Enfilade

Call for Papers | HECAA Emerging Scholars Showcase

Posted in Calls for Papers, graduate students by Editor on January 11, 2024

Workshop for Gilding on Wood (Doreur sur bois), detail, Encyclopédie ou Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers, edited by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d’Alembert, volume 20, plate IV (Paris, 1765 / ARTFL Encyclopédie Project, University of Chicago).

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HECAA Emerging Scholars Showcase
Online, 5 March 2024

Proposals due by 26 January 2024

We at HECAA are thrilled to invite emerging scholars studying the art, architecture, and visual culture of the long eighteenth century around the globe to participate in our 2024 virtual showcase. A beloved HECAA tradition, the showcase is intended as a platform for emerging scholars to connect with the wider HECAA community and get feedback on their research.

Scholars will each be given 3–5 minutes to present their work, followed by an open question and answer session. This year’s Emerging Scholars Showcase will be held on Tuesday, March 5 (time TBD based on participants’ time zones). As in previous years, an additional showcase may be added if there is sufficient interest; so, we encourage you to apply even if you are unable to present on Tuesday, March 5.

To apply, please fill out this form by Friday, January 26 at midnight (EST). Emerging scholars may be current graduate students (MAs or PhDs) and early career researchers who have received their PhDs in the past five years. We ask that presenters apply no more than once every three years to allow for as many individuals as possible to participate. Also note that you do not have to be a member of HECAA to apply to participate in the Emerging Scholars Showcase, so feel free to circulate widely in your networks. Please, direct all questions, suggestions (and love) to hecaa.emergingscholarsrep@gmail.com.

Warmly,
Demetra Vogiatzaki
HECAA Board Member At-Large, Emerging Scholars Representative

Journal18 | Pendant Essays on Paint Boxes

Posted in journal articles by Editor on January 10, 2024

Left: Partial view of the contents of Charlotte Martner’s paint box (Private collection; author’s photograph). Right: Caspar Schneider, Paint box on stand, ca. 1789, mahogany on oak structure, 75 cm high (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art).

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Recent pieces from J18′s Notes & Queries:

Conceived as pendants, these two essays by David Pullins and Damiët Schneeweisz unpack two paint boxes that belonged to Marie Victoire Lemoine (1754–1820) and Charlotte Daniel Martner (1781–1839), bringing out how these boxes tie the material history of painting to gender, colonialism, and enslavement.

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David Pullins, “Contained Assertions: Marie Victoire Lemoine’s Paint Box,” Journal18 (December 2023).

Marie Victoire Lemoine, The Interior of a Woman Painter’s Atelier, 1789, oil on canvas, 116.5 × 88.9 cm (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art).

Holding a loaded palette, brushes and maulstick, a standing woman represents the art of painting, while a second woman seated on a low stool embodies the foundational art of drawing (Fig. 1).[1] Their practices converge in the canvas underway on an easel, depicting a priestess presenting a young woman to a statue of Athena, goddess-protectress of the arts, in which chalk outlines have begun to be fleshed out in color. But the allegory has been dressed in contemporary terms, pointedly situating Marie Victoire Lemoine’s The Interior of a Woman Painter’s Atelier in the year it was executed, 1789, and boldly taking on the language of genre painting that was used more often to critique than to promote women artists. Michel Garnier’s A Young Woman Painter from the same year offers a counter-image (Fig. 2). A painter sets her canvases aside (literally turned to the wall, her easel reflected distantly in the mirror), while she is distracted by love (signaled by the dove, flowers, and book propped on an insubstantial table easel). In contrast to Lemoine’s somber, antique mise-en-abyme, Garnier chooses an unfinished “Greuze girl” as his gloss. . . .

The full essay is available here»

David Pullins is Associate Curator in the Department of European Paintings at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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Damiët Schneeweisz, “Laboring Likeness: Charlotte Daniel Martner’s Paint Box in Martinique (1803–1821),” Journal18 (December 2023).

Charlotte Martner, Self-Portrait with Four People, 1805, watercolor on ivory and cardboard, 14.5 × 11.5 cm (Private collection).

