New Report | Survey of Asian Ceramics, National Trust for Scotland

Large dish, porcelain, painted in underglaze blue, iron-red, and gold, Imari-type palette, made in Arita kilns, Japan, Edo period, c.1700–20
(National Trust for Scotland)
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The report was released early this year; Patricia Ferguson provides an introduction here. The full report is available (for free) as a PDF file here.
Patricia Ferguson, Survey of Asian Ceramics in the Collection of the National Trust for Scotland (National Trust for Scotland, 2023), 162 pages.
Between 2017 and 2019 the National Trust for Scotland delivered Project Reveal, a major collections project inventorying a collection of over 140,000 objects, distributed across 50 properties throughout Scotland. Encompassing major object groupings in the areas of fine and decorative art, household furniture and domestic life, these collections chart the experiences of people living in Scotland through 500 years of Scottish history, as well as demonstrating Scotland’s past relationships with the rest of the world.
This survey of Asian ceramics is a natural successor to Project Reveal. It delves deeper into the history and significance of a collection of circa 1,700 ceramic items. Undertaken by the independent researcher Patricia F. Ferguson this report sets out the survey findings, drawing together disparate existing research on the subject and contributing new collection research and knowledge. Focusing on key collections at nine different National Trust for Scotland properties, the report positions the collections within the broader context of historic ceramic production and collecting, with attention to influences such as: fashion and the role of royalty; production in and trade with China and Japan; and the growth of and changes in demand.
Patricia Ferguson is a ceramic specialist with an MA from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), London. She has worked in London at the British Museum and Victoria & Albert Museum, and as Honorary Adviser on Ceramics to the National Trust (England, Wales, and Northern Ireland). She published Ceramics: 400 Years of British Collecting in 100 Masterpieces in 2016.
Conference | Exploring the Histories of Chinese Collections in Europe

Gotha Research Centre (Das Forschungszentrum Gotha ), Universität Erfurt, Thuringia (large grey building on the left).
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From ArtHist.net:
From Cabinets to Museums: Exploring the Histories of Chinese Collections in Europe
Gotha Research Centre, University of Erfurt, 10–11 January 2024
Organized by Emily Teo
An international workshop at the Gotha Research Centre of the University of Erfurt, in cooperation with Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha
Chinese objects were acquired by European collectors for a variety of reasons: ranging from the aesthetic decoration of their residences, to using objects as a source of knowledge about foreign cultures. This workshop brings together historians and museum professionals to discuss the complex histories of Chinese collections in European contexts. Central to the workshop is the East Asian collection in Gotha. Around 1800, Duke August of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg (1772–1822) founded the Chinese Cabinet, a rich and diverse collection of East Asian objects in Gotha’s Friedenstein Palace. Themes that will be explored include the global circulation of artwork, China-Mode in 18th-century Europe, and the practices of collecting and displaying Chinese objects in European collections. The goal of the workshop is to historicize these collections and to explore their interconnections, leading to new directions for research on East Asian collections in Europe. Registration and contact: Emily.teo@uni-erfurt.de

Shoes from the East Asian collection in Gotha, founded by Augustus, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg as the Chinese Cabinet around 1800 (Schloss Friedenstein, inv. no. ETH14S).
