NEW VIDEO!
THE ICMA ANNUAL LECTURE AT THE COURTAULD
TANNCZEN, HELSEN, KUSSEN, VND RAWMEN: OF DANCING AND DALLIANCE IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES
NINA ROWE
VERNON SQUARE CAMPUS, LECTURE THEATRE 2, LONDON
WEDNESDAY 7 FEBRUARY 2024, 17:30 - 19:00
For the link to watch the video, go the Courtauld Lecture section of the Lectures tab on the ICMA website.
In the German realm in the late Middle Ages, dancing was cause for both celebration and concern. Poets crafted animated accounts of boisterous roundelays welcoming winter and summer, municipal leaders designated festival days when citizens were permitted to whirl and shuffle in city squares, and churchmen admonished Christian youths to beware the seductions of frivolous young ladies on the dance floor. In short, literary and administrative texts evoke the appeal and hazards of dance, both as pastime and performance, in the southern part of the Holy Roman Empire, circa 1450 to 1500. Scholars of medieval art, however, have seldom probed the array of images showing couples spinning, performers leaping, and folks on the sidelines being enticed into the joyful fray. This lecture examines illuminations, wall paintings, prints, and sculptures that capture a variety of attitudes toward dancing in the regions of Bavaria and Austria in the second half of the fifteenth century. Clerics may have condemned dancing as a tool of the devil that irresistibly leads to unchastity and thereby damnation, but artistic evidence indicates that laypeople were willing to take their chances. In public images and small-scale works targeted to wealthy urban audiences, viewers could learn about the risks of dance, but also find encouragement to step out and join the party.
Nina Rowe is a Professor of Medieval Art History at Fordham University in New York City. Her books include The Jew, the Cathedral, and the Medieval City: Synagoga and Ecclesia in the Thirteenth Century (Cambridge UP, 2011) and The Illuminated World Chronicle: Tales from the Late Medieval City (Yale UP, 2020), as well as edited volumes, most recently: Whose Middle Ages?: Teachable Moments for an Ill-Used Past (Fordham UP, 2019). She has held fellowships from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the American Council of Learned Societies, and she served as President of the International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA), 2020-2023.
Organised by Dr Tom Nickson (The Courtauld) and Dr Jessica Barker (The Courtauld).
This event was kindly supported by the International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA). Series made possible through the generosity of William M. Voelkle.