V&A/RCA History of Design Research Seminars
'Crooked cartwheles' and 'burste handgonnes': objects of everyday use
and accidents in sixteenth-century England
Dr Tomasz Gromelski,
Wolfson College, Oxford
5:00 pm, 12 November 2015
RCA – Humanities Seminar Room 1, Stevens Building on Jay Mews – Entrance
opposite Royal College of Art, South Kensington
For more information about the Research Seminars contact Katrina Royall
([log in to unmask]) or Matt Maslin ([log in to unmask])
www.rca.ac.uk/schools/school-of-humanities/hod/;
www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/m/ma-history-of-design/
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Note Giorgio Tagliaferro's paper in the conference below:
The Venice That Made Bellini
Kings Manor, University of York, Exhibition Square, York
20 November 2015
Most historians agree that Venice was at the height of its economic
might during the first half of the fifteenth century, sending galleys
on numerous shipping routes which poured rivers of gold into its
patrician hands. Venice's attention, however, was not limited to trade.
During the span of three doges (Michele Steno, Tommaso Mocenigo and
Francesco Foscari), Venice ferociously expanded into Italy's mainland,
rejecting the non-interventionist approach that it had maintained for
centuries. With new land, needs and pressures, society and culture
rapidly changed. And yet, the history of art has mostly remained silent
about this frantic period. What forms of artistic and architectural
culture did Venice privilege in the first half of the Quattrocento? And
why have they remained mostly invisible? By bringing together a number
of international scholars, this workshop intends to both reveal new
evidence and to ask questions about the ways by which Venice mobilised
artworks and architectural works in the early Quattrocento.
The workshop is free. Graduate and post-doc students are particularly
welcome.
To secure a place write to [log in to unmask] or phone the History of
Art Department 01904 322 978. (From abroad +44 1904 322 978)
Programme
10.05 Liz Prettejohn, Greetings
10.15 Emanuele Lugli, Venice's Cultural Energies, 1400- 1451. An
Introduction.
10.45 Giorgio Tagliaferro, Before the Bellini: Painters, Workshops
and Market Strategies in Early Fifteenth-Century Venice
11.15 Coffee break
11.30 Donal Cooper, Lovro Dobricevic and the Legacy of Venetian
Gothic Painting in Dalmatia
12.00 Silvia Fumian, From Late Gothic to the Renaissance through
Humanism: Venetian Manuscript Illumination, 1400-1450
12.30 Lunch break
14.00 Daniel Wallace Maze, Young Giovanni Bellini
14.30 Peter Humfrey, Antonio Vivarini's 'St Peter Martyr' Polyptych
15.00 Caroline Campbell, Bellini and the Santo
15.30 Tea break
15.45 Roundtable discussion, with Beverly Louise Brown and Amanda
Lillie
16.45 Conclusions
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