Exhibition Closing: Africa & Byzantium, Cleveland Museum of Art, Until 21 July 2024

Exhibition Closing

Africa & Byzantium

003 Special Exhibition Hall
The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Hall

Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

Sunday, April 14–Sunday, July 21, 2024

Man's Crown, 400s–500s CE. X-Group (Ballana) Culture, Nubia, Ballana (Sudan). Silver, gemstones (including garnet, carnelian), and paste stones (glass); 20 x 15 cm (7 7/8 x 5 7/8 in.). Egyptian Museum, Cairo, 70455. © DeA Picture Library / S. Vannini / Art Resource, NY

Three centuries after the pharaohs of ancient Egypt ended their rule, new African rulers built empires in the northern and eastern regions of that continent. Spanning from the Empire of Aksum in present-day Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Yemen to the Christian kingdoms of Nubia in present-day Sudan, these complex civilizations cultivated economic, political, and cultural relationships with one another. The Byzantine Empire (Byzantium)—inheritor of the Roman Empire—also took part in these artistic and cultural networks as it expanded its footprint in northern Africa. Together, these great civilizations created their own unique arts while also building a shared visual culture across the regions linked by the Mediterranean and Red Seas, the Nile River, and the Sahara Desert.

Africa & Byzantium considers the complex artistic relationships between northern and eastern African Christian kingdoms and the Byzantine Empire from the fourth century CE and beyond. The first international loan exhibition to treat this subject, the show includes more than 160 works of secular and sacred art from across geographies and faiths, including large-scale frescoes, mosaics, and luxury goods such as metalwork, jewelry, panel paintings, architectural elements, textiles, and illuminated manuscripts.

Lent from collections in Africa, Europe, and North America, many works have never been exhibited in the US. Most were made by African artists or imported to the continent at the request of the powerful rulers of precolonial kingdoms and empires. The art and faith of these historical kingdoms—including Christianity, Judaism, and Islam—resonate with many worldwide today.

The exhibition is organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Cleveland Museum of Art.

For more information, https://www.clevelandart.org/exhibitions/africa-byzantium

Exhibition Closing: Newly acquired ivory carvings from the Gothic period Cathedrals, Museum Schnütgen, Köln, Germany, Until 7 July 2024

Exhibition Closing

Newly acquired ivory carvings from the Gothic period Cathedrals

Neuerworbene Elfenbeinschnitzereien aus der Zeit der gotischen Kathedralen

Museum Schnütgen, Köln, Germany

26 JanuarY 2024 to 7 JulY 2024

Flügel eines Diptychons mit Szenen der Passion Christi, Paris (?), um 1280-1300. Foto: Stephan Kube/SQB

Der Bestand gotischer Elfenbeinschnitzereien des Museum Schnütgen konnte in den letzten Jahren um herausragende Stücke bereichert werden. All diese Neuerwerbungen sind zur Blütezeit des Elfenbeinhandels um 1250 bis 1350 entstanden und werden in einer kleinen Sonderschau in der Sammlungspräsentation gezeigt.


„Weißes Gold“
Geschnitzt aus den Stoßzähnen des Elefanten, waren die Kunstwerke aufgrund des seltenen Werkstoffs äußerst kostbar. Das Rohmaterial gelangte als Handelsware von der afrikanischen Ostküste über das Rote Meer und Ägypten nach Europa. Hier war es zunächst Frankreich mit Paris als Zentrum, das prachtvolle Erzeugnisse hervorbrachte. Die Einflüsse der Pariser Werkstätten reichten aber weiter, so auch bis nach Köln. Beispielhaft für die enge künstlerische Verflechtung von Paris und Köln im Mittelalter stehen ein Relief mit der Darstellung des Marientods und zwei Flügel, die ursprünglich zu kleinen Reise- oder Hausaltärchen gehörten und der persönlichen Andacht dienten. Eines der Gegenstücke zu den zweiflügeligen Altärchen befindet sich im Musée du Louvre in Paris, das andere gilt als verloren.


Teure Taschenspiegel
Neben den zahlreichen sakralen Objekten aus Elfenbein gibt es auch Luxusgüter für den profanen Gebrauch, wie Kämme, Prunkhörner, Dolchgriffe oder Spiegelkapseln. Als überaus prächtige Beispiele erweitern zwei solcher Spiegelkapseln in Form von exquisiten Gebrauchsgegenständen den bislang religiös geprägten Sammlungsbestand des Museums. Die aufwendig mit Schnitzereien verzierten Vorderseiten zeigen Darstellungen aus dem Themenkreis der höfischen Liebe. Die Rückseiten umfassten einst Spiegelscheiben aus poliertem Metall, ähnlich wie bei Taschenspiegeln. Diese Musthaves, welche sich noch heute in vielen Handtaschen finden, wurden also bereits im Mittelalter von den Damen hochgeschätzt.

For more information, https://museenkoeln.de/portal/Neuerworbene-Elfenbeinschnitzereien-aus-der-Zeit-der-gotischen-Kathedralen

Call for Papers: Emotions, Affects, Feelings: Asian and European Historical Encounters, Venice, Italy and Online (10-11 September 2024), Abstracts By 20 June 2024

Call for PaperS:

Emotions, Affects, Feelings: Asian and European Historical Encounters

Venice, Italy and Online

10-11 September 2024, Ca Foscari University of Venice

Abstracts By 20 June 2024

This hybrid workshop aims to analyse the religious and cultural encounters between Asia and Europe (before 1945) through the lenses of emotions, affects, and feelings. In the past decades, the affective/emotional turn has sustained the re-assessment, and increased our understanding, of many historical processes and contexts. From this point of view, scholarship has just started investigating the history of the encounters between Asia and Europe. This workshop intends therefore to promote scholarly discussion on this theme. We are especially keen to address the role of emotions in intercultural and interreligious communication, and we invite researchers to consider questions such as:

- How did emotions, affects, and feelings mark intercultural encounters?

- What role did emotions and their practices have in intercultural and interreligious communication?

- How have different cultures described each other from the point of view of emotions, affects, and feelings?

- What role did emotions have in the discursive belittling or subjugation of different cultures?

- How did missionaries, or other religious specialists, discuss and exploit emotions when proselytising?

- How have different understandings of emotions circulated through Asia and Europe, and how did they influence one another?

- How was the vocabulary of emotion and affect translated from one language to another?

- How have different understandings of emotion influenced contexts of cultural contact, such as port cities, entrepôts, merchant routes, etc.?

- How were objects catalysts of the circulation of emotions? Did affects change the perceived value or the uses of artifacts that travelled between Asia and Europe?

And many others.

Interested scholars can submit their abstracts (200 words) for selection, together with a short bio, to linda.zampoldortia@unive.it (Convenor: Linda Zampol D'Ortia) by the 20th of June 2024. Feel free to contact the convenor at the same email address for more information, including about available support for speakers.

