Exhibition: Goya’s ‘Disasters of War’ in Barcelona
As noted at ArtDaily:
Goya: The Disasters of War / Los Desastres de la Guerra
Museu Diocesà de Barcelona, 24 March — 29 May 2011
Ibercaja, together with the Diocesan Museum of Barcelona, has organised this exhibition of the first complete series of The Disasters of the War: 80 engravings of the Aragonese painter Francisco Goya Lucientes (Fuendetodos, Zaragoza, 1746 – Bordeaux, 1828). These were painted during the Spanish Independence War, between 1810 and 1814, and are a graphical chronicle of those tragic events. However, Goya far-reaches the events and his existential and vital adventure, and he uses his art to make a declaration against all wars: he denounces the atrocities of the French army against the Spanish people, as well as the violence of the soldiers and the uncontrollable masses. The result of these paintings is the evidence of a surprisingly modernity for the times, a real crude disillusioned reflexion about mankind, finding itself in a limit situation that creates cruelty, death and misery and shows the failure of reason, strongly defended by the erudites. . . .
The full ArtDaily posting is available here»
Paris Conference: Ugliness in the Eye of the Beholder?
This study day in Paris (Nanterre) addresses the theme of the aesthetics of ugliness from the Renaissance to the present. The first session is the one that’s relevant to the eighteenth century — and interesting to see ornament as the point of entry into the subject. From the INHA:
L’Esthétique du laid: Essai de définition d’une histoire du goût
Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, 19 May 2011
Objectif à atteindre ou bête à abattre, la question de l’esthétisme demeure encore aujourd’hui un point sensible de la production et de la critique artistique. La multiplicité des axes d’étude et la subjectivité « implicite » du sujet contraignent aujourd’hui les chercheurs et les enseignants à d’autant plus de nuances et de neutralité dans l’enseignement des arts. Organisée par les étudiants en Master 2 de l’Université Paris Ouest Nanterre – La Défense et sous l’égide de Claire Barbillon et Marianne Cojannot-Le Blanc, maîtres de conférences, cette journée d’étude est par conséquent l’occasion de réfléchir sur cette notion de la « laideur » et sur ses implications.
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Première Partie
Romain Godart and Sabrina Valin
« La gravure dans tous ses états : recueils d’ornements et décor architectural »
Malgré les critiques formulées à l’encontre des différents types d’ornements depuis l’Antiquité, leur diffusion massive depuis le chantier des Loges du Vatican jusqu’aux édifices français du XVIIIe siècle montre de quelles manières le « microbe » antique, tel que le décrit Louis Courajod, contamine les différents arts. Des recueils d’ornements fournissant aux artistes différents modèles, jusqu’à leur adaptation peinte, sculptée ou modelée, l’étude de ce sujet montre que l’ornement devient porteur d’un message qui transcende les simples préoccupations esthétiques et révèle une dimension cognitive ayant bien souvent trait à son commanditaire.
The full program is available as PDF here»
Reviewed: ‘Early Georgian Furniture’
Adam Bowett, Early Georgian Furniture 1715–1740 (Woodbridge, UK: Antique Collectors’ Club, 2009) 328 pages, ISBN: 9781851495849.
Reviewed for Enfilade by David Pullins
In the preface to Adam Bowett’s first book English Furniture 1660–1714 From Charles II to Queen Anne (2002), he wrote “I have attempted to write this book from first principles and, in the main, from primary evidence — bills, inventories and, of course, the furniture itself” (10). In Bowett’s latest work, Early Georgian Furniture 1715–1740, he pursues this disciplined and productive approach, providing numerous correctives to the sloppy dating that has infiltrated not only the antiques trade but also academic publications on English furniture. In particular, his research reveals the dangers of back-dating in the field, which, he argues, has created stylistic vacuums, particularly for the period of the 1720s and 1730s. In order more precisely to date a given form or motif, Bowett focuses on “fashionable furniture” — which is to say items typically produced in London for less than ten percent of the population. While this might at first appear to limit the usefulness of his study beyond the most rarefied examples, his point is not so much to disregard less elevated or vernacular examples but to provide solid points of departure through vanguard furniture. A trickle-down effect, largely accepted by most scholars who examine commerce during the period, is therefore a basic premise of the study. For readers aiming to identify and date a given piece of furniture, this method — along with the structure of the book, which is divided into six chapters according to form (e.g., “Seat Furniture” or “Mirrors”) — results in a remarkably user friendly text that, through a rich range of intelligently selected illustrations, can help contextualize furniture of varied quality and geography.
While Bowett’s meticulously documented corrections to the accepted chronology of English furniture will probably prove the strongest case for the importance of his book, the contribution he offers expands beyond issues of dating. Bowett’s primary research has revealed a fascinating body of information on the training of craftsmen, power structure in the workshop and the intricacies of interaction between patrons and furniture makers. By looking at contemporary documents, including inventories, trade-cards and labels (many of them illustrated), Bowett is able better to define basic terms used to describe furniture forms and the division of labor in the trade between, for example, turners and chair-makers or cabinet-makers and carvers. In the best case scenarios, contemporary descriptions are matched with the surviving work allowing us better to describe undocumented pieces of furniture and better to imagine pieces which are known now only through written descriptions. Bowett also lays the groundwork for understanding two especially complex issues relevant to his subject, the timber trade and the influence of East Asian furniture on English stylistic developments. While expanding on either topic would have greatly enriched his book and its relevance apart from the objects immediately at hand, he wisely curtails his discussion within the context of a self-acknowledged survey (though East Asia appropriately reappears in his description of the development of the cabriole leg, the top rails and back splats of early Georgian chairs).
In addition to Bowdett’s primary concern with form, this survey is also notable for its detailed account of gilt furniture (an important counterpoint to the materials caught in the colloquial phrase “Age of Walnut” to describe the period) and japanned surfaces, which Bowett first treated with considerable care in his earlier book on the preceding period. Both kinds of decoration remind us of the resilience of baroque modes well into the eighteenth century which issues of condition have sometimes occluded.
Bowett’s reappraisal of early Georgian furniture stands out as arguably the most important since R.W. Symonds’s classic texts from the 1920s through 1950s and the Dictionary of English Furniture (last revised in 1954), all of which continue to be used regularly by scholars. At two to three color illustrations per page, each given a detailed caption, the book moves beyond what earlier authors could offer while retaining their high standards of archival research. Following from his earlier work on furniture from Charles II through Queen Anne, Bowett’s book also paves a carefully plotted path for his next anticipated project devoted to the rise and influence of the most famous English cabinet-maker, Thomas Chippendale.
David Pullins is a Ph.D. candidate in History of Art and Architecture at Harvard University. His research addresses the circulation of images across media in eighteenth-century France.
At EMOB: Free Trial of Gale Cengage’s British Literary MSS Online
As noted at Early Modern Online Bibliography (10 April 2011) . . .
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For the next three weeks, emob readers can explore Gale Cengage’s British Literary Manuscripts Online for free. The database contains facsimile images of manuscripts digitized from microfilm. Though the texts themselves cannot be searched, their metadata can be. Authors can also be browsed alphabetically. The resolution is good, and legibility can be enhanced through digital magnification and brightness and contrast controls. Line tools and highlighting tools allow for digital annotation.
The product consists of two parts, both of which are included in the free trial: part one includes Medieval and Renaissance manuscripts; part two includes manuscripts written between 1660-1900.
On the database’s home page, the following links to online tutorials help with basic paleography. . . .
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The full posting at EMOB along with the link for free access is available here»
How I wish, incidentally, I had had access to the paleography tutorials before my first forays into manuscript research! These alone make the posting worth visiting (exploring the other offerings will, for me, have to wait until the weekend). Warm thanks to Anna Battigelli and Eleanor Shevlin for sharing news of the free trial with Enfilade readers. -CAH
Call for Papers: HECCA New Scholars Session at 2012 CAA
In reviewing the regular call for papers for next year’s CAA conference, please note that HECAA will also be sponsoring a special New Scholars Session. The deadline is slightly later than the regular due date for proposals. Questions should be directed to the session chair, Kevin Chua.
HECAA New Scholars Session at CAA in Los Angeles, 22-25 February 2012
Kevin Chua, Texas Tech University, kchua71@yahoo.com
Proposals due by 1 June 2011
This session seeks papers from new scholars in the field of eighteenth-century art and architecture. The panel will consist of three to four short papers. Each presentation should be about 15-20 minutes. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the delivery of all the papers. Please submit a 300-word abstract and curriculum vitae via email to Dr. Kevin Chua at: kevin.chua@ttu.edu. Session participants should be HECAA members in good standing, and preferably have obtained their PhD degree after 2009, or be ABD.
