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Symposium - Art and Its Afterlives

Posted on Monday, 22nd October 2012

Art and Its Afterlives
Fourth Early Modern Symposium

09.30 – 17.45, Saturday 17 November 2012 (with registration from 09.00)
The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN

Art and Its Afterlives aims to address the ways in which the work of art continues to resonate after its creation. While much art history takes as its focus the initial facture of the work of art, this one-day symposium explores what happens to early modern art after the moment of its making. How did early modern works continue to be created in their display, preservation, and reception from the moment of their creation on? Papers will examine how art is shaped by its afterlives – whether these collect, curate, cut up, cut out, copy or correct it – and the ways in which art both persists and changes through time as a material object, a field of generative meaning, and a subject of debate and interpretation. Material, technical and social histories as well as theoretical approaches drawn from the discipline of art history and other fields of the humanities are welcome. Accounts from curatorial practice and the field of museology are also encouraged.

The question of afterlife is an pertinent topic for art history in general, where the work of art is uniquely tied to a particular assemblage of materials which inevitably change with time, rendering fraught questions of preservation, the presence or possibility of copies, the idea of original state, and how a work of art is staged for a viewer. Less material but no less concrete, the interactions between the work and the viewer, and between the work and the its assumed referent are not stable but open to change. The question of afterlife is particularly relevant for the early modern period, when emergent art markets and cultures of collection allowed not only the circulation of artworks, but also their appropriation and adaptation. Taking as its point of departure Bourdieu’s encouragement to investigate ‘not only the material production of the work but also the production of the value of the work’, this symposium privileges the afterlives of art and the alternative histories they present.

Art and Its Afterlives is the fourth symposium of The Courtauld’s Early Modern Department.

Organised by Laura Sanders and Francesca Whitlum-Cooper (The Courtauld Institute of Art)


Ticket/entry details: £16 (£11 students, Courtauld staff/students and concessions)

BOOK ONLINE: http://courtauld-institute.digitalmuseum.co.uk Or send a cheque made payable to ‘Courtauld Institute of Art’ to: Research Forum Events Co-ordinator, Research Forum, The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN, stating the event title ‘Art and Its Afterlives’. For further information, email ResearchForumEvents@courtauld.ac.uk


PROGRAMME

09.00 – 09.30 Registration

09.30 – 09.40 Introduction – Laura Sanders and Francesca Whitlum-Cooper (The Courtauld Institute of Art)

09.40 – 11.00 SESSION 1: Finding the Original

Stephanie Knöll (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf): Holbein’s Images of Death and the Construction of Authorship and Authenticity in Nineteenth Century Art Historical Discussions

Antonia Putzger (Technische Universität, Berlin): What (or Who) Makes an Original? Maximilian I of Bavaria as Collector and Creator of German Renaissance Art

Gabriella Szalay (Columbia University, New York): Wipe It With a Damp Cloth! Restoring Early Netherlandish Paintings

Discussion

11.00 – 11.30 COFFEE/TEA BREAK (tea-coffee provided – seminar room 1)

11.30 – 13.10 SESSION 2: Contexts of Reception

Christina Ferando (Columbia University, New York): From Altarpiece to Masterpiece: Titian’s ‘Long Unnoticed’ Assumption of the Virgin

Giulia Weston (The Courtauld Institute of Art): Salvator Rosa’s British Afterlives

Edward Houle (McGill University, Montreal): The Petits Appartements at Versailles and the Vicissitudes of Heritage

Owen Hopkins (Royal Academy of Arts): Hawksmoor in the Twentieth Century

Discussion

13.10 – 14.10 BREAK FOR LUNCH (lunch not provided except for the speakers)

14.10 – 15.50 SESSION 3: Appropriation and Re-making

Jason Nguyen (Harvard University, Boston): Translation, Illustration, and Transmutation: Authorship and Authority in Claude Perrault’s Les dix livres d’architecture de Vitruve (1673)

Amy Concannon (Tate Britain, London): Cut, Paste, and Copy: Hubert Robert, François Boucher and the Culture of Appropriation Amongst French Artists in the Eighteenth Century

Heike Zech (Victoria and Albert Museum, London): From Sacred to Profane? The Afterlife of a Seventeenth Century Augsburg Masterpiece

Sian Bowen (Northumbria University, Newcastle): Capturing the Ephemeral: Materiality and Transience Through Drawing Practice

Discussion

15.50 – 16.20 COFFEE/TEA BREAK (tea-coffee provided – seminar room 1)

16.20 – 17.45 SESSION 4: Display and Preservation

Anna Bortolozzi (National Museum, Stockholm): Notes from the Underground: the Afterlife of Old St. Peter’s in the Vatican Grottos and Other Stories

Noémie Etienne (Barnard College, New York): From the Wall to the Museum: Material and Symbolic Transformations of Paintings in Paris in the Eighteenth Century

Ronit Milano (Ben-Gurion University, Israel): On Trojan Dogs and Long-Lasting Artistic Quarrels: The Case of Jeff Koons in Versailles

Discussion and concluding remarks

17.45 RECEPTION (Front Hall)