Archived HoA Research Seminars

2025

 

 

26 November 2025
 
Everywhen: Photography and Indigeneity
Geoffrey Batchen
Oakeshott Room, Lincoln College
7 hoa research seminar
‘We need to understand photography as part of racial capitalism’. So writes Ariella Azoulay, correctly insisting that we regard the global dissemination of photography as an imperial exercise of power and domination. But it is Azoulay who has also sought to persuade us that photographs are relational entities whose meanings and effects are generated by their viewers and subjects as much as by their makers. This paper pursues that line of thinking while asking what actually happened when photography and Indigenous Australians encountered one another for the first time. A close study of a group of daguerreotypes of Indigenous Australians, taken in 1847 in Melbourne by Douglas Kilburn, and of French lithographs made after daguerreotypes that also feature native Australians, provides evidence that their subjects were agents in, as well as victims of, the act of photography. The paper thereby seeks to offer a history as complex and nuanced as the images it engages.
 
Image: 

August-Hilaire Léveillé (lithographer, France), Worraddey, chef a l'ile Bruny, Canal de d'Entrecasteaux, Wan-Dieménie [sic] (Mélanésie) | Trouggarnanna, native de Sullivan-cove, Wan-Dieménie [sic] (Mélanésie) [Woureddy, chief of Bruny Island | Truganini], c. 1845

from Jules Dumont d’Urville, Voyage au pôle sud et dans l’Océanie. Part 2, anthropologie et physiologie humaine (Gide, Paris, 1842–47). 

lithograph after daguerreotypes made by Louis-August Bisson in Paris of plaster casts of two sculptures made by Benjamin Law in Hobart in 1835-36. 

22.0 x 16.0 cm (image)

 

 


 

19 November 2025
 
The Natural History of Style: Specimens, Albums, and the History of Art in Early Modern Japan
Kris Kersey
Oakeshott Room, Lincoln College
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
6 hoa research seminar
This talk asks us to reconsider the origins of art history in Japan. It does so by setting up a comparison between the collecting activities of those engaged in what we now call the natural sciences and those engaged in what we now call the history of art. Agents in both fields were invested in finding exemplars, carefully labeling them, and arranging them according to morphological taxonomies. In chronological terms, the talk spans the sixteenth to twentieth centuries. In archival terms, the primary focus is tekagami, a genre of albums that compiled the so-called “exemplary hands” of calligraphers or painters. In reading art history and the natural sciences alongside one another, we arrive at a far more nuanced understanding of how the history of form emerged in early modernity.
 
Image: Page from Various calligraphers (Japan), A Mirror of Gathered Seaweed (Mokagami), 8th-17th century album Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

 

 


 

12 November 2025
 
Art History and Projective Tests 
Whitney Davis
Oakeshott Room, Lincoln College
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
5 hoa research seminar

Between about 1920 and 1955, especially in the USA and Britain, pictures began to be used in a variety of 'projective tests', which became influential in medicine, education, industry, and government. Some tested for 'intelligence', personality factors, and 'unconscious' mental inclinations; some were used in psychodiagnostic contexts (e.g., in identifying schizophrenia); and some were used in psychotherapy. The most well known, the Thematic Apperception Test, used photographs from magazines and other sources as well as well-known works of European and American art (especially in Symbolist and Expressionist traditions) and/or specially commissioned artworks. Subjects usually provided a 'story' for the pictures, which was then interpreted or even 'scored' by a clinician, often in quasi-psychoanalytic terms. The lecture considers the contexts and stakes of this enterprise, comparing and contrasting art-historical approaches to the interpretation of (the very same) pictures by projective test procedures. What were the theoretical bases of projective testing, including aesthetic ideologies? What can art and cultural historians learn from projective tests--and vice versa?

 

 


 

11 November 2025
 
Critical (Ms.) Fortune: A Feminist History of the Italian Renaissance?
Maria H. Loh (Princeton)
Cinema, The Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities
4 hoa research seminar
Kairos, Occasio, and Fortuna are complex facets of the same deity of luck, but at a certain moment in time a troubling, schizophrenic iconography came into being, which cast Lady Luck as a distinctively female force, both a capricious agent controlling the Wheel of Fortune and also as a body that could be either violently seized or wildly adored. This lecture will explore the uneasy sexualization of Fortuna in some early modern images such as an engraving by Marcantonio Raimondi in the Metropolitan Museum that bears the descriptive title A Naked Man Holding Fortune by the Hair and Whipping Her. Rather than simply cancelling an image as such, I would like to take the opportunity to reflect upon the ideological work that such artworks accomplished in their own time and to push us to think about how we can make sense of them as twenty-first-century viewers.