We aim to publish selected papers in the conference proceedings. The working language of this workshop is English.

Call for Papers: IBERSHINCS: Making and Remaking Saints in the Iberian Peninsula and Beyond during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period; Salamanca, Spain, Abstracts Due 30 September 2024

Call for Papers

IBERSHINCS

Making and Remaking Saints in the Iberian Peninsula and Beyond during the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period c. 600 - 1600

IBERSANCOS

Crear y Recrear los Santos en la Peninsula Ibérica y Atrás durante la Edad Media y El Período Moderno Cemprano c. 600 - 1600

Salamanca (Spain), 24 - 26 March 2025

Abstracts Due: 30 September 2024

Notification of Acceptance: 31 October 2024

We kindly invite paper and poster proposals for an in-person international conference hosted by the University of Salamanca in collaboration with the Museum of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain.

This international conference seeks to explore the means of constructing and reconstructing saints in and beyond the Iberian Peninsula with particular emphasis on:

  • the import of new saints into the Iberian Peninsula from the Holy Land, neighboring territories, occupied territories, etc.:

  • the export of saints from the Iberian Peninsula to Europe, Latin America. etc.:

  • the re/creation of saints in the Iberian Peninsula e.g. martyrdom narratives:

The conference approaches this process of saintly re/construction mostly, but not exclusively. from the perspective of:

Cransition and transfer

  • known or lesser-known saints transferred and adapted in geographic areas which require further exploration such as Latin America in the Early Modern Period contributing to a global perspective on the creation and recreation of saints;

  • Saints at crossroads of land and sea and patterns of transfer: between the Mediterranean, the Atlantic Ocean. etc.;

  • Cultural transfer and material culture of sanctity;

  • Transitional periods and saints from the Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages: the Middle Ages to the Early Modern Period;

Interaction

  • Adaptation to new cultural contexts and new peoples through religious discourses, hagiographic narratives, and de/construction of images:

  • Local/regional incorporations, interactions, and adaptations:

  • Interactions with images, transfers) and circulation(s) of iconographies;

  • Local/regional. personal/collective devotional developments and practices:

Production

  • Re/creation of saints and various media (statues, reliefs, panel paintings, manuscript illuminations, frescoes, stained glass, metalwork, mosaics, textiles, etc.):

  • Re creation of saints in relation architecture:

  • Production of (vernacular) religious/secular literature: sermons, hymns. (private/public) devotional prayers. miracle stories, visions, and conversion stories:

  • Relics, reliquaries, miracle-working images, devotional/religious objects;

We welcome original submissions. from a variety of disciplines, including but not limited to: history, art history, visual culture, social history, cultural history. hagiography. religious studies, textual studies, archaeology. in a transdisciplinary perspective. Panel proposals are also welcome.

The paper presentations are addressed to early career researchers. faculty or research staff at any level, independent researchers. etc.: while the poster presentations are primarily addressed to PhD candidates particularly from, but not limited to, Spain. Certificates of 30 horas presenciales will be provided to PhDs.

Accommodation, meals, and travel are covered by participants. There is not registration fee and participation is open to all speakers.

Contextually, the participants will be invited to submit their papers and poster contents for the publication of an edited volume. The language of publication is English.

Please submit all relevant documents as PDF files and/or Word doc to the e-mail address: znorovskyandrea@usal.es no later than 30 September, 2024.

for paper presentations (Sala de Grados. Faculty of Geography and History, University of Salamanca):

  • A 350 - 400 words abstract, in English, clearly underlying the main argument and the potential outcomes of the paper. The abstract should also include a bibliographic list of 5 - 8 references.

  • A short 500 - 700 words CV. in English, including e-mail, current affiliation, affiliation address, academic position, publications, etc. CVs should have the standard CV format: narrative bio formats are not accepted.

  • The presentations are 15-20 minutes and the language of delivery is English.

for poster presentations (Museum of Salamanca):

  • A 350 - 400 words abstract, in Spanish, clearly underlying the main argument and the potential outcomes of the research. The abstract should also include a bibliographic list of 5 - 8 references.

  • A short 500 - 700 words CV. in Spanish, including e-mail, current affiliation, affiliation address, awards, prizes, etc. CVs should have the standard CV format: narrative bio formats are not accepted.

  • The presentations are c. 5 minutes and the language of delivery is Spanish

For qurstions, contact Andrea-Bianka Znorovsky (University of Salamanca, Salamanca), znorovskyandrea@usal.es

For more information, visit http://eventos.usal.es/event_detail/118344/detail/ibersantos-crear-y-recrear-los-santos-en-la-peninsula-iberica-y-atras-durante-la-edad-media-y-el-pe.html

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sktodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101034371.

Announcement! Festschrift for Helen C. Evans, Sign No Later Than August 15, 2024

Announcement

Festschrift for Helen C. Evans

Sign No Later Than August 15, 2024

Work is underway on a festschrift in honor of Dr. Helen C. Evans, Mary and Michael Jaharis Curator Emerita of Byzantine Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. We, Jennifer Ball, Christina Maranci, Brandie Ratliff, and Thelma Thomas, the editors of Beyond Byzantium: Essays on the Medieval Worlds of Eastern Christianity and their Arts. In honor of Helen C. Evans invite friends, colleagues, students, and scholars who have known Helen in some capacity to sign the tabula congratulatoria and join us in congratulating Helen for her outstanding career, service to our field, personal mentorship, and many publications.

Helen has advanced medieval studies through her teaching, exhibitions, and scholarship. Moreover, Helen’s service to the fields of Byzantine and Armenian studies and to art history and the museum profession more generally has been long and transformational. As president of the International Center of Medieval Art, she helped to broaden the scope of the field to envision a truly global Medieval world, encompassing Afro-Eurasia.

The volume, to be published by De Gruyter next year, is organized around themes that reflect Helen’s contributions to Byzantine studies, the global medieval world, Armenia and the Caucasus region, and curating and exhibitions. Given her extensive career, Helen has touched the lives of so many scholars that it made the task of determining the scope of this festschrift difficult. We invited participation from authors whom she has mentored directly or with whom she has collaborated closely on a project.

Now, we invite all to sign the tabula congratulatoria using this Google form: https://forms.gle/Rcs5hsRyYk9KfEW18. Please note that our tabula is a way to thank and congratulate Helen. We are not asking for any donation for the publication.

We ask that you add your name to the tabula no later than August 15, 2024.

If you have any questions, please reach out to us at hcefestschrift@gmail.com.

