Enfilade

Call for Papers | Travellers and the Musical Imagination, 1500–1900

Posted in Calls for Papers by Editor on March 10, 2015

From H-ArtHist:

Travellers to Faraway Countries and the Musical Imagination on the Move, 1500–1900
Università del Salento, Lecce, 28–29 September 2015

Proposals due by 30 April 2015

International Musicological Society-Study Group on Musical Iconography

By the early sixteenth century, European encounters with faraway cultures had led to a new awareness of the cultural ‘other’ and of non-European musical cultures, which found its expression in the writings of travelers and scholars, in the imagination of visual artists, and in the rendering of ‘exotic’ features in musical compositions. Some of the images associated with this emerging awareness, may have been the result of firsthand experiences or eyewitness participation. Others, by contrast, represented mostly secondhand impressions, which despite pretensions of authenticity, partook in visual or auditory imaginary journeys whose details in many cases could have been triggered by learned traditions of literary culture. Quite often, depictions were far removed from the ‘original’; they were idealized and filtered through European sensibilities and according to models of the classical world; as such, iconographical patterns, once crystallized, could have been transmitted from author to author through centuries, thus further removing the received image from the original (if such original ever existed). Ultimately, the firsthand experience of distant cultures made possible the rise of a new sensitivity towards indigenous strands of music to be (re-) interpreted according to the patterns of colonialist imagination. In this context, a better understanding of the ‘constructedness’ of images is crucial for musical iconography.

We invite paper proposals for a two-day conference, which address the following topics, among others:
• Images of music in illustrated chronicles and travel accounts related to America, Asia, Africa, Australia and Europe (‘Grand Tour’)
• Visual references to foreign (exotic, oriental), indigenous (ethnic) and bucolic (pastoral) music in music treatises, emblematic literature, paintings, drawings, engravings, pictorial cycles to be found within aristocratic palaces and residences etc.
• Italian music and dance as viewed through the eyes of transalpine travellers and scholars
• Italian music (and related imagery) as a source of inspiration for composers
• Transmission, reception and circulation of pictorial topoi to be found in music historiography
• Processes of ‘othering’ vs. ‘assimilating’, ‘artistic’ vs. ‘ethnological’ approaches
• Exotic strands in the decoration of musical instruments

Abstracts of no more than 300 words for 20-minute papers in English or Italian may be sent by 30 April 2015 to daniela.castaldo@unisalento.it

Scientific Committee
Daniela Castaldo (Local Organizer, Università del Salento)
Gabriela Currie (University of Minnesota)
Dinko Fabris (IMS President, Università della Basilicata)
Nicoletta Guidobaldi (Università di Bologna-Ravenna)
Björn R. Tammen (Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna)

 

William Bartram Exhibition Slated for 2018

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on March 9, 2015

B2010.2.1

William Bartram, The Soft Shell’d Tortoise Got in Savanah River Georgia, ca. 1773, Gray and black wash over graphite on medium, cream, slightly textured laid paper (New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, Gift of Charles Ryskamp)

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From the YCBA:

This spring [2015], Laurel Waycott, a second-year PhD student in the History of Science and Medicine, and Jacob Stewart-Halevy, a sixth-year student and PhD candidate in the History of Art, will work with Amy Meyers, Director of the Center, and Florence Grant, Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Director’s Office, on the first major exhibition of the work of William Bartram (1739–1823). A Philadelphia-based naturalist, Bartram was the first American-born artist to depict the flora and fauna of North America extensively. The exhibition is scheduled to open at the Center in 2018.

Waycott and Stewart-Halevy have chosen to study Bartram because of his distinctive position in eighteenth-century American natural history, both as a keen observer of American species and their environmental relationships, and as a correspondent with the natural history communities of Great Britain and the Continent.

“I am hoping to explore the dynamic among literary description, personal narrative, and imaginative naturalism in Bartram’s early efforts to catalogue North American species. The contradiction between the meticulous and the fanciful in his animal and botanical drawings seem key to the environmentalism of the moment,” said Stewart-Halevy.

Waycott says studying at the Center will add a unique dimension to her research into the intersections of art, science, and nature, and that the exhibition offers a wonderful opportunity to bring the intertwined histories of science and art to a wider public.

Meyers also appreciates the fresh perspectives the students will bring to the project. “I look forward to working with Laura and Jacob, who will inflect our study of Bartram with exciting new approaches to his life and work. Their cross-disciplinary training will enable us to interpret his contributions to the development of colonial and early republican art and science in important ways.” said Meyers.

Royal Oak Foundation Lectures, Spring 2015

Posted in lectures (to attend) by Editor on March 9, 2015

A selection of the season’s offerings from The Royal Oak Foundation as related to the eighteenth century:

Royal Oak’s speakers are engaging, knowledgeable experts with a passion for a variety of topics related to The Royal Oak Foundation’s mission.

