Enfilade

Symposium | Exotic Anatomies: Stubbs, Banks, and Natural History

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on February 9, 2015
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George Stubbs, Portrait of the Kongouro (Kangaroo) from New
Holland, 1772 (Greenwich: National Maritime Museum)

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From Royal Museums Greenwich in connection with the exhibition The Art and Science of Exploration:

Exotic Anatomies: Stubbs, Banks, and the Cultures of Natural History
Royal Museums Greenwich, London, 9 March 2015

When Joseph Banks returned from Cook’s first voyage of exploration, he brought with him a new world. Not only did he bring collections of specimens that would occupy him and his assistant Daniel Solander for a lifetime, but he brought images and accounts of the South Pacific that changed forever how Europeans saw the world.

One of the oddest was the pelt of a kangaroo, a new animal encountered by the expedition in Australia, which would tax scientists and fascinate the public for decades. Banks commissioned George Stubbs to paint the animal’s portrait, reconstructed from the inflated or stuffed skin, drawings and descriptions. The painting then hung in his house in Soho Square, part of a domestic and scholarly space that soon became a virtual institution where the scientific community gathered.

Further afield, Banks’s specimens were dissected and analysed by the famous surgeon brothers William and John Hunter. They became anatomical objects in the same spaces where the Hunters taught and studied human anatomy, and where they displayed their collections, including others of Stubbs’s ‘exotic’ animal paintings. Stubbs’s kangaroo was rapidly engraved for the published public account of Cook’s voyage, while Cook and his successors brought back live kangaroos for royal menageries and popular entertainments.

Considering the interrelationship between Stubbs, Banks, Cook and the Hunter brothers, this symposium will place Stubbs’s kangaroo at the centre of a number of burgeoning cultures of natural history in 18th-century London. From the gentleman-scholar’s fashionable home, to the practical and controversial space of the anatomy theatre, to the hyperbolic public entertainment, the kangaroo brought a new ‘exoticism’ to natural history.

Fee: £10 | Concessions £7.50. Download the booking form.

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P R O G R A M M E

9.30  Registration and refreshments

10.00  Session 1: Stubbs In Soho Square with the Bankses
• Getting To Know You: Joseph Banks, Australia and the Kangaroo after Stubbs — Jordan Goodman (University College London)
• Science and Sociability: Sarah Sophia Banks and the Domestic Quarters at 32 Soho Square — Arlene Leis, (University of York)
Chair/comment: Simon Schaffer (University of Cambridge)

11.30  Coffee and tea

12.00  Session 2: Stubbs in the Anatomy Theatre with the Hunter Brothers
• William Hunter, George Stubbs, and the Pursuit of Nature — Helen McCormack (The Glasgow School of Art)
• John Hunter (1728–93): Dr Jekyll or Dr Dolittle? — Wendy Moore (author and freelance journalist)
Chair/comment: Katy Barrett (Royal Museums Greenwich)

13.30  Lunch

14.30  Session 3: Stubbs in the London Exhibition Hall with the Public
• The Kangaroo as Scientific Curiosity and Public Spectacle in the Late 18th Century: From Sydney Cove to London — Markman Ellis (Queen Mary, University of London)
• Wonders From Down Under: Kangaroos in Popular Menageries — Helen Cowie (University of York)
Chair/comment: Christine Riding (Royal Museums Greenwich)

16.00  Round Up and Response Session
Richard Dunn (Royal Museums Greenwich)
Geoff Quilley (University of Sussex)

16.30  Curator-led tour of The Art and Science of Exploration

17.00  Wine reception

Exhibition | Spirits of the Passage: The Transatlantic Slave Trade

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on February 8, 2015

From the press release for the exhibition:

Spirits of the Passage: The Story of the Transatlantic Slave Trade
The Frazier History Museum, Louisville, Kentucky, February 2 through June 16, 2013
The DuSable Museum of African American History, Chicago, 19 September 2014 — 4 January 2015
Reading Public Museum, Reading, Pennsylvania, 24 January — 3 May 2015

Slave Shackles from the Henrietta Marie, c. 1700, Courtesy, Mel Fisher Maritime Museum, Key West, FL.

Slave Shackles from The Henrietta Marie, ca. 1700 (Key West: The Mel Fisher Maritime Museum)

The Reading Public Museum invites guests to the new exhibition, Spirits of the Passage: The Story of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, exploring the transatlantic slave trade through a display of nearly 150 historical objects, many salvaged from sunken ships. This exhibition, sponsored locally by The Historic Abraham Lincoln Hotel, was developed in conjunction with the 150th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s 1863 Emancipation Proclamation and the turning point it represented for thousands of enslaved people at a pivotal point in the American Civil War. It’s the first exhibit of its kind to examine the entire history of the Transatlantic Slave Trade from the 16th through 19th centuries, while also presenting the most up-to-date research and discoveries to the public. These include the latest marine archaeological discoveries from the Mel Fisher Maritime Museum, new research on key African societies, and an exploration of the slave trade’s modern day legacies.

Spirits of the Passage allows guests to see authentic artifacts from the wreck of an actual slave ship, such as restraints, tools, plates and trade goods, as well as dozens of other objects from West African societies that show the uniqueness of the individual cultures they represent. These include religious objects, bronze- and beadwork, pottery, and jewelry. These compelling artifacts create a provocative picture of this tragic era, while also engendering a sense of pride in the legacy of strength these enslaved people left behind.

Spirits of the Passage was produced in partnership by The Mel Fisher Maritime Museum in Key West, Florida and The Frazier History Museum in Louisville, Kentucky.

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The 1972 discovery of The Henrietta Marie occasioned this 1997 book:

Madeleine Burnside and Rosemarie Robotham, with a foreword by Cornell West, Spirits of the Passage: The Transatlantic Slave Trade in the Seventeenth Century (New York:  Simon & Schuster, 1997), 192 pages, ISBN: 978-0684818191.

Spirits-of-the-Passage-Burnside-Madeleine-9780684818191In a watery grave off the coast of Florida lies the earliest slave ship ever recovered. The English-owned Henrietta Marie plied the waters from Europe to Africa and the New World, sinking in the year 1700. She has waited three hundred years to reveal her story. Taking the wreck of the ship as its dramatic heart, Spirits of the Passage presents the first general-interest history of the early years of the slave trade. Told in part from the decks and the cargo hold of a single merchant slaver, this powerful and fascinating story covers a period that has heretofore been largely the territory of scholars—the late seventeenth century, when the slave trade began a period of explosive growth.

Spirits of the Passage describes the story of the largest forced migration in human history, with a powerful text that personalizes the experience of slavery in the most gripping way. Richly illustrated with artifacts found in the wreck along with etchings and paintings of the time, the book documents a tragic tale of human misery even as it reveals the strength of spirit that made survival possible for enslaved Africans. Included throughout are narratives of resistance and survival, many of them never before told. The mosaic of profiles breathes life into stories from all sides of the trade, stories that will contribute to a more complete understanding of the dilemmas of the time. As integral parts of this important volume, profiles, anecdotes, illustrations, and incisive narrative all combine to create a compelling account of one of history’s most important, and shattering, moments.

NEH Summer Institute | 3D Modeling of Cultural Heritage Sites

Posted in opportunities by Editor on February 8, 2015

SummerInstituteMontage_Jan16
From H-ArtHist:

Advanced Challenges in Theory and Practice in 3D Modeling of Cultural Heritage Sites
UMass Amherst, 22–28 June 2015, and UCLA, 20–23 June 2016

Applications due by 30 March 2015

Directors: Alyson A. Gill (UMass Amherst) and Lisa M. Snyder (UCLA)

Applications are currently being accepted for Advanced Challenges in Theory and Practice in 3D Modeling of Cultural Heritage Sites. This NEH Summer Institute for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities will take place over two consecutive summers. In 2015, participants will gather at UMass Amherst from June 22–28 to discuss key issues and challenges facing scholars working with 3D content with an emphasis on the end user experience, and define research questions that they will explore in the subsequent academic year. In 2016, participants will present their findings at a three-day symposium to be held at UCLA from June 20–23.

Submissions are encouraged from scholars with research or teaching projects that would benefit from advanced discussion of theoretical issues related to 3D content; in-service educators interested in pedagogical applications for 3D content across humanities disciplines and grade levels; library, museum, and publishing professionals investigating or using 3D content in installations or born-digital publications; and technologists involved with interactive 3D computer graphics, educational games, or dissemination platforms.

Applications due by March 30, 2015; applicants notified by April 13, 2015. Successful applicants receive a $1,375 stipend to defray expenses related to the 2015 Summer Institute at UMass Amherst and an additional $1,000 to defray expenses related to the 2016 Symposium at UCLA. Please visit advancedchallenges.com for details about the schedule, institute faculty, and the application process.

