in the quiet eloquence of material signs that accompanied each rite, gesture, and ceremony.

Key Dates Summary

Deadline for presentation proposal submissions: October 1, 2025

Notification of acceptance: November 1, 2025
Early registration deadline: November 15, 2025 *
Congress dates: January 20-22, 2026

For more information on the preferred thematic lines, abstract guidelines, and travel grant information, click here.

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Oct
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Dr. Günther Findel-Stiftung / Rolf und Ursula Schneider-Stiftung, Doctorl Fellowship

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.

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Oct
1
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Bound for Devotion: The Prayer Book as Object and Practice, 1300–1800, Leiden University (1-3 July 2026)

Call for Papers

Bound for Devotion: The Prayer Book as Object and Practice, 1300–1800

Leiden University, Netherlands

1-3 July 2026

Due By 1 October 2025

Detail from Getijden van onser liever vrouwen (Paris: Wolfgang Hopyl, 10 September 1500), Brussels, KBR, INC A 2.188 (RP)

Prayer was central to religious life in the late medieval and early modern period. Despite growing scholarly interest in religious texts, devotional practices, and spirituality, prayer and prayer books remain comparatively understudied. Prayer could take on a multitude of forms and occur in a range of spaces, from public to secluded and private; from monastic, liturgical prayer to short, indulgenced invocations and meditative prayers that evoked a rich scala of emotions and mental images.

To pray, devotees – whether clerical or lay – often took a book to hand. Prayer books played a vital role during many moments in a person’s life in the performance of prayer and prayer-related practices. While the act of prayer is inherently transient, the books held or touched by late medieval and early modern devotees form codified and material evidence of the practices in which they engaged. Still extant in large numbers and containing a vast variety of textual and visual materials, these books – through both content and appearance – reflect the diversity of prayer practices as well as developments in book production. Taking the book as the central artefact for the study of prayer allows for an analysis that encompasses all aspects and components of prayer books, along with the actors involved in their production and use. This, in turn, enables us to chart the ‘cultural ecosystem’ in which prayer books were produced, circulated, and used.

This three-day international conference, hosted at Leiden University by the PRAYER project (ERC Starting Grant), with keynotes by Walter S. Melion (Emory University) and Kathryn M. Rudy (University of St Andrews), aims to bring together researchers working on books that were (intended to be) used in any form of prayer practice in the late medieval and early modern era (up to the eighteenth century). This conference aims to shed new light on prayer across late medieval and early modern Europe by exploring the broader ecosystem of prayer books. This includes a wide range of interactions between the material book, texts and images disseminated through it (and their connections to other types of objects, such as rosaries, small pipe clay figures, and single-sheet prints), the devotions inspired by these texts and images, the producers and buyers/readers of the books, and the communities they belonged to.

For further information on possible formats and topics for proposals, click here for a PDF of the entire Call for Papers.

Please submit an abstract (max. 300 words) and short biography (max. 100 words) to prayer@hum.leidenuniv.nl by 1 October 2025. We aim to inform our speakers by 1 November 2025.

A selection of revised contributions, pending double peer-review, will be published in an edited volume in Brill’s series 'Intersections: Interdisciplinary Studies in Early Modern Culture' (https://brill.com/display/serial/INTE).

Organizing Committee: Anna Dlabačová, Irene Van Eldere, Susanne de Jong, and Lieke Smits

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Oct
2
4:30 PM16:30

Department of Art & Archaeology Lecture Series: Like the Dawn of Creation: Byzantine Fragments in the Queer Imagination, Roland Betancourt, at Princeton University

Department of Art & Archaeology Lecture Series

Like the Dawn of Creation: Byzantine Fragments in the Queer Imagination

Roland Betancourt

University of California, Irvine

Thursday, October 2, 2025, 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

East Pyne Building 010, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

Film still of Suddenly, Last Summer (1959). Courtesy of the Victoria & Albert Museum. 

This talk explores how Byzantium operates as a queer cipher in modern culture, appearing as an adjectival modifier, “the Byzantine,” rather than as a distinct historical referent. Analyzing Gore Vidal’s 1959 adaptation of Tennessee Williams’s Suddenly, Last Summer, I demonstrate how Byzantine references encode queer identity through the film’s absent protagonist, whose unspeakable sexuality mirrors Byzantium’s own unintelligibility. Drawing on extensive archival research, I show how “the Byzantine” articulated coded queerness for these writers and artists. My talk proposes reimagining Byzantine art history through modes of “queer fragmentation,” recognizing Byzantine elements across temporal boundaries. 

Roland Betancourt is currently the Andrew W. Mellon Professor at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art and Chancellor’s Professor, Department of Art History, at the University of California, Irvine. His book, Byzantine Intersectionality: Sexuality, Gender, and Race in the Middle Ages, won the Jerome E. Singerman Prize from the Medieval Academy of America. His next book is Disneyland and the Rise of Automation (Princeton University Press, 2026). 

For more information, visit https://artandarchaeology.princeton.edu/whats/events/dawn-creation-byzantine-fragments-queer-imagination

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Oct
3
5:00 PM17:00

Lecture: Bordered and Bespoke: African, Asian, and European Entanglements in the Silk Objects of Walé Oyéjidé and Geoffrey Chaucer, Andrea Denny-Brown, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Public Lecture

Bordered and Bespoke: African, Asian, and European Entanglements in the Silk Objects of Walé Oyéjidé and Geoffrey Chaucer

Andrea Denny-Brown

University of Wisconsin - Madison

Elvehjem L140

3 October 2025, 5 pm

This talk will explore the entangled medieval histories offered by the silk textile collection of contemporary designer Walé Oyéjidé and his fashion label Ikiré Jones. Oyéjidé’s “Remastering the Old World” silk textile series creates an alternative history centered on combining medieval and renaissance European artworks with African prints and images of African royalty, in order to pose questions about the possibility of a “shared” fashion narrative that crosses national, racial, religious, and even temporal borders. Using Oyéjidé’s work as a guide, I will consider the storytelling legacies of the silk textiles in late medieval Europe. Geoffrey Chaucer’s Trojan romance Troilus and Criseyde, I argue, represents a moment when overtly exoticized silk fashions in crusader romances give way to more refined literary and visual citations based in an emerging perception of discerning European taste. Looking at this narrative through Oyéjidé’s vision, we can see one cultural mechanism by which past aesthetics came not to be shared.

Andrea Denny-Brown, Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Riverside, is a specialist in the poetry and material culture of the European Middle Ages. She is the author of Fashioning Change: The Trope of Clothing in Highand LateMedieval England (2012) and the co-editor, with Lisa H. Cooper, of Lydgate Matters: Poetry and Material Culture in the Fifteenth Century (2008) and The Arma Christi in Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture (2014). She served as guest editor for a double issue of the journal Exemplaria on “The Provocative Fifteenth Century” (2017-18), and as editor of the same journal from 2018-2021. Her current book project, Criminal Ornament: Maligned Style & the Fifteenth Century, studies interdisciplinary techniques of ornament in late medieval verbal, visual, and decorative arts and the backlash against such ornament in the early twentieth century.

Co-Sponsored by the Anonymous Fund, English, the Nancy M. Bruce Center for Design and Material Culture, Art Department, ILS, European Studies, and the Department of Art History.

For more information, visit https://medievalstudies.wisc.edu/upcoming-events/

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Oct
5
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: The Living Goddess Traditions, Journal of Bengali Studies Vol 8 No 1

Call for Papers

Journal of Bengali Studies Vol 8 No 1

The Living Goddess Traditions

Due by 05 October 2025

Journal of Bengali Studies (ISSN 2277 9426), an online, open access, interdisciplinary, double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal to study the history and culture of the Bengali people, is glad to announce the Call for Papers for its upcoming issue (Vol. 8 No. 1) on the theme of the Living Goddess Traditions. Bengal has been the hub of various goddess traditions and this issue will study the past memory and the present phenomenon of such goddess cults.

The Living Goddess Traditions

Archaic Goddess cults existed in different parts of our planet since our Homind pasts (e.g. Venus of Berekhat Ram, Venus of Tan Tan), and they can be found in the stone age of Homo sapiens as well (e.g. Venus of Hohle Fels), down to the copper age (various ancient civilizations including the Harappans). But following the descent of the iron age, goddess cults seemed to have receded in most parts of the world, while mighty cults of powerful male Gods replaced or eclipsed the Goddesses.

Today, the Bengali-speaking Hindus remain the only large community on earth, who celebrate their thriving Goddess traditions, where the Goddess is not relegated to the curiosity of a museum, or does not play a secondary fiddle to some other almighty male Gods, like certain other parts of South Asia (i.e. north India or south India), but where the Supreme Goddess is very much at the core of the contemporary experience of a large people (numbering 10 crore or more, and it is only for political reasons we desist from calling the Bengali-speaking Hindus a nation on their own).

The theme of this upcoming issue of Journal of Bengali Studies attempts to trace the existing, living traditions of the Goddess cults of Bengal back to the hoary antiquities of its (mostly forgotten) past, and aims to map the trajectory of the evolution of such Goddess cults from past to present. This issue intends to interrogate the possible connections of Bengal’s history and prehistory with a largely rootless present, which, in spite of all the modern, colonial, communist and communal upheavals, still manages to celebrate the Goddess cults which form one of the most important markers, if not the most important marker of Bengali identity.

So, we invite articles which will inspect the existing popular cults and religious practices of the worship of the various goddesses amidst the backdrop of the kernels of history which form the foundations to such living goddess traditions.

The topics for contribution will include the following (but will not be limited to the same):

  • Goddess and goddesses: The supreme Creatrix and the many manifestations of attendant goddesses.

  • Goddess and Tantra.

  • The Folk Goddess Cults: From antiquity to contemporaneity.

  • Goddess Kālī: Primeval Invocations (the Dark Goddess of the Night), Medieval Inventions (Kṛṣṇānanda Āgambāgīśa etc), Modern Inferences (from early modern Ramprasad & Kamalakanta to the twentieth century devotional songs of Pannalal Bhattacharya).

  • Goddess Durgā: Autumnal invocation of Goddess Ūṣā in Ṛgveda, Buffalo Sacrifice of Harappa, Chandraketugarh Goddesses, Post-Gupta Period and Śrī Śrī Caṇḍī, Pala Period Goddess Cults, Medieval Bengal and Caṇḍīmangala, Contemporary Durgā Pujo of public and private dispensations (Bonedi/elite and Baroari/collective). Festivity, Economics, Heritage and Popular Culture.

  • Goddess Tārā: The rise of the Great Goddess in Buddhist Tantra and Hindu Tantra to modern day Tarapith of Birbhum.

  • Pala Period Goddess Vajrayoginī and the contemporary Goddess Chinnamastā.

  • Sena cataloguing of the Ten Mahāvidyās in Bṛhaddharmapurāṇa and their lasting legacies of Tantric Goddess worship to this day. The other Mahāvidyās in the Goddess pantheon beyond Daśamahāvidyā.

  • Local Guardian Goddesses like Mṛṇmayī of Mallabhum, Kalyāṇeśvarī of Shikharbhum, Sarvamangalā of Bardhaman: Past lores and lived traditions.

  • Goddess Viśālākṣī: Local variations in iconology, ritual, styles of worship in the past lores and lived traditions.

  • Goddesses Lakṣmī and Sarasvatī: The evolution of their cults from antiquity to modernity within the domestic sphere, within the public sphere, respectively as the disburser of wealth and as the disseminator of knowledge, with reference to their iconographies and archaeomythologies.

  • Suggested Yakṣī cults and Chandraketugarh: The latent trajectory from the ancient to the medieval to the modern ages.

  • Śākta Rāsa (of Nabadwip and elsewhere).

  • Antiquarian Goddess Cults like the Bird Goddess and the Snake Goddess and their sublimations into various existing goddess cults like Mahāvidyā Bagalā and Goddess Manasā/Mahāvidyā Tvaritā).

  • The curious continuity of the early medieval Goddess Cāmuṇḍā/Carcikā to various lived traditions of Goddesses Petkati and Kankāleśvarī.

  • The lived traditions of Kuladevī or the Clan Goddess or the Family Deity: Past narratives and present practices.

  • The continuous serendipity of the discoveries of ancient and medieval goddess idols from obscure corners of Bengal: How the past communicates with the present.

  • The Śakti pīīthas of Bengal: Lores from the past, and lived traditions of the present.

  • Eponymous Guardian Goddesses of Settlements and the simultaneously rooted but floating identities of Bengali space (e.g. Kālī and Kalighat, Jessore and Yaśoreśvarī).

  • The lived traditions of Goddess worshippers: accomplished Sādhakas like Bamakhyapa of Tarapith, and their lasting legacies.

  • Evolution of Sākta theologies: Past moorings and contemporary traditions.

  • Last but not the least, the various non-Śākta worship of the Goddess in Bengal (including but not limited to the Vaiṣṇava worship of Kātyāyanī Durgā started by Nityananda Prabhu, or the Chinese Kali worship).

The minimum word limit of articles would be 3000 words, and maximum word limit would be 15000 words. Writers need to follow MLA format. Articles complete with bibliography and author’s bio-note should be submitted as email attachments in docx form by 05 October 2025 for this upcoming issue (expected to be published on the occasion of Kalipujo).

