In Memoriam | Rosalind Savill (1951–2024)
Dame Rosalind Savill (1951–2024), DBE, FSA, FBA
A memorial service is being planned for Dame Rosalind Savill by her daughter Isabella Calkin and brother Hugh Savill, to take place in London on a week day in late spring or early summer. So that an appropriate venue can be found, it would be incredibly helpful for Isabella and Hugh to have an idea of the number of people who would like to attend. If you hope to come, could you kindly register your interest as soon as possible at the following email address: RosMemorial@outlook.com. Please feel free to share the news with anyone you think may also be interested in attending.
From The Wallace Collection:
The Wallace Collection is deeply saddened by the recent passing of Dame Rosalind Savill, who was Director of the museum from 1992 until 2011.
Following her studies at the University of Leeds and a position in the ceramics department at the Victoria and Albert Museum, Dame Rosalind joined the Wallace Collection in 1974 as a museum assistant. In 1978, she became Assistant to the Director and further developed her life-long passion for the Collection’s outstanding 18th-century French decorative arts, particularly the sumptuous porcelain created by the Sèvres Manufactory. Many years of research culminated in Dame Rosalind’s publication of these treasures in her 1988 Catalogue of Sèvres Porcelain, which remains a ground-breaking work of reference for French ceramic studies.
From here, Dame Rosalind was appointed Director of the Wallace Collection in 1992. With great energy and tenacity, she brought vital change to the museum, transforming it from an undervisited and underappreciated institution into a cultural landmark, made open and relevant to all. Her most ambitious undertaking was developing the Centenary Project. With generous funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Monument Trust, the Wolfson Foundation, and private individuals, this created a glazed courtyard, as well as new exhibition, learning, library, and event spaces, while securing the very foundations of the building itself. Dame Rosalind breathed new life into the galleries, too, by leading on their refurbishment and rehanging, giving them the splendid character that is much loved today. These galleries also played host to daring exhibitions under her leadership, including showing works by Lucian Freud in 2006 and Damien Hirst in 2009, which looked to reframe the museum within contemporary contexts and led to an unprecedented rise in visitor numbers.
Dame Rosalind’s extraordinary achievements and expertise were recognised far beyond the Wallace Collection. She was awarded a National Art Collection Fund Prize in 1990, appointed a CBE in 2000 and a DBE in 2009 for her services to the arts, and most recently made an officer of the Ordre des Arts et Lettres in 2014. She also served as a trustee to numerous institutions, including the Royal Collection, the Samuel Courtauld Trust, and the Buccleuch Living Heritage Trust, as well as on the advisory committees of the Royal Mint and English Heritage and the academic committee of Waddesdon Manor. In 2011, Dame Rosalind retired from the museum but continued her research on Sèvres, publishing in 2021 Everyday Rococo, a magisterial study of Madame de Pompadour and her patronage of the porcelain factory. Objects were always at the very centre of Dame Rosalind’s work, and she had an insatiable desire to understand them, through close looking and handling, and strongly encouraged others to do so, too. Above all, she was an inspiring communicator and teacher, playing a pivotal role for generations of art lovers, historians, and critics.
The Wallace Collection wishes to celebrate Dame Rosalind’s unwavering commitment and contribution to this remarkable museum and extends heartfelt condolences to her family and friends.
In memory of Dame Rosalind’s profound contribution to the study of French decorative arts, in 2025 the Collection will inaugurate an annual memorial lecture in her name. In the spirit of her passion for sharing her knowledge with the public, each year the Dame Rosalind Savill Memorial Lecture will enable a leading scholar to share new insights into the world of 18th-century French arts and culture.
–Xavier Bray, Director, on behalf of all the Trustees and Staff at The Wallace Collection
New Book | Eighteenth-Century Sicily: Rebuilding after Natural Disaster
From Amsterdam UP:
Martin Nixon, Architecture, Opportunity, and Conflict in Eighteenth-Century Sicily: Rebuilding after Natural Disaster (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2023), 284 pages, ISBN: 978-9463725736, €134 / $154.