Call for Papers: The Midwest Medieval History Conference, University of Missouri-Kansas City (20-21 Sept. 2024), Due By 31 May 2024

Call for Papers

The Midwest Medieval History Conference

In Collaboration with the Medieval Association of the Midwest and the Mid-America Medieval Association

September 20-21, 2024, University of Missouri-Kansas City

Due By 31 May 2024

Pilgrims Visit St. Vincent in Barcelona

Theme: Pilgrimage, Relics, and Devotion

We will consider all abstracts related to the study and teaching of the Middle Ages.

Please send abstracts by May 31, 2024, to C. Matthew Phillips: Matthew.Phillips@cune.edu

For more information, https://midwestmedievalhc.wordpress.com/

NEMICS Interdisciplinary Conference: Texture in the Medieval World, University of York, 1-2 June 2024

NEMICS Interdisciplinary Conference

Texture in the Medieval World

Center for Medieval Studies, University of York; Viking Society for Northern Research; Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art

The King’s Manor, Room K/G33, University of York, England

Saturday 1 June 2024 to Sunday 2 June 2024

Building on the past success of EMICS events, this, the 21st conference of this research series, considers the possible visual and conceptual approaches to Texture in the Medieval World in its widest possible contexts, through examining written, archaeological, pictorial, architectural, geographical, cartographical and liturgical material in order to shed new light on the uses, understanding, purposes, and transformations of texture in the Middle Ages. The interdisciplinary, two-day conference focuses on the visual, conceptual and haptic qualities of textual and visual material and their importance and use in the medieval world. In order to explore the relationship between text, texture and materiality papers will explore ideas of; decoration, colour or luxurious materials; manipulation of texture and materiality through skeuomorphism and symbolism or as exegetical devices; the role of texture and materiality in conveying status, wealth and power in textual, social and material contexts and physicality, presence and scale whether actual, imagined or implied.

Themes will include: craft, technique and process; finished/unfinished; fragments; fraying; fabric; threads; woven, interwoven; embroidered and embellished; edges and borders; webs; networks and exchanges; thus lending itself as a topic to multiple interpretations across various media. This conference (re)considers various facets of textural constructions and understandings in the medieval past, as viewed from the present, seeking an interdisciplinary approach to this topic - including ideas of how texture and depictions of it change over time, and the significance of these changes to the construction of past structures and narratives. By reaching across boundaries of discipline and period, this conference provides a forum for the sharing of ideas, and the exploration of new thoughts on texture. The conference crosses various disciplines and periods, bringing together emerging scholars working across several fields of research with established academics, to provide a platform for the reconsideration of the idea of “texture” in its widest possible connotations.

See here for Texture in the Medieval World Programme (MS Word , 1,050kb).

Registration to attend the above conference is required.  See here for the booking information and here for more information

Location: K/133, King's Manor, Exhibition Square, York, YO1 7EP

Email: texturesconference24@gmail.com

Programme

SATURDAY 1 JUNE 2024

9.00-9.30. Registration and Coffee, The King’s Manor, Room K/G33

9.30-9.45 Welcome and opening remarks

9.45-10.45 Session 1: The Elementary and the Sensory. Chair: Meg Boulton

Jessica Gasson, ‘A fountain of living water that springs from Lebanon’, weaving water and other technical challenges in the facture of the Living Water tapestry, 1485

Adriana de Miranda, Texture Decoration in Water Installations (Zoom presentation)

10.45-11.15 Coffee Break

11.15-12.45 Session 2. Dressing the Ecclesiast. Chair: Tracey Davison

Maria Giorgi, The extraordinary vestment of San Panfilo (Zoom presentation)

Juliette Calvarin, Embroidering Velvet: Textile Mimesis on a Fifteenth-Century Chasuble

Flavia Galli Tatsch, Transmedia, transculturality and Texture of Islamic fabrics in 12th century French sculptures (Zoom presentation)

12.45-2.00 Lunch Break

 2.00-3.30 Session 3. Painting Textile. Chair: Jeremy Melius

Chiara Stombellini, From Transmateriality to Mise en abyme: Artistic Representation of ‘Panni Tartarici’ in Fourteenth-Century Venice

Chiara Demaria, A guide to ‘contraffare’ textures: Cennini’s Libro dell’Arte and 14th-century Tuscan painting (Zoom presentation)

Rebekkah Hart, Salome and the semiotics of coral, blood, and paint

3.30-5.00 Session 4. Early Medieval Textures. Chair: Hanna Vorholt

Tracey Davison, The silk scarves of York and Lincoln as signifiers of considered projections of the self

Francesca Pandimiglio, The Brocade of the Lombards 

Maren Clegg-Hyer, Texture, Materiality, and Missionary Work (Zoom Presentation)

5.00-5.30 Tea Break

5.30-6.45 KEYNOTE LECTURE. Chair: Tracey Davison

Rachel Moss, ‘More potent than all its gold’: Reliquaries and their textures through time

6.45-7.30 Reception

8.00-10.30 Conference Dinner: Jaipur Spice

SUNDAY 2 JUNE 2024

9.30-11.00 Session 5. Concealing and Revealing. Chair: Meg Boulton

Freya Gowrley, Fragmentary Forms: A Longue Durée Approach to Medieval Collage, Proposal for Texture in the Medieval World

Erminia Lucarelli, Depicted and real textiles as vehicles for multi-sensory experiences in sacred spaces: a Florentine case-study (Zoom presentation)

Charlotte Ross, Don’t Judge a Book by its Cover: The Curious Gilt Leather Binding of MS Ashmole 46

11.00-11.30 Tea Break

11.30-1.00 Session 6. Money Counts. Chair: Jane Hawkes

Veronika Pichanicova, Polished to the god(s). gems, metals and light in the religious objects of the middle ages

Jamie Meade, The Fabric of Empire: Byzantine Imperial Clothing as a Marker for Political and Cultural Change

Anna-Maria Minutilli, Unresolved plots: the case study of Saint Theodor’s hexamitos in Brindisi (Zoom presentation)

1.00-2.00 Lunch Break

2.00-3.00 Session 7. Texture and Sensation. Chair: Megan Henvey

Ahmad Yengimolki, Light’s Crucial Role: Illuminating Texture in Islamic and Christian Architecture in Isfahan

Alex Makin, Embroidery, Texture and Sensory Meaning in early medieval England

3.00-3.30 Tea Break

3.30-4.30 Session 8. Words and Music. Chair: Mike Bintley

Jordan K. Skinner, Campanology: Texture and Form

Eric Lacey, The Linguistic Textures of The Seafarer

4.30-6.00 Session 9. Natural Textures. Chair: Jane Hawkes

Stephen Westich, “The Fancy of a Child-Genius”? The Texture and Liminality in Norwegian Stave Churches

Mike Bintley, On the Outside the Yew is an Unsmooth Tree: the Imagined Treescapes of Early Medieval England

Mead Cheek, The Landscape in the Church: the textures of stone sculptures of the Anglo-Saxon Period

