Enfilade

Setting Les Misérables

Posted in on site by Editor on January 10, 2013

As some of you may have noticed, it’s eighteenth-century Greenwich that stands in for nineteenth-century Paris in Tom Hooper’s Les Misérables. And the elephant also returns us to the XVIIIe siècle; see the 24 May 2011 posting from the ‘Lost Paris’ series of the blog, Culture & Stuff). Thanks to Jennifer Germann for the suggestion. -CH

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From Architectural Digest:

Cathy Whitlock, “The Sets of Les Misérables,” Architectural Digest
Through dramatic set design and a pitch-perfect cast, the legendary story of a nation in turmoil comes to vivid new life in Hollywood’s adaptation

Greenwich Les Mis. . . Academy Award–winning director Tom Hooper and production designer Eve Stewart collaborate for the fourth time, having also worked together on the visually stunning and award-winning The King’s Speech, among other productions. In Les Mis, the duo translate the environs of the book, which include majestic French mountain ridges and the bleak Parisian streets of 1832, in all their glory via London’s Pinewood Studios in a shoot that lasted just 12 weeks . . .

The stately grounds of the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England, were transformed into the Place de la Bastille, the square where the Bastille prison stood. Originally conceived by Napoléon as a symbol of victory, the 40-foot-tall elephant is front and center at French commander Jean Maximilien Lamarque’s funeral procession and and the subsequent student uprising. Producer Cameron Mackintosh was so fond of the pachyderm that after production he had it moved it to his home in England. . . .

Sample of Louis XVI’s Blood Authenticated

Posted in the 18th century in the news by Editor on January 9, 2013

As reported by the Agence France-Presse (AFP)

louis-xvi-blood-gourd-2-elsevier

Embellished gourd, 1792-93, inscription reads: “Maximilien Bourdaloue le 21 janvier de cette année imbiba son mouchoir dans le sang de Louis XVI après sa décollation” (Photo: Davide Pettener)

Two centuries after the French people beheaded Louis XVI and dipped their handkerchiefs in his blood, scientists believe they have authenticated the remains of one such rag kept as a revolutionary souvenir. Researchers have been trying for years to verify a claim imprinted on an ornately decorated calabash that it contains a sample of the blood of the French king guillotined in Paris on January 21, 1793. The dried, hollowed squash is adorned with portraits of revolutionary heroes and the text: “On January 21, Maximilien Bourdaloue dipped his handkerchief in the blood of Louis XVI after his decapitation.” He is then believed to have placed the fabric in the gourd, and had it embellished. The sinister souvenir has been in the private hands of an Italian family for more than a century, said the team of experts from Spain and France which published its findings in the journal Forensic Science International. . . .

The full AFP article is available at ArtDaily here»

Coverage in Le Figaro»

Additional images (from a 2010 story) are available at Wired.com»

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From Forensic Science International:

“Genetic Comparison of the Head of Henri IV and the Presumptive Blood from Louis XVI (Both Kings of France),” Forensic Science International (2 January 2013)

Authors: Philippe Charlier, Iñigo Olalde, Neus Solé, Oscar Ramírez, Jean-Pierre Babelon, Bruno Galland, Francesc Calafell, Carles Lalueza-Fox

Abstract: A mummified head was identified in 2010 as belonging to Henri IV, King of France. A putative blood sample from the King Louis XVI preserved into a pyrographically decorated gourd was analyzed in 2011. Both kings are in a direct male-line descent, separated by seven generations. We have retrieved the hypervariable region 1 of the mitochondrial DNA as well as a partial Y-chromosome profile from Henri IV. Five STR loci match the alleles found in Louis XVI, while another locus shows an allele that is just one mutation step apart. Taking into consideration that the partial Y-chromosome profile is extremely rare in modern human databases, we concluded that both males could be paternally related. The likelihood ratio of the two samples belonging to males separated by seven generations (as opposed to unrelated males) was estimated as 246.3, with a 95% confidence interval between 44.2 and 9729. Historically speaking, this forensic DNA data would confirm the identity of the previous Louis XVI sample, and give another positive argument for the authenticity of the head of Henri IV.

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Update (added 5 April 2013) — In the case of another artifact (as reported by the AFP at Art Daily) . . .

A bloodstained cloth allegedly belonging to Louis XVI, the French king who was beheaded after the 1789 revolution, on Wednesday [3 April 2013] fetched a staggering 19,000 euros ($24,400) at a Paris auction. Kept in a miniature coffin, the cloth was estimated to go under the hammer for between 4,000 and 6,000 euros. . . .