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11.00 Tour of the Ducal Museum*
• Agnes Strehlau (Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha)
14.00 Greeting
• Martin Mulsow (Gotha Research Centre, University of Erfurt)
• Tobias Pfeifer-Helke (Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha)
14.15 Introduction
• Emily Teo (Gotha Research Centre)
14.30 Session 1 | Historical Collections
• Jean Theodore Royer (1737–1807) and His Chinese Collection: Thoughts on His Objectives and Collecting Strategies — Jan van Campen (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam)
• Noblesse Oblige — Francois Coulon (Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rennes)
15.40 Coffee break
Object Workshop
16.15 Viewing East Asian Artefacts*
• Kerstin Volker-Saad and Agnes Strehlau (Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha)
18.00 Evening Lecture
• Traces of Guangzhou: Craftsmanship, Material (Dis)Connections and Chinesische Kabinette — Anna Grasskamp (University of Oslo)
19.00 Workshop dinner, for invited participants
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9.30 Object Workshop
• Viewing Chinese Export Albums* — Ulrike Eydinger (Stiftung Schloss Friedenstein Gotha)
11.00 Coffee break
11.15 Session 2 | Transcultural Objects
• Gemstone Potted Landscapes: A Case Study for Exploring the 18th- and 19th-Century China-Europe Transcultural Materiality and Craftsmanship — Wen-ting Wu (National Taiwan University)
• From ’18 Stuck grose Vasen’ to ‘national wertvolles Kulturgut’: Chinese Monumental Vases and the History of Chinese Art History at the Dresden Porcelain Collection — Feng Schöneweiß (Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut)
12.25 Lunch break
13.15 Session 3 | Chinese Architecture for European Princes
• Chinese Architecture at the Friedenstein Palace: Henri-Léonard Bertin, Herzog August von Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg and the Influence of the Drawings from l’Essai sur l’architecture chinoise (1773) — Kee Il Choi Jr (University of Zürich)
• Just for Decoration or Made for Pedagogical Purposes? Murals with Scenes from the Life of Confucius in Oranienbaum Commissioned by Duke Franz of Anhalt-Dessau (1740–1817) — Dorothee Schaab-Hanke (University of Bamberg)
• Think Big: Augustus the Strong and His Collections of Asiatica — Cordula Bischoff (Independent Researcher)
15.00 Final remarks
* Workshop presentations and the evening lecture at the Gotha Research Centre are open to the public with registration. Due to space constraints, the museum tour and object workshops are open only to workshop speakers. Object workshops will be held at the Perthes Forum, a 10-minute walk from the Gotha Research Centre.
Exhibition | Shoes: Inside Out

Eighteenth-century women’s shoes (Hampshire Cultural Trust’s Collection).
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Now on view at The Arc:
Shoes: Inside Out
Willis Museum and Sainsbury Gallery, Basingstoke, Spring 2023
The Arc, Winchester, 24 November 2023 — 6 March 2024
From the functional and practical to the fashionable and extravagant, shoes have played an intriguing role in our social history and modern lives. They can tell us about a person’s work, leisure choices, status, and aspirations—but the story is not always straightforward. Conformity to gender stereotypes is blurred, power statements conceal repression, and the utilitarian merges with the frippery. Shoes: Inside Out is an exhibition featuring footwear from our past, as far back as 11 AD, to the present. Through the themes of work, protect, play, empower, transform, identify, and aspire, 70 pairs of shoes from Hampshire Cultural Trust’s Collection explore how shoes have shaped—and have been shaped by—society. From Georgian high society shoes to 1970s platforms and current high-end designer heels to everyday boots there is a shoe to fit all interests. Alongside the footwear, a display of high-definition x-rays of some of the shoes allow us to glimpse the story within, uncovering developments in the shoes’ construction and revealing an ethereal reminiscence of a life lived.
New Book | Pockets: An Intimate History
We now have two books on pockets (Carlson’s joins that of Barbara Burman and Ariane Fennetaux, published by Yale UP in 2019). From Hachette Book Group:
Hannah Carlson, Pockets: An Intimate History of How We Keep Things Close (Algonquin Books, 2023), 320 pages, ISBN: 978-1643751542, $35.
Who gets pockets, and why? It’s a subject that stirs up plenty of passion: Why do men’s clothes have so many pockets and women’s so few? And why are the pockets on women’s clothes often too small to fit phones, if they even open at all? In her captivating book, Hannah Carlson, a lecturer in dress history at the Rhode Island School of Design, reveals the issues of gender politics, security, sexuality, power, and privilege tucked inside our pockets.
Throughout the medieval era in Europe, the purse was an almost universal dress feature. But when tailors stitched the first pockets into men’s trousers five hundred years ago, it ignited controversy and introduced a range of social issues that we continue to wrestle with today, from concealed pistols to gender inequality. See: #GiveMePocketsOrGiveMeDeath.
Filled with incredible images, this microhistory of the humble pocket uncovers what pockets tell us about ourselves: How is it that putting your hands in your pockets can be seen as a sign of laziness, arrogance, confidence, or perversion? Walt Whitman’s author photograph, hand in pocket, for Leaves of Grass seemed like an affront to middle-class respectability. When W.E.B. Du Bois posed for a portrait, his pocketed hands signaled defiant coolness.
And what else might be hiding in the history of our pockets? (There’s a reason that the contents of Abraham Lincoln’s pockets are the most popular exhibit at the Library of Congress.) Thinking about the future, Carlson asks whether we will still want pockets when our clothes contain ‘smart’ textiles that incorporate our IDs and credit cards. Pockets is for the legions of people obsessed with pockets and their absence, and for anyone interested in how our clothes influence the way we navigate the world.