 

 


 

5 November 2025
 
Monstrous Beauty: A Feminist Revision of Chinoiserie 
Iris Moon 
Oakeshott Room, Lincoln College
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
3 hoa research seminar
This talk explores the exhibition, Monstrous Beauty: A Feminist Revision of Chinoiserie (March 24-August 17, 2025, The Metropolitan Museum of Art), which reimagined the story of European porcelain through a feminist lens. When porcelain arrived in early modern Europe from China, it led to the rise of Chinoiserie, a decorative style that encompassed Europe’s fantasies of the East and fixations on the exotic, along with new ideas about women, sexuality, and race. The exhibition explored how this fragile material shaped both European women’s identities and racial and cultural stereotypes around Asian women. Shattering the illusion of chinoiserie as a neutral, harmless fantasy, Monstrous Beauty adopts a critical glance at the historical style and its afterlives, recasting negative terms through a lens of female empowerment. The talk will provide a behind-the-scenes look at the curatorial process, its hits and misses, while also discussing the stakes of this exhibition and how it contributed new approaches to the study of European decorative arts today.

 

 


 

29 October 2025

Gold Rush, Congo Style: Gustav Klimt’s Marble Mosaic Frieze in the Palais Stoclet
Deborah Silverman
Cinema, The Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities
2 hoa research seminar
This lecture explores a work by Gustav Klimt in a new context: the period of King Leopold II’s “Congo Free State” (1885-1908)—a distant, resource rich entity of extraction that remade Belgium into a global powerhouse. Gustav Klimt achieved what he considered the highpoint of his experiments with ornament not in Vienna, but in Brussels, where he designed, with unlimited budget, a large-scale frieze of gold and bejeweled mosaics to wrap the dining room walls for the Palais Stoclet (1905-1911). This remarkable work revitalized Klimt’s career and changed his style. The Stoclet project also concentrates myriad and unrecognized connections to Africa. Klimt became enmeshed in a web of links that tied his patron and circles of Brussels elites to the Congo and to Egypt. These shape not only the circumstances of his commission but the stylistic forms, raw materials, and figural compositions that he devised for it. Vienna, golden style, is reborn in the gold rush of Belgian empire. 
 
By restoring imperialism to the center of the story, the lecture identifies two coordinates for our analytic field. First, the stylistic development of Klimt’s “golden style,” offering new evidence for his reliance on Egyptian tomb art for his Brussels project. Here a new link emerges between ancient Egyptian archaeology and Belgian occupation of the Congo as conduits of modernist primitivism. Second, the Stoclet house is reconceptualized as an imperial Gesamtkunstwerk, embodying not only a resplendent unity of all the arts but a voracious entitlement to global bounty, exemplified in Klimt’s patron, the triumphant Brussels banker-engineer Adolphe Stoclet. By close focus on this work of Gustav Klimt and his patron, a missing history is made visible: the facts, artifacts, sources, resources—both financial and cultural—and raw materials that are inextricably linked to European expansionism in Africa.
 
Image: Detail of Left dining room wall of the Palais Stoclet, Marble, mosaic, gold leaf, hammered gold, incised gold and embedded jewel stones, 1911

 

 


 

22 October 2025
 
Tudor Liveliness? Discovering Vividness in Post-Reformation England
Dr Christina Faraday 
Cinema, The Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities
1 hoa research seminar

In Tudor England, artworks were often described as ‘lively’. What did this mean in a culture where naturalism was an alien concept? And in a time of religious upheaval, when the misuse of images might lure the soul to hell, how could liveliness be a good thing? In this talk we'll explore a hitherto neglected aspect of Tudor art, re-enlivening the period’s vivid visual and material culture and discovering how artists were able to make absent things present, and make the dead live.