For any query, feel free to email shoptodina@gmail.com and/or whatsapp/telegram 9717468046. The editorial board of JBS remains the sole and final authority on the decisions regarding the publication or non-publication of any submitted article in original or modified forms.

Editor: Dr Rituparna Koley

Check out our past issues at https://bengalistudies.blogspot.com and www.bengalistudies.com

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Oct
5
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry, Château de Chantilly, France, 7 June 2025 - 5 Oct. 2025

Exhibition Closing

Les Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry

Château de Chantilly, Institut de France

Chantilly, France

7 June to 5 October 2025

© RMN-GP

Les Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry is the most famous manuscript in the world. Described as the ‘Mona Lisa’ of manuscripts, this collection of offices and prayers made especially for the Duke of Berry, brother of King Charles V of France, is a testament to the splendour and artistic refinement of the late Middle Ages.

Produced throughout the 15th century, this exceptional work was illuminated by the Limbourg brothers, distinguished artists affiliated with the courts of Burgundy and Berry, whose work profoundly transformed the course of art history. Consisting of 121 miniatures, Les Très Riches Heures capture the imagination with their depictions of historic castles, noble scenes and seasonal work in the fields that have shaped our perception of the Middle Ages.

To celebrate the restoration of this masterpiece, which has only been shown to the public twice since the end of the 19th century, an international exhibition has been set up, featuring almost 150 exhibits from all over the world. The exhibition provides visitors with an insight into each stage of the creation of the Très Riches Heures over almost a century and explains why the manuscript is still so popular.

For more information, visit https://chateaudechantilly.fr/en/evenement/les-tres-riches-heures-du-duc-de-berry/

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Oct
6
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Another History of The Book of Hours, Château de Chantilly, France, 7 June 2025 - 6 Oct. 2025

Exhibition closing

Another History of The Book of Hours

Château de Chantilly, Institut de France

Chantilly, France

7 June to 6 October 2025

The Present Hours for the Use of Tournai are complete, without omissions. Printed in Paris for Simon Vostre around 1512 The Parable of Lazarus and the Rich Man, hand-colored woodcut. © Musée Condé

As an extension of the major exhibition devoted to Les Très Riches Heures of the Duke of Berry, the Reading Room presents a remarkable collection of over fifty Books of Hours, both manuscripts and printed editions, dating from the late 12th to the 19th century. These once-overlooked works now reveal the rich and fascinating history of a treasured book form that was both dreamt of and venerated.

What can be found in the Books of Hours? How, by whom and where are they created? Why are they so important in the history of art and books in general? All the questions that might be asked about books of hours are addressed in the works on display.

For more information, visit https://chateaudechantilly.fr/en/evenement/another-history-of-the-book-of-hours/

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Oct
7
9:30 AM09:30

New Exhibition: Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux; Musée de Cluny, Paris, France, 7 Oct. 2025 to 11 Jan. 2026

Upcoming Exhibition

Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux

Musée de Cluny, Paris, France

Du 7 octobre 2025 au 11 janvier 2026

 Après les événements révolutionnaires, le 19e siècle redécouvre le Moyen Âge, tout en le réinterprétant. Ce siècle, qui cultiva une rêverie romantique et connut d’importants progrès technologiques et la constitution de grandes collections, s’est inspiré du Moyen Âge en produisant des copies, des pastiches, des oeuvres composites et des faux. L’exposition permet des confrontations, mettant en regard certains objets médiévaux avec leurs "résonances" du 19e siècle.

Le propos est centré sur les arts précieux, dans leur acception médiévale : pièces d’orfèvrerie et d’émaillerie, ivoires, tissus précieux. Ces domaines ont en effet connu au 19e siècle un foisonnement de redécouvertes techniques. Ces phénomènes culturels et artistiques émergent dès les années 1820-1830 jusqu’à la veille de la Première Guerre mondiale, soit pendant un siècle environ. Collectionneurs, ateliers de création et de restauration, mais aussi faussaires, en sont les principaux acteurs, autour d’un marché de l’art en pleine expansion, focalisé sur Paris, qui apparaît alors comme la capitale des arts précieux.

Retrouvez toutes les dates des visites guidées de l'exposition ici

Tarif(s) :

  • Droit d'entrée plein tarif : 12€

  • Droit d'entrée tarif réduit : 10€

Pour plus d’informations, visitez https://www.musee-moyenage.fr/activites/programmation/le-moyen-age-du-19e-siecle.html

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Oct
7
10:00 AM10:00

Online Event: Index of Medieval Art: Database Training Session

Online Event

Index of Medieval Art

Database Training Session

October 7, 2025, 10:00 – 11:00 am EST

Musician playing bagpipe, manuscript miniature, Cantigas de Santa María, Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de El Escorial, MS B.I.2, fol. 313v (Seville, 1280-1300). Photo: RBME. Patrimonio Nacional (Index system no. pap20250730036)

We are pleased to announce that the Index will be holding an online training session for anyone interested in learning more about the database! It will take place via Zoom on Tuesday, October 7, 2025 from 10:00 – 11:00 am EST.
This session, led by Index specialists Maria Alessia Rossi and Jessica Savage, will demonstrate how the database can be used with advanced search options, filters, and browse tools to locate works of medieval art. There will be a Q&A period at the end of the session, so please bring any questions you might have about your research!

Please note that this session will not be recorded.

To register, visit https://ima.princeton.edu/index_training/

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Oct
11
to Oct 12

Society for Church Archaeology Annual Conference 2025: Church Archaeology in 2025, Lincoln, UK

Society for Church Archaeology Annual Conference 2025

Church Archaeology in 2025

11-12 October 2025

Lincoln, Barbican Creative Hub Saturday 11th October 2025

Walking Tour of Lincoln City Centre Churches on Sunday 12th October

The Society for Church Archaeology is pleased to announce its annual conference for 2025, on the theme of ‘Church Archaeology in 2025’. Church archaeology is an increasingly broad field of study, with traditional methods being complemented by new approaches and audiences. Advances in archaeological techniques present new opportunities for studying both upstanding and buried remains, whilst the transformation of ecclesiastical buildings in the 21st century is supported by a wealth of methodologies both in terms of investigating the past and presenting this to a range of audiences. The theme for this year’s annual conference reflects this diversity and the conference programme appears below.

Our keynote will be given by Professor David Stocker, who will also be leading the walking tour the following day. Price includes entry to Lincoln cathedral. The conference venue is the Barbican Creative Hub, located directly opposite Lincoln Railway Centre and near to Lincoln Central Bus Station. We are excited to be one of the first events in this brand new venue (opening autumn 2025).

For enquiries about the conference and bookings: churcharchconference@gmail.com

For further details please see: https://www.churcharchaeology.org/current-conference. A list of accommodation is available through Visit Lincoln and can be found here: https://www.visitlincoln.com/accommodation/

To make a booking:

  1. Our preferred booking method is through Eventbrite. We can accept online payments through our Eventbrite page or visit https://www.churcharchaeology.org/currentconference

  2. However, if you are unable to book via Eventbrite AND you are paying by cheque, you may use the printed booking form. We are unable to accept online payments via the printed booking form. Please use our Eventbrite booking form for online payments.

  3. Eventbrite online payments will close on Friday 3 October 2025.

  4. All cheque payments need to be received by Friday 13 September 2025. You can notify churcharchconference@gmail.com to expect a printed booking if you wish, but we cannot confirm your place(s) until we have received the form and cheque.

  5. Booking will close earlier if all places have been allocated prior to the aforementioned dates.

  6. Bookings are registered on a first-come, first-served basis.

For the complete program and abstracts of the papers, click here.

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Oct
13
5:30 PM17:30

Lecture: Considering Withdrawal in Images of the Vitae patrum (Lives of the Desert Fathers), Denva Gallant, at Harvard University

Houghton-Medieval Studies Lecture on Early Book History

Considering Withdrawal in Images of the Vitae patrum (Lives of the Desert Fathers)

Denva Gallant (Rice University)

Edison & Newman Room, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

October 13, 2025, 5:30- 7:00PM ET

Co-sponsored by Houghton Library and the Standing Committee on Medieval Studies.

The Desert Fathers and Mothers defined their lives through acts of withdrawal. Anthony the Abbot’s withdrawal from the fringes of his village to the desert inspired a generation of ascetics and gave rise to an entire genre of hagiography, the vita. Through a close analysis of the lives of Onuphrius and Marina the Virgin, this talk by Denva Gallant explores how Morgan Library MS. M.626 teaches the fourteenth-century viewer to cultivate a rich inner life. Produced at a moment when lay Christians, like Giordano’s audience on the first Sunday of Lent, were being invited to withdraw to private “deserts” in their own homes, the illuminations in this manuscript promote the virtue of total reliance on God—a posture that is essential if withdrawal is to lead to salvation. 

For more information, visit https://medieval.fas.harvard.edu/event/houghton-medieval-studies-lecture-early-book-history-12

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Oct
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Submissions: Season 5 of The Multicultural Middle Ages Podcast (MMA)

Call for Submissions

Season 5 of

The Multicultural Middle Ages Podcast (MMA)

Due By 15 October 2025

After four successful seasons, The Multicultural Middle Ages Podcast (MMA) will return for its fifth in 2026. Sponsored by the Medieval Academy of America, MMA is an anthology-style podcast that seeks to continue conversations and generate new avenues of inquiry related to the Middle Ages that emphasize the period’s diversity and the scholarship related to it. We highlight thoughtful reflections on culturally responsible approaches to the study of the Middle Ages (expansive beyond western Europe) and its afterlives.

We invite proposals from individuals and collaborators of all ranks and disciplines, especially graduate students, for single podcast episodes aimed at fellow medievalists and the wider public.

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

  • innovative methodological/disciplinary approaches to the Middle Ages

  • the future of medieval studies

  • research on the multicultural, multiracial, and multiethnic Middle Ages

  • discussions of recent scholarship

  • archival discoveries

  • academic activism and responses to misappropriations of the Middle Ages

  • pedagogical approaches

  • medievalisms

  • medieval culture in contemporary political and public discourse

  • cultural heritage and approaches to curating exhibitions of the Middle Ages

Possible formats may include narrative expositions, interviews, textual analysis, visual analysis, oral performances, and panel discussions.

No previous experience with podcasting is required. The Graduate Student Committee of the MAA has hosted several podcasting workshops, which are now available on the MAA YouTube channel. If accepted, an MMA team member will support you through the episode development process and post- production.

To help us assess the project’s potential, your submission should include a brief description (500 words) of your proposed episode, noting the following:

  • the chosen topic and its relevance

  • the plan for adapting the topic to a podcast medium (we encourage 35–45 min. episodes but also welcome proposals for shorter or longer episodes)

  • the episode format (interview, narrative, etc.) with an outline of its structure

  • if you require technical assistance to realize the episode (by facilitating an interview, helping record the episode, or taking care of the audio editing)

Please also include each author’s name and CV.

Submit your proposals and any questions to mmapodcast1@gmail.com and Loren Cantrell (lorenlee325@gmail.com) by October 15, 2025.

Full call available on the website: https://www.multiculturalmiddleages.com/

The Multicultural Middle Ages Podcast Production Team

Will Beattie | wbeattie@nd.edu

Jonathan Correa Reyes | jonatcr@clemson.edu

Loren Easterday Lee Cantrell | lorenlee325@gmail.com

Reed O’Mara | reed.omara@gmail.com

Logan Quigley | quigleylogan@gmail.com

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Oct
15
5:00 PM17:00

Call for Applications: AVISTA Graduate Student Research Grant

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

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Oct
16
10:30 AM10:30

Workshop: Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages, Denva Gallant, at Harvard University

Houghton-Medieval Studies Workshop on Early Book History

Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages

Denva Gallant (Rice University)

Hofer Classroom, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

October 16, 2025, 10:30AM - 12:30PM ET and 3:00PM - 5:00 PM ET

Space in this hands-on workshop with Denva Gallant (Rice University) is limited. To register for the 10:30am-12:30pm workshop, please click here, and to register for the 3:00-5:00pm workshop, please click here.

Medieval readers turned to books not only for knowledge, but also for the nourishment of their spiritual lives. In this workshop, we will explore manuscripts from Houghton Library that reveal the many ways books shaped practices of prayer, meditation, and moral reflection. Together, we will consider these manuscripts as artefacts of personal devotion: how their texts, images, and physical features reflect the intentions of scribes and patrons; how signs of use capture the habits of readers; and how such books created spaces for private piety while also connecting to wider devotional communities. By situating them in their artistic and historical contexts, we will gain insight into the lived experience of devotion in the later Middle Ages.

Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages will be offered once in the morning and once in the afternoon, and space is limited. Please register for one session only.

For more information on the morning workshop, click here.

For more information on the afternoon workshop, click here.

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Oct
16
3:00 PM15:00

Workshop: Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages, Denva Gallant, at Harvard University

Houghton-Medieval Studies Workshop on Early Book History

Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages

Denva Gallant (Rice University)

Hofer Classroom, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

October 16, 2025, 10:30AM - 12:30PM ET and 3:00PM - 5:00 PM ET

Space in this hands-on workshop with Denva Gallant (Rice University) is limited. To register for the 10:30am-12:30pm workshop, please click here, and to register for the 3:00-5:00pm workshop, please click here.