6.00 Closing Remarks

Call for Papers: Transforming Church Archaeology: New Directions and Approaches, The Society for Church Archaeology Annual Conference, Gloucester (14-15 Sept. 2024), Due 16 June 2024

Call for Papers

The Society for Church Archaeology Annual Conference 2024

Transforming Church Archaeology: New Directions and Approaches

The Folk of Gloucester, GloUCester, EnglanD; 14-15 September 2024

Due 16 June 2024

The theme of this year’s conference is Transforming Church Archaeology. For centuries, churches and other religious buildings have been at the heart of their respective communities. However, declining congregations and other societal changes means institutions such as the Anglican Church are undergoing a period of transformation that directly impacts the buildings they curate. Whilst some churches face closure and an uncertain future, others are adapted to meet the needs of the wider community or for alternative purposes. Within this context, archaeology has an essential role to play, on the one hand guiding adaptations to historic buildings and on the other providing new avenues for presenting and interpreting church heritage to a variety of audiences. Through an exploration of the multifaceted nature of church archaeology in the 21st century, this conference aims to demonstrate how it continues to play a role in a changing religious landscape.

The Society for Church Archaeology would be delighted to consider 20 minute papers on the theme of Transforming Church Archaeology: New Directions and Approaches for presenting in-person at the society’s annual conference 14th-15th September 2023 (in exceptional circumstances, virtual papers will also be considered; please state these clearly in your proposal). Topics covered might include but are not limited to:

  • The role of archaeology in the transformation or adaptation of ecclesiastical sites

  • The use of archaeology and heritage in widening audiences in churches or other religious buildings

  • Case studies in the preservation or protection of ecclesiastical heritage through archaeological methods

  • Community archaeology and its role in raising awareness of ecclesiastical heritage

Please email abstracts, expressions of interest or general enquiries to churcharchconference@gmail.com . The conference will be held at the Folk of Gloucester, a 16th-century merchant’s house that is now part of a project bringing the community together through shared heritage. Speakers will have their conference fee waived and there is also a budget to cover travel expenses, please contact the above email for more information.

Call for Applications: BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION Research Awards, Due 1 June 2024

Call for Applications

BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

RESEARCH AWARDS

Due 1 June 2024

The BAA invites applications for research awards of up to £1,500. These are designed to assist those who might otherwise have difficulty in funding or completing a research project, and are therefore not open to students registered on degree courses, or those in full-time employment for whom research is an expectation written into their employment contract. The awards cover research with a defined outcome, such as publication, mounting of an exhibition, scientific analysis (in the case of scientific and/or technical analysis, we require the results of the analysis to be publicly available). Research proposals for which some funding has already been obtained are eligible, though it should be shown that the additional funds for which you are applying to the BAA are sufficient to complete the research. Proposals contingent on additional future funding will not be supported. The deadline for applications is 1 June, 2023.

Applicants are required to provide one reference, along with an anticipated research schedule and budget. The research proposal must fall within the Association’s fields of interest (as defined below). Applicants should either be ordinarily resident in the UK, or work on material from, in, or directly related to the art, architecture or archaeology of the British Isles.

An application form follows on a second page. Once complete this should be sent as an email attachment to the Hon. Secretary on secretary@thebaa.org Funds are limited, so the awards are competitive.

BAA STATEMENT OF INTEREST

The Association’s interests are defined as the study of archaeology, art and architecture from the Roman period to the present day, principally within Europe and the Mediterranean basin. The BAA’s core interests run from the Roman era to the 16th century and embrace the study of these periods (historiographical, antiquarian, conservationist).

For a copy of the application, click here.

For more information, https://thebaa.org/research-awards/

Call for Papers: Defend sacred spaces: Fortified churches and monasteries in the medieval Mediterranean (9th-14th centuries), Lipari, Italy (3-5 October 2024), Due By 14 June 2024

Call for Papers

Defend sacred spaces: Fortified churches and monasteries in the medieval Mediterranean (9th-14th centuries)

II International “Mm3a” Conference, Isola di Lipari, Parco Archeologico Luigi Bernabò Brea, Italy

3-5 October 2024

Due By 14 June 2024

Starting from the end of the 9th century, important events including the disintegration of the Carolingian empire and the advance of populations from northern and eastern Europe and the Arab world triggered a phase of insecurity and political instability. The Mediterranean, a place of meetings and exchanges between culturally and geographically distant populations, was particularly affected by these events. In a climate full of tension, threatened by internal conflicts and the advance of non-Christian populations, it became essential to defend the “home of God”. This concept translated architecturally into the adoption of design solutions inherited from military architecture. Throughout the eastern and western Mediterranean, numerous monasteries, abbeys, and churches acquired the appearance of fortresses, marked by high defensive towers and wall-walks, often integrated with the walls and defensive structures of the cities. Architectural innovations, useful for the defense of a single monument or entire villages and cities, spread quickly across the Mediterranean and its areas of influence, acquiring territorial specificities.

Considering the historical context between the 9th and 14th centuries, the II International “Mm3a” Conference in Lipari proposes the development of a framework on fortified religious architecture through: the analysis of the relationships between the regional architectural solutions and the socio-economic contexts, the studies of exchange methodologies and models dissemination and their adjustments according to local building traditions.

To this end, the study topics on fortified religious complexes are:

  • the formation of the architectural phenomenon in relation to the respective regional, cultural, and religious contexts;

  • the main players: commissioner, creators, users;

  • the diffusion of architectural models and construction techniques;

  • the contributions of the ecclesiastical and knightly religious orders in the architectural field;

  • restoration as a tool for knowledge;

  • historical sources, ecclesiological doctrines, and monastic culture.

  • art, iconography, and forms of representation

The Conference will include papers and a poster session. Proposals for participation relating to reports or posters must include:

  • the title;

  • adhesion to one of the thematic areas;

  • an abstract of a maximum of 2000 characters;

  • five key words;

  • a curriculum vitae of the proposer (not exceeding 500 characters); and must be sent by June 16th to the address: mediterraneomedievale@gmail.com

Papers of a maximum of 20 minutes are expected. The Scientific Committee will evaluate the proposals sent by June 30th and will communicate their possible acceptance, as a report or as a poster, inserting them in the Conference session deemed most suitable. The Conference includes the publication of the contributions in a monographic volume within the “Architettura Medievale” series (directed by Silvia Beltramo and Carlo Tosco), published by “All’insegna del Giglio”. Adequate space in the publication will also be reserved for posters admitted to the specific session.

The languages ​​of the Conference are the following: Italian, English, French and Spanish.

The organization of the conference will offer lunches on 4 and 5 October, dinners on 3 and 4 October and coffee breaks for all participants.

Important dates

  • Deadline for submission of proposals: 16 June 2024.

  • Notification of acceptance of proposals: 30 June 2024.

  • Conference date: 3-4-5 October 2024.