Charles Hind | Palladianism: Four Centuries of Style
First Baptist Church, Charleston 12 May 2015
Chicago Architectural Foundation, 8 May 2015
The MAA Carriage House, Washington, D.C., 5 May 2015
Abigail Adams Smith Auditorium, New York, 7 May 2015
The Union League of Philadelphia, 4 May 2015

The year 2015 marks the 300th anniversary of the publication of the first English translations of Andrea Palladio’s I Quattro Libri dell’Architettura [The Four Books of Architecture] and Colen Campbell’s Vitruvius Britannicus. Since the early 17th century, Palladio’s work, as adapted by Inigo Jones for English taste and needs, has influenced architects and clients. British Palladianism, as developed by Jones, Campbell, Lord Burlington and William Kent also proved hugely influential in northern Europe and in the British Colonies including India and North America.

Charles Hind, Chief Curator and H.J. Heinz Curator of Drawings at the Royal Institute of British Architecture, will examine the development of Palladianism in Britain using drawings, photographs and models from the RIBA’s collections, as well as contemporary architects’ practices. He will demonstrate how the contributions of this 16th-century Venetian man influenced centuries of style, and how Palladianism became one of the most important styles ever designed by a single architect, and is still used in public and private buildings.

Charles Hind’s areas of specialty are Andrea Palladio and British architecture from 17th to early 20th centuries. He co-curated a major European exhibition on Palladio in 2008–2009, and served as joint curator and co-author of the catalogue for the 2010 exhibition Palladio and His Legacy: A Transatlantic Journey. Mr. Hind has written numerous journal and magazine articles and lectured on architecture and British country houses. He also leads art and architecture tours in Virginia, St. Petersburg, and Venice. Mr. Hind has curated a number of exhibitions held in the RIBA Heinz Gallery and in the V&A+RIBA Architecture Gallery at the Victoria & Albert Museum.

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David Milne | ‘Still Life Drama’: A Walk Through Dennis Severs’ House
The Explorers Club, New York, 18 June 2015

At the Dennis Severs’ House at 18 Folgate Street in London, visitors are invited not to a museum to learn how people lived in the past, but rather to participate in what the founder called “a still life drama.” Guests walk through each room of the house in a multisensory experience feeling as if the 18th- and 19th-century inhabitants have only just withdrawn a moment before. These encounters were designed by American collector and founder Dennis Severs, who bought a semi-derelict early 18th-century house in the 1970s and then set about bringing it back to life. With no desire to restore the house, Severs instead wanted to honor what he imagined were the echoes of the house’s history. So armed with a chamber stick and pot, he created the fictional story of a Huguenot silk merchant’s family who might have lived in the house for generations from 1724 to 1914.

The triumph and tragedy of this fictional family is told through each room over several stories. Severs filled the house with original objects he bought in London’s street markets and sale rooms, atmospherically lit by candlelight. Painstakingly assembled over 20 years, many of the rooms are mocked up in the manner of stage scenery using inexpensive materials—all is artifice but still conveys a haunting sense of London’s past: silk waistcoats are flung across rumpled bed clothes, a card game has just ended, fires crackle, and steam rises from a filled punch bowl. Curator David Milne will discuss Dennis Severs’ incredible vision and illustrate how his remarkable home uniquely captures a moment in time.

David Milne has served as curator of Dennis Severs’ House since 1990. He has previously worked for Paul Dyson & Associates on projects for the Royal Historic Palaces, the Royal Opera House, the V&A Museum, Versace and Armani. He has been invited to give lectures for The National Trust and English Heritage, and was awarded the Verney fellowship by the Nantucket Historical Association in 2006–2008.

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Sean Sawyer | Tales of Loss & Redemption: The Country House in the National Trust
Castle Hill on the Crane Estate, Boston, 14 April 2015
The Explorers Club, New York, 28 April 2015
The Union League of Philadelphia, 27 April 2015

From the 1880s through the 1930s, Britain experienced a revolution in land ownership only paralleled in its history by the Norman Conquest and the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Britain’s landed elites found themselves under attack by the forces of modernity on all fronts, and their bastions, the country house, fell to the auction block and the wrecker’s ball in increasing numbers throughout the first half of the 20th century. Into this breach in the fabric of British landed society stepped a reluctant new force of social order, the National Trust.

The Royal Oak Foundation’s Executive Director, Dr. Sean E. Sawyer will discuss the National Trust’s role in rescuing some of Britain’s greatest country houses and their internationally significant collections of decorative and fine arts.

From a reluctant recipient of a handful of houses in the 1920s, the Trust evolved, through its Country Houses Scheme, to lead the way in preserving houses and collections through the bleakest years of the post-World War II era. The last decades of the 20th century saw a revival of fortunes for the country house and the Trust’s adaptation as its role as a leading operator of visitor attractions. This is a story full of deaths, both mortal and material, and of daring rescues and bureaucratic blindness. This illustrated lecture will explore some of the Trust’s most important properties, including Blickling and Hardwick Hall, and of the families and great characters who haunt them still.