In Charlotte Daniel Martner’s self-portrait miniature (1805), the classical tendencies of French eighteenth-century portraiture collide with a distinctive burgeoning Antillean visual culture of the early nineteenth century (Fig. 1).[1] The miniature is a contrast in colors: the artist’s luminous pale white skin and Empire dress, emanating from the portrait’s ivory ground like moonlight, set against the darker skin tones of the man, women, and child that surround her, each dressed in dulled shades of red, orange, blue, and beige. The precise status of the four Black individuals within this household is unclear, and they are yet to be identified, but their placement, each suspended in an act of domestic labor, suggests that perhaps they depict those then enslaved in Martner’s home. At the center of the portrait is a brisk loss, as if someone has pressed their thumb to the watercolor and swept away Martner’s features, leaving only a set of auburn eyes, the contours of a nose, dark-brown eyebrows, and loose curls pinned back with a bejeweled comb. . .

The full essay is available here»

Damiët Schneeweisz is a PhD Candidate at The Courtauld Institute of Art currently on Doctoral Placement at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.

Journal18, Fall 2023 — Cold

Posted in journal articles by Editor on January 10, 2024

The latest issue of J18:

Journal18, Issue #16 (Fall 2023) — Cold
Issue edited by Michael Yonan

Feeling cold is increasingly a privilege in our warming world. Regions of the world known for temperate, moderate climates are becoming accustomed to erratic weather. Cooler areas of the globe are warming, and warmer areas becoming too hot to occupy. Accompanying these climatological transformations are humanity’s attempts to control temperature, led by the invention of technologies (most prominently air conditioning) which help us live comfortably, but which come with substantial human, economic, and environmental costs. By creating pleasant temperatures in which to live and work, we exacerbate the problem that makes human intervention into the climate more urgent.

The cause of these changes is the consumption of fossil fuels, which transformed human life profoundly in the pursuit of modernity. The origin of this transformation falls squarely within the long eighteenth century. The established scientific terminus post quem for measuring human effects on global temperatures is the year 1800. Moreover, the 1700s were the final century of the Little Ice Age, a climatological phenomenon characterized by lower global mean temperatures. With these conditions in mind, might temperature play a greater role in our discussion of eighteenth-century art? For this issue of Journal18, I have invited scholars to address this possibility. My goal is to encourage reflection on how eighteenth-century art might engage the scholarly literatures on historical climatology and the history of the senses. Do the conditions of eighteenth-century life, as filtered through artistic production, help us understand why the world became warmer? Can we find in the eighteenth century’s ideas about temperature the roots of our current beliefs, and perhaps locate in art ways of rethinking or undoing the assumptions that have brought us to this place?

The essays offered here address these concerns from multiple perspectives, engage varied works of art, and do so in diverse regions of the globe. Jennifer Van Horn examines an eighteenth-century plate warmer, made circa 1790, owned by George Washington and used in his residences, to reveal its place within a racially determined temperature-scape. She achieves this by analyzing not only how it mediated temperatures for its socially prominent owners, but also how it reveals the experiences of the enslaved individuals who tended it during dinners. She thereby locates the warmer’s effect on bodies, its thermoception, within the “complex entanglements of cold, race, unfreedom, and materiality” of early America to produce a “racialized thermal order.”

Sylvia Houghteling’s essay takes us to a different region of the globe, South Asia, and to a different problem, namely creating cool temperatures for inhabitants of a hot climate. Houghteling shows that South Asian societies produced sophisticated systems of cooling long before colonial occupation, but these early techniques often relied on creating the psychological effect of cold by stimulating other senses, notably smell and sight. She thereby produces a synesthetic framework for temperature modification, one in which the senses interconnect. This approach offers insight into how to produce art history that is sensually engaged, not just in an erotic dimension, but in the ability to imagine complex sensual entanglements through the past’s material remains.

Alper Metin leads us to the Ottoman Empire, where he investigates the history of a warming device appreciated across the world: the fireplace. Eighteenth-century Ottoman patrons adapted fireplace designs from Western models, and in so doing responded to substantial socioeconomic and cultural changes in Ottoman society. These included the desire for increased comfort in domestic interiors and the need to display wealth and sophistication through a fireplace’s decoration. Metin reflects on the Ottoman Turkish terminology for fireplaces, revealing both gendered and socio-ethnic dimensions to its language, and on morphological changes to fireplace design. Fireplaces emerge as more than just warming devices, but rather as creations that express changing conditions and mentalities in a society rethinking its international place.