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And the website really is worth visiting even if you have no intentions of applying; the reading list alone is pretty exciting. CH

New Book | Antiquity, Theatre, and the Painting of Henry Fuseli

Posted in books by Editor on February 8, 2015

From Oxford UP:

Andrei Pop, Antiquity, Theatre, and the Painting of Henry Fuseli (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), 288 pages, ISBN: 978-0198709275, £70 / $115.

9780198709275_450The rediscovery of Pompeii and Herculaneum in the eighteenth century challenged European assumptions about ancient life; just as influential, if quieter, was the revolution caused by translations of Greek tragedy. Art of the mid-eighteenth to early nineteenth centuries dealt with the violence and seeming irrationality of tragic action as an account of the rituals and beliefs of a foreign culture, worshipping strange gods and enacting unfamiliar customs. The result was a focus on the radical difference of the past which, however, was thought to still have something to teach us: not how to live better, but that we live differently and should allow others to do so as well. In recognizing tragedy as an alien cultural form, modern Europe recognized its own historical status as one culture among many.

Naturally, this insight was resisted. Greek tragedy was seldom performed. In painting, it lived a shadow existence alongside more didactic subject matter, emerging explicitly only in a corpus of wash drawings by Anglo-Swiss artist Henry Fuseli (1741-1825) and an international circle of artists active in Rome in the 1770s. In this volume, Pop examines Fuseli as exemplary of a pluralist classicism, paying especial attention to his experiments with moral and aesthetic conventions in the more private medium of drawing. He analyses this broad view of culture through the lens of Fuseli’s life and work. His remarkable acquaintances Emma Hamilton, Erasmus Darwin, and Mary Wollstonecraft, and the great theorists of art and morals to whom he responded, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Johann Joachim Winckelmann, and David Hume, play prominent roles in this investigation of how antiquity became modern.

Andrei Pop is Associate Professor in the John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.

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C O N T E N T S

Introduction: Classicism and its Discontents
1 Tragedy, the Cultural Relativism of Henry Fuseli
2 Grave Monuments, Writing, and the Antique Present
3 Comedy, Dreaming, and the Sympathetic Spectator
4 Winckelmann’s Fake and Activist Neoclassicism
5 The Satyr Play, or Naturalizing Human Nature
6 Ordinary Antiquity
Conclusion
Appendix I: Fuseli and Herder
Appendix II: Fuseli and Homer
Bibliography
Index

Notes and Queries | Info on Benjamin Haydon or Charles Stanhope?

Posted in notes & queries by Editor on February 7, 2015

27903215_1_xTo date, we’ve not done a lot of inquiry-oriented things here at Enfilade, but I’ve long thought it could be a useful forum for certain kinds of notes and queries. Here’s a question from Susan Dixon:

The La Salle University Art Museum in Philadelphia recently acquired a painting attributed to Benjamin Haydon (1786–1846). The staff have some cause to believe it’s a portrait of the Stanhope family. Charles Stanhope, the 3rd Earl Stanhope (1753–1816), invented a type of printing press that bears his name. He had three sons and a few daughters.

Might anyone be conducting research relevant to the painting?

Feel free to respond with a comment below or email Susan directly, dixons@lasalle.edu. CH

 

Exhibition | Bonaparte and the British: Prints and Propaganda

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

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James Gillray, Maniac Ravings, 1803, hand-coloured etching on paper
(London: The British Museum)

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From The British Museum:

Bonaparte and the British: Prints and Propaganda in the Age of Napoleon
The British Museum, London, 5 February — 16 August 2015

This exhibition focuses on the printed propaganda that either reviled or glorified Napoleon Bonaparte, on both sides of the English Channel. It explores how his formidable career coincided with the peak of political satire as an art form. 2015 marks the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo—the final undoing of brilliant French general and emperor Napoleon Bonaparte (1769–1821). The exhibition will include works by British and French satirists who were inspired by political and military tensions to exploit a new visual language combining caricature and traditional satire with the vigorous narrative introduced by Hogarth earlier in the century.

The print trade had already made the work of contemporary British artists familiar across Europe. Continental collectors devoured the products of the London publishers, and artists across Europe were inspired by British satires. This exhibition includes work by James Gillray, Thomas Rowlandson, Richard Newton and George Cruikshank, some of the most thoughtful and inventive artists of their day. The range and depth of the British Museum’s collection allows the satirical printmakers’ approach to be compared with that of portraitists and others who tended to represent a more sober view of Napoleon.

