Enfilade

Penn Dry Goods Market Textile Lecture Series

Posted in lectures (to attend) by Editor on May 11, 2025

From the Schwenkfelder Library & Heritage Center, as noted by The Decorative Arts Trust:

Penn Dry Goods Market Textile Lecture Series

Schwenkfelder Library & Heritage Center, Pennsburg, Pennsylvania, 16–17 May 2025

Image: Deborah Simmons Coates quilt detail, 1840s–1850s, Lancaster History — to be discussed in Mariah Kupfner’s talk.

The Penn Dry Goods Market Textile Lecture Series offers a chance to hear nationally recognized authorities in textile history on a broad range of topics—from embroidered hand towels to Appalachian weaving, from quilts to samplers, and from Scandinavian American and African American traditions. All lectures require a ticket ($25/lecture prepaid or $30 at door). Each ticket also provides access to the Penn Dry Goods Market antique show.

f r i d a y ,  1 6  m a y

8.45am  ‘This is the Way I Pass My Time’: Mennonite Hand Towels from Eastern Pennsylvania — Joel Alderfer (Collections Manager, Mennonite Heritage Center)

10.00  Colonialism, Power, and Identity: Fashion in American Portraits, 1670–1840 — Lynne Bassett (Independent scholar, curator, and author)

12.45  Heritage Craft, Community, and Continuity among Scandinavian Americans — Josh Brown (Skwierczynski University Fellow, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and folk weaver)

2.00  Pennsylvania German Quilt Turning: 40 Examples from Both Sides of the Susquehanna — Debby Cooney (Independent quilt scholar)

3.15  Hidden in Plain Sight: Uncovering the Samplers of Black Girls — Lynne Anderson (President of the Sampler Consortium and Director of the Sampler Archive Project)

s a t u r d a y ,  1 7  m a y

8.45am  A Usable Past: American Hand-Weaving Revival in Appalachia, 1892–1940 — Matthew Monk (Linda Eaton Associate Curator of Textiles, Winterthur)

10.00  Pennsylvania German Quilt Turning: 40 Examples from Both Sides of the Susquehanna — Debby Cooney (Independent quilt scholar)

11.15  ‘So Intimately Are We Connected’: Antislavery Textiles and the Weight of Cotton — Mariah Kupfner (Assistant Professor of American Studies and Public Heritage, School of Humanities, Penn State Harrisburg)

12.45  The Joys of Tape Weaving as Viewed through the Eleanor Bittle Collection — Johannes Zinzendorf and Zephram de Colebi (The Mahantongo Heritage Center at the Hermitage)

2.00  A Legacy in Thread: Schoolgirl Needlework and Female Education in Dutchess County, New York — Stacy Whittaker (Independent needlework scholar)

3.15  The Quilt That Never Was: Solving the Mystery of the Inscribed Great Valley Quilt Blocks — Charlene Bongiorno Stephens and William Stephens (Independent quilt scholars)

Exhibition | Mama: From Mary to Merkel

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on May 10, 2025

From the press release for the exhibition:

Mama: From Mary to Merkel

Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, 12 March — 3 August 2025

Curated by Linda Conze, Westrey Page, and Anna Christina Schütz

Marie-Victoire Lemoine, Portrait of Madame de Lucqui with Her Daughter Anne-Aglaé Deluchi, 1800, oil on canvas, 100 × 81 cm (Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck, Rau Collection for UNICEF).

The exhibition Mama: From Mary to Merkel explores the many different aspects of motherhood over eight chapters. The focus is on the societal expectations that have always influenced motherhood and are reflected in art, culture, and everyday life. The approximately 120 works on display from the fourteenth century to the present day create a panorama that involves everyone, including fathers and those without children of their own. From the concept of the ‘good mother’ to care work and family configurations, the show illustrates how the role of mother quickly breaks down into different, highly individual perspectives that are nevertheless deeply intertwined in cultural history. A polyphonic sound installation uses pre-recorded voice messages to give space to personal experiences, memories, and visions.

“Everyone has a mother. By placing motherhood at the centre of an exhibition, the Kunstpalast is once again addressing a topic that directly touches the lives of our visitors and that everyone can relate to with their own experiences and opinions. The show combines seriousness with humour and art with everyday life and pop culture— thus tying in with the Kunstpalast’s mission statement on several levels,” says Felix Krämer, general director of the Kunstpalast.

Popular culture and art both emphasise societal expectations of mothers and the role of the GOOD MOTHER. We begin with figures of the Virgin Mary from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries. The image of Mary—probably the most prominent mother in Christian culture—remains a symbol of total maternal devotion today. The stereotype of the ‘good’ mother was established in the eighteenth century and is still widespread: contemporary artists in the exhibition explore the efforts involved in attaining this ideal. For a portrait of his mother, Aldo Giannotti (b. 1977) pressed a sign into her hands. The word ‘MOM’ on it only becomes an admiring exclamation of ‘WOW’ when she subjects herself to the strain of hanging upside down from the ceiling. Motherhood is a yardstick by which a woman’s achievement is measured—even if she is not a mother. A well-known example is Angela Merkel (b. 1954): nicknamed ‘Mutti’ (Mum) when she was German Chancellor, she can also be seen as Mother Theresa on the cover of Der Spiegel magazine.

The historical changeability of notions of ‘good’ motherhood is demonstrated by advice books from various decades of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, whose recommendations to mothers are often fundamentally contradictory. ADVICE OR REGULATION—from the Weimar Republic to National Socialism, the early Federal Republic and the GDR to the present-day reunified Germany, this genre is characterised by both consistencies and inconsistencies. A bookshelf in the exhibition gathers advice literature from recent decades and invites visitors to pause and read.

“Ideals and role models, advice, expectations and emotions—the aim of this exhibition is to make the subject of motherhood tangible in all its artistic, cultural historical, social and, of course, highly personal dimensions,” agree the three curators of the show. Linda Conze, Westrey Page and Anna Christina Schütz have approached the topic from different angles, finding mothers and non-mothers in the Kunstpalast collection, supplementing these artists with important, sometimes international loans and bringing everything together to create a narrative. “Connections between the collectively selected works reveal continuities, but also the mutability of images of mothers, which are constantly being reappropriated, reinterpreted, contested and celebrated. We see the show as an invitation to open up a dialogue about care and motherliness and look forward to hearing the audience’s perspectives,” explains the curatorial team.

Looking after children is work. Nevertheless, CARE WORK remains mostly unpaid and has traditionally been automatically assigned to women. With a critical eye, artists have drawn attention to the fact that care is influenced by social norms and class affiliations. For a long time, only poor mothers breastfed their babies themselves, while wealthier women hired wet nurses. Around 1800, the idea that all women should take care of their babies themselves became prevalent; the presence of the biological mother became more important. In the present day, working mothers who focus “too much” on their careers are judged just as much as those who devote themselves entirely to their children and the household. The balancing of care and paid work as well as the role of caregiver and other identities is a recurring theme among the women artists in the exhibition. Several paintings in the exhibition are by Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876–1907), who was always fascinated by motifs of the bond between mother and child. However, she was also apprehensive about the effects of her own motherhood on her artistic work. In her sculpture of a body dissolving in the mechanics of a breast pump, Camille Henrot (b. 1978) focuses on the fine line between providing nourishment and self-sacrifice.

The exhibition delves deeper into the subject of the PLACES OF MOTHERHOOD: historical doll’s house kitchens are brought into dialogue with the video work Semiotics of the Kitchen by Martha Rosler (b. 1943), which examines the distance of the housewife’s domain from intellectual settings. Scottish artist Caroline Walker (b. 1982) portrays mothers with their newborns in the intimate yet isolating domestic sphere. Finnish artist Katharina Bosse (b. 1968) photographs herself in erotically charged poses with her toddler crawling beside her in natural landscapes. In this way, she disrupts the seemingly natural idyll that surrounds motherhood in art and cultural history.

Several women artists use their work to address the fact that the decision to (NOT) HAVE CHILDREN often could not and still cannot be made freely, despite all the progress that has been made. For centuries, female ‘nature’ was defined in a wide variety of societies by a woman’s ability to conceive and bear children. The Virgin Mary, whose life is depicted in Dürer’s Life of the Virgin, is both a female role model and a special case. Her actions are always centred on her son, whom she conceived by divine intervention.