 

 


2024

 

 

4 December 2024
 
Tigers & Dragons: Imagining India and Wales in (Post)Colonial Britain
Dr Zehra Jumabhoy (University of Bristol)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
hoa research seminars logo

What do the Indian Tiger and the Welsh Dragon share in common vis-à-vis the Lion of Britannia? If India was the Jewel in the Imperial Crown, could we argue that Wales was England’s first colony? How should Britain deal with its colonial past, internal and external? As Wales struggles for its identity within ‘British-ness’, how should it acknowledge the way it contributed to, benefited from and, even, suffered for Britain’s Imperial ambitions? This talk will consider these questions, in the context of a major exhibition, Tigers and Dragons: India and Wales in Britain, which will take place at the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery in Swansea from 23rd May to October in 2025. The curators argue that the Welsh involvement in Empire was often different to the larger British experience. Taking no sides politically, it seeks to join the dots between India and Wales, to explore Imperial connections as well as probe national equivalences between the ‘Welsh’ Dragon and ‘Indian’ Tiger. As an exhibition Tigers & Dragons has both a contemporary and historic element; spotlighting Wales-based practitioners alongside art from South Asia and its diasporas, serving as a platform for debates about ‘British’ heritage, decolonialisation and competing nationalisms. This talk will address some of the complexities of the conceptual issues that the show seeks to explore visually. It asks: Do the beleaguered red dragon of Wales and the subjugated ‘Indian’ Tiger continue to share common ground? Or have the ‘(post)colonial’ tables have turned – in India’s favour?

 

 


 

27 November 2024
 
Unraveling Stilfragen: Alois Riegl and the Crafting of Early Formalist Art History
Dr Jesse Lockard (Corpus Christi College) & Prof Meekyung MacMurdie (University of Utah)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
unraveling stilfragen
Representing art history’s now-standard appreciation of Alois Riegl  (1858-1905), Svetlana Alpers described Riegl’s work as a contestation to the “normative center” of the field, admiring the Viennese scholar’s concern with art that was “at best considered marginal, at worst […] degenerate.” Riegl’s influential challenge to his still-emerging discipline began in earnest with the publication of Stilfragen (1893), the first of his works to receive widespread recognition. In this book, Riegl advanced two of his most celebrated (and conceptually interwoven) contributions. First, he developed the basis of an analytic model that connected the form of an artifact to the “spirit” of the era in which it was made. Second, he championed the study of anonymous applied arts, repudiating the discipline’s biographical, textual, and figural biases. Today, Stilfragen is no longer widely read and often referenced only in relation to Riegl’s later, more well-known works, especially Spätrömische Kunstindustrie (1901) and Der moderne Denkmalkultus (1903). Our talk offers a new interpretation of Stilfragen, arguing for its overlooked significance in shaping formalist aesthetic theory. 
 
We argue that crucial aspects of the innovative analytic method Riegl deployed in Stilfragen emerged from ways of knowing located outside of academia—particularly from his technical expertise with textiles and a hitherto unnoted engagement with the complex ecology of images that circulated through nineteenth-century European pattern books, which compiled examples of ornament for the practical use of artists and designers. Highlighting the central role of photography and other book technologies in the formation of Riegl’s methodologies, this talk offers an unconventional account of basic formalist hermeneutics like line and color. Practicing a material approach to critical historiography, we reintegrate the history of artisanal knowledge into the development of art history’s foundational tools and canonic narratives.

 

 


 

20 November 2024
 
Queering Medieval Art at the Met Cloisters, New York
Prof Nancy Thebaut (St Catherine’s College)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
Nancy Thebaut
Nancy Thebaut is an Associate Professor in the Department of History of Art and a Tutorial Fellow of St Catherine’s College. She is a historian of European medieval art and architecture. Her current research interests fall into two broad categories: the interplay of works of art, ritual practices, and theology, especially ca. 800-1200, and the ways that objects shaped and subverted notions of gender, sexuality, and desire in the long Middle Ages. To date, her publications have focused primarily on medieval manuscripts, namely their illuminations and the ivory relief carvings that once adorned their covers.
 
Nancy is also committed to bringing art history to a broad public through curatorial work. She is co-curating with Melanie Holcomb an exhibition on gender, sexuality, and love in medieval art that will open at The Cloisters (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) in 2025. She has also pursued curatorial projects at the Tang Teaching Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Musée Carnavalet, and Musée de Cluny. 

 

 

 


 
13 November 2024
 
Wedgwood’s Model Colonies: Australian Clay, British Moulds, and the New Etruria
Dr Brigid von Preussen (Associate Member, Faculty of History)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
sydney cove medallion  lyon turnbull

This talk uses the so-called ‘Sydney Cove Medallion’, made by Josiah Wedgwood’s factory in 1789, to explore the claims and contradictions of British colonialism in Australia in the final decades of the eighteenth century. In Wedgwood’s medallion, the very substance of the new colony — its land — became the medium for a classicised allegory of colonial endeavour. Australian clay was pressed into a British mould, just as the land of New South Wales was assumed to be ‘virgin’ territory, ready be imprinted with the image of the mother country, while the claims of its Aboriginal inhabitants were ignored. As I will show, the civilisation of ancient Etruria was envisioned as a model for the penal colony in Australia as well as for Wedgwood’s factory in Staffordshire, creating an equivalence between the colonial project and the domestic manufacture of ceramics. I argue that in the Sydney Cove medallion, clay acts as both a medium and a metaphor linking ideas about agriculture, industry, civilisation, and the practice of art itself.

