Enfilade

Call for Papers | Turner 250

Posted in Calls for Papers by Editor on July 7, 2025

J.M.W. Turner, The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire, exhibited in 1817, oil on canvas, 170 × 239 cm
(London: Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, N00499)

◊    ◊    ◊    ◊    ◊

From the Call for Papers:

Turner 250

Tate Britain, London, 4–5 December 2025

Proposals due by 31 July 2025

2025 marks two hundred and fifty years since the birth of Romantic painter J.M.W. Turner (1775–1851). Conscious of the future, he took care to secure his legacy. But what is that legacy? Timed to coincide with the Turner and Constable exhibition at Tate Britain and to help bring celebrations of Turner’s 250th anniversary year to a close, this conference will take Turner’s art and life as a starting point for exploring what it means to research Turner and to curate his work today.

Thanks in part to the gift of the Turner Bequest, Turner is one of the most highly documented artists, and his life and work have inspired extensive scholarship, exhibitions, and creative responses across a range of art forms. We want to open up discussions about how we tell his story in 2025, how we display and respond to his work, and how singular works—such as The Slave Ship—or entire bodies of work have generated their own afterlives. What new contexts can we use to read and reinterpret his work? How much does our focus on Turner through a monographic lens help or hinder fresh perspectives? Where will studies of Turner take us next?

Reflecting Turner’s own approach to his art, the event will encourage dialogue between historical and contemporary perspectives, and across different disciplines, to consider Turner in his own time and the resonances and interpretations of his vision today. We welcome presentations in a variety of forms—such as illustrated talks or short videos. Each presentation should last around fifteen minutes, whether it is a spoken paper or another form of contribution.

We invite proposals on any topic, but are particularly interested in the following themes:
• Curating Turner now: What do audiences want? What do they already know about Turner? What impact does staging a Turner exhibition have on public engagement and attendance?
• Turner’s contemporaries: Who were his peers, and who has been overshadowed?
• Turner contemporary: Artists inspired by Turner or responding to his legacy in their own work.
• Researching Turner in an age of climate crisis / eco-critical turn.
• The artist’s bequest / the monograph: What opportunities and challenges come with an artist’s bequest or a concentrated focus on a single figure?

Please submit the following by 12 midnight (BST) on 31 July, with ‘Turner 250’ as the subject line, to pmc.events@paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk
• A 250-word abstract describing your proposed contribution
• A 250-word biography

Please combine your abstract and biography into a single Word document and send it as an email attachment. Incomplete or late submissions will not be considered. We will provide a speaker’s fee of £150 and cover reasonable travel and accommodation costs. If you have any access requirements or need adjustments, please let us know and we will do our best to accommodate them.

Organised by Tate Britain in collaboration with the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art and supported by The Manton Foundation Fund for Historic British Art.

Alixe Bovey Appointed Editor-in-Chief at British Art Studies

Posted in journal articles, opportunities by Editor on July 7, 2025

From the Paul Mellon Centre announcement (16 June 2025) . . .

Alixe Bovey has been appointed to the position of British Art Studies (BAS) Editor-in-Chief. In this role she will lead on the development of material for publication in the journal, commission new articles and projects, and work collaboratively with authors. BAS is an innovative space for new peer-reviewed scholarship on all aspects of British art, co-published by Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art and the Yale Center for British Art.

Alixe is Professor of Medieval Art History at The Courtauld, where she specialises in the art and culture of the Middle Ages. Her particular interests include illuminated manuscripts, visual storytelling and the relationship between myth and material culture across historical periods and geographical boundaries. Her publications explore a variety of medieval and early Renaissance topics, including Gothic art and immateriality (2015), monsters (2002, 2013), English genealogical rolls (2005, 2021), and monographic studies including Jean de Carpentin’s Book of Hours (Paul Holberton Press, 2011). Following a ten-year stint as Head of Research then Executive Dean and Deputy Director of The Courtauld, she is currently at work on a new book exploring the vibrant culture of storytelling in word and image in fourteenth-century London. Alongside her historical research, she is keenly interested in the creative relationship between practice and art history, and has organised a variety of programmes that bring works of art, artists and art historians together.

Sarah Victoria Turner, Director of PMC, comments: “We are so excited to have Alixe leading British Art Studies and I know she will do this with huge curiosity and commitment to publishing original research on British art. She has been an advocate for the journal and our approach to digital publishing.”

Alixe took up the role in June 2025 with a tenure of two years. Researchers interested in publishing with BAS are warmly encouraged to contact Alixe with questions, ideas or manuscripts for submission at baseditor@paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk.