With apologies for the delay - but note that Barbara Furlotti's talk is
still to happen:
University of Zurich, March 22-May 10, 2011
Deadline: Mar 22, 2011
Public Lecture Announcement
University of Zurich
Chair of History of Early Modern Art and Executive Master in Art Market
Studies
Lecture course Economies of Art: Historical and Systematic Perspectives
The Chair of History of Early Modern Art and the Executive Master in
Art Market Studies are pleased to announce the following public
lectures:
22 March 2011, Dr. Dirk Boll, Christie’s
History of Auctioneering
29 March 2011, Prof. Dr. Oskar Bätschmann, SIK-ISEA
Gustave Courbert und die Selbstvermarktung des Künstlers
19 April 2011, Dr. Barbara Furlotti, Queen Mary University of London
Selling and acquiring Art in Rome: people, objects, practices
10 May 2011, Dr. Ilona Genoni, Christie’s
The History of Art Fairs
University of Zurich
Rämistraße 71
8006 Zurich
Tuesdays, 16.15 – 18.00
KOL-F-101
Coordinators: Prof. Dr. Tristan Weddigen and Dr. Nicolas Galley
The lectures examine current research concerning art market studies and
will complement the lecture course Economies of Art: Historical and
Systematic Perspectives organized by the chair of history of early
modern art of the university of Zurich in the spring term 2011. This
course provides insight into the history of the European art market
from the early modern period up to the present referring to iconography
and the systematic approach of the globalized art market. All the
lectures are public and listeners are welcome.
http://www.emams.uzh.ch
http://www.khist.uzh.ch/neuzeit.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Locating the Foreign in Early Modern Italy
Renaissance Society of America
March 22-24, 2012: Washington, D.C.
Long before the Grand Tour became de rigueur for European peripatetics,
the Italian peninsula witnessed an influx of merchants, pilgrims,
refugees, and slaves whose presence in Italy contributed to polyglot
cultures, multicultural exchange, and international commerce. Whether
attracted by piety, pleasure, or profit, or forced through poverty and
persecution, these outsiders challenged peninsular regimes to define
the proper social, economic, and cultural place for foreign
populations. Particularly when examined in the context of the Ottoman
wars in Europe, post-Tridentine repression, and the economic shift
towards the Atlantic, the presence of foreign people, ideas, and
merchandise in post-Renaissance Italy offers a compelling
counter-narrative that challenges the cultural stagnation and decline
of Italy’s “forgotten centuries.”
This panel will examine the social, economic, and cultural place of
foreign people and ideas in Italy between the late fifteenth and early
eighteenth centuries. Papers may investigate the physical presence of
foreigners and diasporas in Italy’s ghettos, fondacos, and
neighborhoods, or may examine the strategies used by peninsular
authorities in accommodating these people. Scholars are also
encouraged to submit papers that interpret the theme conceptually, by
interrogating ideas of the foreign propagated by early-modern Italians
or ideas of Italy held in the mind of foreigners. Cross-disciplinary
studies are welcome.
Please send a CV and paper abstract of up to 250 words by April 11,
2011 to: [log in to unmask]
Panel Chair: Daniel Bornstein, [log in to unmask]
Panel Co-organizers:
Lisa M. Lillie, Washington University, [log in to unmask]
Stephanie Nadalo, Northwestern University, [log in to unmask]
Lisa M. Lillie
PhD Student, Department of History
Washington University in St. Louis
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Early Modern Architecture Request for Information on
Research Projects in Progress
The Early Modern Architecture initiative
(http://earlymodernarchitecture.com) is now starting a list of research
projects in progress, in response to a series of inquiries following
the announcement of our PhD dissertation list and as an additional step
in forging a network of international and rigorous scholarly exchange.
As with the PhD dissertation list, we welcome projects from any
discipline and on any aspect of the architecture (design, theory, and
practice) of Europe and its colonies, 1400-1800.
If you have a research project in progress, please email us at
[log in to unmask] with your name, the working title of your
project, and the names of your department as well as institution. We
will then add your project to our list and will post the list as soon
as we have a number of projects.
More information is available on our website at:
http://wp.me/P1fiUy-qC.
Freek Schmidt (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Kimberley Skelton
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