New Title: ‘The Efflorescence of Caricature, 1759-1838’
Todd Porterfield, ed., The Efflorescence of Caricature, 1759–1838 (Aldershot: Ashgate), 240 pages, ISBN: 9780754665915, $99.95.
Searing disputes over caricature have recently sparked flames across the world—the culmination, not the beginning, of the story of one of modernity’s definitive artistic practices. Modern visual satire erupts during a period marked by reform and revolution, by cohering nationalisms and expanding empires, and by the emerging discipline of art history. This has long been recognized as its Golden Age. It is time to look anew.
In The Efflorescence of Caricature, 1759–1838, an international, interdisciplinary, and intergenerational team of scholars reconfigures the geography of modern visual satire, as the expansive narrative reaches from North America to Europe, to China and the Ottoman Empire. Caricature’s specific visual cultures are also laid bare, its iconographic means and material support, as well as the diverse milieu of its making—the military, the art academy, diplomacy, politics, art criticism, and popular entertainment. Some of its greatest practitioners—James Gillray and Honoré Daumier—are seen in a new light, alongside some of their far flung and opportunistic pastichers. Most trenchantly, assumptions about the consequences of caricature’s rise come under intense scrutiny, interrogated for its cherished and long-vaunted civilizational claims on individual character, artistic supremacy, political liberty, and global domination.
- Todd Porterfield, The efflorescence of caricature
- Dominic Hardy, Caricature on the edge of empire: George Townshend in Quebec
- Pierre Wachenheim, Early modern Dutch emblems and French visual satire: transfers of models across the 18th century
- Reva Wolf, John Bull, liberty and wit: how England became caricature
- Douglas Fordham, On bended knee: James Gillray’s global view of courtly encounter
- Helen Weston, The light of wisdom: magic lanternists as truth-tellers in post-Revolutionary France
- Richard Taws, The currency of caricature in Revolutionary France
- Mike Goode, The public and the limits of persuasion in the age of caricature
- Robert L. Patten, Signifying shape in pan-European caricature
- Christina Oberstebrink, James Gillray, caricaturist and modernist artist avant la lettre
- Ségolène Le Men, The Musée de la caricature
Todd Porterfield is Professor and Canada Research Chair in Art History at the Université de Montréal. He is the author of The Allure of Empire: Art in the Service of French Imperialism, 1798–1836 (1998), and co-author of Staging Empire: Napoleon, Ingres, and David (2006).
Art History Publication Initiative for First Books
Art History Publication Initiative
A multi-press collaboration to create new publishing opportunities for scholars of art history
This exciting new publishing opportunity offers art historians seeking publication of their first book the chance to be part of a groundbreaking collaborative publishing project. Authors whose books are selected for inclusion in AHPI will find many benefits, including:
• Financial assistance and guidance in acquiring and securing permission for illustrations
• Publication in both print and electronic editions
• A shared website hosting additional electronic enhancements to the book, including but not limited to audio, video, illustrative material, animation, and podcasts
• A strong marketing program including both print and digital
advertising (more…)
Reviewed: ‘Italy’s Eighteenth Century’
Recently added to caa.reviews:
Paula Findlen, Wendy Wassyng Roworth, and Catherine M. Sama, eds., Italy’s Eighteenth Century: Gender and Culture in the Age of the Grand Tour (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009), 504 pages, ISBN: 9780804759045, $65.
Reviewed by Sarah Betzer, McIntire Department of Art, University of Virginia; posted 31 March 2011.
Following an efflorescence of critical work on the subject over the last twenty-five years, the European Grand Tour has emerged as a focus of innovative interdisciplinary scholarship. The significance of ancient and Renaissance art to the Grand Tour itinerary—together with the emergence of modern display practices and attendant opportunities for the exercise of aesthetic judgment—have conspired to guarantee the Grand Tour’s special appeal to art historians. The subject’s enduring interest is surely also due to the fact that it has proven especially fertile ground for art history’s disciplinary move toward thinking beyond national borders. The Grand Tour was founded on the experience of boundary crossing, and the best recent work on the subject has explored how the touristic encounter with real and imagined Italian geographies put productive pressure on national, class, and gender identities. “Italy’s Eighteenth Century: Gender and Culture in the Age of the Grand Tour” is an important addition to this literature, charting new territory by examining Italy in the age of Enlightenment with a view from inside.