Sean Sawyer became the Executive Director of The Royal Oak Foundation in October 2010. He received a B.A. summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1988 and his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1999, specializing in 18th- and 19th-century British architectural history. In 1996, he was awarded the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain’s Hawksmoor Essay Medal, and in 2002 he attended the Attingham Summer School as a Royal Oak Fellow. Dr. Sawyer has taught at Columbia, Fordham and Harvard universities as well as The Parsons / New School Master’s Program in the History of Decorative Arts & Design at the Cooper-Hewitt. He has contributed essays and articles to numerous publications on Sir John Soane and late Georgian architecture and urbanism as well as Dutch-American history and architecture. From 2001 to 2007, he served as Executive Director of the Wyckoff House & Association, a Brooklyn-based organization focused on the operation of the Wyckoff Farmhouse Museum. Prior to joining Royal Oak, Sean was the Director of Administration and Development for the History Department at Columbia University for three years. He is a founding and current member of the Board of Directors for the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum Alliance, which supports the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum in Inwood, northern Manhattan.

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Michael Snodin | A Little Gothic Castle: Horace Walpole and Strawberry Hill
Scandinavia House, New York, 23 March 2015
The Union League of Philadelphia, 24 March 2015
Boston Athenaeum, 26 March 2015
Timken Museum, San Diego, 30 March 2015
UCLA Faculty Center, Los Angeles, 1 April 2015
Arader Galleries, San Francisco, 2 April 2015

Strawberry Hill, the fantasy gothic revival castle in Twickenham, was created during the mid-18th century for the politician, historian, and author Horace Walpole. But Strawberry Hill was more than an assemblage of bricks, plaster and papier mâché: it was the place to house Walpole’s eclectic collection. Portraits by renowned artists, furniture, and porcelain were displayed alongside eccentricities such as a limewood ‘lace’ cravat carved by Grinling Gibbons, embroidered gloves belonging to James II, and Dr. Dee’s mirror.

Mr. Snodin will describe Walpole’s collection—nearly all dispersed in an 1842 auction—and discuss the treasure hunt which is now underway to return as much as possible to the house. He also will illustrate the house’s incredible interiors and reveal how medieval architecture was the inspiration for the style of this summer villa: the stone fan vaulting of Henry VII’s chapel in Westminster Abbey influenced an ethereal confection of gilded plaster and papier mâché for Walpole’s Gallery. “My house is of paper like my writings,” wrote Walpole, “and both will blow away ten years after I am dead.” However, the house has miraculously survived and is now restored to its original appearance from 1790.

Michael Snodin is a design and architectural historian and Chairman and Hon. Curator of the Strawberry Hill Trust and the Strawberry Hill Collection Trust. In his career at the Victoria and Albert Museum he was Head of the Designs Collection, a Senior Curator and a Senior Research Fellow. He curated galleries as well as several major exhibitions including Horace Walpole and Strawberry Hill which opened in 2009 at The Yale Center for British Art. In addition to exhibition catalogues, his publications include many specialist articles. He is curator of Strawberry Hill Restored, which will open in 2017.

 

Conference | Ordo inversus um 1800

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on March 9, 2015

From H-ArtHist:

Ordo inversus: Formen und Funktionen einer Denkfigur um 1800
Weimar, Goethe- und Schiller-Archiv, Weimar, 26–28 March 2915

Tagungsleitung: Andrea Albrecht, Franziska Bomski, Lutz Danneberg

Die Jahrestagung des Zentrums für Klassikforschung wendet sich der ideengeschichtlichen Zäsur des ordo inversus um 1800 zu. Diese Denkfigur meint eine zirkuläre Bewegung des Ausgehens von einem Anfangs- zu einem Endpunkt, der durch ein Zurückkehren wieder mit dem Ausgangspunkt verbunden wird. Als Methodenkonzept spielt der ordo inversus von der Antike über das Mittelalter und die Frühe Neuzeit eine zentrale Rolle in den verschiedensten Wissensbereichen und Disziplinen, in denen er vor allem epistemische Sicherheit garantiert. Der Verlust seiner Plausibilität im 18. Jahrhundert provoziert eine Reihe von Restitutionsversuchen, die sich auf vielfältige Weise nicht nur in der Naturphilosophie und Hermeneutik, sondern auch in Kunst, Literatur und Ästhetik niederschlagen. So lässt sich mit Beginn der ›Moderne‹ ein Funktionswandel des ordo inversus beobachten, der mit modifizierten Formen der Denkfigur einhergeht.

Diese Veränderungen sollen in ihrem historischen Kontext nachgezeichnet und analysiert werden. Ein wesentliches Ziel besteht dabei darin, das derzeit vor allem einzeldisziplinär behandelte Phänomen des ordo inversus in seinen grundlegenden, verschiedene Wissensbereiche gleichermaßen durchgreifenden Formen und Funktionen sichtbar zu machen und auf diese Weise einen disziplinenübergreifenden Einblick in den historischen Wandel im Übergang zur ›Moderne‹ zu liefern. Dabei sollen insbesondere Antike, Mittelalter und Frühe Neuzeit als ideengeschichtlich relevante Traditionen für die Verhandlung des Konzepts im späten 18. Jahrhundert und frühen 19. Jahrhundert deutlich gemacht werden.