Medieval readers turned to books not only for knowledge, but also for the nourishment of their spiritual lives. In this workshop, we will explore manuscripts from Houghton Library that reveal the many ways books shaped practices of prayer, meditation, and moral reflection. Together, we will consider these manuscripts as artefacts of personal devotion: how their texts, images, and physical features reflect the intentions of scribes and patrons; how signs of use capture the habits of readers; and how such books created spaces for private piety while also connecting to wider devotional communities. By situating them in their artistic and historical contexts, we will gain insight into the lived experience of devotion in the later Middle Ages.

Books for the Soul: Personal Devotion in the Middle Ages will be offered once in the morning and once in the afternoon, and space is limited. Please register for one session only.

For more information on the morning workshop, click here.

For more information on the afternoon workshop, click here.

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Oct
17
to Oct 18

Conference: Medieval + Monsters: MAM, MAMA, and IMA Joint Conference with The Newberry Library, Dominican University & The Newberry Library, 17-18 Oct. 2025 (In-Person & Online)

ConFerence

Medieval + Monsters: 
MAM, MAMA, and IMA Joint Conference with The Newberry Library

October 17 & 18, 2025

Dominican University, River Forest, IL & the Newberry Library, Chicago, IL

In-Person & Online

Two workshops will be offered at the Newberry on Saturday, October 18. Registration is limited to 20 participants; please sign up for a workshop on the registration form. Learn more.

Les Enluminures have invited Saturday participants of our Medieval + Monsters Conference for a brief tour and introduction to their manuscripts. Learn more.

For more information about the conference, visit https://www.dom.edu/medieval-monsters-conference

To register for the conference visit, https://www.dom.edu/medieval-monsters-conference-registration-form

Please note: Registration for the Conference includes the Keynote Speech.

To register only for the keynote by author Maria Dahvana Headley, click here.

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Oct
17
9:30 AM09:30

Exhibition Closing: Retablos II: Spanish Paintings and Polychromed Sculpture from the 13th to 16th Centuries, Sam Fogg Gallery, London

Exhibition Closing

Retablos II

Spanish Paintings and Polychromed Sculpture from the 13th to 16th Centuries

Sam Fogg Gallery, London, England

18 September - 17 October 2025

The late medieval period was a time of extraordinary artistic dynamism in the Spanish kingdoms. Among its most remarkable expressions was the retablo, a type of fixed monumental altarpiece unique to the Iberian Peninsula. Positioned behind the altar table and completely filling the apse in a display of brilliant colours and shimmering gold leaf, Spanish retablos reached towering dimensions, combining panel paintings, polychromed sculptures and sumptuous traceried frames. Their scale, presence, and graphic depiction of the lives and deaths of the Christian saints made them the visual and spiritual focus of Spanish churches, framing the liturgy and guiding devotion. 

Over the centuries, many retablos were dismembered as a result of renovation, changing taste, or simple decay. Most have been scattered across private collections and museums right around the world, a process which, paradoxically, often ensured their survival. Following the success of the gallery's first exhibition of Spanish late-medieval retablos in 2019, this new iteration brings together eighteen panel paintings alongside five polychromed sculptures created by artists working in the wealthy northern Spanish kingdoms of Castile and Aragon between around 1250 and 1520. Selected highlights from the exhibition can be seen below, by scrolling down this page, but a complete digital catalogue of the exhibition is available upon request. 

The arresting, inventive, and iconographically complex works of art brought together for this new exhibition all reflect the rich and rapidly changing artistic climate that characterised the Iberian Peninsula during the period. The earliest paintings in the group vividly document the influence of the so-called 'International Gothic' style with its decorative stylisation, rich colour and lavish application of gold, which persisted in Spain longer than anywhere else in Europe. As we move through the fifteenth century however, we begin to discern new models and innovations introduced from Northern Europe through trade routes, itinerant artists and the circulation of drawings and prints. Rather than abandoning tradition, artists and workshops right across Spain adapted to change in remarkable, creative ways, assimilating foreign influences and transforming them into a distinctive Iberian style which, though regionally diverse, stands out for its material richness and complexity. Collectively, these astonishing and arresting works of art help to shine a searing light on the extraordinary artistic splendour of medieval Spain as it developed and evolved from the end of the Romanesque to the birth of the Renaissance.

For more information, visit https://www.samfogg.com/exhibitions/64/

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Oct
19
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Ancient India: living traditions, British Museum, 22 May - 19 Oct. 2025

Exhibition

Ancient India
living traditions

British Museum

22 May – 19 October 2025

Volcanic stone Ganesha from Java, Indonesia, about AD 1000-1200.

Where does the image of the beloved and playful Hindu god Ganesha, with his elephant head and rounded belly, originate? What inspired depictions of the serene Buddha and Jain enlightened teachers?

Reaching back more than 2,000 years, this new exhibition explores the origins of Hindu, Jain and Buddhist sacred art in the ancient and powerful nature spirits of India, and the spread of this art beyond the subcontinent.  

One of the first major exhibitions in the world to look at the early devotional art of India from a multi-faith, contemporary and global perspective, it will highlight the inspiration behind now-familiar depictions of the deities and enlightened teachers of these world religions – and how they were shared across the Indian Ocean to Southeast Asia and along the Silk Roads to East Asia.  

Colourful, multi-sensory and atmospheric, this exhibition was developed in collaboration with an advisory community panel of practising Hindus, Buddhists and Jains. These living religious traditions and their sacred art are now integral to the daily lives of almost two billion people around the world including in the UK. Key loans from our community partners help to tell this contemporary story.    

The exhibition will showcase more than 180 objects – including sculptures, paintings, drawings and manuscripts – from the South Asian collection at the British Museum as well as generous loans from national and international partners. It will highlight provenance, examining the stories, from creation to acquisition by museums, of every object in the show.  

From the symbolic footprints which preceded portrayals of the Buddha in human form to the cosmic serpents incorporated into Hindu art and the nature spirits who attend Jain enlightened teachers, this compelling exhibition tells the ancient stories behind these living traditions.  

For more information, visit https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/ancient-india-living-traditions

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Oct
19
11:00 AM11:00

Exhibition Closing: Knights, Pointe-à-Callière, Old Montréal, 22 May 2025 - 19 October 2025

Exhibition Closing

Knights

Pointe-à-Callière, Old Montréal (Québec), Canada

May 22nd, 2025 — October 19th, 2025

n exceptional collection introducing you to the world of chivalry

They have left their mark on history, literature, and legends... And still today, knights, their legacy, and their traditions remain a source of endless fascination.

The Knights exhibition brings these legendary figures back to life through an exceptional selection of objects, including the collection of European weaponry and armour from the Stibbert Museum in Florence, Italy. Complete suits of armour, helmets, swords, shields—most of the pieces on display are true masterpieces, bearing witness to the expertise of the era’s artisans.

From battlefields to royal courts, the exhibition explores the various aspects of the knights’ life—their training, their equipment, their code of honour, their role in military actions and in the societies of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.

Having become symbols of bravery and honour around the 12th century, knights were prominent figures in feudal society, putting their status on display at tournaments and within the court. The exhibition invites visitors to experience “castle life” by exploring such themes as courtly love, a woman’s place in this masculine world, leisure activities, and religious aspects.

A true immersion into the world of knights, with some 250 objects on display.

A unique experiential zone

The Knights exhibition features an area designed to give all visitors a chance to experience the knighthood by trying on pieces of equipment, gauging the weight of armour, wielding a sword, and taking on a few challenges worthy of the greatest tournaments! Interactive stations will also allow you to follow the journey of a young knight and design your own coat of arms.

A famous copy of the Mona Lisa at the Museum!

A truly exceptional piece will be on display in the exhibition: a copy of the Mona Lisa, created between 1600 and 1625. Remarkably faithful to Leonardo da Vinci’s original work, this painting is one of the jewels of the Stibbert Museum’s collection. It offers a rare opportunity to view and admire a reproduction of such high quality.

The Knights exhibition is produced by Pointe-à-Callière, Montréal’s Archaeology and History Complex, in collaboration with the Stibbert Museum and Contemporanea Progetti.

Form ore information, visit https://pacmusee.qc.ca/en/exhibitions/detail/knights/

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Oct
24
8:30 AM08:30

Conference: Beauty and Faith: Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith, Salmagundi Club & The MET Cloisters, New York City, 24-26 October 2025

Conference

Beauty and Faith: Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith

24-26 October, 2025

Salmagundi Club along with a special visit to the Met Cloisters, New York City

Visual Theology’s third event is a major two-part conference, the first of which will take place in New York City, 24-26 October 2025 at the Salmagundi Club along with a special visit to the Met Cloisters, New York City. The second part will take place in the UK, 8-10 May 2026. (Further details forthcoming.)

Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith will use the history and material culture of the Met Cloisters as a starting point for conversations about the space between brokenness and beauty, and to consider how art, in its many forms, can replant, remake, and reaffirm Christian truth, even when the results demonstrate synchronic anxieties between the past and the present, and faith and fragmentation. 

Keynotes: Julia Yost (First Things, NYC) and Dr. Tracy Chapman Hamilton (Sweet Briar College), and artists Anthony Visco and Maya Brodsky 

For more information about the conference and booking, visit https://www.visualtheology.org.uk/beauty-and-faith-part-one/

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Oct
24
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Words on the Wave: Ireland and St. Gallen in Early Medieval Europe, National Museum of Ireland, Archaeology, Dublin, Until 24 October 2025

Exhibition Closing

Words on the Wave: Ireland and St. Gallen in Early Medieval Europe

National Museum of Ireland

Archaeology, Kildare St, Dublin 2 D02 FH48

30th May 2025 until 24th October 2025

Detail showing St Matthew applying a scribal knife or scraper to a page and dipping his pen in an inkwell (Cod. Sang. 1395, p. 418). © Stiftsbibliothek, St. Gallen

Experience the magic of metal, stone and manuscript art from Ireland’s Golden Age in this unique exhibition of early medieval treasures at the National Museum of Ireland, Kildare St. Explore extraordinary journeys of people, books and ideas between medieval Ireland and Europe. Immerse yourself in precious manuscripts from the Abbey of St Gall, Switzerland — some returning to Ireland for the first time in 1000 years — alongside spectacular objects from the Irish world from which they emerged.

For more information on the exhibition, click here.

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Oct
25
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Virtual Conference: Confound the Time: Reception in Medieval & Early Modern Studies, 24-25 January 2026

Call for Papers

Virtual Conference

Confound the Time: Reception in Medieval & Early Modern Studies

24-25 January 2026

Due 25 October 2025

Confound the Time welcomes papers that investigate the ways in which texts, objects, and images from the medieval and early modern periods re-envision and reconstruct the past or imagine and anticipate the future. We also welcome papers that explore the ways in which medieval and early modern artifacts, history, and culture are reimagined and reconstructed in later periods.

As part of our commitment to accessibility, Confound the Time will be entirely virtual and have no registration fee. Graduate students and early career scholars are especially encouraged to submit.

Topics for individual papers may include:

  • Medieval and early modern reception of classical mythology/culture

  • Early modern reception of medieval literature/culture

  • The Pre-Raphaelites and other neo-medievalist movements

  • Contemporary video games, graphic novels, television shows, and/or films with medieval or early modern settings, characters, and cultures

  • Dungeons and Dragons and/or other role-playing or tabletop games

  • Manuscript Studies/Book History

  • Time/The Times

  • Gender and Sexuality

  • Nationalism and Race

Papers that address these subjects are encouraged, but any paper that centers on medieval or early modern studies will be considered.

Paper submissions should include:

  • An abstract of approximately 250 words

  • A 2-3 sentence third-person bio

Please send all application materials to confoundthetime@gmail.com.

The deadline for all abstract submissions is October 25th, 2025. Questions can be directed to Drs. Audrey Gradzewicz (U of Wisconsin-Madison) and Audrey Saxton (Bethany College, KS).

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Oct
26
10:30 AM10:30

Conference: Beauty and Faith: Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith, Salmagundi Club & The MET Cloisters, New York City, 24-26 October 2025

Conference

Beauty and Faith: Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith

24-26 October, 2025

Salmagundi Club along with a special visit to the Met Cloisters, New York City

Visual Theology’s third event is a major two-part conference, the first of which will take place in New York City, 24-26 October 2025 at the Salmagundi Club along with a special visit to the Met Cloisters, New York City. The second part will take place in the UK, 8-10 May 2026. (Further details forthcoming.)

Part One: Imperfect Beauty: Visions of Fractured Faith will use the history and material culture of the Met Cloisters as a starting point for conversations about the space between brokenness and beauty, and to consider how art, in its many forms, can replant, remake, and reaffirm Christian truth, even when the results demonstrate synchronic anxieties between the past and the present, and faith and fragmentation. 