Our shorter notices take up these themes in further directions. Kaitlin Grimes shows how the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway incorporated narwhal ivory into conceptions of royal power that both supported and materialized its colonial project in the Arctic Atlantic. Etienne Wismer demonstrates that melting glaciers in Switzerland (much in the news today) fascinated Europeans in the years around 1800, spurring scientific investigations, inspiring interior decoration, and generating new health regimens. Both Grimes and Wismer explore the relationship between what Wismer calls a “biotope” and the human beings who inhabited it. I would add that art mediates the relationship between humanity and biotope, and that temperature is a central force constituting their interconnection.

Issue Editor
Michael Yonan
, University of California, Davis

a r t i c l e s

• Jennifer Van Horn — Racialized Thermoception: An Eighteenth-Century Plate Warmer

• Sylvia Houghteling — Beyond Ice: Cooling through Cloth, Scent, and Hue in Eighteenth-Century South Asia

• Alper Metin — Domesticating and Displaying Fire: The Technical and Aesthetic Evolution of Ottoman Fireplaces

s h o r t e r  p i e c e s

• Kaitlin Grimes — Narwhal Ivory as the Arctic Colonial Speciality of the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway

• Etienne Wismer — Making Sense of Ice? Engaging Meltwater in the Long Eighteenth Century in Switzerland and France

All articles are available here»

 

Call for Articles | Spring 2025 Issue of J18: Africa, Beyond Borders

Posted in Calls for Papers, journal articles by Editor on January 10, 2024

From the Call for Papers:

Journal18, Issue #19 (Spring 2025) — Africa: Beyond Borders
Issue edited by Prita Meier, Hermann von Hesse, and Finbarr Barry Flood

Proposals due by 1 April 2024; finished articles will be due by 1 September 2024

Since the dawn of decolonization in 1950s and 1960s Africa, Africanist scholars have emphasized Africa’s connections to the rest of the world before the period of European colonialism. While such views have gained widespread currency among Africanists and some Africanist-adjacent scholars and journals, Africa, apart from the continent’s Mediterranean coast, is hardly discussed beyond these circles. Even when medieval and early modern (art)history and material culture studies claim to be global, Africa often remains on the periphery of the discussion of long-distance trade, artistic innovations, and material cultural exchange.

This special issue of Journal18 invites contributions that examine the confluence of the global, interregional, and local in shaping African arts, material culture, and sartorial practices. It seeks to shift standard accounts of globalization by decentering European empire-building and the colonial archive. The long eighteenth century saw the expansion of African polities and local networks of exchange flourished. Internal trade and migration were just as important as oceanic movements. Traders, merchants, and migrants constantly moved between different societies, actively facilitating the intermingling of diverse cultural forms across great distances. Artisans, both free and enslaved, were also highly mobile during this period. Archipelagic Africa, especially its port cities and mercantile polities, played a significant role in shaping the commodity networks of the entire world.

Among the questions that this issue seeks to address are: Can the discussions of African trade objects help us historicize intra-and inter-continental trade and cultural exchanges? How did African royals, travelers, enslaved, and free individuals engage with the foreign and the faraway? What can African artifacts tell us about religious, aesthetic, and cultural transformations in Africa and its internal or transregional diasporas before the colonial period? What can historic African art collecting tell us about African identities and transcultural negotiations? How did Africa inspire global artistic imaginations during this dynamic period?

We welcome proposals for contributions on related topics, including African architectural forms and notions of space; the visualization of race in pre-colonial Africa; cultures of making and their regional and transregional connections; the reception and reimagining associated with transregional or transcultural reception; African writing and graphic systems; the material cultures of enslaved/free Africans and their experiences of migration and diaspora; and the politics of eighteenth-century heritage conservation.

To submit a proposal, send an abstract (250 words) and brief biography to the following addresses: editor@journal18.org and spm9@nyu.edu, vonhesse@illinois.edu, fbf1@nyu.edu. Articles should not exceed 6000 words (including footnotes) and will be due by 1 September 2024. For further details on submission and Journal18 house style, see Information for Authors.