Gäste sind herzlich willkommen, eine Anmeldung ist nicht erforderlich.

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D O N N E R S T A G ,  2 6  M Ä R Z  2 0 1 5

14.00  Andrea Albrecht, Franziska Bomski, Lutz Danneberg, Begrüßung und Einführung

15.00  Christel Meier-Staubach, Reditus omnium quae in suas causas reversura sunt: Figurationen des ordo inversus in der pseudo-dionysischen Tradition

16.00  Kaffeepause

16.30  Anselm Steiger , Inversio: Zu einer Matrix der Theologie Martin Luthers und des frühneuzeitlichen Luthertums

20.00  Wolfgang Proß, Herders Epitaph: Anfang, Ordnung und Neuanfang in Kultur- und Geschichtsphilosophie der Neuzeit (1500–1800)

F R E I T A G ,  2 7  M Ä R Z  2 0 1 5

9.00  Violetta L. Waibel, Denken und Fühlen: Zum ordo inversus in Hardenbergs »Fichte-Studien«

10.00  Andrea Albrecht, Zirkelschmiede und Sphärometer: Jean Pauls humoristischer Blick auf den ordo inversus

11.00  Kaffeepause

11.30  Maarten Bullynck, In und außer der Ordnung: Mathematische Denkfiguren der Klassik

12.30  Mittagspause

14.30  Mitgliederversammlung des Zentrums für Klassikforschung

17.00  Franziska Bomski, Revolutionen des Weltsystems: Empirie und Kalkül bei Kopernikus und Laplace

17.00  Tilman Venzl, Johann Wolfgang Goethe: »Urworte. Orphisch«

18.15  Britta Hochkirchen, Subversion oder Restitution einer Denkfigur? Christian Rohlfs Weimarer Landschaftsbilder

18.15  Thomas Lange, Zeit sichtbar machen: Überlegungen zur Veranschaulichung des Raum/Zeit-Komplexes in den vier Dimensionen von Runges »Zeiten«

20.00  Gemeinsames Abendessen

S A M S T A G ,  2 8  M Ä R Z  2 0 1 5

9.00  Olav Krämer, Vom vollendeten Kunstwerk zu den allgemeinsten Prinzipien der Ästhetik und zurück: Wilhelm von Humboldts Versuch »Über Göthes Herrmann und Dorothea« (1799)

10.00  Pierfrancesco Basile, Emersons naturalistischer Idealismus

11.00  Kaffeepause

11.30  Laurenz Lütteken, ›Zeit seines Lebens nicht an seinem Platze‹ Rochlitz und Mozart

Informationen und Kontakt
Klassik Stiftung Weimar
Referat Forschung und Bildung
Burgplatz 4 | 99423 Weimar
forschung.bildung@klassik-stiftung.de

Exhibition | Drawings of Alexandre-François Desportes (1661–1743)

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on March 8, 2015

Soon to be on view at the Petit Château at Sceaux:

L’Œil du Maître: Esquisses d’Alexandre-François Desportes (1661–1743)
des collections de la Cité de la Céramique

Musée du Domaine Départemental de Sceaux, 20 March — 28 June 2015

Curated by Dominique Brême

A3-DesportesDu 20 mars au 28 juin, le musée du Domaine départemental de Sceaux vous propose une exposition au Petit-Château sur le peintre des chasses de Louis XIV et de Louis XV et de leur meute royale : Alexandre-François Desportes, représentant brillant du ‘grand goût français’. Les animaux, les paysages et l’art de vivre sont les trois thématiques abordées dans cette exposition au travers de soixante esquisses et dessins, établissant un lien entre l’artiste, associé à la décoration des grandes résidences royales et princières, et le domaine de Sceaux.

Cours d’histoire de l’art : L’âge d’or de la nature morte française, par Dominique Brême, directeur du Domaine départemental de Sceaux et commissaire de l’exposition.
Mercredi 8 avril : Genèse et expansion de la nature morte en Europe
Mercredi 15 avril : Le modèle des Écoles du Nord
Mercredi 6 mai : La nature morte en France au XVIIe siècle
Mercredi 13 mai : Alexandre-François Desportes
Mercredi 3 juin : Nicolas de Largillierre et Jean-Baptiste Oudry
Mercredi 10 juin : Jean-Siméon Chardin

Journal of the History of Collections 27 (March 2015)

Posted in journal articles by Editor on March 7, 2015

In addition to the following articles related to the eighteenth century in the current issue of the Journal of the History of Collections , I would draw your attention to Stefan Krmnicek’s article on coins from the Tux Collection and Jessica Priebe’s article on Boucher, both of which have been published online but will also appear as part of forthcoming issues in the coming months. They serves as a useful reminder that with the advantages of digital advance access, ‘current issue’ no longer tells the whole story. CH

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Stefan Krmnicek, “‘Nummus aliquantulum suspectus’: The Counterfeit Coins of the Tux Collection (1715–1798) at the University of Tübingen,” Journal of the History of Collections, first published online: 8 February 2015.