Keynotes: Julia Yost (First Things, NYC) and Dr. Tracy Chapman Hamilton (Sweet Briar College), and artists Anthony Visco and Maya Brodsky 

For more information about the conference and booking, visit https://www.visualtheology.org.uk/beauty-and-faith-part-one/

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Oct
31
12:00 AM00:00

Discount Ends for New AVISTA Book: American Gothic: Reflections on Gothic Scholarship in America 1925–2025

NEW AVISTA Book

American Gothic: Reflections on Gothic Scholarship in America 1925–2025

Edited by Robert Bork

The Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study of Technology, Science, and Art (AVISTA) are excited to announce the publication of the 18th volume in our Brill series, AVISTA Studies in the History of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art, with "American Gothic: Reflections on Gothic Scholarship in America 1925–2025," edited by Robert Bork.

Use code DGBCONFC for 35% off the list price through October 31st, 2025, here: https://brill.com/display/title/72359

This book chronicles the contributions of American scholars to the study of European Gothic architecture. It traces this history through a series of biographical case studies of major figures ranging from Arthur Kingsley Porter to Robert Branner and Jean Bony to Caroline Bruzelius, calling attention to their influence as mentors and to the character of their professional networks. These biographical chapters are supplemented by thematic essays and a roundtable discussion of current issues in the field. Altogether, the book explains how working from overseas presents both significant challenges and valuable perspectives, allowing American scholars to enrich dialog in the field.

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Nov
3
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: John W. Baldwin Post-Doctoral Fellowship, UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies, Due 3 Nov. 2025

Call for Applications

UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies

John W. Baldwin Post-Doctoral Fellowship

Due 3 November 2025

The UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies is pleased to announce it is accepting applications for the John W. Baldwin Post-Doctoral Fellowship. It is a two-year position beginning July 1, 2026, for recent Ph.D. recipients whose work focuses on European medieval studies within a global comparative context. The application deadline is November 3, 2025.

Full position details and application link: https://recruit.apo.ucla.edu/JPF10513

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Nov
6
6:00 PM18:00

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

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

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Nov
6
7:00 PM19:00

Lecture: Beyond Text: Objects and Manuscripts in Sacred Storerooms across Medieval Africa, Dr. Ariel Fein, at University of Minnesota, Minneapolis

Carl Sheppard Memorial Lecture in Medieval Art History

Beyond Text: Objects and Manuscripts in Sacred Storerooms across Medieval Africa

Dr. Ariel Fein

1210 Heller Hall, 271 19th Ave S, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Thursday 6 November 2025 | 7 - 8:30 PM

The Cairo Geniza has long been celebrated as an accidental archive of “sacred trash”—a repository where medieval Jews deposited worn texts bearing God’s name. But what if this narrative of passive preservation of manuscripts obscures a more dynamic reality? Alongside manuscripts, the Geniza also preserved Torah ark doors, dedicatory panels, and carved inscriptions that moved between the synagogue’s walls and the storage chamber across centuries. This material reality—long overlooked in favor of textual treasures—reveals a broader phenomenon across medieval Africa. From the Great Mosque of Kairouan, where precious Qur’ans shared space with chandeliers, woodcarvings, armor, and manuscript chests, to Ethiopian monasteries preserving textiles beneath parchment deposits, to Coptic churches assembling new sanctuary screens from centuries-old wooden fragments, religious communities across the Mediterranean world stored objects and texts together in sacred repositories. Drawing on new evidence from Jewish, Islamic, and Christian sites, this lecture reveals how the medieval Mediterranean and Africa were connected through unexpected practices of material preservation—and what these practices tell us about memory, devotion, and the very nature of the sacred in the medieval world.

Ariel Fein is an art historian specializing in the visual cultures of Byzantium and the Islamic world, with a particular focus on intercultural and interreligious relationships across the Mediterranean. Her forthcoming book, Refugee to Kingmaker: George of Antioch and the Shaping of Norman Sicilian Visual Culture, examines how a twelfth-century Arab-Christian refugee rose from displacement to become Norman Sicily’s most influential administrator and cultural innovator. Her current project, Medieval Wood Networks, investigates the circulation, consumption, and preservation of decorated wooden objects across the Mediterranean, including extensive research on the carved furnishings of Cairo’s Ben Ezra Synagogue. Her research has been supported by the Institute for Advanced Study, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bard Graduate Center, the Medieval Academy of America, and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture. Dr. Fein received her PhD from Yale University and holds degrees from the Courtauld Institute of Art and Barnard College.

The Carl Sheppard Lecture is an annual lecture in honor of the late Carl Sheppard, former University of Minnesota professor of medieval European art history. Begun in 2012 and held every fall, the Carl Sheppard Memorial Lecture in Medieval Art History celebrates the richness and diversity of global medieval art by inviting an internationally-renowned scholar to the University of Minnesota. The event is open to the University community and the general public.

If you would like to make a gift, you can contribute to the Carl Sheppard Memorial Fund through the University of Minnesota Foundation. 

This event is cosponsored by the James Ford Bell Library and the Center for Jewish Studies.

For more information and to register, visit https://cla.umn.edu/premodern/news-events/events/beyond-text-objects-and-manuscripts-sacred-storerooms-across-medieval-africa

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Nov
22
10:00 AM10:00

Gallery Reopening: Arms and Armor Galleries, Worcester Art Museum, MA

Gallery Reopening

Arms and Armor Galleries

Worcester Art Museum, MA

Opens 22 November 2025

Image: Concept design rendering for the forthcoming arms and armor galleries. Courtesy TSKP x IKD.

Building a new home for a beloved collection

Work is currently underway on the Worcester Art Museum’s new Arms and Armor Galleries, opening on November 22, 2025. Through innovative design solutions and immersive displays, the new 5,000-square-foot galleries will allow visitors to explore more than 1,000 objects from the Museum’s Higgins Armory Collection, the second largest of its kind in the country. 

For more information about the opening, visit https://www.worcesterart.org/about/campus-transformation/arms-and-armor-gallery/

For more information about the Arms and Armor Galleries, visit https://www.worcesterart.org/exhibitions/arms-and-armor/

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Nov
30
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Going Places: Travel in the Middle Ages, Getty Center, Los Angeles, 2 Sept. - 30 Nov. 2025

Exhibition Closing

Going Places: Travel in the Middle Ages

Museum North Pavillion, Plaza Level, Getty Center, Los Angeles, California

2 September 2025 - 30 November 2025

Barlaam, Carrying a Shoulder Pack, Crosses a River (detail) from Barlaam and Josephat, 1469, follower of Hans Schilling. Ink, colored washes, and tempera colors. Getty Museum, Ms. Ludwig XV 9 (83.MR.179), fol. 38v

Free exhibition.

In medieval art, the act of movement from one place to another was conceptualized in a variety of imaginative forms. Featuring manuscripts from the Getty’s collection, this exhibition explores the reasons for travel, different modes of medieval travel, and examples of typical travelers. Illustrations often accurately documented the realities of travel and prompted viewers to travel virtually through their imaginations. The exhibition showcases the wide variety of contexts for medieval movement, from religious travel to diplomacy, trade, exploration, and exploitation.

This exhibition is presented in English and Spanish. Esta exhibición se presenta en inglés y en español.

For more information, visit https://www.getty.edu/exhibitions/going-places/

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Dec
5
5:00 PM17:00

Keynote for Index of Medieval Art Conference: Art as Proof: Statues and High Relief as Ideological Statements at the Time of the Image Controversy, c.750–850?, Francesca Dell’Acqua

Weitzmann Lecture—Keynote for Dec. 6 Index of Medieval Art Conference

Art as Proof: Statues and High Relief as Ideological Statements at the Time of the Image Controversy, c.750–850?

Francesca Dell’Acqua

Università di Salerno – DISPAC

Princeton University, Princeton, NJ

Friday, December 5, 2025, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Virgin Mary, ’effigiem . . . in statum’, gilt silver, embossed, commissioned by Pope Paul I (757–67), artistic impression; ©Matilde Grimaldi for Francesca Dell’Acqua, 2025.

At a synod convened by Emperor Louis the Pious in Paris in November 825, Frankish clerics debated the correct use of images in churches. After carefully considering texts and the traditions of the Church, they confirmed the long-attested view that the Incarnation (the pivotal Christian doctrine that God took on human form in Jesus Christ) legitimizes images. They also established that images should neither be worshiped nor destroyed. In fact, images could be used to instruct people about religion and morals and to elevate the mind to spiritual things. In this lecture I shall limit myself to considering the presence of high-relief and three-dimensional images in repoussé metalwork or other media in western churches before and after the Paris Synod, in the period of the image controversy (c.720s–850). Generally lost, high-relief and three-dimensional images are recorded in written sources.

High-relief and three-dimensional images from Rome, Gaul/Francia, England, and Langobardia have occasionally been mentioned in studies on early medieval art, either to retrace the re-birth of three-dimensional statuary or to discuss image worship. They have also been occasionally construed as attestations of iconophilia, that is an attitude in favor of sacred images. Whether this kind of image might have functioned as an ideological statement should be evaluated not only by considering the specific circumstances in which they were situated, but also the broader body of evidence offered by written sources and material culture between the fourth and the ninth centuries in various regions of the West. I set out to do this in my paper.

For more information, visit https://artandarchaeology.princeton.edu/whats/events/art-proof-statues-and-high-relief-ideological-statements-time-image-controversy-c750

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Dec
6
9:00 AM09:00

Index of Medieval Art Conference: Art and Proof in the Ninth Century

Save the Date

Index of Medieval Art conference

Art and Proof in the Ninth Century

6 December 2025

Hrabanus Maurus, In honorem sanctae crucis, Fulda or Mainz, 820–840. Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Cod. 652, fol. 17v, det.

Please save the date for the next Index of Medieval Art conference, “Art and Proof in the Ninth Century.” Organized by Professors Beatrice Kitzinger and Charlie Barber in collaboration with the Index and co-sponsored by the Department of Art & Archaeology, the conference will follow on the department’s 2025 Kurt Weitzmann Memorial Lecture by Francesca dell’Acqua (Università di Salerno) on December 5, which will double as the conference keynote.

The springing point of the conference is December 825, when the city of Paris witnessed a synod devoted to the discussion of the status of images in the Carolingian world. This meeting, convened in response to flare-ups of the “image question” in Constantinople and Rome, set forth a Latin Christian understanding of images that would remain dominant in early and high Medieval Europe. The dossier affirmed the value of images as mnemonics and devotional aids but ultimately re-asserted the primacy of verbal media in the religious sphere. However, as the conference speakers will show, artistic evidence itself suggests that ninth-century approaches to the role of images complicated and exceeded those prescribed for them by the bishops at Paris.

Prof. dell’Acqua’s lecture will directly address the Roman–Frankish context in which the Paris synod unfolded. The papers that follow will dramatically expand the lens through which we view the central questions by considering the notion of proof in the ninth century through a much wider lens, reaching from the British Isles to Japan and from Georgia to Egypt and representing a wide range of languages and religious communities. Key themes include: the terminology surrounding images and their uses; questions of representation, semiotics, authenticity and truth; propositions that need proving and their modes of proof; the functions and status of images in society, and how these are secured; how occasions for image discussion reflect on local circumstances and priorities; ways in which discussing the validity of images intersects with politics, diplomacy, or self-fashioning; whether the notion of proof in relation to images, which emerged from a specific Christian and European moment, resonates in other contexts; and whether a more global perspective provides different valences for the concept of “proof” through artwork.

Scheduled speakers

Francesca Dell’Acqua [Weitzmann Lecture, Dec. 5, 2025] Associate Professor, Università di Salerno

Andrea Achi, Associate Curator, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Nourane Ben Azzouna, Associate Curator, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Anouk Busset, Lecturer, Université de Lausanne                   

Zsuzsanna Gulacsi, Professor, Northern Arizona University

Rachel Saunders, Assistant Professor, Princeton University

Alexei Sivertsev, Professor, DePaul University

Erik Thunø, Professor, Rutgers University                     

Anca Vasiliu, [Respondent] Director of Research, CNRS, Sorbonne Université

The conference schedule and other details will be posted in the fall. We hope you can join us!

For more information, visit https://ima.princeton.edu/2025/06/17/save-the-date-for-the-next-index-conference-art-and-proof-in-the-ninth-century-dec-6-2025/

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Dec
7
12:00 PM12:00

Exhibition Closing: Medieval | Renaissance: A Dialogue on Early Italian Painting, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, 2 Sept. 2025 - 7 December 2025

Exhibition Closing

Medieval | Renaissance: A Dialogue on Early Italian Painting

Daley Family Gallery, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA

September 2, 2025–December 7, 2025

Umbria or Marche, Croce dipinta, ca. 1295. Tempera and metals on panel. The Frascione Collection.

The closing centuries of the Middle Ages in Italy witnessed profound transformations in the art of painting. New techniques gave way to an expanded repertoire of formats and artistic styles; patronage systems and workshop practices evolved in tandem with reassessments of the merit of authorship; and long-standardized criteria for value and authenticity in representation were steadily redefined. These paradigm-shifting developments—exemplified in Early Italian painting—ramified into the academic study and connoisseurship of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, creating a blurry line between the Medieval period and early modernity that has proven difficult to shake.