The Scientific Committee of the Conference is composed:

  • Coordinator: Rosario Vilardo.

  • Members: Xavier Barral i Altet, Tancredi Bella, Giovanni Coppola, Lamia Hadda, Andreas Hartmann-Virnich, Vinni Lucherini, Andrea Pala, Alessandro Taddei, Carlo Tosco, Guglielmo Villa.

Scientific secretariat

  • Fabio Linguanti

  • Organizational secretariat and information

  • Fabio Linguanti

  • Arianna Carannante


Difendere gli spazi sacri. Chiese e monasteri fortificati nel Mediterraneo medievale (IX-XIV secolo).

A partire dalla fine del IX secolo importanti avvenimenti tra i quali la disgregazione dell’impero carolingio e l’avanzata di popolazioni dal nord e dell’est europeo e dal mondo arabo, innescarono una fase di insicurezza e di instabilità politica. Particolarmente interessato da questi eventi fu il Mediterraneo, luogo d’incontri e di scambi tra popolazioni culturalmente e geograficamente distanti. In un clima carico di tensione, minacciato da conflitti interni e dall’avanzata di popolazioni non cristiane, diventò essenziale difendere la dimora di Dio; concetto tradotto architettonicamente nell’adozione per i luoghi di culto cristiani di formule e di soluzioni progettuali tipiche dell’architettura militare. In tutta l’area mediterranea, orientale e occidentale, numerosi monasteri, abbazie e chiese acquisirono l’aspetto di fortezze contrassegnate da alte torri difensive e cammini di ronda merlati, spesso relazionati alle mura e agli assetti difensivi delle città.

Stratagemmi e innovazioni architettoniche, utili alla difesa del singolo monumento o di interi villaggi e città, si diffusero velocemente attraverso il bacino mediterraneo e le sue aree di influenza acquisendo di volta in volta specificità territoriali. Inquadrando il tema all’interno del contesto storico tra i secoli IX e XIV, il II convegno internazionale Mm3a di Lipari propone l’elaborazione di un quadro sinottico sull’architettura religiosa fortificata attraverso l’analisi delle relazioni tra le formule regionali e i rispettivi contesti socio-culturali, l’indagine sulle metodologie di scambio e di diffusione dei modelli e i loro adattamenti alle correnti costruttive locali.

A tal fine i temi di studio proposti sono:
- la formazione del fenomeno architettonico in rapporto ai rispettivi contesti regionali, culturali e religiosi;
- i protagonisti: committenti, artefici, fruitori;
- la diffusione dei modelli architettonici e le tecniche costruttive;
- gli apporti, in ambito architettonico, degli ordini religiosi ecclesiastici e cavallereschi;
- l’arte, l’iconografia e le forme di rappresentazione;
- le fonti storiche, le dottrine ecclesiologiche e nella cultura monastica;
- i restauri come strumento di conoscenza.

Il Comitato scientifico del Convegno è così composto:
- Coordinatore: Rosario Vilardo.
- Componenti: Xavier Barral i Altet, Tancredi Bella, Giovanni Coppola, Lamia Hadda, Andreas Hartmann-Virnich, Vinni Lucherini, Andrea Pala, Alessandro Taddei, Carlo Tosco, Guglielmo Villa.

Il Convegno prevede relazioni e una sessione di poster.
Le proposte di partecipazione relative alle relazioni o ai poster devono comprendere:
- il titolo
- l’adesione a una delle aree tematiche indicate nella Call
- un abstract di massimo 2000 battute
- cinque parole chiave
- un curriculum vitae del proponente (max 500 battute)
e devono essere inviati entro il 16 giugno 2024 alla mail:
mediterraneomedievale@gmail.com

Si prevedono interventi di massimo 20 minuti.

II Comitato scientifico valuterà entro il 30 giugno le proposte inviate e comunicherà l’eventuale accettazione delle stesse, come relazione o come poster, inserendole nella sessione del Convegno ritenuta più idonea. Il Convegno prevede la pubblicazione di un volume monografico all’interno della collana “Architettura Medievale” (diretta da Silvia Beltramo e Carlo Tosco), edita da “All’insegna del Giglio”. Anche ai poster ammessi all’apposita sessione sarà riservato congruo spazio nella pubblicazione. Le lingue del Convegno sono le seguenti: italiano, inglese, francese e spagnolo.

L’organizzazione del Convegno offrirà i pranzi delle giornate del 4 e del 5 ottobre, le cene del 3 e del 4 ottobre e i coffee break a tutti i partecipanti.

Date importanti:
Deadline per l’invio delle proposte: 16 giugno.
Comunicazione di accettazione delle proposte: 30 giugno.
Data di svolgimento del Convegno: 3-4-5 ottobre 2024.

Segreteria scientifica:
Fabio Linguanti
Segreteria organizzativa e informazioni:
Fabio Linguanti
Arianna Carannante

Call for Applications: Visiting Assistant Professorship, Department of the History of Art and Architecture, Brown University, Due 3 June 2024

Call for Applications

Visiting Assistant Professorship, Department of the History of Art and Architecture

Brown University, Providence, RI

Due 3 June 2024 at 11:59 PM ET

The Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Brown University invites applicants for a 10-month non-renewable position in medieval or early modern European art and architectural history in the world, at the rank of Visiting Assistant Professor. We seek candidates who are grounded in the study of Europe and interested in connections to locations and people outside of, or in cultural and economic dialogue with Europe. The salary for this position is $60,000. The position requires teaching four courses (two undergraduate lecture courses and two undergraduate seminar courses). We are especially interested in candidates who, through their scholarship, teaching, and service, will promote diversity at Brown. The successful candidate will have opportunities to engage with the rich tradition of scholarship at the Cogut Institute for the Humanities Center for the Study of the Early Modern World and/or the Program in Early Cultures.
To apply and for more information: https://apply.interfolio.com/145921

Online & IN-Person Lecture, Signatures and Artistic Authorship in Lorenzetti and Attavante, Christopher Platts, London & Online, 21 May 2024, 5:00-6:300PM GMT

Online & IN-Person Lecture

Signatures and Artistic Authorship in Lorenzetti and Attavante

Dr. Christopher Platts

School of Historical Studies, Birkbeck, University of London

43, Gordon Sq. Room 114, The Keynes Library London WC1H 0PD United Kingdom

Tuesday, May 21, 2024 · 5:00-6:30pm GMT+1

The Sienese painter Pietro Lorenzetti and Florentine illuminator Attavante signed about a dozen surviving artworks. In Lorenzetti’s case, the painter apparently autographed more works than any other European artist, working in any medium, until the late fourteenth century. Such a tendency to inscribe one’s own identity into an artwork, and to do so creatively, foreshadowed the practices of Jan van Eyck and Albrecht Dürer a century or two later. In Attavante’s case, the illuminator’s inscriptions were either monumental in visual effect, if miniature in scale, or they were hastily scribbled onto the blank flyleaves of deluxe manuscripts. This paper examines two unusual cases, a unique “double-signature” by Lorenzetti and a newly discovered signature by Attavante, exploring how these self-inscriptions are different from each artist’s other autographs. By analyzing subtle relationships between text and image in each artwork—a monumental altarpiece on one hand, and a choir psalter on the other—this paper proposes that both artists were especially concerned with recording their own authorship, either publicly for multiple audiences or privately for themselves. Moreover, each painter, by choosing how and where he signed his work within the overall composition, emphasized that art-making was not only a devotional act but a holy one akin to the generative acts of God, the saints, or the prophets.

Christopher Platts is an assistant professor of art history at the University of Cincinnati. His research focuses on the style, form, and function of late medieval and early modern Italian art, especially Sienese and Venetian painting of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. He is currently working on a book about Paolo Veneziano and the patronage and reception of Venetian Gothic painting in Europe and the Mediterranean during the trecento. Chris is also active as a curator at public and university art museums and libraries. His latest exhibition, which is currently up at the University of Cincinnati Art Library, is “Rediscovering Catharina van Hemessen’s Scourging of Christ: Women Artists, Patrons, and Rulers in Renaissance Europe.”

To register to attend online, visit https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/signatures-and-artistic-authorship-in-lorenzetti-and-attavante-livestream-tickets-895185964317?aff=erellivmlt

To register to attend in-person, visit https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/signatures-and-artistic-authorship-in-lorenzetti-and-attavante-tickets-895345300897

Call for Applications: British Archaeological Association Travel Grants, Due 15 May 2024

Call for Applications

British Archaeological Association

Travel Grants

Due 15 May 2024

Applications for travel grants are invited from students registered on post-graduate degree courses (at M.A., M.Litt., M.St., M.Phil., and Ph.D. level). Grants of up to £500 are available to cover travel for a defined purpose (such as essential site visits, attendance at an exhibition/conference, short research trip, etc). The awards will be made twice yearly, with deadlines for applications on 15 March and 15 May.

Applicants are required to provide one reference, together with a timetable and travel budget, and the objective of the travel must fall within the Association’s fields of interest (as defined below). Applicants should either be registered at a UK University or be undertaking work on material from, in, or related to the art, architecture or archaeology of the British Isles. Applicants are also responsible for asking their nominated referee to forward a reference directly to the Hon. Secretary within one week of the closing date for applications.

An application form follows on the second page. Once complete, this should be sent as an email attachment to the Hon. Secretary on secretary@thebaa.org Funds are limited, so the awards are competitive. If successful, the Association expects candidates to write a short account (150-350 words) of the travel facilitated by the award that could be posted on the BAA website.

BAA STATEMENT OF INTEREST
The Association’s interests are defined as the study of archaeology, art and architecture from the Roman period to the present day, principally within Europe and the Mediterranean basin. The core interests of the BAA are Roman to 16th century. We only entertain applications that cover the 17th to 21st centuries if they are of a historiographical, conservationist or antiquarian nature and link back to the BAA’s core interests.

For more information and the application form, visit https://thebaa.org/scholarships-awards/travel-grants/

International Conference: Refinement and/or Reduction? Gothic Art, Architecture and Culture, c. 1250 to 1350, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg (23-25 May 2024), Register Until 12 May 2024

International conferencE

Refinement and/or Reduction?
Gothic Art, Architecture and Culture, c. 1250 to 1350

Institut für Kunstgeschichte und Archäologien Europas
Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
23.05.–25.05.2024

Registration Until 12 May 2024

Concept and organization:
Prof. Dr Ute Engel (Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg)
Prof. Dr Christian Freigang (Freie Universität Berlin)

The international conference aims at an interdisciplinary reassessment of Gothic art and architecture between c. 1250 and 1350 in a broad European perspective. With an increased diversity of patrons and new technical facilities, the design options for artists and architects alike extended to a virtuoso refinement across media, on the one hand. On the other hand, new modes of reduction emerge, probably originating in economic, technical or programmatic tendencies of the time. The conference elucidates and discusses the cultural background of this paradoxical situation. Additionally, the conference intends to honour Paul Frankl (1878–1962), professor of the History of Art at the University of Halle 1921–1934. Forced into American exile, he became one of the leading scholars of the Gothic, based at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Princeton from 1940 onwards.

For a PDF of the program, click here.

For more information, click here.


Programme

Thursday, 23.05.2024

15.00 h Registration
16.00 h Welcome

PANEL 1
GOTHIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE C. 1250 TO 1350, AND ITS HISTORIOGRAPHY
(Chairs: Prof. Dr Ute Engel and Prof. Dr Christian Freigang)

16.15 h
Prof. Dr Ute Engel (Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg):
"Refinement and/or Reduction c. 1250 to 1350: An Introduction"

16.45 h
Prof. Dr Christian Freigang (Freie Universität Berlin):
“‘Doktrinäre Gotik – Reduktionsgotik‘. Architectural History between Criticism of Academicism and Theory of Space”

17.15 h
Prof. Dr Beatrice Kitzinger (Princeton University):
"Encountering Paul Frankl in the Princeton Archive"
17.45 h Discussion

19.00 h KEYNOTE LECTURE
Prof. Dr Paul Binski (University of Cambridge):
“Subtlety and Gothic Architecture”

20.00 h Reception


Friday, 24.5.2024

PANEL 2
PARIS AND COURT CULTURE
(Chair: Dr Antje Fehrmann)

9.00 h
Prof. Dr Dany Sandron (Sorbonne Université, Paris):
"Opus parisianum? Architecture in Paris c. 1250–1350"

9.30  h
Prof. Dr Lindy Grant (University of Reading):
“The Aesthetics of  Asceticism: Louis IX and Court Culture after the Return from the  1248–1254 Crusade”

10.00 h
Prof. Dr Michael T. Davis (Mount  Holyoke College):
"Synthesis, Invention and Transformation in French  Gothic Architecture, 1250–1320 "

10.30 h Discussion

10.45 h Coffee/Tea

PANEL 3
BEYOND PARIS  
(Chair: Prof. Dr Ute Engel)

11.15 h
Prof. Dr Michaelis Olympios (University of Cyprus, Nicosia):
"Architecture and Ritual at the Laon Cathedral Chapels"

11.45 h
Prof. Dr Christoph Brachmann (University of North Carolina Chapel Hill):
„The Simultaneity of the Non-Simultaneous”

12.15 h
Prof. Dr Etienne Hamon (Université de Lille):
"The Updating of Graphic Models from the 1300s in 15th-century Architecture and Decorative Arts: Some Examples from Central France"

12.45 h Discussion

13.00 h Lunch break

PANEL 4
CENTRES IN THE SOUTH  
(Chair: Prof. Dr Christian Freigang)