The coin collection of the Institute of Classical Archaeology at the University of Tübingen contains some fifty counterfeits, imitations and fabrications of ancient coins which can be traced back to the bequest of the Stuttgart senior civil servant (Regierungsrat) Carl Sigmund Tux (1715–1798) at the ducal court of Württemberg. These coins are of particular historical value, for all fabrications in the Tux collection are fixed with a terminus ante quem through the bequest of 1798. A selection of the most interesting counterfeit specimens is presented and discussed against the background of the history of the Tux collection and the early development of numismatics at the University of Tübingen. Additionally, Tux’s descriptions of the counterfeit coins provide first-hand insight into the abilities, knowledge and limitations in ancient numismatics of the most passionate coin collector and leading coin specialist at the ducal court of Württemberg in the Baroque period.

Jessica Priebe, “The Artist as Collector: François Boucher (1703–1770),” Journal of the History of Collections, first published online: 28 January 2015.

The name François Boucher is synonymous with the visual and material culture of luxury in mid eighteenth-century France. His paintings are filled with desirable objects that informed the tastes of collectors. What is less known is that Boucher was a prolific collector of art and nature, with more than 13,000 different objects in his collection at the time of his death in 1770. Despite this, a formal study of his collection is almost entirely absent from the existing field of historical scholarship. This article aims to bring to light Boucher’s activities as a collector, in particular his interest in natural objects for which he was especially well known. It also considers the extent to which Boucher’s passion for collectable objects had an impact on his practice as an artist.

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Journal of the History of Collections 27 (March 2015)

A R T I C L E S

Rachel Finnegan, “The Travels and Curious Collections of Richard Pococke, Bishop of Meath,” pp. 33–48.
This article examines the collecting career of the Revd Richard Pococke (1704–1765), some time Bishop of Ossory and subsequently Bishop of Meath, who travelled extensively in Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean from 1733–41 and accumulated a modest yet important collection of antiquities, coins, medals and natural curiosities. Using evidence from his recently published Grand Tour correspondence, together with other contemporary sources such as letters and sale catalogues, this article considers his foreign travels and mode of collecting and also the scholarly uses to which his foreign collections were put, including his contribution to learned societies, and the publication of his eastern travels.

Leanne Zalewski, “Fine Art for the New World: Thomas Jefferson, Collecting for the Future,” pp. 49–55.
Of Thomas Jefferson’s many accomplishments—President of the United States, co-author of the Declaration of Independence, and founder of the University of Virginia—his art collection fails to top the list. However, Jefferson’s vision for the developing nation involved a strong interest in the arts. As such, he assembled his own art collection and planned an ideal, but ultimately unrealized, sculpture gallery. His collection, neither vast nor impressive, included portraits, busts, engravings, and copies after Old Master paintings. Although it included not a single work of European or American art could be called a masterpiece or canonical work, yet his collection was the first significant art collection in the United States. Why? This article examines the legacy of his trailblazing assemblage through an analysis of his fine art collection both real and ideal within the broader context of the history of collecting in the United States.

Richard Scully, “A Serious Matter: Erwin D. Swann (1906–1973) and the Collection of Caricature and Cartoon,” pp. 111–122.
This paper explores the origins and development of the Swann Collection of Caricature and Cartoon, begun by Erwin D. Swann in 1966, and currently held by the Library of Congress in Washington, dc. One of the world’s few collections dedicated to the preservation of original comic art by caricaturists and cartoonists from the eighteenth to the twentieth century, Swann’s collection also transcends national boundaries, and embraces comic art as one of the ‘universal folk expressions’. An established art collector, Swann sought to give caricature and cartoon the same status as ‘high’ art, and worked hard to achieve this prior to his death in 1973. His work has been continued, and his collection maintained, in subsequent years. A closer investigation of the collection’s genesis, and the intentions of Swann himself, sheds light on the significance of this unique archive, and its utility for the continuing, ‘serious’ scholarship of comic art worldwide.

R E V I E W S

• Elizabeth Williams, Review of Tessa Murdoch and Heike Zech, eds., Going for Gold. Craftsmanship and Collecting of Gold Boxes (Eastbourne: Sussex Academic Press, 2014), pp. 124–25.

• Tom Stammers, Review of Alexandra Stara, The Museum of French Monuments 1795–1816: ‘Killing Art to Make History’ (Farnham: Ashgate Publishing, 2013), pp. 125–26.