Medieval | Renaissance foregrounds this distinction, exhibiting nineteen rarely shown works from the Frascione Collection in Florence, founded in 1893. Featuring devotional icons, altarpiece panels, narrative scenes, and portraits from the late thirteenth through early sixteenth centuries, the exhibition charts innovations in the craft and conceptualization of painting in Italy after 1300. These paintings represent a liminal epoch between the later Middle Ages and the Early Renaissance, whose works and artists are shared—even “claimed”—by two divergent art historical fields, “Medieval” and “Renaissance,” with their own cultures, questions, and interpretive methods.

Curated by John Lansdowne and Stephanie C. Leone, specialists in Medieval and Renaissance art, respectively, the exhibition invites viewers to contemplate the works through two distinct art historical lenses and from either side of a long-standing and long-debated disciplinary divide.

Organized by the McMullen Museum, Medieval | Renaissance has been underwritten by Boston College with major support from the Patrons of the McMullen Museum.

For more information, visit https://mcmullenmuseum.bc.edu/exhibitions/medieval-renaissance/

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Dec
13
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice, Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery, England, 13 Sept. 2025 - 13 Dec. 2025

Exhibition Closing

The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice

Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery

Blackburn, England

13th September – 13th December 2025

Inspired by John Ruskin’s phrase “the nature of gothic”, this exhibition explores how artists across centuries have represented the natural world.

From Blackburn’s Hart collection of medieval and Islamic manuscripts, works from the Arts and Crafts Movement, including: ceramics, textiles, Private Press Books, and works by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Contemporary artistic responses further demonstrate the influence of the natural world.

The exhibition is part of the outcomes from the Museum’s National Portfolio Organisation (NPO) status, awarded by Arts Council England, as part of a wider story of cultural renewal in Blackburn.

‘The Nature of Gothic’ has also been supported by the Brian Mercer Trust, and by loans from a wide range of museums and galleries across the UK.

Once shaped by industrial wealth, Blackburn is now redefining its identity through art, heritage and community partnerships.

For more information, visit https://blackburnmuseum.org.uk/whats-on/the-nature-of-gothic/

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Dec
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Applications: Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award, Italian Art Society

Call for Applications

Italian Art Society

Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award

Due 15 December 2025

The Italian Art Society (IAS) welcomes applications for the Dorothy F. Glass Travel Award. The award of $1000 is meant to support an emerging or unaffiliated scholar traveling abroad to study, or to present on, the arts of the Italian Middle Ages. Preference will be given to scholars of sculpture, the major subject of Glass’s work. Recipients must be members of the Italian Art Society at the time of application and upon receipt of the award, and must not have received an IAS award in the previous two years. IAS officers are not eligible to apply. Deadline: December 15, 2025 Please email Dr. Silvia Bottinelli, Chair of the IAS Awards Committee, at awards@italianartsociety.org if you have any questions.

For more information, visist https://www.italianartsociety.org/grants-opportunities/travel-grants/dorothy-f-glass-icms-travel-award/

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Dec
31
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Journeys — Borders — Encounters, SASMARS Biennial International Conference (2-6 Sept. 2026, Stellenbosch, South Africa)

Call for Papers

The Southern African Society for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (SASMARS) Biennial International Conference

Journeys — Borders — Encounters

Mont Fleur Conference Venue, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 2-6 September 2026

Due by 31 December 2025

We are pleased to announce that the 27th Biennial International SASMARS Conference will be held from 3 to 6 September 2026 at the Mont Fleur Conference Venue in Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Papers for this interdisciplinary conference may cover any period within the Middle Ages and Renaissance, in any geographical space, and deal with any area of interest or discipline that could be relevant to the topic “Journeys — Borders — Encounters”.

Ideas to consider could include, but need not be limited to:

  • Travel and migration

  • Spiritual journeys and pilgrimage

  • Trade routes, trade, and trade goods

  • Encounters between cultures, peoples, religions, and the like

  • Physical or metaphorical boundaries

  • Maps and map-making

  • Evirnoments and ecology

  • Medicine and medical knowledge exchange

  • Intellectual and textual encounters and exchanges

  • War and campaigning

Proposals should consist of a title and abstract of up to 250 words, as well as the author’s name, affiliation, contact details, and a brief biography of no more than 100 words. Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes when read (approximately 2,500 words) and will be followed by a Q and A.

Please submit proposals to Carin Marais (samedrensociety@gmail.com) by 31 December 2025. Any enquiries can be sent to the same email address.

Our keynote speaker for the 2026 conference will be Professor Jordi Sánchez-Martí of the University of Alicante, Spain.

Professor Sánchez-Martí, B.A. (Jaume I), M.A. (Bristol), Ph.D. (Cornell) is a professor in English Literature and a Partner Principal Investigator on Re-mediating the Early Book: Pasts and Futures (REBPAF). Professor Sánchez-Martí has a particular interest in Middle English romances and their transmission, as well as Iberian books of chivalry in English translation and their circulation.


Please click for the conference details. More information and contact details on the SASMARS Facebook page and website.

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Jan
4
10:30 AM10:30

Exhibition Closing: Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City, 12 Sept. 2025 - 4 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Closing

Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life

The Morgan Library & Museum, New York City, NY

September 12, 2025 through January 4, 2026

Chanting Clerics, from the Windmill Psalter, England, London, late thirteenth century. The Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.102, fol. 100r (det). 

Traditionally ascribed to King David, the Hebrew Book of Psalms is a collection of sacred poems that constitute the longest and most popular book of the Bible. These poems include expressions of lament and loss, petitions and confessions, as well as exclamations of joy and thanksgiving— universal themes that speak to what it means to be human.

Sing a New Song traces the impact of the Psalms on men and women in medieval Europe from the sixth to the sixteenth century. It encompasses daily practices and performance, as well as the creation of Psalters (Books of Psalms), among the most richly ornamented manuscripts ever made. Stressing the integration of the Psalms in medieval life, topics range from children saying their prayers to people preparing to die.

The beginning of the exhibition is devoted to the Psalms’ origins, with special emphasis on David as composer. The following two sections show how Psalms permeated the intellectual culture of medieval Europe through translations into Latin and the vernacular. Children used Psalters to learn to read, patrons commissioned versions in their native languages, and theologians, glossing the Psalms, authored the most influential interpretive writings of the Middle Ages. The next section is dedicated to the medieval Psalter. More than any other text, Psalms informed the language of the liturgy, and the Psalter served effectively as the prayer book of the Church. Priests, monks, and nuns were required to pray all 150 Psalms weekly. Lay people across Europe, imitating these practices, fueled a demand for Psalters —often gloriously illuminated. Another section examines performance of the Psalms within the monastery, the church, and the private home. The final section examines the apotropaic function of Psalm texts, the use of Psalms as penitential atonement, and how Psalms comforted the dying.

For more information, visit https://www.themorgan.org/exhibitions/sing-a-new-song

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Jan
11
9:30 AM09:30

Closing Exhibition: Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux; Musée de Cluny, Paris, France, 7 Oct. 2025 to 11 Jan. 2026

Closing Exhibition

Le Moyen Âge du 19e siècle: Créations et faux dans les arts précieux

Musée de Cluny, Paris, France

Du 7 octobre 2025 au 11 janvier 2026

Après les événements révolutionnaires, le 19e siècle redécouvre le Moyen Âge, tout en le réinterprétant. Ce siècle, qui cultiva une rêverie romantique et connut d’importants progrès technologiques et la constitution de grandes collections, s’est inspiré du Moyen Âge en produisant des copies, des pastiches, des oeuvres composites et des faux. L’exposition permet des confrontations, mettant en regard certains objets médiévaux avec leurs "résonances" du 19e siècle.

Le propos est centré sur les arts précieux, dans leur acception médiévale : pièces d’orfèvrerie et d’émaillerie, ivoires, tissus précieux. Ces domaines ont en effet connu au 19e siècle un foisonnement de redécouvertes techniques. Ces phénomènes culturels et artistiques émergent dès les années 1820-1830 jusqu’à la veille de la Première Guerre mondiale, soit pendant un siècle environ. Collectionneurs, ateliers de création et de restauration, mais aussi faussaires, en sont les principaux acteurs, autour d’un marché de l’art en pleine expansion, focalisé sur Paris, qui apparaît alors comme la capitale des arts précieux.

Retrouvez toutes les dates des visites guidées de l'exposition ici

Tarif(s) :

  • Droit d'entrée plein tarif : 12€

  • Droit d'entrée tarif réduit : 10€

Pour plus d’informations, visitez https://www.musee-moyenage.fr/activites/programmation/le-moyen-age-du-19e-siecle.html

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Jan
25
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Fra Angelico, Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy, 26 Sept. 2025 - 25 Jan. 2026

Exhibition Closing

Fra Angelico

Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy

26 September 2025 - 25 January 2026

Beato Angelico, Trittico francescano (det.), 1428-1429. Su concessione del Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana – Museo di San Marco

From September 26, 2025, to January 25, 2026, the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco present Fra Angelico, an extraordinary and unprecedented exhibition devoted to an artist who symbolises fifteenth-century Florentine art and stands out as one of the greatest masters of Italian art of all time.

The exhibition, organized in collaboration between the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi, the Ministero della Cultura – Direzione regionale Musei nazionali Toscana and Museo di San Marco in a close dialogue between cultural institutions and the region, is one of the leading cultural events of 2025. It celebrates a father of the Renaissance in two venues: the Palazzo Strozzi and the Museo di San Marco.

The exhibition explores Fra Angelico’s art, development and influence and his relation to painters such as Lorenzo Monaco, Masaccio, and Filippo Lippi, as well as sculptors like Lorenzo Ghiberti, Michelozzo, and Luca della Robbia. Curated by Carl Brandon Strehlke, Curator Emeritus of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with – for the Museo di San Marco – Angelo Tartuferi, former Director of the Museo di San Marco, and Stefano Casciu, Regional Director of Musei nazionali Toscana, Fra Angelico marks the first major exhibition in Florence dedicated to the artist exactly seventy years after the monographic show of 1955, creating a unique dialogue between institutions and the region.

For more information, visit https://www.palazzostrozzi.org/en/archivio/exhibitions/angelico/,

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Jan
26
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Gothicisms, Musée du Louvre Lens, France, September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

Exhibition Closing

Gothicisms

Musée du Louvre Lens, Lens, France

September 24, 2025–January 26, 2026

From the birth of the cathedrals to the Goth counterculture and fantasy, Gothic art truly has traversed the centuries. In ground-breaking fashion, the Louvre-Lens is presenting its first ever panorama of Gothic art from the 12th to the 21st century, from its emergence through to the neo-Gothic style and right up to the “Goths” of today. 

Gothic art is closely associated with the age of the cathedral builders. As the first pan-European movement, it inspired exceptional artistic forms endowed with unparalleled expressive force. Sculptures, art objects, graphic arts, painting, photography, installations and furniture are gathered here in a journey through some 200 works of art. Together they reveal the recurrences and continuity of these Gothic languages, which blossomed during medieval times, came to life again in the 18th and 19th centuries, and still inspire us now. But where does the word Gothic come from? Why is this colourful art today associated with a dark aesthetic of black, night and the fantastic? How can this endlessly recurring attraction be explained? This chronological journey is interspersed with forays into specific topics, touching on the Gothic script, music, film and literature. It is an immersion into history and into society’s collective imagination to understand the origins and singularity of the Gothic movement: unique, multifaceted and very much alive today.  

Exhibition curators:
General curator: Annabelle Ténèze, director of the Louvre-Lens
Scientific curator: Florian Meunier, chief heritage curator at the Department of Art Objects, Musée du Louvre
Scientific advisor: Dominique de Font-Réaulx, general heritage curator, specialising in the 19th century, special advisor to the President-Director of the Musée du Louvre
Associate curator: Hélène Bouillon, general heritage curator
Assisted by Caroline Tureck, head of publications and documentation at the Louvre-Lens
Scenography: Mathis Boucher, scenographer, Louvre-Lens

This project was made possible thanks to the support of the Musée de Cluny – Musée national du Moyen Âge, Cité de l’architecture et du Patrimoine, Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Musée des Arts décoratifs de Strasbourg.

For more information, visit https://www.louvrelens.fr/en/exhibition/gothicisms-2/

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Feb
20
12:00 AM00:00

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

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Feb
22
10:00 AM10:00

Exhibition Closing: Paws on Parchment, The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, August 06, 2025–February 22, 2026

Exhibition closing

Paws on Parchment

Centre Street Building, Level 3, Medieval Gallery

The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, MD

August 06, 2025–February 22, 2026

Flanders, Prayer Book, late 15th-century. Acquired by Henry Walters.

Cat lovers unite! The Walters is celebrating our feline friends with this paws-itively adorable exhibition. Paws on Parchment explores how medieval people thought about, engaged with, and admired cats through the animals’ presence in manuscripts from the period. Centuries before cat memes took over the internet, the antics of fanciful felines were already popular in the margins of medieval manuscripts. These furry animals delighted readers back then just as they amuse us today.

Cats played an important role in the medieval era. Like today, cats were considered beloved pets whose behavior amused and exasperated their owners. However, felines also served an important function as hunters that protected valuable books and textiles, food stores, and even people from disease-carrying rodents and other vermin. Cats also carried deep symbolic and moral meaning in this period.

