Online Conference | Ecologies of Paper
From The Huntington:
Ecologies of Paper in the Early Modern World
Online, 5-6 November 2020
Registration due by 30 October 2020
Presented by The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, Ecologies of Paper in the Early Modern World will explore the transmutation, preservation, and loss of paper as a cycle of archiving and forgetting that defined early modern artistic practice, economic transaction, and political statecraft. Speakers will map paper’s various guises, its ability to retain meanings associated with its material origins, as well as its desire to conceal its former states or to encourage belief in a value beyond its material reality. Charting the journeys of early modern paper in drawing, print, and document, this program will not only restructure our understanding of paper’s importance in early modern artistic practice and political life but also reconstruct the governing roles of environment, place, and origin in modes of making and address. If you would like to receive a copy of the speakers’ papers for this event, please register here by October 30. All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST).
T H U R S D A Y , 5 N O V E M B E R 2 0 2 0
9:00 Welcome and Introduction
• Steve Hindle (The Huntington), Shira Brisman (University of Pennsylvania), and Caroline Fowler (Clark Art Institute)
9:15 Session 1: Documents and Foundations
• Asheesh Kapur Siddique (University of Massachusetts-Amherst), Documenting the Body of State: Paper, Early Modernity, and the Matter of the U.S. Constitution
• Cheryl Finley (Cornell University and the Atlanta University Center Collective for the Study of Art History & Curatorial Studies), Paper, Print, and Activism
• John Gagné (University of Sydney), Toward a History of the Conservation of the Premodern Documentary Heritage
10:30 Break
10:45 Session 2: Backgrounds and Foregrounds
• Jennifer Chuong (Harvard University), Overmarbling and Paper’s Disorderly Metamorphoses
• Iris Brahms (Freie Universität Berlin), Blue Paper as Metaphor and Efficient Solution
• Caroline Fowler (Clark Art Institute), The Matrix and The Mould: Counter-Histories of Reproduction
• Heather Wolfe (Folger Shakespeare Library), Interpreting the Materiality of Paper through Digital Images
12:15 Discussion, led by Shira Brisman (University of Pennsylvania)
F R I D A Y , 6 N O V E M B E R 2 0 2 0
9:15 Session 3: Scarcity
• Joshua Calhoun (University of Wisconsin-Madison), The Transformation of a Plant; or, Rags Do Not Make Paper
• Shira Brisman (University of Pennsylvania), Contriving Scarcity in Early Modern Art and Law
10:15 Break
10:30 Session 4: The Paper Age
• Esther Chadwick (The Courtauld Institute of Art), Material Sinews of the Paper Age
• Nina Dubin (University of Illinois-Chicago), Rags to Riches: Paper Culture in the Age of Bubbles
• Richard Taws (University College London), Laissez-passer: Afterimages of Revolutionary France
11:45 Break
12:30 Discussion, led by Caroline Fowler (Clark Art Institute)
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