Issue Editors
Prita Meier, New York University
Hermann von Hesse, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Finbarr Barry Flood, New York University

Exhibition | Gods, Heroes, and Traitors

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on January 9, 2024

Robert von Langer, The Human Race Threatened by the Element of Water (Das Menschengeschlecht vom Element des Wassers bedroht), 1804
(Vienna: Albertina)

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The show was on view at the Albertina last summer; the catalogue (in German) is still available from Hatje Cantz Verlag:

Gods, Heroes, and Traitors: The History Image around 1800
Albertina, Vienna, 2 June — 27 August 2023

Borne up by sentiment, historical painting was considered the most elevated genre of art well into the early nineteenth century. Staking a claim to morality as Schiller saw it—in the sense of having the ability to affect the spirit and intellect didactically—the drawings condense significant moments of religious, mythological material. Human emotions and deeds were turned into an artistic image of history, in the truest sense of the word.

With the pictures assembled here, the Albertina unites outstanding works of art that mark the origins of what is today the most important collection of prints worldwide. Its founder, Prince Albert Casimir of Saxony, Duke of Teschen, was a collector with his finger on the pulse of the times. He was especially interested in drawings, studies, sketches, and large-format works on paper, acquiring the artworks directly, and often personally, from the studios of artists such as Jacques-Louis David, Anton Raphael Mengs, Antonio Canova, Angelika Kauffmann, Heinrich Friedrich Füger, and Johann Heinrich Füssli, or from the big Academy exhibitions of his era.

Christof Metzger and Julia Zaunbauer, eds., with a foreword by Klaus Albrecht Schröder, Götter, Helden und Verräter: Das Historienbild um 1800 (Berlin: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2023), 216 pages, ISBN: 978-3775754521, $62.

New Book | Étienne Barthélemy Garnier

Posted in books by Editor on January 9, 2024

From Éditions Faton:

Christophe Huchet de Quénetain and Moana Weil-Curiel, Étienne Barthélemy Garnier (1765–1849): De l’Académie royale à l’Institut de France (Dijon: Éditions Faton, 2023), 544 pages, ISBN: 978-2878443462, €74.

Étienne-Barthélemy Garnier, dont on connaît parfois la monumentale Consternation de Priam, ou certains très beaux dessins, est trop souvent considéré comme un élève de David. Dans une période complexe sur les plans politique et artistique, il saura tracer un chemin qui va le mener des Prix de l’Académie royale aux cimaises du Salon, des décors officiels aux plus hautes fonctions de l’Institut, dont il deviendra le doyen, sans cesser de plaire à une clientèle privée. Dans ce livre, le lecteur comme l’amateur vont découvrir un bel artiste qui perpétue dans la première moitié du XIXe siècle les préceptes reçus de ses maîtres (Durameau, Doyen et Vien), tous pleinement inscrits dans le XVIIIe siècle. Sa volonté de privilégier, quelle que soit la technique, la lisibilité de ses compositions face au lyrisme ou à l’emphase de certains confrères et la précocité (son Hippolyte quittant Phèdre, son portrait de Napoléon dans son cabinet de travail), sinon l’originalité (sa Charité romaine féminisée…), de certains sujets font assurément partie de ses qualités et nous font regretter que ses projets pour la tapisserie destinés à la manufacture des Gobelins n’aient pu être menés à bien.

Christophe Huchet de Quénetain est historien d’art et antiquaire. Docteur en histoire de l’art de l’université de Paris-IV Sorbonne, auditeur de The Royal Collection Studies et de l’Institut des hautes études de défense nationale, ancien élève de l’École pratique des hautes études, de l’École du Louvre et de l’École Boulle-Greta, il est qualifié aux fonctions de maître de conférences des universités. Il s’intéresse aux arts décoratifs et aux collectionneurs des XVIIe, XVIIIeet XIXe siècles.

Docteur en histoire de l’art de l’École pratique des hautes études, les principaux domaines de recherche de Moana Weil-Curiel sont la peinture et le décor en France et en Italie du XVIIe au XVIIIe siècle, ainsi que l’histoire du goût.