In Paws on Parchment, visitors will enjoy medieval depictions of cats preserved in the pages of manuscripts from across the world, including a 15th-century “keyboard cat.” Most notably, visitors can see real pawprints left by a cat walking across the pages of a Flemish manuscript as the ink dried in the 1470s. A handful of these “pawprint” manuscripts are known around the world, and this is the first time the Walters’ example will ever be shown.

Curator: Lynley Anne Herbert, Robert and Nancy Hall Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts

For more information, visit https://thewalters.org/exhibitions/paws/

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Sep
19
12:00 AM00:00

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

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.

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Sep
18
12:30 PM12:30

Online Lecture: Ancient India: sacred stone, British Museum

Online Lecture

British Museum

Ancient India
sacred stone

18 September 2025, 17.30–18.30 BST (12:30–13:30 ET)

Join award-winning earth scientist Dr Anjana Khatwa in conversation with Dr Sushma Jansari, curator of the Ancient India: living traditions exhibition, as they discuss the sacredness of rock.

Rock is an often-invisible aspect of our natural world – a backdrop to our busy lives that exists silently, unseen and unrecognised. But for thousands of years on the Indian subcontinent, it has been seen as sacred – imbued with the spirit of Ma Dharti, Mother Earth.

The 21 incarnations of Ma Dharti take shape in wondrous forms, from Parvati, goddess of the Himalaya mountains, to a small rocky outcrop in a temple worshipped as the goddess Shitala. Even the red quartz pebbles found in the Narmada River in India are considered sacred, seen as representations of Lord Shiva. These belief systems align with other cultures across the world – where animacy, life and spirit is present even in inanimate aspects of the natural world. In this talk, Khatwa reframes our relationship with the geological landscape by drawing together science, Indigenous knowledge and wisdom from global majority cultures.

This event is part of the Art History Festival 2025 organised by the Association for Art History. It's also part of the public programme supporting the exhibition Ancient India: living traditions (open until 19 October).

For more information and to book tickets, visit https://www.britishmuseum.org/events/ancient-india-sacred-stone

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Sep
18
11:30 AM11:30

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

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Sep
18
9:30 AM09:30

Exhibition Opening: Retablos II: Spanish Paintings and Polychromed Sculpture from the 13th to 16th Centuries, Sam Fogg Gallery, London

Exhibition Opening

Retablos II

Spanish Paintings and Polychromed Sculpture from the 13th to 16th Centuries

Sam Fogg Gallery, London, England

18 September - 17 October 2025

The late medieval period was a time of extraordinary artistic dynamism in the Spanish kingdoms. Among its most remarkable expressions was the retablo, a type of fixed monumental altarpiece unique to the Iberian Peninsula. Positioned behind the altar table and completely filling the apse in a display of brilliant colours and shimmering gold leaf, Spanish retablos reached towering dimensions, combining panel paintings, polychromed sculptures and sumptuous traceried frames. Their scale, presence, and graphic depiction of the lives and deaths of the Christian saints made them the visual and spiritual focus of Spanish churches, framing the liturgy and guiding devotion. 

Over the centuries, many retablos were dismembered as a result of renovation, changing taste, or simple decay. Most have been scattered across private collections and museums right around the world, a process which, paradoxically, often ensured their survival. Following the success of the gallery's first exhibition of Spanish late-medieval retablos in 2019, this new iteration brings together eighteen panel paintings alongside five polychromed sculptures created by artists working in the wealthy northern Spanish kingdoms of Castile and Aragon between around 1250 and 1520. Selected highlights from the exhibition can be seen below, by scrolling down this page, but a complete digital catalogue of the exhibition is available upon request. 

The arresting, inventive, and iconographically complex works of art brought together for this new exhibition all reflect the rich and rapidly changing artistic climate that characterised the Iberian Peninsula during the period. The earliest paintings in the group vividly document the influence of the so-called 'International Gothic' style with its decorative stylisation, rich colour and lavish application of gold, which persisted in Spain longer than anywhere else in Europe. As we move through the fifteenth century however, we begin to discern new models and innovations introduced from Northern Europe through trade routes, itinerant artists and the circulation of drawings and prints. Rather than abandoning tradition, artists and workshops right across Spain adapted to change in remarkable, creative ways, assimilating foreign influences and transforming them into a distinctive Iberian style which, though regionally diverse, stands out for its material richness and complexity. Collectively, these astonishing and arresting works of art help to shine a searing light on the extraordinary artistic splendour of medieval Spain as it developed and evolved from the end of the Romanesque to the birth of the Renaissance.

For more information, visit https://www.samfogg.com/exhibitions/64/

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Sep
17
6:00 PM18:00

Curator Roundtable: Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life, The Morgan Library & Museum

Curator Roundtable

Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life

Gilder Lehrman Hall, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York, NY

Wednesday, 17 September 2025, 6–7 PM

Chanting Clerics, from the Windmill Psalter, England, London, late thirteenth century. The Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.102, fol. 100r (det).

Tickets: Free; advance registration is required.

Join curators Roger Wieck, Deirdre Jackson, Joshua O’Driscoll, and Frederica Law-Turner to explore the exhibition’s themes and objects. Moderated by art historian Lucy Freeman Sandler, the discussion will delve into the Psalms’ origins, the uses of Psalters in daily life, and the curatorial process.

The Hebrew Book of Psalms is a collection of sacred poems that constitute the longest and most popular book of the Bible. These poems include expressions of lament and loss, petitions and confessions, as well as exclamations of joy and thanksgiving— universal themes that speak to what it means to be human. The exhibition Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life traces the impact of the Psalms on men and women in medieval Europe from the sixth to the sixteenth century.

The program takes place in Gilder Lehrman Hall on the Ground Floor. Doors to the Hall will open 30 minutes before the program begins. Attendees are invited to view Sing a New Song: The Psalms in Medieval Art and Life from 5:30-6 PM.

Please e-mail public_programs@themorgan.org with questions about accessibility.

For more information and to register, visit https://www.themorgan.org/programs/curator-roundtable-sing-new-song-psalms-medieval-art-and-life

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Sep
16
4:30 PM16:30

Lecture: Extracting the Past: How the ‘AI’ Industry Exploits Art History and What We Can Do to Stop It, Sonja Drimmer, at Wesleyan University (CT)

Lecture

Extracting the Past: How the ‘AI’ Industry Exploits Art History and What We Can Do to Stop It

Sonja Drimmer

Tuesday, September 16, 2025 at 4:30pm

Boger Hall, Room 112, 41 Wyllys Avenue, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut

Free and open to the public.

Sonja Drimmer, Associate Professor of Medieval Art at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, will discuss the relationship between artificial intelligence and the practice of art history in the lecture “Extracting the Past: How the ‘AI’ Industry Exploits Art History and What We Can Do to Stop It.”

Over the last several years, universities and museums have partnered with commercial technology firms like Google, Microsoft, and Meta, who have promised that their AI products will enhance both historical research and accessibility to historical collections. These promises, however, are not supported by the reality of what computer vision—the branch of AI most relevant to the history of art—can achieve. So why have major institutions in education and the arts been so quick to take up these firms' offers?

This talk responds to this question by providing an introduction to computer vision’s origins in military surveillance, an overview of its development under late capitalist regimes of exploitative micro-labor, and an orientation to how computer vision works. However, the main focus of this talk is not what computer vision does. Rather, Drimmer considers the culture of the AI industry, its main objectives, and the dangerous vision for the future that it promises—and whether those promises are credible or even in good faith. This vision for the future has relied on extracting history, and art history in particular, and Drimmer argues that it is our responsibility as art historians to be knowledgeable about the forms this extraction takes. Drimmer concludes with suggestions about what we can do to protect the subjects and practitioners of our discipline, as well as education in the humanities more broadly, against this incursion. Drimmer does not intend an intransigent rejection of a given technology; rather this talk articulates a challenge that is grounded in knowledge of the historical origins and corporate practices of the AI industry today.

Drimmer is Associate Professor in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. A scholar of medieval European art with expertise in illuminated manuscripts and early print, Drimmer's longstanding interests in premodern notions of reproduction, replication, and media theory have led her to move beyond the medieval world and focus on the relationship between modern technology--from photography to artificial intelligence--and the history of art. Her first book, The Art of Allusion: Illuminators and the Making of English Literature, 1403–1476 (UPenn, 2018) is the first study devoted to the origins of the English literary canon as an illustrated corpus, and it received High Commendation for Exemplary Scholarship from the Historians of British Art. She is currently completing a monograph titled Impressive Politics: Print before the Press in Late Medieval England. Her writing on AI has appeared in both public and academic venues, including Artforum, The International Journal for Digital Art History, The Conversation, Art in America, and Art News.

Sponsored by the Samuel Silipo ’85 Distinguished Visitors Fund, Department of Art and Art History, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, and the Medieval Studies Program.

For more information, visit https://www.wesleyan.edu/cfa/events/2025/09-2025/09162025-sonja-drimmer.html

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Buboes, Orificies, and Horns: Non-Normative Bodies, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

Call for Papers

Buboes, Orificies, and Horns: Non-Normative Bodies

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, May 14-16, 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

This panel examines medieval conceptualisations and representations of (non-)normative bodies, and aims to better understand the demarcations between the human and non-human, the abled and disabled, the white and non-white/racialised, the gender conforming and gender non-conforming body. We welcome interdisciplinary approaches, including art history, literary criticism, disability studies, critical race studies, and gender studies. We adopt a broad definition of the ‘medieval world,’ and invite contributions on material from all geographic regions and time periods between ca. 500-1500, as well as the later re-appropriation of medieval material. Contributions that study the intersection of two or more bodily markers are encouraged.

We welcome papers from researchers, curators, conservators, librarians, and graduate students working on medieval bodies. This session will be held in person. Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be submitted via the Confex proposal portal by 15 September 2025.

For more information or questions, please contact the organisers, Imke Vet (imke.vet@yale.edu) and Se Jin Park (sejin.park@yale.edu).

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out: Psychedelic Approaches to Medieval Objects, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

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. 

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: The Beast and the Sovereign: Zoopolitics in the Middle Ages, IMC Leeds 2026

Call for Papers for Session

The Beast and the Sovereign: Zoopolitics in the Middle Ages

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

Throughout the Middle Ages, relations of power and notions of political authority were often framed as or compared to relations between human and nonhuman animals. Medieval zoopolitics in its various manifestations and aspects emerged from the tension between the cultural and natural orders, between the human and animal community. The session will discuss the nonhuman dimensions, practices, and ideas about authority, rulership, and politics throughout the Middle Ages found both in fact and in fiction. Potential themes may include, but are not limited to:

  • animal metaphors and zoomorphism of rulers and rulership

  • rulers’ command over nature as their entitlement to authority over humans

  • hybrid and liminal nature of rulership

  • taming and domestication of wild rulers

  • naturalization of power and legitimacy

  • treatment and comparison of one’s subjects to animals and beasts

  • dehumanization and animalization of one’s enemies

  • animal fables and anthropomorphism of animals as reflections on the nature of power

To propose a paper:

Please submit a paper title and abstract (max 200 words) with your name, email address and academic affiliation to Wojtek Jezierski, Department of Historical Studies, University of Gothenburg, Sweden (wojtek.jezierski@gu.se) by 15 September 2025.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Medievalism in Time and Space, The International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference (Nov. 14-15, 2025), Online

Call for Papers

The International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference

Medievalism in Time and Space

Fully Online

November 14-15, 2025

Due by 15 September 2025

Hosted by Anita Obermeier and the Institute for Medieval Studies at the University of New Mexico

Medievalism is the reception of the Middle Ages in postmedieval times—as well as the ongoing invention, reinvention, construction, and reconstruction of the global medieval past, broadly defined.

Just as Arthurian legend, Beowulf, Norse/Viking myth, and The Thousand and One Nights are continually reinvented, so too are Arabic sīras, Indian epics and Bhakti/Sufi traditions, and Chinese classical novels and poetry—each reshaped to meet modern cultural, national, and global needs.

We welcome proposals that explore:

  • Medievalisms in Time and Space: temporalities and their relations; interior/psychic spaces, contested spaces, real and imagined geographies, Outer Space, and trans-temporalities.

  • Trans-Medievalisms (broadly conceived): e.g., transgender medievalisms, transformative medievalisms, transgressive medievalisms, and other “trans-” crossings of period, genre, medium, and place.

While we encourage work engaging these themes, papers on any aspect of medievalism are welcome.

Submission: Please submit your proposal via the Google Form below by September 15, 2025.
Queries: Angela Weisl (angela.weisl@shu.edu) or Michael Evans (michaelevans@delta.edu)
Submission Form: We may charge a nominal fee of $30 to faculty, but we will not charge international participants with undervalued currencies. For folks outside of the USA, Canada, and Europe, participation is for free.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for International Conference: Entangled Seascapes: More-Than-Human Histories Across Oceanic Worlds (Academia Belgica, Rome, 22-23 Jan. 2026)

Call for Papers

International Conference

ENTANGLED SEASCAPES: MORE-THAN-HUMAN HISTORIES ACROSS OCEANIC WORLDS

Academia Belgica, Rome, 22-23 January 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

This conference seeks to bring together scholars working on pre-modern and early modern oceanic worlds: from the Indian Ocean, South China Sea, and the Pacific to the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Framed within the emerging field of blue humanities and building on posthumanist and decolonial perspectives, the conference explores the sea not as a passive space between empires or cultures, but as an active, more-than-human agent, one that shapes and is shaped by human and nonhuman actors. By focusing on more-than-human histories and material entanglements, we aim to challenge dominant land-based narratives of civilisation, encounters, and sovereignties.