Hannah Carlson teaches dress history and material culture at the Rhode Island School of Design. After training as a conservator of costume and textiles at the Fashion Institute of Technology, she received a PhD in material culture from Boston University. She has contributed articles to Commonplace: The Journal of Early American Life; Dress; and MacGuffin: The Life of Things.
Exhibition | The Fabric of Democracy

La fête de la Fédération textile, 1790
(Musee de la Toile de Jouy)
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Now on view at the Fashion and Textile Museum:
The Fabric of Democracy: Propaganda Textiles from the French Revolution to Brexit
Fashion and Textile Museum, London, 29 September 2023 – 3 March 2024
Curated by design historian Amber Butchart, this exhibition explores printed propaganda textiles over more than two centuries. Discover how fabric designers and manufacturers have responded to political upheaval from the French Revolution through to Brexit.
The mechanisation of textile industries from the mid-18th century led to the development of printing techniques that could create more detailed imagery on cloth, quicker than ever before. These increasingly affordable processes ‘democratised’ textile decoration, allowing governments, regimes, and corporations to harness the power of print to communicate, from wartime slogans to revolutionary ideals.
While propaganda is usually associated with public art and monumental sculpture, this exhibition explores how fabrics have been used as a political medium both in the home and on the body, through furnishing and fashion. Find out how textiles were used as a tool of the state across the political spectrum, from communism to fascism. Discover how a fraternal crisis in the monarchy played out on cloth, and how democracies promote national identity through textile design. On display will be textiles from countries including Britain, America, Italy, Germany, and Austria—ranging from French toile de Jouy to Japanese robes from the Asia-Pacific war, to Cultural Revolution-era Chinese fabrics rarely exhibited in the UK.
Amber Butchart is a curator, writer, and broadcaster who specialises in the cultural and political history of textiles and dress. She is a former Research Fellow at the University of the Arts London and is a regular public lecturer across the UK’s leading arts institutions. She researches and presents documentaries for television and radio, including the six-part series A Stitch in Time for BBC Four that fused biography, art, and the history of fashion to explore the lives of historical figures through the clothes they wore, and she is the history consultant and regular on-screen historian for BBC One’s Great British Sewing Bee. Amber is an external adviser for the National Crime Agency as a Forensic Garment Analyst, working on cases that require investigation of clothing and textiles. She has published five books on the history and culture of clothes, including The Fashion of Film, Nautical Chic, and a history of British fashion illustration for the British Library.
Exhibition | Boy’s Dress, 1760–1930
Now on view at the Fashion and Textile Museum:
Oh Boy! Boy’s Dress, 1760–1930
Fashion and Textile Museum, London, 29 September 2023 – 3 March 2024
The Fashion and Textile Museum is excited to present Oh Boy!, an exploration into historical boy’s dress. Curated by leading fashion historian Amy de la Haye, alongside renowned expert collector Alasdair Peebles, the exhibition presents an unrivalled collection of an often-undervalued area of fashion history, spread over two acts.
29 September — 16 December 2023
Act One: Breeched, No More Dresses explores the ceremony of entry into the masculine world, taking place after six years of age, as boys abandoned dresses in favour of breeches. Focusing on the period from 1760 to 1810, Act One presents a dimity gown and coat, a robust three-piece fustian breeches suit, and a block-printed skeleton suit, alongside other fascinating pieces.
21 December 2023 — 3 March 2024
Act Two: Ship Shape delves into the vogue for nautical wear dating from 1860 to 1930. Starting with a miniature suit that an admiral had made for his young son and including linen and wool serge suits, loosely inspired by naval dress, accompanied by accessories. The space will be imaginatively adorned, showcasing Alasdair’s skills as a decorative period interior painter and exploring the topic of collecting as narrative.
Amy de la Haye is Professor of Dress History & Curatorship, and joint director of the Centre for Fashion Curation at London College of Fashion (LCF). Recent and current projects include Gluck: Art & Identity at Brighton Museum (2017), Ravishing: The Rose in Fashion at MFIT (2021), Wild & Cultivated: Fashioning the Rose at London’s Garden Museum (2022), Making Mischief: Folk Costume in Britain at Compton Verney (2023), and Making More Mischief… at LCF Stratford (2024). She has published extensively and writes for SHOWstudio. Formerly she served as curator of 20th-century dress at the Victoria and Albert Museum with exhibitions including the radical Streetstyle: from sidewalk to catwalk (1994).