Call for Papers | Rethinking Centers and Peripheries in France

Posted in Calls for Papers by Editor on January 9, 2024

As noted at Le Blog de l’ApAhAu:

Transferts culturels et tensions autour du modèle exogène: Architecture et aménagement du territoire: Le royaume de France et ses provinces dans l’Europe, XVIIe–XVIIIe siècles
Université de Poitiers, 28 March 2024

Proposals due by 31 January 2024

Durant l’Ancien Régime, un réseau de relations intense a alimenté les échanges entre les foyers artistiques principaux mais également à travers des centres de production dits secondaires voire subalternes. L’étude des mobilités des hommes, des objets et des idées montre une variété des pratiques et des circulations qui oblige aujourd’hui à opérer des décentrements vers des modèles de compréhension des territoires et des phénomènes d’appropriation, hors du schéma, initié dès les années 1980 par E. Castelnuovo et C. Ginzburg sur le rapport entre centre et périphéries[1]. Dans un renouvellement des perspectives d’étude, ce cadre analytique fondateur mais désormais trop restrictif doit être reformulé pour mettre en place une réflexion autour de dynamiques spatiales qui s’intéressent aux capitales provinciales, aux villes frontières, aux territoires ruraux et aux arcs de circulation qui traversent l’Europe en marge des axes principaux.

Pour cette première journée d’études, l’approche privilégiée vise à mesurer si le concept de centralisation des standards culturels reste pertinent face à des territoires larges, rarement connectés par les études contemporaines.

• Un premier axe s’intéressera à la question de l’étude des constructions historiographiques autour des nationalismes artistiques, de la mise en place des principes de domination centre / périphérie et marges, etc.
• Un deuxième axe examinera le rapport au lieu, la prise en compte des qualités intrinsèques des contextes pour mieux comprendre les schémas de diffusion dans un système où modèles et vocabulaires exogènes peinent souvent à s’imposer.

Nous attendons des communications portant spécifiquement sur l’aménagement du territoire et l’architecture.

Les communications dureront 30 minutes. Les propositions de communication d’environ 200 mots, accompagnées d’une courte notice bio-bibliographique seront à envoyer, au plus tard le 31 janvier 2024 à marie.luce.pujalte.fraysse@univ-poitiers.fr, magaly.piquart@gmail.com, et poteljean@gmail.com.

1 Enrico Castelnuovo et Carlo Ginzburg, « Domination symbolique et géographie artistique dans l’histoire de l’art italien », Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales, vol. 40, novembre 1981, Sociologie de l’œil, p.51–72.

Comité d’organisation
• Marie-Luce Pujalte-Fraysse, Maître de Conférences HDR en histoire de l’art moderne, Université de Poitiers
• Magaly Piquart-Vesperini, Doctorante en histoire de l’architecture moderne, Paris I, Ater en histoire de l’art moderne, Université de Poitiers
• Jean Potel, Doctorant en histoire de l’architecture moderne, Sorbonne Université

 

New Book | Palaces of Reason

Posted in books by Editor on January 8, 2024

From The Pennsylvania State UP:

Robin Thomas, Palaces of Reason: The Royal Residences of Bourbon Naples (University Park: Penn State University Press, 2024), 212 pages, ISBN: ‎978-0271095219, $110.

Palaces of Reason traces the fascinating history of three royal residences built outside of Naples in the eighteenth century at Capodimonte, Portici, and Caserta. Commissioned by King Charles of Bourbon and Queen Maria Amalia of Saxony, who reigned over the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, these buildings were far more than residences for the monarchs. They were designed to help reshape the economic and cultural fortunes of the realm.

The palaces at Capodimonte, Portici, and Caserta are among the most complex architectural commissions of the eighteenth century. Considering the architecture and decoration of these complexes within their political, cultural, and economic contexts, Robin L. Thomas argues that Enlightenment ideas spurred their construction and influenced their decoration. These modes of thinking saw the palaces as more than just centers of royal pleasure or muscular assertions of the crown’s power. Indeed, writers and royal ministers viewed them as active agents in improving the cultural, political, social, and economic health of the kingdom. By casting the palaces within this narrative, Thomas counters the assumption that they were imitations of Versailles and the swan songs of absolutism, while expanding our understanding of the eighteenth-century European palace more broadly.

Robin L. Thomas is Professor of Art History and Architecture at Penn State University. He is the author of Architecture and Statecraft: Charles of Bourbon’s Naples, 1734–1759, also published by Penn State University Press.