Key themes

  • Oceanic materialities: boats, corals, shells, and sea-assemblages

  • Sea deities, spirits, and cosmologies in art, architecture, and ritual

  • Oral and literary traditions: the sea as danger, promise, or divine force

  • Archaeologies of marginal maritime communities (fisherfolk, pirates, boatbuilders, islanders, sea-nomads)

  • Indigenous, subaltern, and local knowledge systems connected to seafaring and/or oceanic life

  • More-than-human entanglements in past seascapes: marine animals, currents, winds, tides, and reefs

Research questions

  • How have seascapes shaped and been shaped by human and nonhuman actors in pre-modern and early modern worlds?

  • By shifting the focus from terrestrial centres to oceanic edges, what alternative historical narratives emerge, particularly those informed by non-elite perspectives and lived experiences of the sea?

  • How can oceanic entanglements prompt a rethinking of material culture, human-environment relations, and historical agency by exploring not only the practical uses of the sea but also the cognitive and affective dimensions of maritime experience in the past?

An optional field visit to a museum relevant to the themes of the conference will be organised on Saturday, 24 January 2026. Further details will be announced in due course.

Abstracts

The conference is intended to be multidisciplinary, and we welcome contributions from historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, human geographers and any scholars interested in seascapes, more-than-human thinking and related theoretical approaches.

Participants will be given a 45-minute slot, with 30 minutes for their paper, followed by 15 minutes for Q&As.

In order to be considered, please submit a proposed paper title along with a short abstract (approximately 350 words) no later than 15 September 2025 to Matthew Cobb m.cobb@uwtsd.ac.uk and Daniela De Simone daniela.desimone@ugent.be. Notifications of acceptance will be sent by 15 October 2025.

To support the organisation of the conference, a fee of €80 will be kindly requested from the accepted participants.

Publication plans

Selected participants will be asked to submit an extended abstract (1,500-2,000 words) by 5 January 2026. This should detail your theoretical framework and include five key references.

The extended abstracts will be circulated among conference participants in advance to facilitate informed discussion. Beyond the conference event itself, our intention is for revised versions of these papers to be submitted for a journal special issue.

Keynote

The keynote lecture will be delivered by Professor Serpil Oppermann, Director of the Environmental Humanities Center at Cappadocia University, and author of Blue Humanities: Storied Waterscapes in the Anthropocene (Cambridge University Press, 2023).

Entangled Seascapes is intended not only as a forum for presenting original research, but also as a collaborative space for scholarly exchange and long-term network-building among researchers working on oceanic and more-than-human histories from across the worlds.

Convenors:

Matthew Cobb, University of Wales Trinity Saint David

Daniela De Simone, Ghent University

Organising Committee:

Academia Belgica

Annalisa Bocchetti, "L'Orientale," University of Naples

Matthew Cobb, University of Wales Trinity Saint David

Daniela De Simone, Ghent University

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Special Session: Queer(ing) Medieval Art (2): New Queer Notations: Glimpses, Sketches, Fledgling Ideas, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

call for Papers for Special Session

Queer(ing) Medieval Art (2)

New Queer Notations: Glimpses, Sketches, Fledgling Ideas

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI

May 14-16, 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

Fledgling ideas and reflections on queer(ing) medieval art often begin as glimpses and sketches. Scholars regularly set these “small” discoveries or field notes aside in the hopes of returning to them later or building them into larger, more formalized projects. This exploratory session invites speakers to share in-progress research or potential new approaches to queer medieval studies, with the aim of fostering generative conversations and collaborations. Following five to six lightning papers (max. 10–12 minutes), the session organizers will act as respondents and discussion facilitators. We invite participants to return to those provocative, marginal, or fugitive pieces of visual and material culture they have yet to “solve,” and to expand the possibilities and directions of the field.

To reduce barriers, this session is being offered in a hybrid format. Speakers are welcome to present virtually or in person.

Please submit proposals, including an abstract of no more than 100 words, via the ICMS-Kalamazoo Confex website by September 15, 2025: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi/Session/7381

Questions? Contact Kris Racaniello (kris.racaniello@gmail.com) or Erika Loic (eloic@fsu.edu).

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Panels: New Research on the Art and Architecture of Medieval Parish Churches (1: in person) and (2: virtual), ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

Call for Papers for Panels

New Research on the Art and Architecture of Medieval Parish Churches (1: in person) and (2: virtual)

International Congress on Medieval Studies

Kalamazoo, MI
May 14-16, 2026

Due 15 September 2025

Scholars are invited to propose presentations on any aspect of the art and architecture of the medieval parish church. Possible research questions include, but are not limited to: How did the architecture, art, or visual culture of the parish define the medieval worship experience? How did individual churches change over time—and what can these changes reveal about each parish community? How can in-depth study of a local parish church expand or contradict broader national narratives? What new methodologies can twenty-first century scholars use to tell the story of the medieval parish?

To submit a proposal for the in-person session: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi/Session/7517.

To submit a proposal for the virtual session: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi/Session/7653.

Proposals should consist of a title, an abstract (300 words or less), and a short description (50 words or less) which may be made public if the proposal is accepted. Please also include the author's name, affiliation and contact information.

For general information on the International Congress on Medieval Studies CFP process, see https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call.

For questions related to this panel, contact the session presider, Catherine E. Hundley: chundley[at]wesleyseminary.edu.

Proposals are due September 15, 2025.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Sponsored Session: Music and the Visual Arts, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

Call for Papers for Sponsored Session

Music and the Visual Arts

Sponsored by Musicology at Kalamazoo

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

Due 15 September 2025

This session focuses on the connections between medieval music and the visual arts. Scholars may adopt a wide range of approaches and methodologies drawn from musicology, art history, and elsewhere. We welcome papers that either consider specific and direct relationships (e.g., art that depicts musicians or instruments; marginalia in music books; music that describes handicrafts) or papers that investigate more abstract connections between sound and sight (e.g., philosophical/epistemological approaches). This session offers a space for cross-disciplinary discussion among art historians, musicologists, and others with the aim of enriching our understanding of the medieval period.

Abstracts are due on September 15, 2025, and may be submitted at this website.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: Denying and undermining sainthood in the Middle Ages, IMC Leeds 2026

Call for Papers for Session

Denying and undermining sainthood in the Middle Ages

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 6-9 July 2026)

Due by 15 September 2025

Ever since Christianity began recognising sainthood, there has also been a parallel phenomenon of its denial. The uncovering of a false martyr’s tomb by St. Martin, and the Dominican inquisitor’s campaign against the cult of Guinefort, the holy greyhound, are among the most well-known examples of such interventions.

The session will discuss the phenomenon of denying and undermining sainthood in Latin Christianity throughout the Middle Ages, its various manifestations and aspects. Potential themes may include, but are not limited to:

- undermining sainthood and refusal to recognise a cult by official church authorities

- questioning sainthood as part of the canonisation process

- refusal to worship approved saints and lack of worship of figures eligible for sainthood

- undermining and diminishing the sanctity of holy patrons by competing ecclesiastical institutions, social groups, political communities, etc.

- questioning sainthood as an element of religious conflicts and a part of heterodox groups’ doctrine and teaching

- questioning the authenticity of relics and sceptical discourse towards the cult of relics

- destroying images of saints and artistic expressions of denying sainthood

To propose a paper

Please submit a paper title and abstract (max 200 words) with your name, email address and academic affiliation to Grzegorz Pac (gl.pac@uw.edu.pl) by 15 September 2025

The session is organised as part of the project RECOGNISING SAINTS in the High Middle Ages: Local and Papal Formalisation of Cults Reconsidered, funded by the National Science Centre, Poland, and hosted by the Faculty of History, University of Warsaw.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Boundaries, Crossings, and Crossroads in the Medieval Iberian Worlds (500-1600), Fordham University, New York City (27 Feb.- 1 Mar. 2026)

Call for Papers

44th Annual Medieval Studies Conference

Boundaries, Crossings, and Crossroads in the Medieval Iberian Worlds (500-1600)

February 27-March 1, 2026

Lincoln Center Campus, Fordham University, New York City

Due by September 15, 2025

We are excited to announce that the Center for Medieval Studies at Fordham University will host its 44th Annual Medieval Studies Conference on February 27-March 1, 2026 at Fordham's Lincoln Center campus in New York City on "Boundaries, Crossings, and Crossroads in the Medieval Iberian Worlds (500-1600)." The conference is hosted by Fordham's Center for Medieval Studies with additional support from el taller @ KJCC at New York University.

Plenary Speakers:

Thomas Burman (University of Notre Dame)

María Judith Feliciano (CSIC, Madrid)

Anita Savo (Boston University)


Please see the website for the call for papers: https://mvstconference.ace.fordham.edu/iberianworlds/

Those interested in presenting should submit a 250-word abstract and CV to medievals@fordham.edu by September 15, 2025. Registration will be waived for conference speakers.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Metropolitan Museum Journal

Call for Papers

Metropolitan Museum Journal

Sponsored by the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Due By 15 September 2025

The Editorial Board of the peer-reviewed Metropolitan Museum Journal invites submissions of original research on works in the Museum’s collection. Beginning with Volume 52 (2017), there will be two sections: Full-length Articles and Research Notes. Full-length Articles contribute extensive and thoroughly argued scholarship. Research Notes typically present a concise, neatly bounded aspect of ongoing study, such as the presentation of a new acquisition or attribution, or a specific, resonant finding from technical analysis. All texts must take works of art in the collection as the point of departure.

We look forward to receiving your submission, whether a first-time investigation or a critical reassessment from the Museum's vast holdings.

To be considered for the following year’s volume, the complete article must be submitted by September 15.

Click here for more information.

Click here to view inspiration from the Collection

View the Journal here

View the instructions for authors 

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

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

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.

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: Queer(ing) Medieval Art (1): Queer Spatiality, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

Call for Papers for Session

Queer(ing) Medieval Art (1)

Queer Spatiality

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI

May 14-16, 2026

Due by 15 September 2025

De balneis Puteolanis, Italy, ca. 1400 (New York, Morgan Library and Museum, detail of MS G.74 fol. 19r)

Centering the relational as subject, this session defines spatiality through the interpersonal and intermedial, seeking papers addressing queer places and spaces. Although typically evocative of architectural studies, we envision "Queer Spatiality" as an expansive category, encompassing a variety of subfields, including performance studies, sensory studies, and textual studies. This session seeks papers addressing the places and spaces where queer people moved, lived, died, bathed, and made. Where was medieval queerness practiced, resisted, felt out, negotiated, managed, materialized, forbidden, or visualized?

Presenters might address how liquid waterworks or textile architectures shaped queer medieval identities and communities, discussing, for example, caravansaries or bathhouses, or soundscapes generated by itinerant sexworkers' pavilions. How did class factor into making and archiving queer space? Other subjects might include the production of queer olfactory zones, "unsettled" living or settlement rejection (broadly defined, from migration to enslavement), burial settings as utopian community building, explorations of the materials, construction methods, and iconographies that characterized or archived these spaces and architectures, etc. We particularly welcome papers with a secular/non-Christian medieval queer or Trans* focus and especially papers on lesbians/wlw.

*The ICMA is able to offer Kress Foundation reimbursements for this session for domestic travel up to $600; overseas travel up to $1200: https://www.medievalart.org/kress-travel-grant

Please submit proposals, including an abstract of no more than 100 words, via the ICMS-Kalamazoo Confex website by September 15, 2025: https://icms.confex.com/icms/2026/prelim.cgi/Session/7380

Questions? Contact Kris Racaniello (kris.racaniello@gmail.com) or Erika Loic (eloic@fsu.edu).

Please consider submitting to one of two Queer(ing) Medieval Art sessions at Kalamazoo! This IN-PERSON session is sponsored by the ICMA (reimbursements for domestic travel up to $600; overseas travel up to $1200).

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: A Sensory History of Devotion in the Late Medieval Meditteranean World, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026

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

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Sep
15
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Timely Tusks: New Approaches to Global Medieval Ivories, ICMS Kalamazoo (14-16 May 2025)

Call for Papers

Timely Tusks: New Approaches to Global Medieval Ivories

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo (May 14 - 16, 2026)

Due by 15 September 2025

1997 was a landmark year for the study of Gothic ivories, with the exhibition Images in Ivory at the Detroit Museum of Art and a plenary talk and two sessions at Kalamazoo. Thirty years later, the field has seen an explosion of scholarship and approaches, making for a timely revisit. The proposed session welcomes papers that examine ivory from 500-1500 - from anywhere and of any type. Topics might include the trade and market in raw materials, the organization and processes of production, the use and handling of various object types, issues of iconography, and post-medieval collecting, reception and treatment.

