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Conference | James Gillray@200: Caricaturist without a Conscience?

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on February 12, 2015

JamesGillrayEnchantments

James Gillray, Enchantments Lately Seen upon the Mountain of Wales, 1796
(New College, Oxford)

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From New College, Oxford:

James Gillray@200: Caricaturist without a Conscience?
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 28–29 March 2015

Organised by Todd Porterfield, Université de Montréal; Martin Myrone, Tate Britain; and Michael Burden, New College, Oxford; with Ersy Contogouris, Université de Montréal

To commemorate the 200th anniversary of Gillray’s death, and in conjunction with the Ashmolean Museum’s exhibition, Love Bites: Caricatures of James Gillray, based on New College’s outstanding collection, we are organizing a two-day symposium at the Ashmolean Museum to hear and see the latest Gillray scholarship.

James Gillray’s reputation in the two centuries since his death has been as varied and layered as his prints. Trained at the Royal Academy, he failed at reproductive printmaking, yet became, according to the late-eighteenth-century Weimar journal London und Paris, one of the greatest European artists of the era. Napoleon, from his exile on St Helena, allegedly remarked that Gillray’s prints did more to run him out of power than all the armies of Europe. In England, patriots had hired him to propagandize against the French and touted him as a great national voice, but he was an unreliable gun-for-hire. At a large public banquet, during the heat of anti-Revolutionary war fever, he even raised a toast to his fellow artist, the regicide, Jacques-Louis David. Gillray produced a highly individual, highly schooled, and often outlandish body of work with no clear moral compass that undermines the legend of the caricaturist as the voice and heart of the people.

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S A T U R D A Y ,  2 8  M A R C H  2 0 1 5

10.00  Registration and coffee

10:30  Session I: Gillray in the Media Age
• Douglas Fordham, University of Virginia, ‘A Media Critic for the Intaglio Age’
• Esther Chadwick, Yale University, ‘Gillray’s Tree of Liberty: Political Communication and Epistolary Networks in the Radical 1790s’
• Kate Grandjouan, Visiting Associate Professor, Department of Art History, University of Belgrade, ‘Gillray’s French Jokes: The “Sick-list” Casualties of the 1790s’

12.00  Lunch

1:00  Session II: Gillray in the Colonial Networks: Positionings on Race and Slavery
• Julie Mellby, Graphic Arts Curator within Rare Books and Special Collections at Firestone Library, Princeton University, ‘The Sale and Resale of English Beauties in the East Indies’
• Amanda Lahikainen, Aquinas College, ‘James Gillray and Representations of Napoleon’s Egyptian Campaign: Islam as Republican Sacrilege’
• Katherine Hart, Senior Curator of Collections & the Barbara C. and Harvey P. Hood 1918 Curator of Academic Programming, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, ‘James Gillray, Charles James Fox, and the Abolition of the Slave Trade: Caricature and Displacement in the Debate over Reform’

2.30  Coffee

3:00  Session III: The Artist and Formal Means
• Ersy Contogouris, Université de Québec à Montreal, ‘Gillray’s Preparatory Drawings’
• Cynthia Roman, The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University, ‘James Gillray and the Satiric Alternative to Painting History’

6.30  Reception

7.00  Dinner

S U N D A Y ,  2 9  M A R C H  2 0 1 5

9.00  Visit to the exhibition, Love Bites: Caricatures of James Gillray

10:15  Session IV: The Artist and Literary Means
• David Taylor, Assistant Professor, Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies, University of Warwick, ‘Gillray, Milton, and the “Caricatura Sublime”’
• Rachel M. Brownstein, Professor of English, City University of New York, ‘James Gillray and Jane Austen: Aesthetic Affinities’

11.15  Coffee

11:45  Session V: Gillray, the People, the Academy and Revolution
• Vic Gatrell, Caius College, Cambridge, ‘Gillray Reconsidered: ‘The Voice and Heart of the People’?
• Katarzyna Murawska-Muthesius, Associate Lecturer, Department of History of Art, Birkbeck College, University of London, ‘Caricature’s Unconscious: James Gillray and the Academy’
• Ian Haywood, Professor of English Co-Director, Centre for Research in Romanticism University of Roehampton, London, ‘Gillray’s Valediction: The Life of William Cobbett

1.15  Lunch

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