The exhibition begins with portraits of the handsome young general from the mid-1790s and ends with a cast of his death mask and other memorabilia acquired by British admirers. Along the way, the prints will examine key moments in the British response to Napoleon—exultation at Nelson’s triumph in the Battle of the Nile in 1798, celebration of the Peace of Amiens in 1802, fear of invasion in 1803, the death of Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, and Napoleon’s triumph at Austerlitz, delight at his military defeats from 1812 onwards, culminating in his exile to Elba in 1814. 1815 sees triumphalism after Waterloo and final exile to St Helena, but some prints reflect an ambiguous view of the fallen emperor and doubts about the restoration of the French king Louis XVIII.

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From The British Museum Press:

Tim Clayton and Sheila O’Connell, Bonaparte and the British: Prints and Propaganda in the Age of Napoleon (London: The British Museum Press, 2015), 256 pages, ISBN: 9780714126937, £25.

Bonaparte-British-Museum-Europe-history-Waterloo-cmc9780714126937_masterThis fascinating book explores through contemporary prints how Bonaparte was seen from across the English Channel where hostile propaganda was tempered by admiration for his military and administrative talents. Featuring works from The British Museum’s world-renowned collection of political satires, including examples by the greatest masters of the genre, James Gillray, Thomas Rowlandson and George Cruikshank, the authors examine in detail these fascinating and humorous prints.

Attitudes to Bonaparte were coloured by political tensions in Britain as highlighted in satires of Charles James Fox, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Lord Holland and other radicals. French, German, Russian and Spanish copies of British prints demonstrate the wide dissemination of prints and the admiration of continental artists for British satirists. From portraits of the handsome young general to the resplendent Emperor to the cast of his death mask, this book explores crucial events of Bonaparte’s career and the period. French satires showing the British in relation to Bonaparte are also included alongside portraits of Bonaparte and his family made for the British market. This richly illustrated title reveals the stories behind the prints, explaining how satire was used as propaganda and how the artists worked. It features intricately detailed prints in full colour, bringing to life a key period in European history.

Tim Clayton is a leading authority on British prints of the period and the author of several critically acclaimed military histories. Sheila O’Connell is curator of British prints before 1900 at The British Museum.

Exhibition | Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art

Posted in books, catalogues, exhibitions by Editor on February 6, 2015

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William Hodges, The Resolution and Adventure, 4 January 1773, Taking Ice for Water, Latitude 61 Degrees South, ink and wash on paper; 14 x 22″ (Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales).
Click here for more information.

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From the McMichael press release (9 December 2014) for the Vanishing Ice exhibition:

Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art, 1775–2012
Whatcom Museum, Bellingham, Washington, 3 November 2013 —  16 March 2014
El Paso Museum of Art, 1 June — 24 August 2014
Glenbow Museum, Calgary, Alberta, 27 September 2014 — January 4, 2015
McMichael Canadian Art Collection, Kleinburg, Ontario, 31 January — 26 April 2015

On January 31, 2015, the powerful and provocative exhibition Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art1775–2012 opens at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. Since debuting in 2013 at the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham, Washington, the exhibition has garnered attention for its unique interweaving of art, history, and science. Showcasing the beauty and fragility of Earth’s frozen frontiers through the eyes of artists, writers, and naturalists over a period of more than 200 years, the exhibition offers a unique take on the timely subject of climate change.

Joseph Mallord William Turner, Mer de Glace, in the Valley of Chamouni, Switzerland, 1803, watercolor, Graphite, Gum, 28 x 41 inches (New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, B1977.14.4650)

Joseph Mallord William Turner, Mer de Glace, in the Valley of Chamouni, Switzerland, 1803, watercolor, graphite, gum, 28 x 41″ (New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection)

Vanishing Ice features over seventy works including drawings, prints, paintings, photographs, videos, and installations by fifty artists from twelve countries. Among these historical and contemporary artists are: Ansel Adams, Lita Albuquerque, James Balog, Thomas Hart Benton, David Buckland, Gustave Doré, Lawren Harris, Isaac Julien, Kahn & Selesnick, Rockwell Kent, Paul D. Miller (aka DJ Spooky), Alexis Rockman, Camille Seaman, and Spencer Tunick. The exhibition unfolds thematically, geographically, and chronologically, moving from alpine to Arctic and Antarctic landscapes.

The idea for Vanishing Ice grew out of curator Barbara Matilsky’s doctoral dissertation, written thirty years ago about the sublime landscapes of French artist-naturalist-explorers who were among the first to depict the poles and mountain glaciers. As Matilsky became aware of the increasing number of contemporary artists who were venturing to the Arctic and Antarctic, she saw an opportunity to compare historical and contemporary depictions of these rapidly changing landscapes, as epitomized by the juxtaposition of Arthur Oliver Wheeler’s 1917 image of the Athabasca Glacier in Jasper National Park and Gary Braasch’s 2005 photograph of the same location.

