Conference: Art Against the Wall
From The Courtauld:
Art against the Wall
The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, London, 19 November 2011
Organized by Thomas Balfe and Jocelyn Anderson
Art against the Wall is the third symposium of The Courtauld’s Early Modern department. The symposium will provide an occasion for established and emerging scholars to present and discuss their research together. This one-day symposium will explore the relationship between walls and art in early modern visual culture. During the period 1550-1850 the interplay between work and wall became increasingly complex as art objects began to pull away from the walls which had previously defined them. The enduring association between artistic skill and craft production meant that many art works were often still regarded as elements in overarching decorative schemes; paintings installed in eighteenth-century English domestic interiors, for example, continue to be described as part of the ornamentation, even as the furniture, of a room. Conversely, walls now had the power to redefine art works, giving them a new meaning through a new context; thus, in late sixteenth-century debates on the status of the religious image, walls – which map the division between sacred and secular space – take on crucial importance. Yet the wall could also become art, as the numerous examples of trompe l’oeil wall illustration to be found in seventeenth-century architecture and garden design suggest. Taking as its point of departure Derrida’s insight that there can be no clear separation of ergon (work) from parergon (not-the-work, ‘wall’), the symposium will attempt to investigate the rich questions raised by the phenomenon of art against the wall.
To book a place: £15 (£10 students) Please send a cheque made payable to ‘Courtauld Institute of Art’ to: Research Forum Events Co-ordinator, Research Forum, The Courtauld Institute of Art , Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN, clearly stating that you wish to book for the ‘Art against the Wall’ symposium. For credit card bookings call 020 7848 2785 (9.30 – 18.00, weekdays only). For further information, send an email to ResearchForumEvents@courtauld.ac.uk
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P R O G R A M M E
9:30 Registration
10:00 Introduction – Jocelyn Anderson and Thomas Balfe (The Courtauld Institute of Art)
SESSION 1: Work, Wall and Space: How Does Art Fit In?
10:15 Rodrigo Cañete (The Courtauld Institute of Art), Velazquez’s Wall Hermeneutics or How Only His Role as Palace Superintendent Can Allow Us to Unlock The Meaning of His Paintings
10:35 Dario Donetti (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa), ‘Quattordici cappelle a canto al muro’: Some Architectural Issues Concerning Santa Croce in Florence under Cosimo I de’ Medici
10:55 Catherine McCormack (UCL), Caravaggio’s Madonna of the Pilgrims or Just Another Brick in the Wall?
11:15 Discussion
11:30 COFFEE/TEA BREAK
SESSION 2: Domestic Displays: Art in London Residences
12:00 Adriano Aymonino (Getty Research Institute), The Integration of the Arts in British Neoclassical Interiors: Aesthetics and Meaning
12:20 Susannah Brooke (Queens’ College, Cambridge), Issues of Display: a Private Picture Collection in London, c. 1795-1820
12:40 Gerry Abalone (Tate), Painting, Frame and Setting
13:00 Discussion
13:15 LUNCH (not provided)
SESSION 3: The Wall Transformed: Monumental Illusionism
15:15 Meriel May Geolot (independent scholar), Unravelling the Tapestries: The Gobelin’s Tentures de Boucher in the Late Georgian English Country Home
14:35 Marika T. Knowles (Yale University), Pierrot and the Wall-Mask, or How the Wall Became a Character
14:55 Kristina Kleutghen (Washington University, St Louis), Contradictions of Illusion and Immateriality: Psycho-Pictorial Disjunctions in Early Modern Chinese Wall Paintings
15:15 Discussion
15:30 COFFEE/TEA BREAK
SESSION 4: Ergon/Parergon: Grand Schemes in Palaces
16:00 Kevin Childs (British School at Rome), ‘…piena di grazia, di bellissime fantasie e di molte capricciose…’ Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel Ceiling and the Wall that is no Wall in late sixteenth-century Roman Fresco Decoration
16:20 Francesco Freddolini (Getty Research Institute), The Eloquent Walls: Stucco Decoration and Display of Art in Seventeenth-Century Rome
16:40 Friederike Drinkuth (Stately Palaces and Gardens Mecklenburg) and Tobias Locker (Technische Universität, Berlin), Reconsidering the Frederican Rococo: The Discovery of Mirow Palace
17:00 Discussion and concluding remarks
17:30 RECEPTION
Abstracts of the talks are available as a PDF file here»
Call for Papers: Graduate Student Symposium in Vancouver
Graduate Student Symposium in Vancouver: The Unseen
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, 30-31 March 2012
Proposals due 6 January 2012
The Unseen proposes a blind engagement with the visual. While traditional art historical practice assumes the task of making the art object or artifact whole through observation, description, and interpretation, this symposium instead sets out to embrace a trace that may be fractured, destroyed, moved, translated, historicized, censored, extolled or ignored. The 31st annual University of British Columbia Art History, Visual Art and Theory Graduate Symposium will attend to a critical reassessment of what resists representation, description, articulation or documentation. We seek innovative submissions that investigate and conceptualize the notion of the unseen as it intersects with historical, perceptual, political and philosophical claims concerning the production and circulation of meanings and forms of knowledge.
Unseeing describes both a category of historical analysis and a critical action. Recent studies on visuality and visual culture have asserted the primacy of the visual as a “social fact” constituting historical and contemporary modes of perception and lived experience. By challenging what is or has once been at the boundaries of visuality and visibility, the unseen alternately aims to grasp the unseizable and its potentiality as a form of non-knowledge. This methodological reevaluation further underscores the historiographical problematic of the unwritten or the unwriteable, discerning what has been occluded from or has escaped being written into histories of the visual, or what has become embedded in and normative of others.
Current and recently graduated Master of Arts, Masters of Fine Arts, Doctoral and Post Doctoral scholars are encouraged to submit an abstract of no more than 300 words by January 6, 2011. Include your full name, affiliation and contact information and send your abstract to gradsymp@interchange.ubc.ca.
The 31st Annual AHVAT Graduate Symposium includes a two-day symposium on March 30 and 31, 2012, and a concurrent exhibition, dates to be confirmed. For more information please visit: http://www.ahva.ubc.ca.



















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