Alasdair Peebles works as a freelance decorative painter, specialising in hand-painted wallpapers and the restoration of painted finishes in Historic houses. For the last thirty years, he has built a private collection focused exclusively on boy’s and youth’s clothes from 1750 to 1950. He is currently co-authoring a book on men’s and boys’ dress for Bloomsbury. He has lectured widely, regularly lends clothing to museums for exhibitions and works with costume designers on period film projects including Little Women and Mary Poppins.
Colloquium | Le stuc dans les grands décors en Europe
From ArtHist.net and the conference programme:
Le stuc dans les grands décors en France et en Europe, de la Renaissance à 1850
Online and in-person, Versailles, Paris, and Fontainebleau, 11–13 December 2023
L’objectif de ces journées est de faire le point sur les recherches en cours, les avancées dans les domaines de la restauration et de l’analyse scientifique, les découvertes effectuées à l’occasion de récents chantiers de restauration et définir des objets de recherches pluridisciplinaires. L’usage du stuc dans l’Antiquité et au Moyen Âge a suscité l’intérêt des historiens de l’art et des scientifiques du patrimoine français. Par contre, hormis dans la sphère provençale et languedocienne, où le milieu universitaire est particulièrement actif sur le sujet des décors, le stuc demeure un champ d’étude encore trop peu exploré en France pour la période de la Renaissance au XIXe siècle.
Pourtant, le vaste sujet du stuc connaît en Europe un certain engouement, comme en témoignent le Centro Studi per la Storia dello Stucco in Età Moderna e Contemporanea, les publications du Rijksdienst voor Cultureel Erfgoed des Pays-Bas, les colloques organisés par la Low Countries Sculpture Society et par l’université de Pardubice, en République Tchèque. La galerie Mazarin à la Bibliothèque nationale de France, la chambre de la duchesse d’Étampes, la galerie François Ier et la Porte Dorée à Fontainebleau, la galerie d’Apollon et l’appartement d’été d’Anne d’Autriche au Louvre ou encore la galerie des Glaces et le salon de Diane à Versailles sont autant de campagnes de restaurations récentes ou en cours qui concernent en partie le stuc. Elles sont l’opportunité de mettre en lumière la question du stuc dans les grands décors français en stuc, de la Renaissance au XIXe siècle.
Les trois journées d’études et de visites sont le premier évènement organisé par un nouveau groupe de recherche sur le décor en stuc dans les grandes demeures en France et en Europe de la Renaissance à 1850. L’objectif de ces journées est de faire le point sur les recherches en cours, les avancées dans les domaines de la restauration et de l’analyse scientifique, les découvertes effectuées à l’occasion de récents chantiers de restauration et définir des objets de recherches pluridisciplinaires. Langues: français et anglais.
Le colloque est retransmis en direct sur YouTube, où vous pourrez continuer à le visionner après l’événement. Il suffit de cliquer sur les liens ci-dessous.
Le lien de la chaîne YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@GroupeStucs
1 e journée, Versailles: https://youtube.com/live/wrNoOIji2CM
2e journée, C2RMF: https://youtube.com/live/ijBg390diu0
3e journée, Fontainebleau: https://youtube.com/live/RYip3hmp164
Collaboration entre le château de Versailles, le château de Fontainebleau, le Centre de Recherche et de Restauration des Musées de France, le Laboratoire de Recherche des Monuments Historiques, le musée du Louvre, le château de Compiègne et l’association Low Countries Sculpture asbl
À l’heure actuelle, le groupe rassemble plusieurs institutions muséales, patrimoniales et scientifiques : le musée national des châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon, le musée national du château de Fontainebleau, le musée national du château de Compiègne, le musée du Louvre, la bibliothèque nationale de France, le château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, le Centre de Recherche et de Restauration des Musées de France, le Laboratoire de Recherche des Monuments Historiques, le château de Vaux-le-Vicomte et l’association Low Countries Sculpture. Le groupe espère réunir une communauté d’historiens de l’art (conservateurs et universitaires), de restaurateurs, de scientifiques du patrimoine et d’artisans s’intéressant à ce sujet qui puisse à terme élaborer des programmes de recherches cohérents et devenir une référence pour les prochains chantiers de restauration concernant des décors de stuc.
