Call for Papers:
MADE IN NEW YORK
The Twenty-Seventh Annual Parsons/Cooper Hewitt Graduate Student
Symposium on the History of Design
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York.
April 26 and 27, 2018.
A unique confluence of circumstances made New York City both a chief
entrepot of early America and something of a cultural anomaly in the
country. We are looking for papers that explore the history of making,
fabrication, industry and crafts in New York--on large and small
scales, high design and popular culture, tangible goods and media
product--from the Dutch founding of the city, or even before, to the
present day.
Especially after the opening of Erie Canal in 1825, which made New
York the chief nexus of transportation of goods between the coast and
inland, the city grew to be one of the largest manufacturing centers
in the country: the leader in fashion and high style, and in shopping
culture, earning it the sobriquet The Great Emporium. New York City
was also the media center of the country in the 1800s, home to
publishing houses and, by the early 20th century, a nascent film
industry, establishing and disseminating American cultural norms and
archetypes. At the same time, the city was an unruly, diverse mixture
of people and interests, which sometime erupted into conflicts such as
gang wars and riots. More diverse than many other American cities,
even in the 18th century, a major center of immigration, more highly
urbanized, and more open to social experimentation than other parts of
the country, New York has often been seen as in but not fully of
America: a symbol of otherness.
Today, large-scale manufacturing has long since left the city, but a
vibrant culture of making remains. From artisanal workshops to
medium-scale factories, New Yorkers continue to produce tangible
goods. Local production is also an essential factor in creating an
environmentally sustainable city.
In examining the material culture output of the city both past and
present, we hope to explore these and other themes. What has been
manufactured in New York, by whom, and for whom? What is being made
now? What roles have New York-made products had in the formulation of
American culture? How have the cultural associations of the city
developed, been contested, and shifted amongst different
constituencies, and how have those meanings accrued onto objects made
in the city? How has consumer culture developed in the city? How have
goods been advertised and sold? What aesthetics and styles grow out of
the unique circumstances of the city’s street grid, buildings, and/or
modes of living?
Proposals are welcome from graduate students at any level in fields
such as Art History, History of Design, History of the Decorative
Arts, Design Studies, History of Architecture, Fashion Studies,
Cultural Anthropology, Consumer Studies, Design and Technology, Media
Studies, Museum Studies, Food Studies, etc.
This year’s Voorsanger Keynote speaker will be Peter M. Kenny,
co-President of Classical American Homes Preservation Trust and former
Ruth Bigelow Wriston Curator of American Decorative Arts and
Administrator of the American Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
As a historian of American furniture and interiors, much of Dr.
Kenny’s work has been with New-York-based makers, including
publications such as Duncan Phyfe: Master Cabinetmaker in New York
(2011), Honore Lannuier, Cabinet Maker from Paris: The Life and Work
of a French Ebeniste in Federal New York (1998), and American Kasten:
the Dutch-Style Cupboards of New York and New Jersey, 1650-1800
(1991). The symposium's keynote address is dedicated to the late
Catherine Hoover Voorsanger.
The Keynote will be on Thursday evening, April 26, 2016 and the
symposium sessions will be in the morning and afternoon on Friday,
April 27.
To submit a proposal, send a two-page abstract, one-page bibliography
and a c.v. to:
Ethan Robey
MA Program in the History of Design and Curatorial Studies
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Deadline for proposals: January 29, 2018.
The symposium is sponsored by the MA Program in the History of Design
and Curatorial Studies offered jointly by Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian
Design Museum and Parsons School of Design.
ETHAN ROBEY
Assistant Professor of the History of Decorative Art and Design
PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN
2 EAST 91ST STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10128
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T 212.849.8346 / F 212.849.8347
@parsonsHDCS
newschool.edu/parsons/ma-history-design-curatorial-studies/
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