Update (added 10 October 2013) — The saga continues (as reported by the AFP at Art Daily) . . .

Scientists revealed genetic data Wednesday they said disproved the authenticity of macabre relics attributed to two French kings: a rag dipped in Louis XVI’s blood and Henri IV’s mummified head. A DNA analysis of three living relatives of the Bourbon kings found no link with genetic traces from the grisly souvenirs, according to a study in the European Journal of Human Genetics.

“It is not the blood of Louis XVI,” co-author Jean-Jacques Cassiman, a Belgian geneticist, told AFP of the handkerchief allegedly dipped in the blood of the king guillotined by revolutionaries in Paris on January 21, 1793, and kept in an ornately-decorated calabash since then. . .

TEFAF Museum Restoration Fund Announces 2013 Grants

Posted in Art Market, museums by Editor on January 8, 2013

Good news for a few eighteenth-century holdings at the Worcester Art Museum and the Ashmolean, announced by the TEFAF Museum Restoration Fund ahead of this year’s art fair at Maastricht (15-24 March 2013) . . .

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The Worcester Art Museum in the United States and the Ashmolean Museum in the United Kingdom are to receive grants from the TEFAF Museum Restoration Fund  to help them carry out important conservation projects. The Fund was set up by TEFAF Maastricht, as one of its 2012 Silver Jubilee initiatives and provides up to €50,000 each year to help institutions around the world conserve works of art in their collections. A panel of independent, international experts considered many applications from museums before selecting the two winning projects, which will each receive €25,000.

HogarthScreen shot 2013-01-06 at 4.42.39 PM

William Hogarth, Portraits of William and Elizabeth James,
1744 (Worcester Art Museum)

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The Worcester Art Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts is to restore a pair of portraits by the eighteenth-century British artist William Hogarth. The pendant portraits of William and Elizabeth James, painted by Hogarth in 1744, were acquired by the museum more than a century ago but have never been comprehensively treated or technically evaluated and will benefit greatly from a conservation project. The work will enable the Worcester Art Museum to feature them prominently in Hogarth and the English Character, an exhibition planned for 2016, and ultimately to return these cornerstone works to its permanent galleries. The restoration will allow those viewing them to experience the full impact of the paintings as exquisite works of art without any concerns about their condition. The newly conserved pictures will reveal more authentic palettes and broader tonal ranges that, when reunited with their newly conserved frames, will enable viewers to have the pleasing experience intended by Hogarth.

William Hogarth (1697-1764) was one of the masters of British painting. Although best known for his biting satires of society that were popularised in engravings, he was also a skilled portraitist. In these paintings he captured the confidence of William James, a country squire from the English county of Kent, and his wife Elizabeth, both proud of their fashionable London clothes.

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01-candelabraThe Ashmolean Museum in Oxford is to carry out a conservation project on two candelabra by the Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-78). The intricately carved candelabra are some of the finest examples of neo-classical sculpture in the United Kingdom. They form a key element of the collections displayed in the Ashmolean’s impressive Randolph Sculpture Gallery and are of international significance. They were purchased from Piranesi by Sir Roger Newdigate, who made two Grand Tours in 1739-40 and 1774-75. The candelabra were shipped in component form from Italy to Oxford with instructions for their re-assembly provided by Piranesi. The candelabra have become structurally unsound because the plaster bonding in the joints between each vertical section has failed during the 100 years since they were last restored. Until they were re-plinthed on pallets in 1991, these vulnerable objects were traditionally moved by masons dragging them across the floor, using winches, rather than lifting them. Although they are now mounted on pallets, disguised as plinths, moving them still puts them at risk as they comprise many loose components. For that reason the museum has developed this project to dismantle, conserve and structurally stabilize these remarkable objects.

A Collaborative Reading of ‘Slavery and the Culture of Taste’

Posted in books by Editor on January 7, 2013

An invitation from Dave Mazella of The Long Eighteenth:

Simon Gikandi’s book Slavery and the Culture of Taste has just received a James Russell Lowell prize at MLA, and I thought that C18L, Long 18th, and other 18th-century scholars/readers might be interested in doing a collaborative reading of this book in the spring. Right now I’m trying to gauge the level of interest in the book, and seeing when might be a good time to do it.