• Tom Stammers, Review of Andrea Meyer and Bénédicte Savoy, eds., The Museum is Open: Towards a Transnational History of Museums, 1750–1940 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), pp. 127–28.

• Clare Barlow, Review of Rosie Dias, Exhibiting Englishness: John Boydell’s Shakespeare Gallery and the Formation of a National Aesthetic (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2013), pp. 128–29.

Exhibition | On the Road to Italy: Robert to Corot

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on March 7, 2015

Now on view at Amiens:

Sur la route d’Italie: Peindre la nature d’Hubert Robert à Corot
Musée d’Art et d’Archéologie d’Évreux, 26 April — 21 September 2014
Musée de Picardie, Amiens 13 February — 31 May 2015

df83a83421Pour la première fois, la collection de paysages français de l’éditeur Michael Pächt est présentée au public dans une exposition événement organisée en partenariat avec l’Institut national du patrimoine et le musée d’Art et d’Archéologie d’Evreux. Fasciné par le paysage français de la fin du XVIIIe siècle et de la première moitié du XIXe siècle, grand admirateur de Corot, dont il a rassemblé quelques-unes des plus belles pages peintes sur le motif, Michael Pächt a retracé, au gré d’achats guidés par la passion de l’amateur, une chaîne iconographique, stylistique et humaine, dont les relations maître-élève et les amitiés constituent les maillons. Les affinités électives entre artistes, les parentés, les héritages et les ruptures reprennent vie, introduisant le visiteur dans l’intimité qui se crée entre le peintre et la Nature.

D’Hubert Robert à Corot en passant par Michallon, Bidault, Granet et Rousseau, la collection Pächt nous plonge dans la grande aventure de la peinture de plein air à travers les oeuvres de ceux qui firent le voyage en Italie avant de trouver une terre d’élection dans la forêt de Fontainebleau, en Picardie ou dans le Sud de la France. Une centaine d’oeuvres, peintures, dessins, estampes, ainsi que quelques rares clichés-verre de Corot et de Rousseau, viennent animer la Galerie Puvis de Chavannes le temps d’un partage entre un amateur et un public auquel il livre un peu de sa passion.

Paysages français des collections du Musée de Picardie

L’exposition se prolonge avec une sélection de peintures choisies dans les réserves parmi les plus grands chefs-d’oeuvre du musée. Cet accrochage met également à l’honneur les esquisses inédites de Charles Larivière et d’Albert Maignan qui laissèrent de leur séjour en Italie, aux deux extrémités du XIXe siècle, des toiles imprégnées de la lumière du Sud.

Commissariat général
Olivia Voisin, conservateur du patrimoine, chargée du département Beaux-Arts
Florence Calame-Levert, directrice du musée d’Évreux
François Bridey, directeur adjoint du musée d’Évreux

Commissariat scientifique
Gennaro Toscano, directeur du département des conservateurs, Institut national du patrimoine, Paris

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Published by Gourcuff Gradenico and available from Artbooks.com:

Gennaro Toscano, Sur la route d’Italie: Peindre la nature d’Hubert Robert à Corot (Montreuil, Gourcuff Gradenico, 2014), 180 pages, ISBN: 978-2353401789, 29€.

4020918-papier_couv_final-1Cet ouvrage présente un ensemble extraordinaire de paysages d’artistes français ayant effectué le voyage en Italie (fin XVIIIe et xixe siècle). Les quelque 26 artistes renommés (Hubert Robert, Granet, Constantin d’Aix, Bertin, Michallon, Corot, Coignet, Rousseau Harpignies…) présents dans la collection ont la caractéristique commune d’avoir peint la nature en plein air en France et en Italie. Montée en partenariat avec l’Institut national du patrimoine (Inp), une exposition se déroulera du 26 avril au 14 septembre 2014 au musée d’Art, Histoire et Archéologie d’Évreux, puis au printemps 2015 au musée de Picardie à Amiens. Cet ensemble de paysages peints en France et en Italie est pour la première fois présenté au public et permet de s’interroger sur la constitution d’une collection particulièrement riche.

En marge de l’exposition, les services de la direction de la culture et de la ville d’Evreux et d’Amiens métropole s’associent pour programmer une «saison italienne». Plusieurs événements verront donc le jour au musée et dans d’autres institutions italiennes, permettant d’explorer la thématique du voyage en Italie ou d’éclairer les relations artistiques entre la France et l’Italie (littérature, Beaux-Arts, musique). Richement illustrée cette publication, solide du point de vue scientifique, s’adresse aussi à un public large et constitue une réflexion sur la peinture de paysage du XVIIIe au xixe siècle.

New Book | Painting 1600–1900: Art and Architecture of Ireland

Posted in books by Editor on March 5, 2015

Distributed by Yale UP:

Nicola Figgis, ed., Painting 1600–1900: Art and Architecture of Ireland (London: The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, 2014), 600 pages, ISBN: 978-0300179200, $150.