 

 


 

6 November 2024
 
Disobeying Arts and Crafts Studies Orthodoxy
Thomas Cooper (Lincoln College)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
hoa research seminars logo

What does it meant to describe someone as ‘Arts and Crafts’? What does it mean to define craftspeople, designers, architects and theorists active the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries as being members of, or associated with, the Arts and Crafts movement? I have these and other questions in mind as I discuss my research on the career and work of the artist, writer and teacher, May Morris (1862-1938). While Morris has been understood as a leading figure of the Arts and Crafts movement, in my current project I am consciously attempting to find an alternative way to think about and write a critical history of her career and work. In doing so, I am disobeying Arts and Crafts orthodoxy. But, by the same token, I am experimenting with ways of opening up the possibilities of what is known and sayable within Arts and Crafts scholarship.

 

 


 

30 October 2024
 
Thinking through Photographic Backgrounds & Staged Images of American History
Prof Erin Pauwels (2024-2025 Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
 lissa rivera absence edwardsville illinois 1

This lecture explores how the visual analysis of backgrounds, backdrops, and negative spaces in photographic compositions can reveal art’s complicity in supporting American imperialism during the late nineteenth century. Applying this method to portraits of immigrants to the United States and Indigenous Peoples engaged in diplomatic relations with the US government demonstrates how photography operated as a public platform for asserting national identity and cultural sovereignty. It also shows how both subjects and photographers negotiated terms of self-representation through figure-ground relationships, reclaiming even posed and theatrically-constructed images as evidence of complex dynamics between power, identity, and agency in visual culture.

 

Image: Edwardsville, Illinois, from the series Absence Portraits. 2011, printed 2022. Lissa Rivera. Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

 


 

24 October 2024
 
Unknotting Dürer’s ‘Jerome’ 
Prof Alexander Marr (University of Cambridge)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
 
(A June and Simon Li Foundation Special Lecture)
unknotting durers jerome

The pendulous gourd in Dürer’s ‘St Jerome in his Study‘ (1514) has long been an object of fascination and frustration for art historians. While most acknowledge that by including this bulbous fruit so prominently in the print Dürer intended it to have some special meaning, nobody can quite agree on what that meaning is. Interpretations have tended to be iconographical, drawing on sometimes obscure texts while largely ignoring the object’s curious, virtuosic form. Focusing on that form and the internal logic of the image, this talk will explore how, in the St Jerome, Dürer tackled the knotty problems of representation, ornament and signification.

 

 


2023

 

28 November 2023
 
Carrie Mae Weems and the Afterlives of Images: A Visual Correspondence
Tina M. Campt
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
tina m campt

This talk explores the unique forms of visual and sonic correspondence found in the work of one of the preeminent contemporary artists of her generation: Carrie Mae Weems. It explores her engagement with the Black body – both her own, as well as mundane and iconic media figurations of it – as a bridge of contact and commemoration between artist and audience, individual and collective, and the living and departed. Examining a selection of her most recent works, the talk asks us to consider how Black artists remake and resuscitate images as a conduit of connection that force us to grapple simultaneously with the converging temporalities of Black subjection and Black possibility.

 

 


 

22 November 2023
 
Reading big significance into a small decorative effort: Steps towards a history of modern British craft
Imogen Hart
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
ih research seminar image
What does a William de Morgan lustreware vase from the 1870s have to do with a block-printed linen textile made by Phyllis Barron and Dorothy Larcher in the 1930s? Tracing the making practices, exhibition spaces, and critics that link these two objects, the talk explores how the category of craft was constructed and navigated in Britain between the Arts and Crafts movement and the Second World War. It focuses in particular on the writing of May Morris and follows her example by paying attention to the complexity of the decorative surface.
 