We would probably do it over about a week or so, with one respondent per chapter posting a 500-800 word response every day or so, depending on the level of traffic. Then hopefully we can get Gikandi to respond to our posters at the end. For those interested in the process, we’ve done this with books by Joe Roach, Michael McKeon and Richard Sher in the past. Here’s the link to our announcement. If you’d like to participate, or better yet, help organize, please contact me at dmazella@uh.edu. It would also be helpful if you could give me an idea of the best week or weeks this spring for me to schedule.

Thanks,

Dave Mazella
The Long Eighteenth

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Recent postings at The Long Eighteenth offer numerous items of potential interest Enfilade readers including: 1) Soren Hammerschmidt‘s new course blog, Eighteenth-Century Media; 2) ‘Jeffersongate’ and the controversy surrounding Henry Wiencek’s treatment of Thomas Jefferson in Master of the Mountain; and 3) thoughts on synthesis. -CH

New Book | Hadrian’s Wall: A Life

Posted in books by Editor on January 7, 2013

From Oxford University Press:

Richard Hingley, Hadrian’s Wall: A Life (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 416 pages, ISBN: 978-0199641413, $150.

HWCover1In Hadrian’s Wall: A Life, Richard Hingley addresses the post-Roman history of this world-famous ancient monument. Constructed on the orders of the emperor Hadrian during the 120s AD, the Wall was maintained for almost three centuries before ceasing to operate as a Roman frontier during the fifth century. The scale and complexity of Hadrian’s Wall makes it one of the most important ancient monuments in the British Isles. It is the most well-preserved of the frontier works that once defined the Roman Empire.

While the Wall is famous as a Roman construct, its monumental physical structure did not suddenly cease to exist in the fifth century. This volume explores the after-life of Hadrian’s Wall and considers the ways it has been imagined, represented, and researched from the sixth century to the internet. The sixteen chapters, illustrated with over 100 images, show the changing manner in which the Wall has been conceived and the significant role it has played in imagining the identity of the English, including its appropriation as symbolic boundary between England and
Scotland. Hingley discusses the transforming political, cultural, and religious significance of the Wall during this entire period and addresses the ways in which scholars and artists have been inspired by the monument over the years.

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From Christopher Catling’s review, “Vandals and Hanoverians,” for TLS (14 December 2012): 27.

. . . in Gildas [writing around 540], the Wall is explicitly about “them and us” – civilization versus beastly paganism. The Wall is a genetic and cultural boundary, an idea that Hingley shows to be surprisingly long-lived: it recurs in nineteenth-century historical paintings of the Wall’s construction destined for the walls of the Houses of Parliament, in the illustrations to Kipling’s Puck of Pook’s Hill (1906), and even in a cartoon published in The Times in 1997 referring to the devolution debate. Civilization versus beastly paganism The idea that there is something different (for which read hostile and culturally inferior) about the people who live north of Hadrian’s Wall recurs every time political relations between the English and the Scottish come to the fore. . . .

Scotland really did turn hostile with the Jacobite uprisings of 1715. There was much talk about building a new Hadrian’s Wall, as roads, bridges and garrisons were constructed between 1725 and 1737 to militarize the Borders and the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. One result was the first accurate mapping of the Wall and its associated landscapes, undertaken by military surveyors; another was the use of the Wall as a quarry for road stone and the construction of a military road right on top of the eastern section of the Wall, from Newcastle to Sewingshields.

The antiquary William Stukeley was horrified by this act of desecration. Lobbying the Princess of Wales, he asked her to be his patron and champion in the work of protecting “this most noble, most magnificent work from further ruin, not from enemies, but from more than Gothic workmen, quite thoughtless and regardless of this greatest wonder, not of Brittain only, but of Europe.” Now, for the first time in the history of the Wall, it was the English who were cast in the role of the barbarians; Hanoverian military engineers were no better than the Goths and Vandals who had sacked Rome. . .

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For the Wall’s ongoing influence, we can also add The Game of Thrones, as George R. R. Martin acknowledged in 2000 (as quoted in The Guardian). Hadrian’s Wall as civilization’s boundary will presumably be with us for a long time.