The medical achievements and societal developments of the twentieth century allowed women to emancipate themselves from their socially prescribed destiny for the first time by taking the contraceptive pill or asserting their hard-fought right to terminate a pregnancy. Hannah Höch (1889–1978) paints her struggle with the decision to not have a child by Raoul Hausmann. Nina Hagen’s (b. 1955) protest against the expectations of fulfilling her duty as a mother in the song “Unbeschreiblich Weiblich” (Indescribably Feminine) is juxtaposed with Elina Brotherus’s (b. 1972) confrontation with her own involuntary childlessness.

For a long time, the physical bond between mother and child was unquestioningly viewed as a prerequisite for a motherly love that was regarded as intrinsic. The exhibition also shows that the often positively connoted intimate relationship between mother and child at all ages can also have a potentially traumatic side. In a series of photographs, Leigh Ledare (b. 1976) explores his CLOSENESS to his mother, who confronts her adult son with uncompromising desire. In a video work by performance artist Lerato Shadi (b. 1979), she and her mother lick sugar and salt off each other’s tongues and explore the space between repulsion and affection. The armchair by Italian designer Gaetano Pesce (1939–2024) promises a return to the mother’s womb, with the foot section connected to the main body of the furniture via an ‘umbilical cord’.

In German, the word MUTTERSEELENALLEIN describes the utmost loneliness. Mary, Our Lady of Sorrows, mourning her dead son Jesus Christ, is one of the central motifs in Western art history. Artists have repeatedly made reference to the so-called Pietà, appropriating and reinterpreting it as a motif. The loss of the child is juxtaposed with the loss of the mother, which artists of different generations have sometimes made an autobiographical theme and thus given expression and form to their personal grief. Finally, mutterseelenallein can also refer to anyone who has been denied motherhood, whether due to social norms, physical conditions or decisions that were not made voluntarily.

book coverThe exhibition chapter FAMILY CONFIGURATIONS asks what influence family images have on motherhood. In the eighteenth century, the nuclear family rose to become the ideal of the Western world. In this model, the mother is the centre of care, while the father is responsible for financial support. Through processing their own personal or observed experiences, artists have questioned the dominance of this father-mother-child constellation. Alice Neel, who lived apart from her daughter, captures psychological subtleties in her family portraits that resist simple narratives. Oliviero Toscani’s photos for a campaign for the Benetton fashion brand around 1990 challenged conservative notions of family by placing homosexual parents at the centre. Queer lifestyles can inspire ways of thinking in which the burden of care is placed on several shoulders instead of being the sole responsibility of the biological mother. The circle of people who can be mothered also extends beyond biological relatives: foster, step-, adopted children and those in care are also looked after. In the complexity of modern living arrangements, the bond with a pet can be just as important as other relationships. Art reflects the shift from the question ‘Who is the mother?’ to ‘Who is mothering?’

The exhibition is an invitation to continue the dialogue about care and motherhood—for example in the diverse accompanying programme, which ranges from a midwife consultation in the exhibition to workshops with various collectives and organisations such as Düsseldorf family centres. One of Germany‘s most prominent mother figures has recorded the audio guide for the exhibition: Marie-Luise Marjan, aka ‘Mutter Beimer’ from the popular TV series Lindenstraße.

Mama: From Mary to Merkel is curated by Linda Conze, Head of Department of Photographs; Westrey Page, Curator Special Projects; and Anna Christina Schütz, Department of Prints and Drawings, Research Associate.

Linda Conze, Westrey Page, and Anna Christina Schütz, ed., Mama: Von Maria bis Merkel (Munich: Hirmer Verlag, 2025), 200 pages, ISBN: 978-3777444888, €45.

Online Conversation | Anne Nellis Richter on the Cleveland House Gallery

Posted in books by Editor on May 9, 2025

On Tuesday, from the Museums and Galleries History Group:

Anne Nellis Richter | The Gallery at Cleveland House

Online, 13 May 2025, 12pm (EDT)

book coverJoin us for the second in our series of online MGHG In Conversation events with Dr. Anne Nellis Richter (the American University, Washington, DC) and Dr. Susanna Avery-Quash (MGHG board member and Senior Research Curator at the National Gallery, London). The discussion will focus on Anne’s recent book, The Gallery at Cleveland House: Displaying Art and Society in late Georgian London (2024). This event is hosted by the Museums and Galleries History Group. Tickets are £5 (free for members); registration is available via Eventbrite.