New Book | Volcanic

Posted in books by Editor on January 8, 2024

From Yale UP:

John Brewer, Volcanic: Vesuvius in the Age of Revolutions (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2023), 544 pages, ISBN: ‎978-0300272666, £30 / $40.

book coverA vibrant, diverse history of Vesuvius and the Bay of Naples in the age of Romanticism

Vesuvius is best known for its disastrous eruption of 79CE. But only after 1738, in the age of Enlightenment, did the excavations of Herculaneum and Pompeii reveal its full extent. In an era of groundbreaking scientific endeavour and violent revolution, Vesuvius became a focal point of strong emotions and political aspirations, an object of geological enquiry, and a powerful symbol of the Romantic obsession with nature. John Brewer charts the changing seismic and social dynamics of the mountain, and the meanings attached by travellers to their sublime confrontation with nature. The pyrotechnics of revolution and global warfare made volcanic activity the perfect political metaphor, fuelling revolutionary enthusiasm and conservative trepidation. From Swiss mercenaries to English entrepreneurs, French geologists to local Neapolitan guides, German painters to Scottish doctors, Vesuvius bubbled and seethed not just with lava, but with people whose passions, interests, and aims were as disparate as their origins.

John Brewer is emeritus professor of humanities and social sciences at the California Institute of Technology and a faculty associate of the Harvard University History Department. His books include Pleasures of the Imagination, which won the Wolfson History Prize and was shortlisted for the National Book Awards.

A New Chapter for the Berger Prize

Posted in books by Editor on January 8, 2024

From The Walpole Society:

The Walpole Society is delighted to announce an agreement with the Berger Collection Educational Trust (BCET) to run the leading book prize for British art history, the Berger Prize. The Berger Prize celebrates brilliant writing and scholarship about the arts and architecture of the United Kingdom. The Walpole Society, which promotes the study of Britain’s art history, will deliver the Berger Prize from 2024, working alongside the BCET and Denver Art Museum, home of the Berger Collection of British art. The Walpole Society was appointed following the retirement of Robin Simon, co-founder and organiser of the prize since 2001. Chair of BCET trustees, Katherine MB Berger, and Dr Jonny Yarker, incoming chair of judges, paid tribute to Robin Simon at the 2023 Prize ceremony.

Several initiatives starting in 2024 will build on the Prize’s two decades of support for British art history, further broadening its reach:

• A new website to showcase the prize.

• The prize’s eligibility and rules, with a renewed commitment to governance and transparency, will be updated. Nominations for the 2024 prize close on 28 March.

• The incumbent prizewinner will deliver a lecture at the Denver Art Museum, home of the Berger Collection. The 2024 lecture by Tim Clayton is on 7 May.

• A summer event in London will announce the long list. In 2024 this will be on 28 June, when Tim Clayton will talk about his 2023 Berger Prizewinning book, James Gillray: A Revolution in Satire.

• New from 2024, each shortlisted book will receive a prize of £500. The 2024 shortlist will be announced at a virtual event on 15 September.

• The first prize of £5000 is the largest sum offered by any art history book prize. The winner of the 2024 Berger Prize will be presented on 15 November, at a ceremony at London’s Reform Club.

• A new podcast from The Walpole Society, launching in the latter part of 2024, will showcase brilliant writing and scholarship about the arts and architecture of the United Kingdom, with a focus on Berger Prize shortlisted authors.

• Walpole Society trustee, Dr Jonny Yarker, succeeds Robin Simon as chair of judges. Joining the panel in 2024 are Clare Hornsby, Chairwoman of The Walpole Society, and Angelica Daneo, Chief Curator at the Denver Art Museum. Click here for information about the 2024 prize jury.

Katherine MB Berger, Chairman of the Berger Collection Educational Trust (BCET), commented: “We are all so excited and we look forward to future vibrant initiatives—and to working together with The Walpole Society on our shared aim for promoting excellence in British art history.”

Clare Hornsby, Chairwoman of The Walpole Society, said: “We’re honoured to have been chosen by the Berger Collection Educational Trust to run the Berger Prize. The Prize feels like a natural fit for The Walpole Society, whose goals are so closely aligned with it and with the BCET. We intend the Prize in this new era to reach an even wider audience—in the UK, US, and internationally, whilst honouring its twenty year heritage established by Robin Simon and Katherine Berger.”

Incoming chair of Berger Prize judges, Dr Jonny Yarker, said: “British art history is extraordinary for its richness, range and creativity. I look forward to the Berger Prize both recognising the brilliance and dedication of researchers, whose books are often the summation of a life’s research, and also for the Prize to offer an annual snapshot of the field of studies in all its diversity and depth.”