Enfilade

Exhibition | Thomas Frye: An Irish Artist in London

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on January 15, 2024

From Ireland’s Office of Public Works:

Neglected Genius — Thomas Frye: An Irish Artist in London
Dublin Castle, 1 December 2023 — 19 March 2024

Curated by William Laffan

The Office of Public Works is pleased to announce the opening of a major exhibition dedicated to Ireland’s most successful design-entrepreneur of the eighteenth century, Thomas Frye (1710–1762).

Exhibition poster showing an 18th-century portrait of a woman and child.Born in 1710, most likely in Edenderry, County Offaly, Thomas Frye moved to London as a young man, where he quickly established himself as a successful portrait painter. From the mid-1740s, he ran a factory in Bow, just east of the City of London, set up to recreate Chinese porcelain, which had been admired in Europe for centuries. Under Frye’s management the Bow factory thrived, producing inexpensive ceramics both decorative and utilitarian in a variety of designs.

Frye was among the earliest European artists to collapse the distinction between ‘high’ art and factory-produced design. In an age of increasing specialisation, the manner in which he ranged freely across multiple techniques and media was unique. Although his name is scarcely known today outside specialist circles, Frye has a strong claim to the title of Ireland’s most successful printmaker, industrial artist, and design entrepreneur. At the same time, Frye’s career in London illustrates the incipient globalization of the period. Frye attempted to emulate Chinese technology with raw materials from north America.

This exhibition sets side-by-side Frye’s portraiture in oil, his enamel miniatures, his mezzotints, and the production of the Bow porcelain factory under his management. For the first time equal emphasis is afforded to each facet of this supremely gifted and highly innovative Irish artist. Included are loans from the Victoria and Albert Museum; The Foundling Museum, London; the Holburne Museum, Bath; and the National Gallery of Ireland, along with leading private collections.

William Laffan, the curator of the exhibition states: “Frye must be acknowledged as a pioneering figure in portraiture, porcelain and printmaking, and as one of the most inventive and ‘ingenious’ artists of the Georgian era.”

 

The Decorative Arts Trust’s Emerging Scholars Colloquium, 2024

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on January 15, 2024

The Decorative Arts Trust’s Emerging Scholars Colloquium takes place this Sunday, on the heels of the group’s Antiques Weekend, an annual foray into New York’s Americana Week:

The Decorative Arts Trust’s Emerging Scholars Colloquium
Park Avenue Armory, New York, 21 January 2024

Photo from the 2023 Emerging Scholars Colloquium in the Park Avenue Armory’s Board of Officers Room (via the Instagram account of The Decorative Arts Trust).

The Decorative Arts Trust is excited to host its 8th Annual Colloquium featuring young scholars in the decorative arts field. The registration fee for the colloquium is $25; Decorative Arts Trust membership is not required to attend. The event is generously sponsored by Classical American Homes Preservation Trust and Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Ayres III. Registration is available here.

p r o g r a m m e

9.00  Coffee and bagels

9.30  Welcome by Benjamin Prosky, President, Classical American Homes Preservation Trust

Introductions by Catherine Carlisle, Manager of Educational Programs, Decorative Arts Trust
• Follow the Hearth: Retracing the Spatial History of Edgewater’s Dining Room Mantelpiece — Lauren Drapala (PhD candidate, Bard Graduate Center, and William L. Thompson Collections Fellow, Classical American Homes Preservation Trust)
• An Artifact of Afro-America: A Blanket Chest by Brooks Thompson — Neil Grasty (Undergraduate Student, Morehouse College, and Curatorial Intern, High Museum of Art)
• Loud and Clear: Glass and Obscured Narratives at the New Orleans Museum of Art — Laura Ochoa Rincon (Decorative Arts Trust Curatorial Fellow, New Orleans Museum of Art)
• Does Architecture Move? The Mahadol Palanquin of 18th-Century Gujarat and Marwar — Krishna Shekhawat (PhD Student, University of California, Berkeley)
• ‘Dressing Up’ Egypt: Performing Race and Late 19th-Century Egyptomania — Lea Stephenson (PhD Candidate, University of Delaware)

11.30  Concluding remarks by Matthew Thurlow, Executive Director, Decorative Arts Trust

 

The Burlington Magazine, December 2023

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions, journal articles, obituaries, reviews by Editor on January 14, 2024

The eighteenth century in the December issue of The Burlington, which focuses on Spain:

The Burlington Magazine 165 (December 2023)

Francisco de Goya, Self-Portrait with Dr Arrieta, 1820, oil on canvas, 115 × 77 cm (Minneapolis Institute of Art, 52.14).

a r t i c l e

• Mercedes Cerón Peña, “Goya’s Self-Portrait with Dr Arrieta,” pp. 1300–04.
In 1820 Goya painted a portrait of himself as he had appeared during his serious illness of the year before, attended by his doctor, Eugenio García Arrieta. Newly discovered biographical information about Arrieta suggests that the painting’s red and and green colour scheme may allude to the political views he shared with Goya.

r e v i e w s

• Michael Hall, Review of the new Galería de las Colecciones Reales (Royal Collections Gallery) in Madrid (opened 28 June 2023), pp. 1339–43.