14.30 h
Dr Markus Schlicht (Université Bordeaux Montaigne):
"Refinement to Reduction: The Choir of Bordeaux Cathedral (from 1252)"

15.00  h
Dr Alexandra Gajewski (Burlington Magazine, London):
“Becoming a  Papal Residence: Churches and Chapels in Avignon, from John XXII to  Clement VI"

15.30 h
Dr Tom Nickson (Courtauld Institute of Art, London):
“Two for One? Berenguer de Montagut, Manresa, and Catalan Gothic”

16.00 h Discussion

16.15 h Coffee/Tea

PANEL 5
CROSS-MEDIA FIGURATIONS
(Chair: Prof. Dr Juliane von Fircks)

16.45 h
Prof. Dr Brigitte Kurmann-Schwarz (Universität Zürich)/Prof. Dr Peter Kurmann (Université de Fribourg):
„French Architecture and Stained Glass in Dialogue (1250–1350)“

17.15 h
Prof. Dr Tim Ayers (University of York):
“More or Less? The Chapter House and its Vestibule at York Minster”

17.45 h
Prof. Dr Evelin Wetter (Abegg-Stiftung, Riggisberg/Universität Leipzig):
"Embroidered Image and Surface. On the Reduction of the Background to Colour and Material in the Works of the  Opus anglicanum"

18.15 h Discussion


Saturday, 25.5.2024

PANEL 6
INNOVATION AND INVENTION
(Chair: Dr Sascha Köhl)

9.00 h
Prof. Dr Marc Carel Schurr (Universität Trier):
"Less is more - Strasbourg Cathedral and the 'Avant-garde' of Architecture around 1300"

9.30 h
Prof. Dr Jacqueline Jung (Yale University, New Haven):
"Refinements   of Time in Monumental Narrative Relief Sculpture after 1250"

10.00 h
PD Dr Christian Kayser (Technische Universität, München):
"The Western Tower of Freiburg Minster and the Invention of the Gothic Openwork Spire"

10.30 h Discussion

10.45 h Coffee/Tea

PANEL 7
CITYSCAPES
(Chair: Prof. Dr Markus Späth)

11.15 h
Dr Tobias Kunz (Staatliche Museen zu Berlin):
"Not Only Paris. Foreign Innovations and their Consequences in Cologne Sculpture"

11.45 h
Dr Zoe Opacic (Birkbeck College, University of London):
"Erfordia turrita: 'Reduktionsgotik' and Urban Refinement in Fourteenth-century Erfurt"

12.15 h
Dr Zoltán Bereczki (University of Debrecen):
“Franciscan Monasteries in the Medieval Cityscape. A Case Study of Sopron (HU) and Bratislava (SK)"

12.45 h Discussion

13.00 h Lunch break

PANEL 8
EUROPEAN TRANSFER
(Chair: Prof. Dr Christian Freigang)

14.00 h
Prof. Dr Robert Bork (University of Iowa):
“Reflections on Refinement: Plasticity versus Planarity between France and Germany, 1250–1350”

14.30 h
Prof. Dr Jakub Adamski (University of Warsaw):
“Strasbourg – Wrocław – Cracow. On the Transfer of Modern Architectural Design from the Upper Rhine Valley to Southern Poland  from  c. 1280“

15.00 h
Prof. Dr Yves Gallet (Université Bordeaux Montaigne):
"Refinement versus Reduction? A Showcase of Paradoxical Coexistence in 14th-Century Architecture: Matthias of Arras´s Work in Prague"

15.30 h Discussion

CONCLUSION
(Chair: Prof. Dr Ute Engel)

15.45 h
Prof. Dr Bruno Klein (Technische Universität, Dresden): "Conclusion and Perspectives on Gothic Art, Architecture and Culture c. 1250 to 1350"

16.15 h Coffee/Tea, End of conference


The conference will take place at Martin-Luther-Universität, Halle:
On 23 and 24 May 2024 at Universitätsplatz, Löwengebäude, Aula and Historischer Sessionssaal, Universitätsplatz 11, 06108 Halle (Saale);
on 25 May 2025 at Steintor-Campus, Hörsaal II, Emil-Abderhalden-Straße 28, 06108 Halle (Saale).
Additionally, there will be the chance to listen to the lectures online via web-link.

Registration

Please register for the conference until 12 May 2024, using the email address below.
Please note whether you will take part in presence or online:
sekretariat@kunstgesch.uni-halle.de

The conference is co-sponsered by:
Fritz Thyssen Stiftung
Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Energie, Klimaschutz und Umwelt Sachsen-Anhalt
Saalesparkasse

Contact: ute.engel@kunstgesch.uni-halle.de

American Friends of Chartres Lecture: Designing Chartres Cathedral: A Geometrical Perspective, 14 May 2024, 7:30-9:00PM ET (ONLINE)

Online Lecture

American Friends of Chartres

Designing Chartres Cathedral: A Geometrical Perspective

14 May 2024, 7:30-9:00PM ET

How did medieval builders in Chartres use geometry to design their remarkable cathedral? Taking advantage of laser-scanned survey data and modern design software, Robert Bork sheds new light on this fundamental question, demonstrating both remarkable continuity in the builders’ methods and previously unrecognized revisions to the cathedral’s design in the years around 1200. In this zoom presentation, Bork will share these results in dialog with Ellen Shortell, with time at the end for Q&A with the audience.

To register for the event, click here.

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS: GESTA EDITORSHIP (DUE 31 MAY 2024; BEGINS 1 JANUARY 2025)

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS

EDITORSHIP OF GESTA

Application Review Begins Friday 31 May 2024

 The ICMA solicits applications for the next editor (or co-editors) of the ICMA’s flagship journal,Gesta. The position is an important one: Gesta is the only journal in North America devoted to medieval art history, and it serves a crucial function in our field as well as in medieval studies more generally. It is also one of the primary means by which the ICMA meets its core mission: “to promote and support the study, understanding, and preservation of visual and material cultures produced primarily between ca. 300 CE and ca. 1500 CE in every corner of the medieval world.”

The appointment is for a three-year-term beginning on 1 January 2025; it can be renewed for a second three-year-term term by mutual agreement. Following a model increasingly favored by other professional organizations (and which has been successfully implemented at Gesta since 2013), we will consider the option of appointing two colleagues to serve as co-editors. We are thus asking for single or paired applications.

Scholars in the field who have relevant editorial experience (vetting articles and carrying out extensive developmental editing) are encouraged to apply. Eligible applicants include faculty members at any rank from lecturer to professor, emeriti/ae, people in cognate professions, and independent scholars. However, we advise faculty on a tenure track appointment who have not yet been granted tenure to carefully consider their workload balance before applying to take on this substantial work. The position carries an annual stipend of $6,500 (or $3,250 each in the case of co-editors).