9780300179200Art and Architecture of Ireland is an authoritative and fully illustrated survey that encompasses the period from the early Middle Ages to the end of the 20th century. The five volumes explore all aspects of Irish art—from high crosses to installation art, from illuminated manuscripts to Georgian houses and Modernist churches, from tapestries and sculptures to oil paintings, photographs and video art. This monumental project provides new insights into every facet of the strength, depth and variety of Ireland’s artistic and architectural heritage.

Painting 1600–1900: Art and Architecture of Ireland
The volume is divided into two sections. The first contains thematic essays, ranging widely from exhibiting practices to the social history of Irish art, revealing how pictures were produced, acquired and traded in Ireland. The varied texts reflect the decision to be inclusive in determining ‘Irishness’—the volume considers painters born in Ireland who spent their careers abroad, as well as visiting artists to Ireland. The second section is devoted to biographical entries, largely based on W.G. Strickland’s biographies of artists (Dublin and London, 1913), but updated to include extensive recent research. More than 300 entries provide information on Irish painters of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a critical period that saw the development of easel painting, patronage, the exploration of antiquarianism and a search for the pictorial expression of national identity. The biographies offer a rich compendium of Irish experience; while some of the artists lived with worldly success and fame, others suffered disappointment and failure. All the entries are based on original research, much of it undertaken in hitherto unexplored archives. It seems appropriate given Ireland’s economic, political and social history, that the story told by this volume is one of exodus, exchange and international endeavour.

Nicola Figgis is a lecturer at the School of Art History and Cultural Policy, University College, Dublin, specialising in 17th–19th-century Irish painting and aspects of the Grand Tour. She is co-author, with Brendan Rooney, of Irish Paintings in the National Gallery of Ireland, volume i (2002).

New Book | Sculpture 1600–2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland

Posted in books by Editor on March 5, 2015

Distributed by Yale UP:

Paula Murphy, ed., Sculpture 1600–2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland (London: The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, 2014), 600 pages, ISBN: 978-0300179217, $150.

9780300179217Art and Architecture of Ireland is an authoritative and fully illustrated survey that encompasses the period from the early Middle Ages to the end of the 20th century. The five volumes explore all aspects of Irish art—from high crosses to installation art, from illuminated manuscripts to Georgian houses and Modernist churches, from tapestries and sculptures to oil paintings, photographs and video art. This monumental project provides new insights into every facet of the strength, depth and variety of Ireland’s artistic and architectural heritage.

Sculpture 1600–2000: Art and Architecture of Ireland 
Irish sculptors have made a significant contribution to the development of their art form both within and outside Ireland. This volume affords the unique opportunity to explore four centuries of their work. Biographies of individual artists and analytical assessments are augmented by a series of thematic
essays establishing a context for the practice of sculpture
throughout the country north and south.

Paula Murphy is associate professor at University College Dublin, where she lectures in art history, specializing in art of the modern period. She has a particular interest in sculpture and has published widely on Irish sculpture, notably Nineteenth-Century Irish Sculpture: Native Genius Reaffirmed, published by Yale University Press in 2010.

Exhibition | American Neoclassic Sculpture at the Boston Athenæum

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on March 4, 2015

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Now on view at the Boston Athenaeum:

American Neoclassic Sculpture at the Boston Athenæum
Boston Athenæum, 26 February — 16 May 2015

Curated by David Dearinger

American Neoclassic Sculpture at the Boston Athenæum, on view at the Boston Athenæum February 26 through May 16, 2015, reveals a collection that is among the oldest and most significant of its kind in the United States, one that helped establish an ‘American taste’ in the visual arts. The exhibition includes more than thirty work: sculptures by the three ‘founders’ of American Neoclassicism—Horatio Greenough (Boston’s first professional sculptor), Thomas Crawford, and Hiram Powers—along with works by their followers, works by such European Neoclassicists as Jean-Antoine Houdon and Bertel Thovaldsen, and marble copies of ancient works including the Venus de Medici and the Apollo Belvedere.

Featured works include Horatio Greenough’s Elizabeth Perkins Cabot (1832–33), Venus Victrix (1837–40), and The Judgment of Paris (1837–40); Thomas Crawford’s Adam and Eve (1855); Bertel Thorvaldsen’s Ganymede and the Eagle (ca. 1830–50); and Jean-Antoine Houdon’s George Washington (ca. 1786). A series of sculpted portraits of Daniel Webster by John Frazee, Hiram Powers, Thomas Ball, and Shobal Vail Clevenger explores the range of treatments, from real to ideal, used in Neoclassic portraiture.