The Museums and Galleries History Group was founded in 2002 and inaugurated in 2003 with the symposium Museums and their Histories, held at the National Gallery in London. The MGHG provides a platform for debate and contact among all those who seek to understand museums and galleries from historical and theoretical perspectives. The interests represented are wide-ranging, interdisciplinary and international and the Group also acts as a forum for considerations of the place of museum history within academic discourse and its importance for current museum practice.

Please see the Group’s website to learn more or to join!

Exhibition | Rococo & Co: From Nicolas Pineau to Cindy Sherman

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on May 8, 2025

Closing soon at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs:

Rococo & Co: From Nicolas Pineau to Cindy Sherman

Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, 12 March — 18 May 2025

Curated by Bénédicte Gady, with Turner Edwards and François Gilles

This exhibition celebrates the restoration of a unique collection of nearly 500 drawings from the workshop of the sculptor Nicolas Pineau (1684–1754), one of the main proponents of the Rocaille style, which Europe adopted as Rococo. A practitioner of measured asymmetry and a subtle interplay of solids and voids, Nicolas Pineau excelled in many fields: woodwork, ornamental sculpture, architecture, prints, furniture and silverware. The presentation of this major Rococo figure is extended to include a workshop that plunges the visitor into the heart of the creation of Rococo panelling. Asymmetries, sinuous lines, chinoiserie dreams and animal images illustrate the infinite variations of the Rococo style. Finally, from the 19th to the 21st century, this aesthetic has found numerous echoes, from neo-styles to the most unexpected and playful reinterpretations.

The exhibition explores the evolution of the Rococo style and its reappearance in contemporary design and fashion, including Art Nouveau and psychedelic art. Nearly 200 drawings, pieces of furniture, woodwork, objets d’art, lighting, ceramics, and fashion items engage in a playful dialogue of curves and counter-curves. Nicolas Pineau and Juste Aurèle Meissonnier are joined by Louis Majorelle, Jean Royère, Alessandro Mendini, Mathieu Lehanneur, the fashion designers Tan Giudicelli and Vivienne Westwood, and the artist Cindy Sherman.

Bénédicte Gady, Turner Edwards, and François Gilles, eds., Nicolas Pineau 1684–1754: Un sculpteur de rocaille entre Paris et Saint-Pétersbourg (Paris: Éditions Les Arts Décoratifs, 2025), 504 pages, ISBN: 978-2847425123, €85.

Lecture | Wolf Burchard on Louis XIV’s Savonnerie Carpets

Posted in lectures (to attend) by Editor on May 7, 2025

This AFA lecture is free and open to the public:

Wolf Burchard | Louis XIV’s Savonnerie Carpets: The World’s Largest Jigsaw Puzzle

American Friends of Attingham Albainy Memorial Lecture

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 22 May 2025, 6pm

Wolf Burchard, Antonin Macé de Lepinay, and Elizabeth Cleland examine the Tapis Grande Galerie du Louvre, preserved by the Mobilier national in Paris, in 2023 (Photo by Justine Rossignol).

‘The King’s Carpet’, or le tapis du roi, was an enormous rug made up of 92 individual pieces that were intended to cover the entire span of the Grande Galerie of the Louvre, six times the length of the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. Despite the monumental expense and energy lavished on this spectacular royal commission, Louis XIV appears never to have used the carpets. With time, the notion of ‘one’ carpet was forgotten and individual pieces were given away, some finding their way into the homes of English and American collectors, most notably the Rothschilds, Vanderbilts, and Wrightsmans. The altered and dispersed carpets thus became an enormous jigsaw puzzle, which Emmanuelle Federspiel and Antonin Macé de Lepinay of the Mobilier national in Paris, and Wolf Burchard of The Met in New York, are reconstructing, carpet by carpet, fragment by fragment.