The catastrophic Sicilian earthquake of 1693 led to the rebuilding of over 60 towns in the island’s south-west. The rebuilding extended into the eighteenth century and gave opportunities for the reassertion and the transformation of power relations. Although eight of the towns are now protected by UNESCO, the remarkable architecture resulting from this rebuilding is little known outside Sicily.
This is the first book-length study in English of this interesting area of early modern architecture. Rather than seek to address all of the towns, five case studies discuss key aspects of the rebuilding by approaching the architecture from different scales, from that of a whole town to parts of a town, or single buildings, or parts of buildings and their decoration. Each case study also investigates a different theoretical assumption in architecture, including ideas of the Baroque, rational planning, and the relegation of decoration in architectural discourse.
Martin Nixon is Assistant Professor of Art History at Zayed University, United Arab Emirates. His research interests include Southern Italian art and architecture, architecture and political power, urbanism and territorial transformation, the reception of architectural ornament, and questions of cultural and stylistic hybridity in architecture. Nixon completed his doctoral dissertation on the eighteenth-century rebuilding of the Val di Noto, Sicily with York University in 2018. In 2011, he received the John Fleming Travel Award to assist his doctoral research in Sicily. He completed an MA in Art History at the Open University in December 2007 with a dissertation on the eighteenth-century Sansevero Chapel in Naples.
c o n t e n t s
List of illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Sicily as a Colonial Possession c. 1600–1750: Subordination and Resistance
2 The Hexagonal Towns of Avola and Grammichele: Urbanism, Fortification, and Coercion
3 The Palaces of Noto: Ornament, Order, and Opportunism
4 The Palazzo Biscari in Catania: Lightness, Refinement, and Distinction
5 The Palazzo Beneventano in Scicli: Trauma and Violence
6 The Palaces of Ragusa: Abundance, Famine, and the Grotesque
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Call for Papers | Lost Cities in a Global Perspective
From ArtHist.net:
Lost Cities in a Global Perspective: Sources, Experience, and Imagery, 15th–18th Centuries
University of Campania ‘Luigi Vanvitelli’, Caserta, 16–17 October 2025
Proposals due by 15 March 2025
In conjunction with the Research Project “The Vesuvian Lost Cities before the ‘Discovery’: Sources, Experience, and Imagery in Early Modern Period” (VeLoCi)
In 1972 Italo Calvino published the book Invisible Cities, encouraging a reflection on modern megalopolises starting from the reactivation of the imaginary arising from the memory of historical cities. In “Cities and Memory 3,” Calvino states that “the city does not tell its past, it contains it like the lines of a hand, written in the corners of the streets, in the grilles of the windows, in the handrails of the stairs, in the antennas of the lightning rods, in the poles of the flags,” underlining how the knowledge of a city passes through the discovery of material elements (space) and immaterial elements (history).
More recently, Salvatore Settis (Se Venezia muore, 2014 / If Venice Dies, 2016) postulated that “Cities die in three ways: when they are destroyed by a ruthless enemy (like Carthage, which was razed to the ground by Rome in 146 BC); when a foreign people settles there by force, driving out the natives and their gods (like Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztecs that the Spanish conquistadores destroyed in 1521 and then built Mexico City on its ruins); or, finally, when the inhabitants lose their memory of themselves, and without even realizing it become strangers to themselves, enemies of themselves. This was the case of Athens.”
Many cities across the world have disappeared over the centuries, abandoned (but perhaps never forgotten), destroyed by natural disasters, or buried under new urban layers (Teotihuacán, Chichén Itzá, Copàn, Tulum, Angkor, Petra, Rome, Pompeii, Herculaneum, Brescia), re-emerging for different reasons. Fascinating historians, explorers, archaeologists, architects, and artists, ‘lost cities’—both literally and metaphorically—have continued to exist in literary sources, descriptions, chronicles, and sometimes in iconographic representations.