“I am hoping that Vanishing Ice will stimulate a new appreciation for alpine and polar landscapes by revealing their significance for both nature and culture,” said exhibition curator Barbara Matilsky from the Whatcom Museum. “In the past, artists and naturalists expanded the public’s awareness of Earth’s icy frontiers. Today, artists continue to collaborate with scientists, motivated by the belief that art will help people to visualize the accelerating effects of climate change. They awaken the world to both the beauty and increasing vulnerability of ice, which is critical for biological and cultural diversity. Their work will hopefully inspire activism on the regional and national levels to make the requisite policy changes that will bring Earth back into balance.”

The McMichael is the exhibition’s final stop on a tour that included the Whatcom Museum; the El Paso Museum in Texas; and most recently the Glenbow Museum in Calgary.

“The McMichael nurtures a special interest in exploring the intersection of art and nature, and encouraging meaningful dialogue about the environment,” said Dr. Victoria Dickenson, Executive Director and CEO of the McMichael. “Vanishing Ice is both a beautiful glimpse of some of the most remote and fragile ecosystems, and a call to action on what many people hold to be the defining issue of this generation.”

Vanishing Ice, which will span the McMichael’s upper level of gallery spaces, will be complemented by an exhibition based on the McMichael’s permanent collection of works related to the Arctic, opening on February 14, 2015. The installation will include paintings and drawings by members of the Group of Seven, including Lawren Harris—famed for his depiction of icebergs and glaciers—and works by Inuit artists, including Tim Pitsiulak.

Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art, 1775–2012 is organized by the Whatcom Museum. Major funding for the exhibition has been provided by the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts with additional support from the Norcliffe Foundation, the Washington State Arts Commission, and the City of Bellingham.

From the University of Washington Press:

FINAL-COVER_Vanishing-IceWEB

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Barbara C. Matilsky, Vanishing Ice: Alpine and Polar Landscapes in Art, 1775–2012 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2013), 144 pages, ISBN: 978-0295993423, $40.

Vanishing Ice introduces the rich artistic legacy of the planet’s frozen frontiers now threatened by a changing climate. Tracing the impact of glaciers, icebergs, and fields of ice on artists’ imaginations, this interdisciplinary survey explores the connections between generations of artists who adopt different styles, media, and approaches to interpret alpine and polar landscapes.

Beginning in the eighteenth century, collaborations between the arts and sciences contributed to a deeper understanding of snowcapped mountains, the Arctic, and Antarctica. A resurgence of interest in these environments as dramatic indicators of climate change galvanizes contemporary expeditions to the glaciers and the poles. Today, artists, writers, and scientists awaken the world to both the beauty and increasing vulnerability of ice.

Barbara C. Matilsky is curator of art at the Whatcom Museum, Bellingham, Washington. She is the author of numerous books, including Fragile Ecologies: Contemporary Artists’ Interpretations and Solutions.

C O N T E N T S

Director’s Foreword
Prologue
From the Sublime to the Science of a Changing Climate
Voyage to Glacial Peaks
Magnetic Attraction: The Allure of the Poles
Elegy: The Open Polar Sea
Timeline
Checklist of the exhibition

New Book | Country Houses and the British Empire, 1700–1930

Posted in books by Editor on February 5, 2015

From Manchester UP:

Stephanie Barczewski, Country Houses and the British Empire, 1700–1930 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2014), 230 pages, ISBN: 978-0719096228, £75.

image-service.aspCountry Houses and the British Empire, 1700–1930 assesses the economic and cultural links between country houses and the Empire between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries. Using sources from over fifty British and Irish archives, it enables readers to better understand the impact of the empire upon the British metropolis by showing both the geographical variations and its different cultural manifestations. Stephanie Barczewski offers a rare scholarly analysis of the history of country houses that goes beyond an architectural or biographical study, and recognises their importance as the physical embodiments of imperial wealth and reflectors of imperial cultural influences. In so doing, she restores them to their true place of centrality in British culture over the last three centuries, and provides fresh insights into the role of the Empire in the British metropolis.

Stephanie Barczewski is Professor of Modern British History at Clemson University.