Please join AFA as we welcome Dr. Wolf Burchard as the esteemed speaker for this Tracey L. Albainy Memorial Lecture, co-hosted by the American Friends of Attingham and The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts. The AFA is delighted to welcome the public to this complimentary program, held in the Bonnie J. Sacerdote Lecture Hall at The Met. Registration is available here.

Tracey L. Albainy (1962–2007) served as Senior Curator of Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Art of Europe at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She was a devoted Attingham supporter, completing multiple courses.

Wolf Burchard is Curator of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and was recently appointed a Trustee of the Attingham Trust. He earned his MA and PhD in art history from the Courtauld Institute of Art and is the author of The Sovereign Artist: Charles Le Brun and the Image of Louis XIV (2016). He curated the exhibition Inspiring Walt Disney: The Animation of French Decorative Arts (2021) shown at The Met, The Wallace Collection, and The Huntington.

Haughton Seminar | Treasures: Creation, Emulation, and Imitation

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on May 6, 2025

Gold Box with Hanau marks for Les Frères Toussaint, ca. 1780
(Nuremberg: Germanisches Nationalmuseum, HG13559)

◊    ◊    ◊    ◊    ◊

This year’s Haughton International Seminar:

Treasures: Creation, Emulation, and Imitation

The British Academy, 11 Carlton House Terrace, London, 25–26 June 2025

Each year the Haughton International Seminar draws together a group of eminent international speakers to share their knowledge and passion with an appreciative audience. This year’s seminar, Treasures: Creation, Emulation, and Imitation—dedicated to the memory of Dame Rosalind Savill—will take place in London at The British Academy on Wednesday, 25th and Thursday, 26th June.

From the earliest cave painters to the stars of today, artists have balanced invention with imitation. Imitation looks to nature—the human form or the shape of a flower—but artists also imitate each other. In some cases imitation is loose and a point of departure; in others it is exact but made as honest copies; and in yet others it is done to impersonate and to deceive. Addressing a wide range of media—including the 18th-century ‘Porcelain Fever’ of Augustus the Strong, the 19th-century Arts & Crafts movement, royal sculptural collections, gold boxes, and more—the seminar will explore the extent to which the works were creations, emulations, or imitations. More information about the 2025 seminar, along with previous years’ offerings, can be found at the event website, where one can also purchase tickets. Booking in advance is essential due to limited numbers.

p r e s e n t a t i o n s

• Adriano Aymonino — Media Transfer: Creating, Emulating, and Imitating the Antique in Early Modern Europe

• Emerson Bowyer — Canova: Sketching in Clay

• Tobias Capwell — The Helmschmids of Augsburg: German Renaissance Masters of the Art of Armour

• Angela Caròla-Perrotti — Del Vecchio, Giustiniani, Mollica, or Colonnese? A Preliminary Approach to Differentiating Vases ‘all’Etrusca’ Produced in Naples between 1800 and 1850

• Ivan Day — The Surtout de Table: From Trionfi da Tavola to Gilt Bronze

• Katharina Hantschmann — The Best Teachers: Role Models for Porcelain Production and a Virtuoso in Nymphenburg

• J. V. G Mallet and Elisa Sani — Italian Maiolica in the Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor

• Jonathan Marsden — Changing Seasons: Sculptural Metamorphoses from the Royal Collection

• Roger Massey — Ingenuity and Plagiarism: The Concept of Originality in 18th-Century English Pottery and Porcelain Figures

• Stacey Pierson — Archaism as Imitation: Recreating the Past in Chinese Porcelain

• Justin Raccanello — From Imitation to Modernity: Margaret and Flavia Cantagalli and the Art Nouveau

• Linda Roth — Ceramicist Taxile Doat (1851–1938): Imitation to Innovation

• Timothy Schroder — All the Glitters is Not Gold: Perception and Deception in the World of Goldsmithery

• Heike Zech — Made in Paris? So-called poinçons de prestige on 18th-Century Goldboxes

Call for Papers | Staging the Heroine, 1350–1800

Posted in Calls for Papers by Editor on May 5, 2025

From ArtHist.net:

Staging the Heroine: The Construction and Performance of Female Heroism in

Literature, the Visual Arts, and Theatre, 1350–1800

Leiden University, 3–5 June 2026

Proposals due by 1 September 2025

In early modern culture, heroines are almost omnipresent: they play an important role in narrative fiction and poetry, are described in biographies and collections of epigrams, are depicted in paintings and engravings, rendered in sculptures, and staged in tragedies, melodramas, pastorals, and in the early modern opera. Our conference/project aims at mapping the presence, representation, adaptation, and evaluation of female heroines in literature as well as in the visual and performative arts.