The Art World in Britain 1660 to 1735

Posted in resources by Editor on January 6, 2013

I should have noted this incredibly useful resource much, much earlier. As a compendium of primary materials, The Art World in Britain 1660 to 1735 is an ongoing project, with a completion date estimated at 2020. There’s a large team of people who deserve credit, but Dr. Richard Stephens stands out for his impressive work as editor. General information is provided below, and news of the latest additions are available here (details for having your name added to the update list are available at the website). -CH

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The Art World in Britain 1660 to 1735

Art World

The art world in Britain 1660 to 1735 will create a searchable corpus of the principal primary materials relating to the arts in early modern Britain. It will present new research in the form of a biographical dictionary, a database of art sales, a topographical dictionary and a group of subject-based texts. It will provide tools for further research with a database of financial records and a large checklist of works of art. The art world in Britain 1660 to 1735 is a major initiative of Court, Country, City: British Art 1660-1735. It is a long-term project, based at the University of York, which collaborates with other scholars and institutions and welcomes the involvement of its users. The website will be published as a developing work in progress: substantial additions of data will be uploaded every three months, and functional enhancements will keep pace with the growing body of material. The project aims to reach completion in October 2020.

Submissions for the Oscar Kenshur Book Prize

Posted in books by Editor on January 5, 2013

Oscar Kenshur Book Prize
Applications due by 31 January 2013

The Center for Eighteenth-Century Studies at Indiana University is pleased to announce its annual book prize, to be awarded for an outstanding monograph of interest to eighteenth-century scholars working in a range of disciplines. The prize honors the work of Oscar Kenshur, professor emeritus of comparative literature at Indiana University, a dix-huitièmiste par excellence, and one of the founding members of the Center.

Submissions in English from any discipline are welcome; authors can submit their work irrespective of citizenship. Multi-authored collections of essays and translations, as well as books by members of the Indiana-University-Bloomington faculty, are not eligible. The Kenshur prize of $1000 will be awarded together with an invitation to the Center for Eighteenth-Century Studies for a workshop dedicated to the winning book, in which several colleagues will discuss the book from different disciplinary perspectives. The Center will cover the author’s expenses to attend this event.

To be eligible for this year’s competition, a book must carry a 2012 copyright date. Submissions can be made by the publisher or the author: three copies must be received at the ASECS office by the 31st of January 2013. Please send the books (clearly marked for Kenshur Prize) to ASECS, 2598 Reynolda Rd., Suite C, Winston-Salem, NC 27106. For further inquiries please contact Professor Mary Favret, Director of the Center for Eighteenth-Century Studies at Indiana University (email favretm@indiana.edu).

Conference | European Portrait Miniatures

Posted in books, catalogues, conferences (to attend) by Editor on January 4, 2013

European Portrait Miniatures: Artists, Functions and Collections
Celle Castle, Celle, Germany, 25-27 January 2013

121655The conference is being held on the occasion of the opening of the fifth exhibition of the Tansey Collection and the publication of the accompanying catalogue Miniatures from the Time of Marie-Antoinette in the Tansey Collection on 25 January 2013.

Admission is free. Celle Castle as well as the Bomann-Museum nearby are within walking distance (20 minutes) from Celle railway station. Trains from Hannover take approximately 25 to 45 minutes (Deutsche Bahn, Metronom or S-Bahn). For more information and for registration, please contact bernd.pappe@miniaturen-tansey.de.

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F R I D A Y ,  2 5  J A N U A R Y  2 0 1 3

16:30  Opening of the exhibition Miniatures from the Time of Marie-Antoinette in the Tansey Collection

18:00  Visit of the exhibition and reception at the Bomann-Museum Celle

19:30  Dinner

S A T U R D A Y ,  2 6  J A N U A R Y  2 0 1 3

Objects, Agencies, and Social Practices

9:00  Marcia POINTON (Manchester), Intimacy, Exclusion and Revelation: The Portrait Miniature as Image and Object, ca. 1640-1800

9:30  Bert WATTEEUW (Antwerp), Miniature Dramas: The Portrait Miniature as a Literary Motif in Early Modern European Drama

10:00  Discussion

10:15  Coffee

Politics and Representation

10:45  Vanessa REMINGTON (London), ‘Philistines or Connoisseurs?’: The Collecting of Miniatures by the Early Hanoverians at the English Court, 1714-1760

11:15  Karin SCHRADER (Bad Nauheim), Between Representation and Intimacy: The Portrait Miniatures of the Georgian Queens

11:45  Friederike DRINKUTH (Schwerin), Intimacy and Ancestry: A Dynastic Souvenir for Queen Charlotte

12:15  Discussion

12:30  Lunch

13:45  Laurent HUGUES (Nîmes), The Commissions of Miniatures of the Royal Family from France According to the Archival Sources, 1725-1792

14:15  Sarah GRANT (London), Miniatures of the Princesse de Lamballe (1749-1792): The Portraiture, Patronage and Politics of a Royal Favourite