• Stephen Lloyd, Review of the exhibition Return of the Gods (World Museum, Liverpool, (April 2023 — February 2024), pp. 1343–45. “Britain’s largest assemblage of Classical sculpture outside London belongs to National Museums Liverpool . . . In 1959 Liverpool City Council and its museums were gifted the entirety of the Ince Blundell collection—approximately six hundred heavily restored Roman marbles . . . collected by . . . Henry Blundell (1724–1810), a wealthy Catholic landowner, between 1776 and 1809.”

• Humphrey Wine, Review of the catalogue raisonné by Joseph Assémat-Tessandier, Louis Lagrenée, dit l’Aîné (1725–1805) (Arthena, 2022), pp. 1364–65.

Louis-Michel van Loo, Portrait of Isabel Farnese, 1737, oil on canvas, 341 × 264 cm (Madrid: Galería de las Colecciones Reales).

• Rebeka Hodgkinson, Review of Stephanie Barczewski, How the Country House Became English (Reaktion, 2023), pp. 1370–71.

• Peter Humfrey, Review of Eveline Baseggio, Tiziana Franco, and Luca Molà, eds., La chiesa di Santa Maria dei Servi e la comunità veneziana dei Servi di Maria, secoli XIV–XIX (Viella, 2023), pp. 1374–75. “The demolition of the great fourteenth-century church of the Servi in about 1812–13 represents one of the most grievous of the many losses suffered by Venice’s artistic heritage during the Napoleonic period.”

o b i t u a r y

• Saloni Mathur, Obituary for Kavita Singh (1964–2023), pp. 1379–80.
Professor of art history and Dean of the School of Arts and Aesthetics at Jawaharlal Nehru University, Kavita Singh became internationally known for her publications on the history and politics of museums and the pre-modern art of South Asia. An authority on Indian court paintings, she was an inspiring colleague and teacher who publicly championed both her university and the study of Mughal art in the subcontinent.

New Book | Mariana de Neoburgo

Posted in books by Editor on January 13, 2024

The English description of the book from CEEH:

Gloria Martínez Leiva, with a foreword by Javier Jordán de Urríes, Mariana de Neoburgo, última reina de los Austrias: Vida y legado artístico (Madrid: Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica, 2022), 432 pages, ISBN: 978-8418760082, €50.

Maria Anna of Neuburg (1667−1740), the second wife of Charles II (Carlos II), was queen consort of Spain for ten years and queen dowager for another forty. However, she is a little-known figure to whom historians have barely paid attention. This study takes a look at her life, her image and her artistic patronage, which was not unaffected by the heightened political tension that characterised European history around 1700 and resulted in a change of dynasty in Spain.

Against this turbulent international backdrop, the survey of the queen’s life explores in depth important aspects of court art such as the decoration of her apartments in the royal palaces and sites in which she lived, drawing on documents held in Spanish and foreign archives. It also examines the residences she occupied as a widow in Toledo and Guadalajara, as well as her homes and palaces in Bayonne during her thirty-two-year exile. The approximately one hundred known portraits of her help both unravel her personality and trace the artistic, stylistic and conceptual evolution of the genre over more than half a century, showing how her image—first as queen consort and subsequently as queen dowager—was shaped and publicly projected.

A comprehensive overview of the works of art she commissioned—especially from Luca Giordano—or owned, the portrait gallery she assembled, the paintings she sent to her brother the elector palatine, her richly stocked library and her exceptional founding of the chapel of Loreto in Chiusa (Italy) sheds new light on the patronage of Maria Anna, who is finally studied in her full dimension as the last Habsburg queen.

Gloria Martínez Leiva, who received a PhD in art history for her thesis on Maria Anna of Neuburg, has focused her research on the Spanish royal collections, on which she has published many articles. She is co-author of Quadros y otras cosas que tiene Su Magestad Felipe IV en este Alcázar de Madrid. Año de 1636 (2007) and El inventario del Alcázar de Madrid de 1666. Felipe IV y su colección artística (2015). She has pursued a career in cultural institutions such as Patrimonio Nacional and the Fundación Universitaria Española. She is director of the platform InvestigArt.

Call for Papers | Panel on Ships at ASPHS 2024 in Lisbon

Posted in Calls for Papers by Editor on January 13, 2024

The Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies annual conference will be held in Lisbon, 8–12 July 2024.