Organized by David Dearinger, the Boston Athenæum’s Susan Morse Hilles Curator of Paintings and Sculpture, American Neoclassic Sculpture is the first time these important works have been shown together. The show presents sculptures, many acquired directly from the artists themselves, that helped establish Neoclassicism as the first ‘national style’ of the young United States. Neoclassic taste, based on the work of ancient Greek and Roman artists, dominated the West starting in the 1750s, after sensational archaeological discoveries at Pompeii, Herculaneum, and elsewhere revealed the styles the ancient Romans favored in vivid detail. It was the latest in a series of classical revivals since the fifth-century fall of Rome. In the young United States, the idealized design language of the classical world seemed the perfect translation of the heady notions of the American Revolution, including the democracy of ancient Greece and the civic virtues of Republican Rome. The proliferation of ancient forms in the United States—columns, capitals, acanthus leaves, imposing pediments, togas (even on George Washington), drapery, idealized faces, and perfect torsos—infused the freshly-minted American republic with the grandeur and gloss of historic destiny.

Almost as soon as it was founded in 1807, the Boston Athenæum began to acquire art along with books and periodicals— slowly at first and then, starting in the 1820s, with increasing vigor. At the same time, the Athenæum and some of its members became major patrons and promoters of American Neoclassic sculptors. “Boston was a particular hotbed of activity,” Dr. Dearinger says of this period. “The city had patrons who were enthusiastic about classical literature and American history. So neoclassical sculpture fit right in. Boston was considered a great place for sculpture. Sculptors came up from New York and New Jersey to meet potential Boston collectors. There was nothing like it anywhere else at the time. “Leading Massachusetts politicians like Charles Sumner and Edward Everett were major patrons, not out of self-interest but as promoters of native-born sculptors and their work,” Dearinger continues. “They supported American sculptors in every way they could, for patriotic reasons, because they felt culture was important to a democratic society and because the work embodied democratic ideals.”

Meanwhile,the Boston Athenæum was commissioning pieces and buying directly from the artists, helping to get things started. Until the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, opened in 1876, the Boston Athenæum served as the city’s only public art museum. The Athenæum featured works by American sculptors in its annual art exhibitions and, by the time of the Civil War, had established a reputation as a leading and reliable supporter of American sculpture. By 1860, the Athenæum owned one of the largest publicly-accessible collections of sculpture in the country. Among those early Athenæum acquisitions were sculptures: free-standing or in relief, made of plaster or marble. They included fine, full-size copies of approved ancient pieces such as the Venus de Medici and the Apollo Belvedere, as well as idealized figures and busts of important historical personages, modeled or carved by leading modern European neoclassicists. Special connections in Europe also helped the Athenæum acquire plaster casts of important ancient works made directly from the originals in European museums and private hands.

With the maturation of sculpture in America beginning in the 1820s, the work of native Neoclassic sculptors began to be represented in the Athenæum’s collection. Eventually, this included important works by the three ‘founders’ of American Neoclassic sculpture, Horatio Greenough (1805–1852), Thomas Crawford (1814–1857), and Hiram Powers (1805–1873), as well as examples by their followers, many of them born in or around Boston: Richard S. Greenough (1819–1904), Thomas R. Gould (1818–1881), Harriet Hosmer (1830–1908), Chauncey B. Ives (1810–1894), and William Wetmore Story (1819–1895). By then, many American sculptors had moved to Italy to live and work in Florence or Rome, where the cost of living was lower and Puritan standards of behavior did not need to be observed. The change also brought the Americans closer to their classical models and to good sources of the best white marble, which was not available in the United States. Connections to Boston, however, remained as strong as ever. “New Englanders in general were better represented on the Grand Tour than other Americans,” Dr. Dearinger says. “In the 1820s, 40s, and 50s, many of these intrepid seekers of culture were publishing travel books. Chapters in them describe visits to American studios in Italy, places which became, eventually, mandatory European tour stops.” Many works were purchased by American collectors right out of those studios. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel The Marble Faun, written after long sojourns in Florence and Rome, and Henry James’s Roderick Hudson, both describe the lives of American sculptors in Italy.

The installation of American Neoclassic Sculpture includes sections summarizing the ancient roots of Neoclassicism, early European interpretations of it, the rise of Neoclassicism in America, the tension between the classical and the real in portraiture and in images of children, the Neoclassicist’s preference for themes from literature and religion, and the special role that Boston—and the Boston Athenæum—played in the patronage of American sculptors during the first half of the nineteenth century. The installation design also reflects early nineteenth-century ideas of how best to display Neoclassic work. “Deep, deep red or deep, deep blue were considered the best wall colors for setting off white marble works,” Dearinger says. “Sculptors were sometimes involved in designing the settings for their own works in their patrons’ homes and they really cared about it. We know of projects where the artist worked out the light source, chose the deep red fabric rugs, even selected the color of the benches.” The dark blue gallery walls and dramatic lighting of the Athenæum’s installation is designed to suggest those early environments. “If there is an overall theme of this exhibition, it is the fine line between the real and the ideal,” Dearinger concludes. “How does artist address both? In portraiture, a bust must look something like the person portrayed, so how does the artist judge where to stop along the boundary between reality and flattery?. The exhibition also explores how conservative protestant Americans were able to straddle the gap between their Puritan backgrounds and the seductive, sensuous tastes of the ancients.”