Comite d’Organisation
Lionel Arsac (château de Versailles)
Oriane Beaufils (château de Fontainebleau)
Anne Bouquillon (C2RMF)
Ann Bourges (C2RMF)
Valérie Carpentier-Vanhaverbeke (musée du Louvre)
Stéphanie Deschamps-Tan (musée du Louvre)
Jean Ducasse-Lapeyrusse (LRMH)
Étienne Guibert (château de Compiègne)
Léon Lock (The Low Countries Sculpture Society)
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Château de Versailles, auditorium, cour d’Honneur, entrée sur la gauche du Pavillon Dufour (A)
9.50 Laurent Salome (directeur, château de Versailles), Mots de bienvenue
10.00 Lionel Arsac (conservateur du patrimoine, château de Versailles), Introduction
10.20 Session 1 | Le Stuc: état de la recherche, définitions
Présidence: Geneviève Bresc-Bautier (directrice honoraire du département des Sculptures, musée du Louvre)
• Serena Quagliaroli (université de Turin), and Giulia Spoltore (Università della Svizzera italiana), A Centre for the Study of Stucco
• Giacinta Jean (SUPSI, Mendrisio), Giovanni Nicoli (SUPSI, Mendrisio), and Jana Zapletová (Palacký University, Olomouc), Form and Material of Stucco Decoration: Developing Research Projects for a Better Understanding, Conservation, and Dissemination
• Sarah Munoz (université de Lausanne), Usages et techniques du stuc en France aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles: considérations, savoir-faire et secrets d’atelier
• Cyril de Ricou (Atelier de Ricou, Paris) et Armelle Le Gendre (Atelier de Ricou, Paris), Regards croisés sur les stucs de Michel Anguier dans les appartements d’été d’Anne d’Autriche: l’apport des sources écrites et de l’analyse des matériaux
12.15 Pause déjeuner
13.45 Session 2 | Sculpteurs, stucateurs et gipiers
Présidence: Pascal Julien (université Toulouse Jean-Jaurès)
• Lionel Arsac (conservateur du patrimoine, château de Versailles), Le stuc dans les Grands Appartements de Versailles
• Magali Theron (université d’Aix-Marseille), Maîtres sculpteurs et/ou gipiers? Les auteurs des décors en gypserie à Marseille et Aix au XVIIe et début du XVIIIe siècle
15.20 Session 3 | Concevoire: modèles et transmissions
Présidence: Christine Casey (Trinity College Dublin)
• Alicia Adamczak-Gosset (Institut catholique de Paris), Le stuc en regard de la peinture: valeur iconographique et matérielle dans les décors de Jacques Sarazin et de Simon Vouet
• Léon Lock (The Low Countries Sculpture Society, Bruxelles/Mons), Le stuc dans les anciens Pays-Bas de 1650 à 1780: Réflexions sur la traduction de modèles gravés en hauts reliefs
• Giuseppe Dardanello (université de Turin), Stucco in Piedmont from the Late 17th to the mid-18th Century: Designers and Producers
• Barbara Rinn-Kupka (historienne de l’art indépendante, Cologne), French outside France: French Decoration Models in Central and Northern German Stuccowork from the 16th to the mid-18th Century
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Centre de Recherche et de Restauration des Musées de France (C2RMF), auditorium, Palais du Louvre, porte des Lions, escalier de l’Horloge
8.30 Accueil
9.00 Jean-Michel Loyer-Hascoët (directeur, C2RMF), Mots de bienvenue
9.10 Anne Bouquillon (C2RMF) et Ann Bourges (C2RMF), Introduction
9.35 Session 4 | Échanges et diffusion (I)
Présidence: Muriel Barbier (directrice du patrimoine et des collections, château de Fontainebleau)
• Oriane Beaufils (conservatrice du patrimoine, château de Fontainebleau) et Émilie Checroun (conservatrice-restauratrice, Paris), Les stucs du château de Fontainebleau: modèles, méthodes et matérialité
• Grégoire Extermann (SUPSI, Mendrisio) et Alberto Felici (SUPSI, Mendrisio), Une décoration en stuc inédite à la Villa Imperiale de Pesaro: entre Italie, empire et monarchies
11.05 Session 5 | Échanges et diffusion (II)
Présidence: Oriane Beaufils (conservatrice du patrimoine, château de Fontainebleau)
• Serena Quagliaroli (université de Turin) and Giulia Spoltore (Università della Svizzera italiana), Some Italian-French Case Studies in mid-16th-Century Rome
• Mickaël Zito (musée des beaux-arts et d’archéologie de Besançon), Des Lacs à la Toscane, sur les traces des stucateurs Portogalli