Image: William De Morgan, lustre-glazed earthenware vase, 1872–1907, The De Morgan Foundation

 

 

 

 


 

15 November 2023
 
'Balkan Baroque,' Revisited
Dr Marko Ilić
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
marko ilic
This talk draws on past and current research to discuss Marina Abramović’s Balkan Baroque, first performed at the 47th Venice Biennale in 1997. Arguably one of the most well-known art projects of the 1990s, Balkan Baroque consisted of the artist scrubbing over 1,500 cow bones with a metal brush and soapy water for six hours a day, over four consecutive days. A metaphorical act of mourning for the atrocities committed in the Bosnian War, Balkan Baroque immediately caused a stir; it went on to win the Biennale’s highest honour, the Golden Lion.
 
Visit the major Marina Abramović retrospective at the Royal Academy today and you will find a whole gallery dedicated to this project. In a dimly-lit room thematising the ‘communist body,’ complete with crimson walls and matching carpets, a pile of replica bones stand in for the artist’s original act of ‘self-purification.’ This talk takes the current display of Balkan Baroque in London as an opportunity to look back on what it meant for audiences at the time, and to think through what significance it might have for us now.

 

 

 


 

8 November 2023
 
Journeys for Colour: British Orientalism and the Victorian Colour Revolution
Madeline Hewitson
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
john frederick lewis the pipe bearer
This talk draws on research from the current exhibition ‘Colour Revolution: Victorian Art, Fashion & Design’. 
 
In the nineteenth century, the Middle East was a new destination to experience colour. Unsurprisingly, artists were at the forefront of this new wave of mass British tourism. They went in search of the opportunity to discern an altogether new understanding of the relationship between environment, colour, and light. Victorian artists approached the colours of the Orient with reverence and the receptiveness of a willing student. However, the idea of the alterity of Eastern colour, that it was somehow different to the colours of the West, implies the same divisive hierarchy Edward Said first identified in Orientalism (1978).
 
However, colour also offers, to use Mary Louise Pratt’s term, a contact zone ‘a social space where disparate cultures meet, clash, and grapple with each other’ as well as Natasha Eaton’s notion of the ‘chromozone’. In this sense, colour was an active agent that confronted and clung to British artists’ palettes and canvases in transformative ways. As Frederic Leighton wrote as he watched a Damascene sunset, ‘It has dyed our spirits in colours that can never be washed out.’
 
This paper will closely read the work of several key British Orientalists featured in the exhibition to understand the role of colour in a selection of depictions of the Middle East. It will explore the way colour was used to convey Orientalist themes and how artists adapted the idea of a chromatic education in global and inter-imperial contexts. 
 
Image: John Frederick Lewis, The Pipe Bearer, 1856, Birmingham Museum Trust

 

 


 

1 November 2023
 
Why Do We Need to Reimagine Modernism? The Centre-Periphery Problem in the History of Modernist Art
Partha Mitter
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
partha mitter

The heterogeneous character of contemporary global art practices has given rise to anxiety about the end of art history as a grand Hegelian narrative.  The constant merry-go-round of international biennales, art fairs and auctions, where select artists from the peripheries are trumpeted as evidence that the modernist art of the West, and the Rest of the World, now share certain common values.  As my talk will argue, rather than being universal, these values are in fact the product of the western modernism and its special claims to universality.

 

 


 

25 October 2023
 
Voicing the Archive
Marysia Lewandowska
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
voiving the archive

Considering the role of the archive as a tool helps to address the relationships between people, their ideas and things that survived the dispersal and fragmentation associated with the passage of time. The aim of my research-based projects must be in part to keep insisting on what is present and what can be presented, to think about the present as a process of emergence captured in a distinct moment of attention. This seems especially relevant when tracing women’s cultural contributions and difficulties associated with finding their material evidence. One of the ongoing preoccupations of my practice lies in the interrogation of voice and voicing understood in its wider sense as contribution and political agency. Confronting absence, void, erasure or silence often acts as a catalyst for constructing an artwork, demanding that it performs a corrective intervention in the process of re-visiting histories now. The value of documents encountered in the process of research lies not only in what they record or reveal but more importantly in understanding the cultural circumstances of the decades which produced them. I tend to treat sound and voice as agents in contemporary manifestations of political imaginary deployed through listening and feedback. This is consistent with my long-term commitment to investigating the role women’s voices continue to play in diverse social contexts. The tactics associated with my practice urge audiences to re-discover and re-arrange the internal “structures of feeling” in which archival knowledge, material traces, artistic expression and open access have all been given a chance to cross-pollinate and to be heard.