Pompeii and Herculaneum are two of the most famous cities that disappeared due to natural disasters. Despite historiographical and narrative traditions claiming that their ‘discovery’ occurred only in conjunction with the start of the Bourbon excavations in the 18th century, the VeLoCi project has demonstrated that even before the start of systematic excavations, material traces of the existence of these ancient cities had emerged and that there was no lack of literary, antiquarian, and scientific sources dedicated to their history. In other cases, cities that disappeared following catastrophes or simple stratification were not unearthed, despite their historical past being well known.
What was then the perception, the relationship of coexistence and study and knowledge with the buried/lost cities in the different cultures of the world in the early modern era? What phenomena or episodes have reactivated their systematic research? What are the operational, scientific, and epistemological approaches to the discovery of the past? What are the reasons that suggest seeking and valorising the past?
Starting from the case study of the Vesuvian cities, the international conference Lost Cities in a Global Perspective: Sources, Experience, Imagery in Early Modern Period (XV–XVIII Century) aims to investigate in an interdisciplinary and comparative way the material and imaginary dimensions assumed by lost cities before the birth of archaeology as a science in the 18th and 19th centuries. We invite scholars from a variety of disciplines, including architectural history, art and literary history, history, history of science, archaeology, cultural studies, and other related fields, to submit papers examining cases from any geographical context. Interdisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome, as are contributions that reflect on the exchange of knowledge and cultures at a global level.
Topics may include (but are not limited to):
• Travel Accounts and Exploration: the role of European explorers and missionaries in shaping the narratives of lost cities in Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
• Historiographical approaches: the role of early modern historians and intellectuals in constructing and reconstructing the idea of lost cities.
• Myth and Reality: what role did legends and fantastic narratives have in shaping lost cities and how did they intertwine with emerging archaeological or geographical knowledge.
• Visual Culture and cartography: the role of representations of lost cities in art and cartography.
• Colonialism and Cultural Exchange: the impact of colonial expansion on the perception of lost cities and the relationship with native cultures.
• Material Culture and Archaeology: proto-archaeology and antiquarian research in exploring the physical remains of lost cities and ancient civilizations.
• Literature and Lost Cities: the role of literature in constructing of the idea of lost cities, from utopian and dystopian narratives to adventure tales.
• Cultural Memory and Identity: how did the notion of lost cities has served as a tool for constructing cultural memory and national identity, and how did societies have preserved or forgotten this memory.
• Environmental Factors and Natural Disasters: what role has climate change, natural disasters, and geographical displacement played in the disappearance of cities.
The two-day conference—organised by Giulia Ceriani Sebregondi, Francesca Mattei, and Danila Jacazzi—is promoted by the PRIN 2022 research project “VeLoCi — The Vesuvian Lost Cities before the ‘Discovery’: Sources, Experience, Imagery in Early Modern Period” at the end of its duration and will be hosted at the University of Campania ‘Luigi Vanvitelli’, in Caserta, Italy. VeLoCi will organise and pay for accommodation and reimburse travel costs (economy class) for the speakers. At the end of the conference, the publication of some contributions in a peer-reviewed collective volume will be evaluated. Scientific and organisational secretariat by Giorgia Aureli and Giorgia Pietropaolo.
Participation in the conference is free of charge. The conference languages are Italian and English. Abstracts, in PDF format (maximum 1500 characters, about 250 words) in Italian or English, must include a title and a short biography (maximum 1500 characters, about 250 words). Please send the material to ve.lo.ci.prin@gmail.com by 15 March 2025. Notification of accepted proposals will be sent around 15 April. Please note that this CFP is also open to PhD students and independent scholars.