12.05 Pause déjeuner
13.00 Session 6 | Grands décors: étude de cas de restauration (I)
Présidence: Jean Ducasse-Lapeyrusse (LRMH)
• Luca Baroni (Université Ca’Foscari, Venise – directeur, lieux culturels de la région des Marches du Nord), Stucco as Political Power: The Rediscovery and Restoration of the Decorative Cycle by Federico Brandani in the Ducal Palace of Montebello, ca. 1530–63
• Jan Verbeke (conservateur-restaurateur indépendant, Gand), The Plasterer Ian Christiaen Hansche in the Refectory of Park Abbey in Heverlee: The Meticulous Conservation and Restoration of the Monumental 1679 Stucco Ceiling
• Michael Gratton (atelier Tollis, Paris), Les décors de gypseries du Grand Salon du château de Vaux-le-Vicomte, étude des techniques de mise en œuvre et restauration
15.00 Session 7 | Grands décors: étude de cas de restauration (II)
Présidence: Fabrice Goubard (LPPI, CY Cergy Paris Université)
• Corrado De Giuli Morghen (Agence d’architecture Fabrica Traceorum, Marseille), Pierrick Rodriguez (conservateur des Monuments Historiques, DRAC PACA), et Margot Morisse (conservatrice-restauratrice du patrimoine), Le maître-autel et le retable du sculpteur Christophe Veyrier de l’église Notre-Dame de Nazareth à Trets (13), un témoignage précieux du baroque provençal
• Camille Jacquot (responsable du pôle patrimoine, château de Lunéville) et Annabelle Sansalone (conservatrice-restauratrice du patrimoine, Paris), Présentation des décors en plâtre dans l’antichambre de la Reine au château de Lunéville: contexte historique et mise en œuvre de l’ouvrage
• Wijnand Freling (architecte du patrimoine, Rocaille b.v., La Haye), Preserving a Monumental 18th-Century Stucco Ceiling in the Staircase of the Senate at the Binnenhof, the Centre of Government of the Netherlands in The Hague
17.00 Discussion sur le stuc: matérialité et caractérisation des matériaux
• Fabrice Goubard (LPPI, CY Cergy Paris Université)
• Anne Bouquillon (C2RMF)
• Ann Bourgès (C2RMF)
• Jean Ducasse-Lapeyrusse (LRMH)
18.00 Visite de la Galerie Dorée de la Banque de France
Arnaud Manas (chef du service historique, Banque de France)
Max. 35 personnes, sur inscription
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Château de Fontainebleau, salle des Colonnes
11.20 Accueil café
11.45 Oriane Beaufils (conservatrice du patrimoine, château de Fontainebleau), Introduction
12.00 Session 8 | Matériaux particuliers, reproductibilité
Présidence: Guilhem Scherf (département des Sculptures, musée du Louvre)
• François Gilles (université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne/Musée des arts décoratifs, Paris), Usage(s) du plâtre chez les sculpteurs en ornement parisiens au XVIIIe siècle
• Étienne Guibert (conservateur du patrimoine, château de Compiègne), Le stuc, un matériau économique et pratique dans les décors néoclassiques de Compiègne
13.00 Pause déjeuner
14.15 Session 9 | Quand le stuc est omniprésent
Présidence: Eckart Marchand (The Warburg Institute, université de Londres)
• Alexia Lebeurre (université de Bordeaux), La grande manière retrouvée: le stuc-marbre dans les demeures parisiennes de la seconde moitié du XVIII e siècle
• Hugues Morisse (Lympia Architecture, Paris), Agir en diplomate. Quand le stuc s’exporte à l’étranger. Le cas de la légation de France à Belgrade dans l’entre-deux-guerres
• Johann Kräftner (architecte du patrimoine, ancien directeur, collections princières du Liechtenstein, Vienne/Vaduz), The Restoration of the Stucco in the Two Liechtenstein Palaces in Vienna
15.45 Conclusions et perspectives
• Valérie Carpentier-Vanhaverbeke (conservatrice du patrimoine, musée du Louvre)
• Stéphanie Deschamps-Tan (conservatrice en chef du patrimoine, musée du Louvre)
16.10 Réception de clôture
Call for Papers | Collecting, Growing, and Exploring
From ArtHist.net:
Collecting, Growing, and Exploring in Early Modernity
EPHE Sorbonne, Paris 11 June 2024
Organized by Maddalena Bellavitis and Catherine Powell-Warren
Proposals due by 15 January 2024

Thomas Bardwell, Portrait of a Girl in a Yellow Dress Holding a Shell, 1756, oil on canvas, 126 × 101 cm (sold at Bonhams, 2 December 2010).