The Editors work with the production team at the University of Chicago Press (Journals Division). Chicago handles the design, printing, and distribution of the journal, and manages subscriptions. They also work directly with an Editorial Board that has a consultative function and the ICMA’s Publications Committee. The Editors will have the help of a professional copy editor appointed by the ICMA, and a part-time Editorial Assistant (typically a graduate student). During December 2024, the incoming editor(s) will receive orientation from the current editors, whose term will be over on 31 December 2024. 

Those interested in applying should submit a CV and a statement of interest and relevant experience, addressed to the address below. The Search Committee will begin reviewing applications on 31 May 2024.

Signed,
Brigitte Buettner
Chair, ICMA Publications Committee

Click HERE to submit application.

CALL FOR PROPOSALS FOR ICMA SPONSORED SESSIONS: INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL CONGRESS LEEDS 2025, DUE BY 15 MAY 2024

CALL FOR PROPOSALS

ICMA SPONSORED SESSIONS

INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL CONGRESS 2025

LEEDS, UNITED KINGDOM; 7-10 JULY 2025

DUE BY WEDNESDAY 15 MAY 2024

The International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) seeks proposals for sessions to be held under the organization’s sponsorship in 2025 at the International Medieval Congress (IMC) at Leeds, England.  

While session proposals on any topic related to the art of the Middle Ages are welcome, the IMC also chooses a theme for each conference. In 2025 the theme is “Worlds of Learning.”  For more information on the Leeds 2025 congress and theme, see:  https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc-2025/

Session organizers and speakers must be ICMA members at the time of the conference. Proposals must include a session abstract, and a list of speakers, as one single Doc or PDF with the organizer’s name in the title, and a CV, again as a Doc or PDF with the organizer’s name in the title.

Upload your proposals HERE by 15 May 2024.

Please direct all inquiries to the Chair of the Programs Committee: Alice I. Sullivan, Tufts University, USA, alice.sullivan@tufts.edu 

The ICMA Programs and Lectures committee will select a session to sponsor and will notify the successful organizer(s) by 7 June 2024. The organizer(s) will then submit the ICMA-sponsored proposal to the IMC. 

CALL FOR PROPOSALS FOR ICMA SPONSORED PANELS: ASSOCIATION FOR ART HISTORY ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2025, UNIVERSITY OF YORK, DUE BY 15 MAY 2024

CALL FOR PROPOSALS

ICMA SPONSORED PANELS

ASSOCIATION FOR ART HISTORY ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2025

University of YORK, UNITED KINGDOM; 9-11 APRIL 2025

DUE By WEDNESDAY 15 MAY 2024

The International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) seeks proposals for sessions to be held under the organization’s sponsorship at the Association for Art History Annual Conference to be held 9-11 April 2025 at the University of York.  

 Proposals to the ICMA must include a session abstract and a CV of the organizer(s).

Please note the following:  

  • The AAH does not require a slate of speakers; the AAH will generate a CFP once sessions have been selected. Therefore the ICMA will not request a slate of speakers. 

  • The ICMA requires the CVs of the session organizers, but the AAH does not. 

  • Session organizers and speakers must be ICMA members but are not required to become AAH members. However, AAH members receive a preferential conference rate. 

  • Sessions at the AAH conference are built of 70-minute blocks, with a minimum of two blocks per session, up to four blocks in a day. Each block consists of two papers of 25 minutes plus 10 minutes of questions for each paper. The ICMA seeks to sponsor one session of two 70-minute blocks (four papers). 


Upload your proposals HERE by 15 May 2024

Please direct all inquiries to the Chair of the Programs Committee: Alice I. Sullivan, Tufts University, USA, alice.sullivan@tufts.edu 

 
The ICMA Programs and Lectures committee will select a session to sponsor and will notify the successful organizer(s) by 7 June 2024. The organizer(s) will then submit the ICMA-sponsored proposal to the AAH, which will make the final decision. 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: ICMA ANNUAL BOOK PRIZE, SUBMISSIONS DUE 31 MAY 2024

Call for Submissions

2024 ICMA ANNUAL BOOK PRIZE

DEADLINE: 31 MAY 2024

AUTHORS: NOTIFY YOUR PUBLISHER TO SUBMIT YOUR BOOK!

EMAIL BOOKPRIZE@MEDIEVALART.ORG WITH THE TITLE(S), AUTHOR(S), AND PRESS NAME. IF SELF-NOMINATING, PLEASE SEND ALONG YOUR PRESS CONTACT’S EMAIL.

To be eligible for the 2024 prize, the book must have been printed in 2023. 

 The ICMA invites submissions for the annual prize for best single- or co-authored book on any topic in medieval art. To be eligible for the 2024 competition, books must have been printed in 2023. No anthologies, exhibition catalogues, or special issues of journals can be considered. 
The competition is international and open to all ICMA members. To join or renew, click here. A statement of current membership is required with each submission.

Languages of publication: English, French, German, Italian, or Spanish

Prize: US $1,000 to a single author, or US $1,000 split equally between co-authors.

Submission of books: only printed books are eligible for the prize. A statement of current ICMA membership must accompany each submission. 

Presses and self-nominations: books must be sent directly to the jury members. Please email BookPrize@medievalart.org with the title(s), author(s), and press name. If self-nominating, please send along your press contact’s email.

POSTPONED: IDEA ANNUAL LECTURE: MARTINA RUGIADI, SPEAKER - STAGING MEDIEVAL ART: PHOTOGRAPHY, ARCHAEOLOGY, AND LIVING OBJECTS IN AFGHANISTAN

POSTPONED
until Fall 2024

Thank you for your interest in the ICMA Annual IDEA Lecture by Martina Rugiadi. The event is postponed until the Fall of 2024. We will be in touch when we have rescheduled it to a specific date.

ICMA Annual IDEA Lecture
Staging medieval art: Photography, archaeology, and living objects in Afghanistan


Martina Rugiadi
, speaker
Thursday 2 May 2024 at 6pm ET


Since centuries, the town of Ghazni has been the site of devotion, visited by those seeking to be blessed and healed at the tombs of its saints. Yet our scholarly gaze has primarily focused on the city’s short-lived royal past of the 11th-12th centuries, the remains of which were meticulously documented with stunning photographs in the 1950s and 60s. Uncovering these images, this talk aims to reveal broader, more inclusive histories that transcend disciplinary boundaries.

Martina Rugiadi is Associate Curator in the Islamic Art Department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, where she is preparing an exhibition on medieval Afghan marbles. As an archaeologist, she has worked mostly in Iran, Afghanistan, and Syria, and now co-directs the Towns of the Karakum project in Turkmenistan. Her recent research explores medieval drinking, Islamic-period spolia, agency and visual languages, and the juncture of art history, cultural heritage, and the museum. 

Share