The fundamental aim of the project is to understand how literary, rhetorical, pictorial, and performance-related devices were used to stage heroines across different media. Rhetoric is here understood in a broader sense, e.g., including the literary techniques of heroic characterization and the narratological strategies used to turn actions by women into acts of female heroism. We also include here the conceptualisations of heroic (normally tragic) female characters, as they were prescribed in early modern artes poeticae, often in explicit or implicit dialogue with Aristotle’s influential Poetics. We are further interested in pictorial devices, such as the ability of visual artists to express emotions through the body language and facial expressions of the protagonists, and through the creation of a mis-en-scene. We especially encourage participants to investigate possible cross-fertilisation between artistic fields: how did textual rhetoric influence the visual and performative arts—and vice versa, what role did pictorial rhetoric play in the composition of literary texts, theater plays, or opera? Was there a theatrical manner of staging heroines in painting? We are also interested in the influence of performance practices on the conceptualisation of female heroism: how did the then current embodied techniques that actors and singers used to express emotions influence the construction of the heroine? Were there specific performance guidelines for male actors portraying female characters?

Closely related to this set of questions is another major area of interest to the project, which regards the role that exemplary heroines from classical antiquity and the biblical tradition played in the formation of early modern heroines. What textual and pictorial sources were used by early modern artists and writers, how did they interpret, appropriate, adapt, reshape, and apply them? How do female heroic figures acquire a new configuration or greater heuristic complexity in the translation of sources into another medium, language, or historical or cultural context? How do artworks redefine female heroism in this process of transmission and reception? The project especially encourages cross-medial and/or diachronic analyses of the representation of prominent heroines (e.g., Judith, Dido, Medea). What points of continuity and discontinuity can be discerned in different interpretations and representational strategies of the female heroism of such well-known figures in literature, the visual arts and on the stage? How do differences relate to specific historical circumstances and institutions, and to ongoing philosophical debates about female virtuosity, religious beliefs, intellectual practices, and political developments?

From this perspective, we particularly welcome source-oriented contributions tracing the reception or afterlife of specific textual models. What exactly was the impact of formative models such as the tragedies of Seneca or Ovid’s Epistulae heroidum on the early modern construction of heroines? And what was the role of early modern textual models such as Boccaccio’s 14th-century mythographical works De mulieribus claris and Genealogia deorum gentilium? De mulieribus claris was one of the most successful works of the period, appearing in numerous translations and editions. It would be interesting to map its reception between c. 1360 and c. 1700 and to tease out the role it played in the formation of the early modern heroine. The same is true for other modern models: how did, e.g., the great female figures of vernacular epics like Ariosto’s Orlando furioso or Tasso’s Gerusalemme liberata impact representations of and discourse on female heroism?

Since the project aims at yielding new insights into early modern approaches to female virtue and heroism, literary, rhetorical, and visual analyses should be based on fundamental, culturally grounded questions such as: is there a specific set of female virtues and vices that recur in heroines, and if there is, how does it relate to traditional catalogues of male virtues and male exemplarity? Is mental complexity ascribed to those female characters who were generally portrayed as negative, destructive, or sinful (like Medea or Cleopatra), or rather to those who were positively evaluated for displaying a kind of moral behaviour that was in line with current Christian values? Was it specifically the violation of current moral values that fuelled the early modern fascination with heroines? Was the attention paid to female heroism (and anti-heroism) part of the emerging interest in cultural criticism, e.g. by humanists and other early modern intellectuals? Was it also part of the moral education of males who were taught not to fall victim of so-called destructive women?