The last few decades have produced a number of studies devoted to the relationship between collecting and science, highlighting the relationship between a growing interest in botany and the fascination with the collection of naturalia, especially from the mid-sixteenth century onwards. These objects of natural origins aroused the admiration of enthusiasts and scientists alike. This passion for collecting reached various corners of society: the academic garden at Leiden University included an ambulacrum that housed dried plant specimens, fossils, and taxidermized animals (Egmond 2010); artists kept collections of rarities not only for use in the studio, but also to satisfy their personal curiosity (Rijks 2022); and Petronella de la Court’s shell collection was represented in her prized dollhouse, and mentioned several times in Georg Eberhard Rumphius’ seminal text D’Amboinsche Rariteitkamer (Powell-Warren 2023). Indeed, the interest in collecting even spawned its own genre of still life painting. The interest in such wonders of nature and the desire to possess them often went beyond the ‘simple’ collecting of specimens, dried samples, or shells obtained through exchanges and purchases. In fact, they could often go so far as to push those who possessed gardens or parks to engage in botanical experiments that led to attempts to grow tropical flowers and fruits even if it was in unfavourable climates and hostile terrain, and even to promote scientific expeditions to study and collect specimens in distant and exotic lands.
More recent scholarship has addressed several issues regarding collecting practices, the intersection between collecting and science, and even the participation of women in collecting. Among other ground-breaking works, the following spring to mind: Possessing Nature (Findlen 1994); Visible Empire: Colonial Botany and Visual Culture in the Hispanic Enlightenment (Bleichmar 2012); Objects in Motion in the Early Modern World (Bleichmar and Martin, eds.) 2015); Conchophilia (Bass et al. 2021); Rarities of these Lands (Swan 2021); and Women and the Art and Science of Collecting (Leis and Wells, eds.) 2021).
What remains un- or underexplored, however, is the extent to which—if at all—collecting and scientific experimentation and exploration were related in the early modern period. Thus, this workshop aims to focus attention on the collections of naturalia, on the one hand, and on the attempts to grow exotic plants in Europe and the adventurous journeys that the search for tropical plants and animals they encouraged, on the other. The organizers of this workshop, Maddalena Bellavitis and Catherine Powell-Warren, invite interdisciplinary contributions addressing the topic from the perspective of each discipline, from art history to material culture, from botany to gastronomy, from travel literature to cartography. Proposals that feature a female figure as protagonist are particularly encouraged, as the importance of the female contribution to this topic, although demonstrated, remains under-researched and under-published. To be considered for participation, please provide a single PDF document containing (in English) a short bio and a one-page proposal for a 20-minute presentation of original, unpublished research. Applications may be sent to maddalena.bellavitis@gmail.com by 15 January 2024. Participants will be notified at the beginning of February.
Conference | Scientific Objects in the Museum
From ArtHist.net:
Les objets scientifiques au musée: Comment étudier et exposer l’histoire des sciences? XVIe–XIXe siècle
Musée du Louvre, Centre Dominique-Vivant Denon, Paris, 11–13 December 2023
Rencontre organisée dans le cadre du projet «Réflexions ciblées autour de la muséologie entre la France et l’Amérique du Nord d’hier à nos jours: collections, politiques culturelles et innovations muséographiques», soutenu par l’accord France-Canada pour la coopération et les échanges dans le domaine des musées (Ministère de la Culture, France / Ministère de l’enseignement supérieur et de la recherche, France / Ministère du patrimoine canadien, Canada).
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Journée du 11 décembre ouverte au public, Centre Dominique-Vivant Denon; inscription obligatoire à centre-vivant-denon@louvre.fr. Les inscrits sont priés de se présenter munis de leur carte d’identité.