14:45  Sigrid RUBY (Gießen/Saarbrücken), Love Affairs with the Founding Father: Portrait Miniatures of George Washington – Modes of Creation and Display

15:15  Discussion

15:30  Coffee

European Miniature Collections (part I)

16:00  Stephen LLOYD (Edinburgh), A Group of Miniatures by Jacob van Doordt (fl. 1606 – d. 1629) in the Buccleuch Collection

16:30 Thierry JAEGY (Paris), Masterpieces of Miniature Painting in French Private Collections

17:00  Markus MILLER (Eichenzell), The Collection of Portrait Miniatures of the Landgraves and Grand Dukes of Hesse-Darmstadt

Andreas DOBLER (Eichenzell), The Miniature Collection of Empress Friedrich in Castle Fasanerie

17:45  Discussion

19:30  Dinner

S U N D A Y ,  2 7  J A N U A R Y  2 0 1 3

European Miniature Collections (part II)

9:00  Elizaveta ABRAMOVA (Saint Petersburg), The Collection of Miniatures from the State Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

9:30  Izabela WIERCZINSKA (Warsaw), The Enchantment of History: Selected Masterpieces from the Miniatures Collection of the Great Dukes of Hesse and by Rhine

10:00  Discussion

10:15  Coffee

10:45  Astrid SCHERP (Munich), The Collection of Portrait Miniatures of Elector Palatine Johann Wilhelm von der Pfalz (1658-1716)

11:15  Lucyna LENCZNAROWICZ and Danuta GODYN (Cracow), The Highlights of the Miniatures Collection at the National Museum in Cracow

11:45  Discussion

12:00  Lunch

Techniques and Materials

13:15  Emma RUTHERFORD (London), The Plumbago Portrait in Britain

13:45  Julia SEDDA (Berlin), Silhouettes: The Fashionable Paper Portrait Miniature around 1800

14:15  Discussion

Miniature Painters

14:30  Nathalie LEMOINE-BOUCHARD (Paris), Charles-Paul-Jérôme de Bréa (1739-1820) and his Work in Miniature

15:00  Coffee

15:30  Catherine DE LEUSSE (Paris), Mme. Herbelin, a Miniaturist of the July Monarchy and of the Second Empire

16:00  Roger and Carmela ARTURI PHILLIPS (Ferndown, Dorset), Miniature Painting in the 20th Century

16:30  Discussion

16:45  Closing Remarks

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From Artbooks.com:

Catalogue: Juliane Schmieglitz-Otten and Bernd Pappe, Miniaturen der Zeit Marie Antoinettes aus der Sammlung Tansey / Miniatures from the Time of Marie Antoinette in the Tansey Collection (Munich: Hirmer, 2013), 500 pages, ISBN: 978-3777490212, $105.

The Tansey miniatures, now housed in the Bomann Museum in Celle, form one of the most significant collections of European miniature paintings. Miniatures from the Time of Marie Antoinette in the Tansey Collection is the fifth book in a series exploring this collection by key periods; 168 works, mostly by French artists, are examined in actual size using the outstanding photographs of Birgitt Schmedding. The final 50 years of the 18th century constituted one of the most magnificent periods in the art of miniature painting, with regard to both style and technique. The artists, who produced these portraits for private gifts, not only excelled in applying watercolours to ivory, but also expressed great ingenuity in their representations of affection and love. The authors Bernd Pappe and Juliane Schmieglitz-Otten, both renowned connoisseurs in this field, detail and analyse each work. Introductory essays by leading specialists provide further insights into this fascinating time for miniature painting. The Tansey Collection, started about thirty years ago by the German-American couple Lieselotte and Ernest Tansey, was donated in part to the Bomann Museum in Celle 1997.

New Book | Common Land in English Painting, 1700-1850

Posted in books by Editor on January 3, 2013

From Boydell & Brewer:

Ian Waites, Common Land in English Painting, 1700-1850 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2012), 216 pages, ISBN: 978-1843837619, $90.

common-land-in-english-painting-1700-1850During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, much of England’s common land was eradicated by the processes of parliamentary enclosure. However, despite the fact that the landscape was frequently viewed as unproductive, outmoded and unsightly, many British landscape painters of the time – including Constable, Gainsborough and Turner – resolutely continued to depict it.