We invite proposals that engage with the approaches and questions outlined above. Abstracts (of max. 250 words) should be sent to Christoph Pieper (c.pieper@hum.leidenuniv.nl) by 1 September 2025. We plan to publish the results of the conference as an edited volume in the series Intersections (Brill/De Gruyter) in 2027.

Karl Enenkel (Münster)
Emma Grootveld (Leiden)
Christoph Pieper (Leiden)
Jed Wentz (Leiden)

The Burlington Magazine, April 2025

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions, journal articles, reviews by Editor on May 5, 2025

The long 18th century in the April issue of The Burlington:

The Burlington Magazine 167 (April 2025) | Art in Britain

e d i t o r i a l

RA Lecture Illustration of the Colonnade at Burlington House, produced by the Soane Office. ca.1806–17, pen, pencil, wash and coloured washes on wove paper, 72 × 67 cm (London: Sir John Soane’s Museum).

• “Boughton’s Heavenly Visions,” pp. 327–29.
Boughton in Northamptonshire is an improbable dream of a house. It is an essay in restrained French Classicism that was gently set into the English countryside in the late seventeenth century, encasing an older building. The house was chiefly the creation of the francophile Ralph, 1st Duke of Montagu (1638–1709), who served as Charles II’s ambassador to the court of Louis XIV. Its most splendid internal feature is the so-called Grand Apartment, which consists of a parade of impressive state rooms.

a r t i c l e s

• William Aslet, “The Discovery of James Gibbs’s Designs for the Façade of Burlington House,” pp. 354–67.
A reassessment of drawings by Gibbs in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, demonstrates that, as well as the stables and service wings and celebrated colonnade, the architect provided an unexecuted design for the façade of Burlington House, London—an aspect of the project with which he has hitherto not been connected. This discovery deepens our understanding of one of the most important townhouse commissions of eighteenth-century Britain and the evolving taste of Lord Burlington.

• Adriana Concin, “A Serendipitous Discovery: A Lost Italian Portrait from Horace Walpole’s Miniature Cabinet,” pp. 368–75.
Among the portraits in Horace Walpole’s renowned collection at Strawberry Hill were a number of images of Bianca Cappello, a Medici grand duchess of some notoriety. Here the rediscovery of a late sixteenth-century Italian miniature once displayed in Walpole’s cabinet is discussed; long thought to depict Cappello, it is now attributed to Lavinia Fontana.

• Edward Town and Jessica David, “The Portraits of Alice Spencer, Countess of Derby, and Her Family by Paul van Somer,” pp. 376–85.
Research into a portrait at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, has revealed the identities of twelve Jacobean portraits attributed to the Flemish painter Paul van Somer. The portraits were probably commissioned by Alice Spencer, Countess of Derby, and create a potent illustration of her dynastic heritage. [The research depends in part upon the eighteenth-century provenance of these portraits.]

r e v i e w s

book cover of Penelope

• Anna Koldeweij, Review of the exhibition Rachel Ruysch: Nature into Art (Alte Pinakothek, Munich, 2024–25; Toledo Museum of Art, 2025; MFA, Boston 2025), pp. 393–96.

• Christine Gardner-Dseagu, Review of the exhibition catalogue Penelope, ed. by Alessandra Sarchi and Claudio Franzoni (Electa, 2024), pp. 404–07.

• Andreina D’Agliano, Review of the exhibition catalogue, Magnificence of Rococo: Kaendler’s Meissen Porcelain Figures, ed. by Alfredo Reyes and Claudia Bodinek (Arnoldsche, 2024), pp. 412–14.

• Stephen Lloyd, Review of Susan Sloman, British Portrait Miniatures from the Thomson Collection (Ad Ilissum, 2024), pp. 418–19.

• Natalie Rudd, Review of Discovering Women Sculptors, ed. by Marjorie Trusted and Joanna Barnes (PSSA Publishing, 2023), pp. 422–23.