Like Paula Findlen’s excellent introduction, the collection reflects a “multidisciplinary conversation about the state of this field” (1), with authors hailing from the history of science, history of art, history of music, literature, and gender studies. The collection makes available in English the recent work of established Italian scholars who are united with their North American counterparts by their scrupulous mining of archival sources; the generous footnotes shed light on a veritable treasure trove of primary documents.
The volume’s ambitious core contribution is couched methodologically: to unsettle the tendency to examine Italy of the Grand Tour primarily through the eyes of foreign visitors whereby “Italy” emerges as a sort of afterimage, a composite of lived experiences, mythic tropes, and memories. This approach, shared by many of the foremost Grand Tour scholars, has yielded fundamental insights about foreign perceptions of Italy, albeit one that Findlen observes can threaten to reduce the site to “an itinerary rather than a living, breathing entity” (4). This volume proposes to expand our understanding of the place and period by examining the particular cultural episodes of the Italian peninsula “in its own terms” (7). . . .
The full review is available here» (CAA membership required)
At CUNY: Three Revolutions of Liberty: England, America, and France
From the Center for Humanities at CUNY:
Three Revolutions of Liberty: England, America, and France
Philippe Raynaud, Nadia Urbinati, Jeremy Jennings, and Richard Wolin
Center for the Humanities, The City University of New York, 13 April 2011

400 pages, ISBN: 9782130568742
Over the last few decades, the revival of political liberalism has gone hand in hand with a reassessment of the commonalities and differences subtending the eighteenth-century trans-Atlantic revolutions. A comparative perspective allows us to better appreciate the standpoints of both the revolutions’ leading intellectual progenitors (Locke, Montesquieu, and Jefferson) as well as of their leading critics (Edmund Burke, Madame de Stael, and Alexis de Tocqueville). In Trois révolutions de la liberté, Angleterre, États-Unis, France (2009), Philippe Raynaud, one of the protagonists of the French liberal revival, has fashioned a unique interpretation of the intellectual lineage that defines this trans-Atlantic revolutionary heritage – a heritage that, in so many ways, continues to define the central terms of modern politics. Join Prof. Raynaud (Political Science, University of Paris II), Nadia Urbinati (Political Science, Columbia University), Jeremy Jennings (Political Science, Queen Mary, University College London), and Richard Wolin (Political Science and
History, The Graduate Center, CUNY) for a vigorous debate on the
implications and relevance of the revolutionary legacy for both the history
of ideas as well as contemporary politics.
Conference on Connections between India and Europe
New Global Connections: India and Europe in the Long Eighteenth Century
Centre for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Queen’s University Belfast, 5-6 May 2011

"Old Court House and Street, Calcutta," 1786
The Centre for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Queen’s University Belfast, is holding an international symposium entitled New Global Connections: India and Europe in the Long Eighteenth Century on 5 and 6 May 2011. The opening lecture of the symposium (part of the long-running India Lecture Series at QUB) will be by Professor Seema Alavi of Delhi University on “Mughal Decline and the Emergence of New Global Connections.” The programme comprises eleven papers that seek to evoke the pan-European dimensions of the eighteenth-century encounter with India through interdisciplinary engagement. For details of the programme please contact: Dr. Gabriel Sánchez Espinosa, g.sanchez@qub.ac.uk
Following an efflorescence of critical work on the subject over the last twenty-five years, the European Grand Tour has emerged as a focus of innovative interdisciplinary scholarship. The significance of ancient and Renaissance art to the Grand Tour itinerary—together with the emergence of modern display practices and attendant opportunities for the exercise of aesthetic judgment—have conspired to guarantee the Grand Tour’s special appeal to art historians. The subject’s enduring interest is surely also due to the fact that it has proven especially fertile ground for art history’s disciplinary move toward thinking beyond national borders. The Grand Tour was founded on the experience of boundary crossing, and the best recent work on the subject has explored how the touristic encounter with real and imagined Italian geographies put productive pressure on national, class, and gender identities. “Italy’s Eighteenth Century: Gender and Culture in the Age of the Grand Tour” is an important addition to this literature, charting new territory by examining Italy in the age of Enlightenment with a view from inside.


















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