This book is the first full study of how they did so, using evidence drawn not only from art-historical picture analysis, but from contemporary poems and novels, and the contemporary pamphlets, essays and reports that advanced the rhetoric of both agricultural improvement and new theories on landscape aesthetics. It highlights a deep-rooted social and cultural attachment to the common field landscape, and demonstrates that common land played a significant but – until now – underestimated role in both the history of English art and of the formation of an English national identity, reflecting what are still highly sensitive issues of
progress, nostalgia and loss within the English countryside. Recasting common land as a recurrent facet of English culture in the modern period, the numerous paintings, drawings and prints featured in this book give the reader a comprehensive and evocative sense of what this now almost wholly lost landscape looked like in its hey-day.

Ian Waites is Senior Lecturer in History of Art and Design at the University of Lincoln.

Horowitz Foundation Funds Institute for American Arts at BGC

Posted in resources by Editor on January 3, 2013

Recently announced by the BGC:

The Bard Graduate Center is pleased to announce that it has been awarded a grant of $1 million by the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz Foundation for the Arts to establish the Center’s first named institute.

“The study of American material culture and art has always been a cornerstone of the BGC academic mission,” said Dean Peter N. Miller. “This magnificent commitment from the Horowitz Foundation will not only enhance the BGC’s existing program and provide essential financial support to our students, but also enable us to think big.”

Over the past several years, the Horowitz Foundation has generously supported the BGC through grants for exhibitions on topics of American material culture presented by the BGC Gallery. This latest award will provide a firm foundation to sustain and grow a key aspect of the Center’s academic program. Among the Horowitz Institute’s teaching, research, and scholarship components will be:

• A fellowship awarded to a PhD student with an approved dissertation topic focusing on an aspect of American material culture

• The Materials of American Art program to provide MA students with first-hand exposure to materials and techniques used to create objects and opportunities to engage with artists and artisans working in a variety of media

• A prize for the best Qualifying Paper on a topic in American art

• The establishment of the Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz Foundation Seminars for advanced discussion of a wide range of topics and issues in architecture, decorative arts, design, and collecting involving American material culture

• The creation of a book prize for the best manuscript in the field of American art and culture to be awarded in the name of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Horowitz

“I founded the BGC in 1993 with the conviction that the aspirations and habits of civilization are revealed through art and objects, which are fundamental to our lives,” said Dr. Susan Weber, BGC Founder and Director. “The Horowitz Institute will benefit future professors, curators, and authors who will one day be making valuable contributions to the scholarship in the field. We extend our deepest gratitude to the directors of the Horowitz Foundation for this significant commitment that will serve both student need and the wider academic community.”

The Raymond and Margaret Horowitz Foundation was established by an extraordinary couple. New Yorkers to the core, they collected American Impressionist art avidly, beginning in the early 1960s, when there were few others interested in this genre. Mr. and Mrs. Horowitz scoured galleries in New York and Boston, and bought singular examples in oil, watercolor, pastel, charcoal, and print media. In 1999, forty-nine Impressionist and Realist paintings and works on paper from the collection were exhibited at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, and the response was resounding.

“The Horowitz Foundation was formed to better the education, exhibition, and scholarship in the field of American art. Thus far grants have been made to many institutions, museum and university alike. We are proud to assist the Bard Graduate Center in their work, which has been consistently thoughtful in approach and brilliant in execution,” commented Warren Adelson, Director of the Horowitz Foundation.

American Material Culture at the BGC

From its inception in 1993, the BGC has seen the study of American decorative arts and material culture as a cornerstone of the graduate program. Several members of the faculty specialize or teach in areas pertaining to American art, design, and cultural history. Among them are Ken Ames, one of this country’s leading authorities on American silver; Catherine Whalen, a specialist in American craft; and David Jaffee, a specialist in the material culture of early America. An anthropologist, Aaron Glass focuses his research on the material culture of Native American cultures, particularly those found in the Northwest Coast. Ivan Gaskell, Pat Kirkham, Michele Majer, and Amy Ogata teach and publish in aspects of American material culture ranging from costumes and textiles to architecture, design, film, and history.

Organized by the academic programs department and open to the general public, BGC’s Seminar Series is a venue for advanced intellectual discussion in New York City and an expression of the range of methods and approaches for studying the cultural history of the material world. In 2007, the BGC inaugurated a special series focused on New York and American Material Culture. Since then leading scholars of American history from such venerable institutions as Yale, Brown, Winterthur, the University of Virginia, and the Getty Institute have come to the BGC to examine a wide range of topics related to architecture, decorative arts, design, and collecting.