New Book | Life in the Georgian Parsonage

Posted in books by Editor on May 4, 2025

From Bloomsbury:

Jon Stobart, Life in the Georgian Parsonage: Morals, Material Goods, and the English Clergy (London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2025), 392 pages, ISBN: 978-1350382084 (hardback), $115 / ISBN: 9781350382077 (paperback), $38.

book cover

An innovative approach in the field of material culture and consumption studies, Life in the Georgian Parsonage looks at the houses, consumption, and lifestyle of Church of England clergy in the long 18th century, linking moral debates and popular representations of the clergy to the material culture of their houses and their motivations as consumers. By focusing on ethical and moral dimensions of consumer practices, it challenges established readings of consumption in the long 18th century as an essentially secular process in which goods were markers of wealth, status, and taste, by bringing the clergyman into the frame—their lives, their habits, and their homes.

Cross-disciplinary in its approach, combining material culture and religious and social history and sitting at the intersection of these fields, Life in the Georgian Parsonage fills a significant gap, enhancing in important ways our knowledge of this group as a crucial but understudied set of 18th-century consumers, while also contributing to understanding the parish clergy of England in the context of 18th-century society and culture. Bringing together a wide range of source material—from probate inventories to personal account books, satirical prints to sermons, diaries to designs for parsonages—the author reconstructs the material lives and household arrangements of the Georgian clergy in glorious detail. Examining the parish clergy over this period of profound social and religious change through the lens of consumption, and consumption through the lives of these clergymen, has a transformative impact both on these areas of enquiry and on our understanding of English society in the 18th century.

Jon Stobart, FRHS, is Professor of History at Manchester Metropolitan University, and the editor of The Comforts of Home in Western Europe, 1700–1900 (Bloomsbury, 2020), A Taste for Luxury (Bloomsbury, 2017) with Johanna Ilmakunnas, General Editor of A Cultural History of Shopping, 6 volumes (Bloomsbury, 2022), and co-editor, with Christopher Berry, of A Cultural History of Luxury in the Age of Enlightenment (Bloomsbury, forthcoming). He is also editor of Global Goods and the Country House (2023), author of Comfort and the Eighteenth-Century Country House (2022) and co-author of Consumption and the Country House (2016).

c o n t e n t s

Introduction
1  Representations of the Clergy: Critiquing Incomes, Worldliness, and Pretension
2  The Worldliness Problem: Sermons on luxury, Moderation, and Dignity
3  The Changing Nature of the Parsonage: Improvement, Convenience, and Status
4  A World of Goods: Buying and Locating Household Belongings
5  At Home with the Clergy: Practicing Politeness and Hospitality
6  Communities of Interest: Family, Parish, and Neighbourhood
7  Personal Perspectives on Consumption: Religion, Morality, and Duty
Conclusions

Bibliography

New Book | Detailing Worlds

Posted in books by Editor on May 3, 2025

From Bloomsbury Publishing:

Eric Bellin, Detailing Worlds: A Conceptual History of Architectural Detail (London: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2025), 376 pages, ISBN: 978-1350204379, $115.

In the 21st century, the word ‘detail’ appears constantly in discussions of building, and we use it in many different ways-yet just over 250 years ago, ‘detail’ meant nothing at all particular to the work of architects, engineers, or builders. Detailing Worlds is the first book to examine the origins and evolution of ‘detail’ as a concept with meanings specific to practices of building. By exploring how past meanings and roles were ascribed to detail in different ‘worlds of practice’—those of academics, technicians, students, engineers, and architects—Detailing Worlds looks to the future, illuminating the ways disciplinary knowledge and the concepts on which it is based evolve and change over time. It is a story about how such concepts are slowly but constantly reconceived, redefined, and transformed by individuals as they interact with one another, and how this process is shaped by the ever-changing sociocultural and technological dimensions of the world around us. Richly illustrated with more than 200 images—including figures from rare texts, archival student drawings, and practitioners’ construction documents from the 18th through 20th centuries—Detailing Worlds ventures to tell the history of a disciplinary-specific idea and offer insights about how we think and speak about the practice of building today.

Eric Bellin is an Assistant Professor at Thomas Jefferson University’s College of Architecture and the Built Environment in Philadelphia, where he teaches courses in design, representation, and history. In addition to his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, he holds March and MS in Architectural Pedagogy degrees from the University of Florida.

c o n t e n t s

1  Introduction: The Question of Detail
2  The Academic
3  The Technician
4  The Student
5  The Engineer
6  The Architect
7  Conclusion: On the Practice of Detailing

Index