Ships and Their Contents: Shipbuilding, Shipwrecks, and Global Circulation in the Iberian World, 1600–1800
Chaired by Sabina de Cavi and Luis Gordo Peláez

Proposals due by 21 January 2024

In a recent talk organized by the Getty Research Institute, Mirko Sardelić (Senior Research Associate of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts / The University of Western Australia) theorized about Renaissance ships as mobile cross-cultural systems. In response to the increasing academic interest in maritime history, ars navigandi, and maritime archaeology, this panel aims at discussing the materiality of ships and their role as cultural and artistic media in a transoceanic context. It focuses on the global trade in the Iberian World that was dominated by the two main urban centers and port cities of Seville and Lisbon and often interacted and clashed with English and Dutch interests. We welcome contributions on topics such as: the materiality and daily life on the early modern ship; economic partnerships for shipbuilding; shipwrecks, their representation and remains; the iconography of transatlantic cargo ships and the global trade (cartography); cargoes of art and precious goods; smuggling, docks and customs across the globe; marines and the maritime society in the broadest sense (gente di mare). Please submit a 300-word proposal, 5 keywords and a one-page CV before 21 January 2024 to Sabina de Cavi (scavi@fcsh.unl.pt) and Luis Gordo Peláez (luisgordopelaez@csufresno.edu).

New Book | Praying to Portraits

Posted in books by Editor on January 12, 2024

Largely a 17th-century story, but also entirely relevant to the 18th century with good 18th-century examples—and to my thinking, a really smart, helpful book for thinking about portraits of any sort (and incredibly well-written). CH

From The Pennsylvania State UP:

Adam Jasienski, Praying to Portraits: Audience, Identity, and the Inquisition in the Early Modern Hispanic World (University Park: Penn State University Press, 2023), 232 pages, ISBN: 978-0271093444, $120.

In Praying to Portraits, art historian Adam Jasienski examines the history, meaning, and cultural significance of a crucial image type in the early modern Hispanic world: the sacred portrait.

Across early modern Spain and Latin America, people prayed to portraits. They prayed to ‘true’ effigies of saints, to simple portraits that were repainted as devotional objects, and even to images of living sitters depicted as holy figures. Jasienski places these difficult-to-classify image types within their historical context. He shows that rather than being harbingers of secular modernity and autonomous selfhood, portraits were privileged sites for mediating an individual’s relationship to the divine. Using Inquisition records, hagiographies, art-theoretical treatises, poems, and plays, Jasienski convincingly demonstrates that portraiture was at the very center of broader debates about the status of images in Spain and its colonies.

Highly original and persuasive, Praying to Portraits profoundly revises our understanding of early modern portraiture. It will intrigue art historians across geographical boundaries, and it will also find an audience among scholars of architecture, history, and religion in the early modern Hispanic world.

Adam Jasienski is Associate Professor of Art History in the Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.

c o n t e n t s

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations

Introduction: Portraits and Sacred Images in Early Modernity
1  Sacrificing the Self
2  True Portraits, Lying Portraits
3  Repainting Portraits
4  Portraits as Sacred Images
Conclusion: The Life Histories of Sacred Portraits and the History of Sacred Portraiture

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Exhibition | Part of the Furniture: The Library of John Bedford

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on January 11, 2024

Joseph Moxon, Practical Perspective; or Perspective Made Easie (London, 1670)
(University of Leeds)

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Now on view at the University of Leeds, with additional information at the Antique Collecting Magazine. Also, see this posting at Antique Dealers Blog by one of the show’s curators, Mark Westgarth.

Part of the Furniture: The Library of John Bedford
Brotherton Gallery, University of Leeds, 9 January — 21 December 2024

Curated by Mark Westgarth, Rachel Eckersley, and Rhiannon Lawrence-Francis

Rare and beautiful books chart the evolution of furniture design over the centuries and the journey from drawing board, to workshop, to home

Selected from the world-leading library of antiques dealer John Bedford (1941–2019), ornate patterns by a renaissance pioneer, designs by Chippendale, Sheraton, Pugin, and Morris, elaborate trade cards, colourful catalogues, drawings, and manuals show how ideas and trends took shape, gained influence, and were eventually revived as fashions came full circle.

Upholsterer and furniture dealer Daniel Thorn might be less of a household name, but his personal sketchbook of designs for drapery, curtains, and furniture is a lively working record of the looks of the late-18th and early-19th centuries. Other highlights include the only complete coloured copy of The Ladies Amusement, an 18th-century book of decorative designs made to cut out and paste. Henry Lawford’s gloriously garish 1855 fold-out sofa catalogue sweeps away clichés of dismal Victoriana in a colour-lithographed riot of puce, lavender, and pea-green.

The exhibition also celebrates Bedford’s life, his vast knowledge, and his generous legacy to the University of Leeds, which enabled the extension and refurbishment of The Brotherton Research Centre and the establishment of The John Bedford Fellowship, in addition to the donation of his dazzling library.

Part of the Furniture: The Library of John Bedford is curated by Mark Westgarth, Associate Professor of Art History and Museum Studies and Director of the Centre for the Study of the Art & Antiques Market; Rachel Eckersley, Rare Book Specialist; and Rhiannon Lawrence-Francis, Special Collections Curator.

Henry Lawford, The Cabinet of Practical, Useful, and Decorative Furniture Designs (J. S. Virtue & Co., 1855)
(University of Leeds)

 

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»