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C O N T E N T S

Introduction: British Country Houses and Empire, 1700–1930
1 Colonial Merchants
2 Indian Nabobs
3 West Indian Planters
4 Military and Naval Officers and Other Categories of Imperial Estate Purchasers
5 The Impact of Imperial Wealth on British Landed Estates
6 The Cultural Display of Empire in Country Houses
7 The Discourse of Commodities
8 The Discourse of Cosmopolitanism
9 The Discourse of Conquest
10 The Discourse of Collecting
Conclusion
Appendices
Select bibliography
Index

Workshop | On Site: Western Travellers Sketching in the Ottoman Empire

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on February 5, 2015

From H-ArtHist:

On Site: Western Travellers Sketching Topographies in the Ottoman Empire
Freie Universität Berlin, 19 February 2015

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the relations between the European countries and the Ottoman Empire were characterised by an increase in economic and diplomatic relations, but at the same time by military conflicts and aspirations. Europeans travelling to the Ottoman Empire in the 17th and 18th centuries were thus motivated by a variety of reasons and interests, which could be of a diplomatic, military, economic, religious, antiquarian or scholarly nature. Drawings and sketches were produced in these contexts both by travelling artists and by amateur draughtsmen.

The workshop investigates the activity of topographical sketching of landscapes or cityscapes during these travels with a particular focus on the implications of on-site sketching. The central question is how this artistic practice of sketching in a transcultural setup can be understood and conceptualised in art historical terms. We invite papers that deal with aspects of the following three fields.

Iconography
How did travelling draughtsmen choose their subjects and viewpoints? Which landscapes and cityscapes were considered significant and for what reasons (military, religious, antiquarian, aesthetic)? Did the permanent presence of conflict, both military and religious, between the Ottoman Empire and various European states, have an impact on the production and interpretation of these drawings?

Authenticity
Did these pictorial renderings aim at authenticity, and if so, how? How did travelogues testify to the authenticity of images? How did the knowledge, the preconceptions, the expectations and the fantasies of alterity that the travellers brought with them inform their practice of sketching on site; Or rather: In which way were such notions visually negotiated and thereby transformed?

Practices, Techniques, and Modes of Representation
How was the practice of drawing on site (i.e. outside, in a foreign country, as a stranger) conceived of and dealt with? Which practices, techniques and modes of representation were applied under these conditions? What effects did sketching bans and a fear of pictures and their producers have on travelling draughtsmen? How were these situations described and reflected in travellers’ writings?

Concept: Ulrike Boskamp, Annette Kranen
Venue: Freie Universität Berlin, Koserstraße 20, 14195 Berlin, Room A 163

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P R O G R A M

13.15  Ulrike Boskamp (Berlin), Welcome and Introduction

13.30  Palmira Brummett (Providence), Mapping the Ottomans: Moving from Narrative to Image at the ‘Limits’ of Empire

14.30  Irini Apostolou (Athens), The Representation of the Levant by French Travellers in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries

15.30  Coffee Break

16.00  William Kynan-Wilson (Berlin/Cambridge), Mediating Images in Jacques Carrey’s View of Athens (1674)

17.00  Annette Kranen (Berlin), Presenting Travel: Movement, Space and Places in Seventeenth-Century Western Images of the Ottoman Territories

18.00  Final Discussion

Exhibition | Jean-Jacques de Boissieu

Posted in exhibitions by Editor on February 4, 2015

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From the Städel Museum:

Jean-Jacques de Boissieu: A Contemporary of Städel’s / Ein Zeitgenosse Städels
Städel Museum, Frankfurt, 11 February — 10 May 2015

Curated by Jutta Schütt

Self-Portrait of Jean-Jacques de Boissieu, 1796, etching.

Self-Portrait of Jean-Jacques de Boissieu, 1796, etching.

Jean-Jacques de Boissieu (1736–1810) was already a highly acclaimed artist beyond France in his lifetime. Not only princes but also private collectors like Johann Friedrich Städel were fascinated with the landscapes, genre scenes, and portraits depicted in the artist’s drawings and prints. The founder of the Städelsches Kunstinstitut acquired over twenty drawings and far more than two hundred etchings by de Boissieu, which still rank among the central holdings of the Städel’s Department of Prints and Drawings. Created in a period of historically revolutionary events, de Boissieu’s oeuvre mirrors the landscape and life of the province around the artist’s native city of Lyon with an almost irritatingly unexcited and serious steadiness. His etched landscapes and portraits as well as his subtly nuanced brush and chalk drawings reveal a progressive realism that hints at a bourgeois understanding of art independent of any academic norms.