For more information and to submit, visit: https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call

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Sep
14
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Session: Birgitta of Sweden and her Legacy, IMC Leeds (6-9 July 2026)

Call for Papers for Session

Birgitta of Sweden and her Legacy

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, UK

6 July 2026 - 9 July 2026

Due by 14 September 2025

Revelationes caelestes, Lübeck: Bartholomaeus Ghotan, before 1492, f. 288v (München, BSB, 2 Inc.c.a. 2689)

No medieval conference without Birgitta, right? For International Medieval Congress - University of Leeds, we invite papers investigating all aspects of time in the life, works, and afterlife of Birgitta of Sweden, as well as the history of the Birgittine Order.

Possible themes:

  • Times in Birgitta's works (depictions of past and contemporary historical events, sacred history, or visions)

  • Birgittine piety in connection with time

  • The novelty of Birgitta's work and teaching

  • The afterlife of Birgitta (canonisation, veneration, criticism, or postmedieval representations)

  • Innovations and changes in the Birgittine monasteries

  • Relationships of Birgittine monasteries to Birgitta

We are deliberately aiming broadly now and will narrow the session(s) depending on your suggestions.

Please send an abstract of around 200 words and a brief biography by 14 September 2025 to Iliana Kandzha (ilk@hum.ku.dk) and Barbara Müller (barbara.mueller@uni-hamburg.de). We will let you know by the end of September; if relevant, the bursary application deadline is 15 October.

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Sep
14
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Panel: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Study of Medieval Roofing Systems from Europe to the Christian East, IMC Leeds 2026

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

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Sep
14
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Panel Series: The Materiality of the Late Medieval Book: Production, Reading, and Transition, IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 14 September 2025

Call for Papers for Panel Series

The Materiality of the Late Medieval Book: Production, Reading, and Transition

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Due By 14 September 2025

We invite proposals for papers for a series of panels at the International Medieval Congress (IMC), to be held in Leeds, 6–9 July 2026. This session series will explore the materiality of the late medieval book between c. 1350 and 1540, with a particular emphasis on approaches that take the physical object as the foundation of scholarly inquiry. This strand aims to foreground the book as a material artefact – not simply as a vehicle for text or image, but as a made, handled, and interpreted object. We seek contributions that begin with codicological, palaeographical, artifactual, or structural features of books – bindings, layouts, quire structures, scripts, substrates, wear patterns, or added matter – and use these material traces to investigate broader questions of cultural practice, intellectual history, devotional life, or reading habits.

Papers may address, but are not limited to:

  • Material production: physical construction of books, use of specific materials (parchment, paper, pigments), regional or institutional practices

  • Reading and handling: how physical features shaped reading practices and reader interaction; evidence of use such as marginalia, damage, repairs, signs of wear, and ownership traces; and the repurposing, circulation, or afterlives of books

  • Transitions and continuities: how the rise of print engages with manuscript materiality – including hybrid books, printed texts with manuscript additions, and conservative or experimental formats that blur traditional boundaries

  • Methodologies: new approaches to studying the physical book as evidence and object

We particularly welcome work grounded in close analysis of specific manuscripts, printed books, or fragments.

Please send an abstract of no more than 250 words, along with your name, institutional affiliation, and a brief biographical note (max. 100 words), to Janne van der Loop, (jannevanderloop@uni-mainz.de) by 14 September 2025.

Selected papers will form part of a multi-session strand proposal for IMC 2026. Applicants will be notified of the outcome around 20 September 2025. For questions or further information, please contact Janne van der Loop (jannevanderloop@uni-mainz.de) or Ad Putter (A.D.Putter@bristol.ac.uk)

We look forward to papers that place the material form of the late medieval book at the centre of scholarly interpretation.

Sponsored by REBPAF and Mainzer Buch Wissenshaft

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Sep
13
7:00 PM19:00

Call for Papers for Session: The Middle Ages in the Modern Classroom, IMC Leeds 2026, Due by 14 Sept. 2025 Midnight BST

Call for Papers for Session

The Middle Ages in the Modern Classroom

International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 6-9 July 2026

Due by 14 September 2025, 12:00AM BST

(13 September 2025, 7:00PM ET)

Despite the modern era’s fascination with the Middle Ages, teaching the medieval past to modern students remains a challenge. How do we, as teachers, academics, and educators share the love and enthusiasm we have for the period with our students?

This session invites proposals that explore how medieval material is taught in the contemporary classroom, at all levels of education.

  • Pedagogical Approaches – innovative methods for engaging students with medieval content

  • Digital Tools – use of digital tools, technologies and platforms in the classroom

  • Making the Medieval Relevant – dispelling the ‘Dark Ages’ and other misconceptions

  • Modes of Assessment – finding new ways to evaluate learning

  • Teaching Medievalism – use, abuse, and appropriation of the Middle Ages in modern politics and culture

  • Accessibility and Inclusion – creating inclusive learning spaces and teaching the Middle Ages with sensitivity to contemporary race, gender, disability and identity politics

  • Decolonising and Diversifying the Curriculum – strategies for incorporating the Middle Ages into diverse curricula, as well as challenging Eurocentric perspectives

  • And anything else relating to teaching the Middle Ages!

Please submit abstracts of up to 200 words by midnight 14 September (BST) to m.k.d.cobb@leeds.ac.uk and r.gillibrand@leeds.ac.uk. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions or queries

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Sep
13
11:00 AM11:00

Exhibition Opening: The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice, Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery, England, 13 Sept. 2025 - 13 Dec. 2025

Exhibition

The Nature of Gothic: Reflecting the Natural World in Historic and Contemporary Artistic Practice

Blackburn Museum & Art Gallery

Blackburn, England

13th September – 13th December 2025

Inspired by John Ruskin’s phrase “the nature of gothic”, this exhibition explores how artists across centuries have represented the natural world.

From Blackburn’s Hart collection of medieval and Islamic manuscripts, works from the Arts and Crafts Movement, including: ceramics, textiles, Private Press Books, and works by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Contemporary artistic responses further demonstrate the influence of the natural world.

The exhibition is part of the outcomes from the Museum’s National Portfolio Organisation (NPO) status, awarded by Arts Council England, as part of a wider story of cultural renewal in Blackburn.

‘The Nature of Gothic’ has also been supported by the Brian Mercer Trust, and by loans from a wide range of museums and galleries across the UK.

Once shaped by industrial wealth, Blackburn is now redefining its identity through art, heritage and community partnerships.

For more information, visit https://blackburnmuseum.org.uk/whats-on/the-nature-of-gothic/

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Sep
13
9:00 AM09:00

Conference: Körper und Herrschaft, in Gotha, Germany, 11-13 Sept. 2025

Conference

Körper und Herrschaft

Referentialität, Räume und Transformationen von Körperlichkeit in politischen Settings im Übergang von Spätmittelalter und Früher Neuzeit

Forschungszentrum Gotha, Germany

11-13 September 2025

Abb.: What makes the King? William Makepeace Thackeray, The Paris Sketchbook, aus dem Exemplar der Forschungsbibliothek Gotha, um 1880.

A conference on "Körper und Herrschaft" (Body and Domination) is being held by the Gotha Research Centre at the University of Erfurt under the direction of Dr Benjamin Steiner and Dr Anja Rathmann-Lutz (Tübingen) from 11 to 13 September 2025 at the "Landschaftshaus" in Gotha.

Body history is more relevant than ever: Recent debates about the health of candidates in US presidential elections, for example, impressively demonstrate the extent to which physical appearance, vitality and health still influence political settings today. This is by no means a purely modern phenomenon. Even in pre-modern societies, the physical constitution of rulers played a central role in legitimising political power.

Despite its historical relevance, corporeality as a condition of political rule remained underexposed for a long time – even in research. Particularly in medieval and early modern monarchies, however, specific expectations were placed on the physical conditions of rulers in order to stabilise political orders or ensure dynastic continuity.

The conference in Gotha is now dedicated to the question of how bodies can be methodically and historically analysed in political contexts. How visible or invisible is the "mere" body behind the façade of staging, ritual and symbolism? What repercussions do political spaces, institutions and techniques of rule have on the bodies of those in power – and vice versa? And can specific transformations in the relationship between body and rule be recognised in the transition from the late Middle Ages to the early modern period?

Speakers have been invited who deal with corporeality in the context of rule from different perspectives - be it in the context of dynastic systems, medical-historical questions, individual biographies of rulers or with regard to comparative approaches that transcend epochs or regions.

The event is sponsored by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation.

Contact: PD Dr. Benjamin Steiner Inhaber der Vertretungsprofessur für Wissenskulturen der Europäischen Neuzeit (Faculty of Philosophy)

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Sep
13
9:00 AM09:00

Conference: Zwischen Himmel und Erde – Musik im Kloster, Fachtage Kloster Kultur, Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen, 10-13 September 2025

Conference

Fachtage Kloster Kultur

Zwischen Himmel und Erde – Musik im Kloster

 10–13 September 2025, Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen

Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen, Cod. Sang. 542, S. 403 (e-codices)

Die Themen Musik und Kloster sind in der Kulturgeschichte untrennbar miteinander verbunden. Der sakralen Musik kommt viele Jahrhunderte lang eine weitaus größere Bedeutung gegenüber der profanen Musik zu, sie ist gleichbedeutend mit einer direkten Aussprache mit Gott.

Die vierte Veranstaltung der Fachtage Klosterkultur thematisiert die Funktion und Bedeutung von Musik im Kloster. Sowohl die Musikpraxis als auch das musikalische Schaffen durch Ordensleute nimmt die Tagung in den Blick, ebenso Fragen zur Erforschung und zu Austauschbeziehungen klösterlicher Musik.

Die Zahl der Teilnehmenden ist begrenzt. Es wird eine Tagungsgebühr von CHF 140,00 erhoben, darin enthalten ist die Tagungsverpflegung (gemäss Programm). Für die Teilnahme an der Exkursion werden zusätzlich CHF 50,00 erhoben.

Weitere Informationen finden Sie uter https://www.fachtage-klosterkultur.org/de/fachtage-2025/

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Sep
13
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers for Special Session: Contesting the Sacred: Profanation, Theft, and Claims over Religious Images, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026, Online Event

Call for Papers for Special Session

Contesting the Sacred: Profanation, Theft, and Claims over Religious Images

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI

May 14-16, 2026

Online Event

Due by 13 September 2025

This session investigates the complex dynamics involving sacred images and relics in the medieval period, focusing on profanation, theft, and disputes over ownership that reshaped their spiritual, social, and cultural significance. It examines acts of contestation that challenged established hierarchies and redefined sacrality. The panel will explore how medieval communities negotiated power, devotion, and identity through their relationships with sacred objects, with particular emphasis on the intertwined role of images and relics in religious life and social contexts.

Interdisciplinary contributions are encouraged, particularly in art history and anthropology. Through in-depth case studies covering various media, geographic areas, and historical periods, participants will analyze both symbolic meanings and practical implications of possession and contestation. The session will explore the social, legal, and theological frameworks that shaped late medieval perceptions of ownership, sacrality, and profanation, highlighting their role in conflicts and negotiations surrounding sacred objects.

This session aims to provide a nuanced understanding of how medieval societies engaged with sacred images and relics beyond veneration. It will highlight the cultural, devotional, and political tensions underpinning these interactions, offering new perspectives on authority, piety, and subversion within the medieval religious landscape.

Scholars are invited to submit a 300-word abstract, excluding references. Proposals should also include name, affiliation, email address, the title of the presentation, 6 keywords, a selective bibliography, and a short CV. Please send the documents to kalamazoocallforpapers@gmail.com by September 13, 2025.

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Sep
13
12:00 AM00:00

Call for Papers: Contesting the Sacred: Profanation, Theft, and Claims over Religious Images, ICMS Kalamazoo 2026, Due by 13 Sept. 2025

Call for Papers for Special Session

Contesting the Sacred: Profanation, Theft, and Claims over Religious Images

61st International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University, May 14-16, 2026

Online Event

Due by 13 September 2025

This session investigates the complex dynamics involving sacred images and relics in the medieval period, focusing on profanation, theft, and disputes over ownership that reshaped their spiritual, social, and cultural significance. It examines acts of contestation that challenged established hierarchies and redefined sacrality. The panel will explore how medieval communities negotiated power, devotion, and identity through their relationships with sacred objects, with particular emphasis on the intertwined role of images and relics in religious life and social contexts.

Interdisciplinary contributions are encouraged, particularly in art history and anthropology. Through in-depth case studies covering various media, geographic areas, and historical periods, participants will analyze both symbolic meanings and practical implications of possession and contestation. The session will explore the social, legal, and theological frameworks that shaped late medieval perceptions of ownership, sacrality, and profanation, highlighting their role in conflicts and negotiations surrounding sacred objects.

This session aims to provide a nuanced understanding of how medieval societies engaged with sacred images and relics beyond veneration. It will highlight the cultural, devotional, and political tensions underpinning these interactions, offering new perspectives on authority, piety, and subversion within the medieval religious landscape.

Scholars are invited to submit a 300-word abstract, excluding references. Proposals should also include name, affiliation, email address, the title of the presentation, 6 keywords, a selective bibliography, and a short CV. Please send the documents to kalamazoocallforpapers@gmail.com by September 13, 2025.

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