9.00 Mot de bienvenue par Françoise Mardrus (Directrice, direction des Études muséales et de l’Appui à la recherche, musée du Louvre) et Vincent Droguet (Conservateur général du patrimoine, sous-directeur des collections, Service des Musées de France), à confirmer
9.10 Présentation du déroulement des trois journées par Françoise Dalex (direction des Études muséales et de l’Appui à la recherche, musée du Louvre)
9.30 Objets d’art et de science: Points de vue de la recherche
Présidence de séance: Philippe Cordez
• Susanne Thürigen (Curator for Scientific Instruments, History of Medicine and Pharmacy, Arms and Armour, Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg), The Behaim Globe: History and Future of a Political Instrument
• Federica Gigante (Research Associate, Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies / Oxford Centre for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology, University of Oxford), Du cabinet de curiosités au musée d’aujourd’hui: L’histoire remarquable d’un astrolabe longtemps méconnu
• Sven Dupré (Professor of History of Art, Science and Technology / Director, Research Institute for History and Art History, Utrecht University), Glass, Conservation, and the Art of Scientific Instrument Making
• Marco Storni (Postdoctoral researcher, EOS project RENEW18, Université Libre de Bruxelles), Vers une histoire alternative de la mesure du temps: Les sabliers, XVe–XVIIIe siècle
• Omar Nasim (Professor of History of Science, University of Regensburg), Furniture History of Science: Merging Material and Visual Cultures
12.30 Pause déjeuner
14.00 Visite et présentation de la salle des objets scientifiques au musée du Louvre
15.00 Quelques collections et expositions d’objets scientifiques en Europe
Présidence de séance: Françoise Dalex
• Marta Lourenço (National Museum of Natural History and Science, MUHNAC, Portuguese Infrastructure of Scientific Collections, University of Lisbon), An Overview of the Recent Past in the Preservation and Access of Scientific Heritage: Where Are We Now?
• Rebekah Higgitt (Principal Curator of Science, National Museums, Scotland, Edinburgh), Collections and Displays of Historic Scientific Instruments in United Kingdom Museums
• Giorgio Strano (Head of Collections, Museo Galileo, Florence), Displaying the Medici and Lorena Collections of Historic Scientific Instruments at the Museo Galileo in Florence
• Dominique Bernard (maître de conférences (honoraire) en physique, Université de Rennes 1, membre de l’association Rennes en Sciences), Les instruments scientifiques et l’enseignement: Quelques exemples de l’université de Rennes
17.30 Vanessa Ferey et Jean-François Gauvin: Commentaire général et résumé de la journée
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Visites-ateliers, pour les intervenants
Musée des Arts et Métiers
10.00 Présentation de la collection Lavoisier par Marco Beretta (Professor, Department of Philosophy and Communication Studies, History of Science and Technology, Université de Bologne)
Muséum national d’Histoire Naturelle
14.00 Visite de la salle des collections de chimie avec Christine Maulay-Bailly (ingénieur d’études CNRS en analyse chimique, Responsable technique de la Chimiothèque/Extractothèque, Unité Molécules de Communication et Adaptation des Microorganismes, Museum national d’Histoire naturelle) et Brice Monnely (secrétaire Gestionnaire, Unité Molécules de Communication et Adaptation des Micro-organismes, Museum national d’Histoire naturelle)
15.00 Visite de la zoothèque avec Pierre-Yves Gagnier (délégué à l’innovation numérique, Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle)
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Visites-ateliers, pour les intervenants
Musée de la Marine, réserves de Dugny
10.00 Présentation des réserves, de la documentation, d’objets non exposés par Louise Contant (Cheffe du département des Collections), Eric Rieth (responsable de la recherche scientifique au musée national de la Marine, directeur de recherche émérite au CNRS, membre de l’Académie de Marine, spécialiste d’archéologie nautique médiévale et moderne des espaces maritimes et fluviaux), Marianne Tricoire (conservatrice du patrimoine en charge des objets scientifiques et techniques), et Léa Surrel (chargée de documentation)
Musée de la Marine, Paris, palais de Chaillot
15.00 Visite du musée par Louise Contant (Cheffe du département des Collections) et Marianne Tricoire (conservatrice du patrimoine en charge des objets scientifiques et techniques)
Online Talk | Julie Park, Lady Scott’s Landscape in a Dark Room

Paul Sandby, Roslin Castle, Midlothian, ca. 1780, gouache on medium laid paper, mounted on board, sheet: 46 × 68 cm
(New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, B1975.4.1877)
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This afternoon from 12.30 to 1.00, from the Yale Center for British Art:
Julie Park | Lady Scott’s Landscape in a Dark Room
Online, Tuesday, 5 December 2023, 12.30pm
Julie Park will discuss the role of the camera obscura used by Lady Frances Scott as depicted in Paul Sandby’s landscape painting Roslin Castle, Midlothian (ca. 1780) and the dynamics of interiority and looking that it mediates. Park chose a detail from this painting for the cover of her recent monograph My Dark Room, which explores the camera obscura as a paradigm for the designs and experiences of interiority in eighteenth-century England’s spaces of the built environment. Please register here»
Julie Park is Paterno Family Librarian for Literature and professor of English at Pennsylvania State University. She is the author of My Dark Room (2023) and The Self and It (2009).



















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