Scientific Committee
Candida Carrino, Giulia Ceriani Sebregondi, Kathleen Christian, Bianca de Divitiis, Danila Jacazzi, Francesca Mattei, Tanja Michalsky, Massimo Osanna, Francesco Sirano
New Book | Shoes and the Georgian Man
From Bloomsbury:
Matthew McCormack, Shoes and the Georgian Man (London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2025), 208 pages, ISBN: 978-1350358676 (hardback), £85, $100 / ISBN: 978-1350358669 (paperback), £29, $40.
Shoes are everyday objects, but they are loaded with meaning. This book reveals how shoes played a powerful role in the wider story of shifts in gender relations in 18th-century Britain. It focuses on the relationship of shoes with the body and its movements, and therefore how what we wear on our feet relates closely to social, occupational, and gender roles. It also uses footwear to explore topics such as politics, war, dance, and disability. Thinking about shoes as material objects, McCormack studied historic shoes first-hand in museums, in order to ascertain their physical properties and what they would have been like to wear. Worn shoes preserve traces of the wearer’s body in their indentations, stretches and scuffs, providing a unique primary source about their wearer. This approach forges new connections between the histories or material culture, gender, and the body, and sheds new light on what it meant to be a man in the 18th century.
Matthew McCormack is Professor of History at the University of Northampton, course leader for MA History, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and of the Higher Education Academy. His previous books include The Independent Man: Citizenship and Gender Politics in Georgian England, Embodying the Militia in Georgian England, and Citizenship and Gender in Britain, 1688–1928. He edited the Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies (2015–20).
c o n t e n t s
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Georgian Men and Their Shoes
2 Shoes and the Body
3 Shoes and Politics
4 Boots and Masculinity
5 Gout Shoes and Disability
6 Dancing Feet
7 The Soldier’s Shoe
Conclusion: Wearing Georgian Shoes
Select Bibliography
Index
Registration for an online conversation about the book is available via Eventbrite:
Online Conversation: Shoes and the Georgian Man
Tuesday, 11 March 2025, 2pm EDT
Serena Dyer talks with Matthew McCormack about his new book, Shoes and the Georgian Man, published by Bloomsbury in January 2025. By Leicester Branch of the Historical Assn.
New Book | The Turban
From Reaktion Books with distribution by The University of Chicago Press:
Chris Filstrup and Jane Merrill, The Turban: A History from East to West (London: Reaktion Books, 2025), 264 pages, ISBN: 978-1836390749, £20 / $30.
A superbly illustrated history of the turban, from Arabian origins to global cultural icon.
A turban is a strip of cloth folded and wrapped around the head; however, this description includes multifarious forms across space and time. This book follows the turban as it moves from the Arabian Peninsula through the Ottoman Empire to Europe and the Americas. It directs the reader’s gaze from traditional and religious uses of the turban into the realms of international trade, Renaissance art and contemporary fashions. Turbans, as this book shows, have moved in and out of Western culture, at times considered archaic and forgotten, then noticed and reinstated as major accessories. Today Sikh men are recognized by their distinctive headwraps, and the turban remains an important part of Black culture. This book explores the turban’s many adaptations worldwide.
Chris Filstrup was Chief of the Oriental Division at the New York Public Library and Dean of Libraries at Stony Brook University. He is co-author with Jane Merrill of The Wedding Night (2011) among other titles. He lives in Alexandria, Virginia.
Jane Merrill has written for many national U.S. magazines and is the author of The Showgirl Costume (2018) and other cultural histories. She lives in Saint George, Maine.
c o n t e n t s
Introduction
1 A Path into Western Iconography
2 Trade, Diplomacy and Depiction
3 Nabobs, Adventurers and Travellers
4 Masques and Turquerie
5 Riding the Magic Carpet
6 A Neoclassical Accessory
7 Individual Expressions: Africa and the Caribbean
8 Cultural Tourism and Authenticity since 1900
References
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo Acknowledgements
Index



















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