 

Image: Tender Museum, Muzeum Sztuki Łódź 2009

 

 


2022

 

 

26 November 2022
 
The Sky Is Falling: Ambition and Hubris in the Early Modern Sky
Professor Maria H. Loh (Hunter College)
Mary Sunley Lecture Theatre, St Catherine's College
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
hoa research seminars logo
There is a delicious drawing in the Ashmolean Museum that shows the lantern of the Florentine Duomo being smashed to pieces. The artist and date are unknown, although some have connected the image to a terrible storm that knocked the gilded cross and orb off the top of the Florentine cathedral on a cold winter's night in 1601. Strange things were known to fall out of the skies. Hail storms, frogs, crucifixes, and sometimes even people, too. This paper focuses on Dosso Dossi's peculiar Portrait of a Gentleman in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. A man. A labyrinth. An armillary sphere. A little pear. A donkey. A bolt of lightning. And a smouldering pair of wings. The cryptic portrait serves as a point of departure and return in order to consider representations of the early modern sky as an ambivalent site of ambition and hubris, of hope and anxiety. https://collections.ashmolean.org/collection/search/per_page/25/offset/0/sort_by/relevance/object/41980 

 

 


 

 

9 November 2022
 
Undetectability: Scott Burton, Public Art, and Visibility in the First Decade of the AIDS Crisis 
David J. Getsy (University of Virginia, Charlottesville)
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
 
 
(Sponsored by the June and Simon Li Foundation)
thumbnail burton twopartchair 1986 inartaidsamerica2016

Scott Burton was one of the most well-known proponents of the new public art in the United States in the 1980s, and his work involved making site-specific sculptures of furniture that anonymously served the passerby. These seemingly innocuous functional artworks, however, were based in Burton’s long-running investigation into the queer experiences of public behavior, cruising, BDSM, and tactical dissemblance. Burton’s sculptures hide in plain sight, and this talk will examine their undetectability in the context of the first decade of the on-going AIDS crisis.  Burton’s sculpture was both materially and conceptually tied up with the cultural battles over representation and contagion, and his works allow for an alternate account of the visibility politics that tend to dominate histories of AIDS and queer art in the 1980s. Burton’s contribution, Getsy will argue, was his reimagining of sculpture’s long-standing associations with embodiment and the figure through his sculptures’ self-abnegation, practice of support, and facilitation of contact—both physical and social.

 

 


 

15 June  2022
 
Iberian Exchanges: Editing Art and Artists between Iberian and Global Geographies, 1450-1550
Dr Costanza Beltrami and Sylvia Alvares-Correa
Lecture Theatre, History Faculty, George Street
hoa research seminars logo

This presentation explores the main questions which emerged in the process of editing the volume Art and Artists between Iberian and Global Geographies, 1450–1550. Featuring authors from seven different countries, the collection aims to refashion the geography and chronology of artistic exchange in the Late Medieval and Renaissance periods. Focusing on the Iberian world—defined as both the Peninsula and Portugal and Spain’s overseas territories—the volume demonstrates the historical and theoretical importance of this long-marginalized region. Ranging from Sardinia to Madeira, Antwerp to Potosí, the chapters collected here construct a complex image of contacts moving in and out, north and south, east and west of the Peninsula. Several media and geographies are interwoven to create a rich tapestry held together by the concept of ‘itinerant’ artworks, artists and ideas. The essays challenge paradigms of centre and periphery, medieval and modern, local and migrant.  

Yet the process of editing the volume poses difficult questions. Are the artists and objects discussed in the essays ‘hybrids’? To what extent was medieval Iberia a geographical and artistic unit? How can exchanges between Iberian possessions be conceptualised if they bypassed the Peninsula itself? Was artistic exchange in this period different from that which preceded and followed it? Does our sense of 1492 as a moment of global chronological rupture need to be nuanced? In this presentation, the editors will propose some working answers developed in the volume’s Introduction.

 

 


 

8 June 2022
 
A Frame for Thomas Stothard's Voyage of the Sable Venus (1794)
Prof Cora Gilroy-Ware (Department of History of Art, University of Oxford)
Auditorium, St John's College
thumbnail
Reproduced as an engraving by William Grainger, Thomas Stothard’s lost painting The Voyage of the Sable Venus on her Journey from Angola to the West Indies depicts an enslaved woman in the guise of the Roman goddess of love. Due to its striking and unusual imagery, this British print has since been adapted by several African American practitioners, including, most recently, Kara Walker in her installation for Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall. The original circumstances of the image’s production, however, are rarely taken into account. This talk locates the Sable Venus in time, taking a close look at the publication in which it was first circulated