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I am aware that the deadline has just passed, but:
A submission might still be accepted AND
the message contains a very useful web address:
The Royal collection: Russia-royalty-the Romanovs
AJ
 
  _____  

From: Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre (CCRAC)
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Friday, October 12, 2018 10:58 AM
To: Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre
Subject: Russia: Courtly Gifts and Cultural Diplomacy Conference
 
Dear all,
 
Please be aware that the deadline for submissions for the conference
'Russia: Courtly Gifts and Cultural Diplomacy' is approaching soon: 15th
October. 
 
Abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted to Dr Louise Hardiman
(Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre) at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] Please
include a paper title, your name, institution (if applicable), brief
biography, and full contact information (address, phone number, and email).
 
Please feel free to forward the CfP onto interested colleagues.
 
Best regards,
Kamila 
 
Call for Conference Papers 
Russia: Courtly Gifts and Cultural Diplomacy
Friday 22 March 2019 
Conference 10.00-18.00; Drinks reception 18.00-20:30
The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace, London
 
ccrac pic 1.jpg
Nicolas Chevalier, The Marriage of Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, 23
January 1874 (1874-75)
Image credit: Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
2018. 
A collaboration between Royal Collection Trust, Cambridge Courtauld Russian
Art Centre and The Burlington Magazine, this one-day international academic
conference takes its cue from the exhibition, ‘Russia: Royalty and the
Romanovs’, to be held at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace, London,
from 9 November 2018 to 28 April 2019. 
The exhibition explores the relationship between Britain and Russia and
their royal families through the stories of art and objects in the Royal
Collection, charting a history of alliance, dynastic marriage, and war. Over
a long historical timeframe beginning with Peter the Great’s visit to London
in 1698, the display of portraits, sculpture, photographs, archival
documents and miniature masterpieces by Fabergé will illustrate historic
events, state ceremony, and family meetings between the rulers of the two
nations. 
For further information, visit the website of the Royal Collection at:
<https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/themes/exhibitions/russia-roy
alty-the-romanovs/the-queens-gallery-buckingham-palace>
https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/themes/exhibitions/russia-roya
lty-the-romanovs/the-queens-gallery-buckingham-palace
The conference ‘Russia: Courtly Gifts and Cultural Diplomacy’will explore
themes of courtly gift-giving and cultural diplomacy between Russia and the
west, a history that sits within the broader framework of the history of
British-Russian state and cultural relations. Scholarly research in these
areas has flourished over the past few decades, and continues to generate
debate and activity as the discipline of history itself has developed to
encompass the study of material culture; sensory history and the history of
emotions; domestic history; histories of power, ceremony and ritual; and
internationalism and cross-cultural exchange. Increasing access to archives
and the availability of new methodologies, not least the advent of the
‘digital’ humanities, have provided further opportunities for cutting-edge
research. This conference accordingly embraces innovative methodologies from
disciplines including history, art history, literature, area studies, and
anthropology to explore ways in which Russia’s international relations have
been forged, fermented and fractured by the exchange of material objects in
the social, cultural and political spheres.    
Call for Papers
Papers are invited on the following themes:
*     practices of gift-giving between the British and Russian monarchies
and governments
*     British-Russian cultural exchange at state and diplomatic level
*     interactions between cultural diplomacy, art and politics
*     cultural diplomacy and nationalism/imperialism
*     gift-exchange in the formation of royal collections
*     royal portraits as gifts
*     the exchange of court artists, craftsmen and other cultural producers
*     the role of ambassadors and cultural mediators
*     royal photographs, photographs of royalty
*     royal patronage in the cross-cultural context 
*     gift-giving and domestic court life
*     family, marriage, and dynastic ties
*     material culture and gift-giving
*     the material accompaniments of royal travel and state visits
*     transcultural ritual and ceremony 
*     custom, convention and protocol 
*     societies promoting cultural exchange between governments
*     the forging of cultural links between state departments
*     British artists and makers and Russian royal patronage (e.g., Godfrey
Kneller, Christopher Galloway, George Dawe, Christina Robertson, Charles
Cameron)
*     Russian artists and makers and British royal patronage (e.g., Carl
Fabergé, Savely Sorine)
Paper topics should relate to a British-Russian or British-Soviet context
and, to complement the exhibition, may address any period from the late
seventeenth to the mid twentieth century.
Papers shall be twenty minutes long and will be organised into panels of two
to four papers, with time allocated for questions on all papers at the end
of each session. 
Participation in the conference for both speakers and delegates will include
an opportunity to visit the exhibition and an early evening drinks
reception.
In accordance with the event policy for conferences held at The Queen’s
Gallery, the conference organisers will not be able to reimburse travel
expenses or arrange accommodation for speakers. Some limited funding may
become available as a result of grant applications that are in progress; if
you wish to be considered for this, please provide an estimate of costs as
part of your proposal.
Further information 
Abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted to Dr Louise Hardiman
(Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre) at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] Please
include a paper title, your name, institution (if applicable), brief
biography, and full contact information (address, phone number, and email).
Any questions about the conference may also be sent to the above email
address.
The deadline for submission of abstracts is Monday 15 October 2018.
Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre (CCRAC) is an academic collaboration
between the Department of History of Art at the University of Cambridge and
The Courtauld Institute of Art. CCRAC promotes research, collaboration and
scholarly debate on all aspects of the visual arts, architecture, design,
and exhibitions in Russia and the Soviet Union. For further information see
<http://www.ccrac.org.uk/> www.ccrac.org.uk. 
Organising Committee
Caroline de Guitaut (Royal Collection Trust), Dr Louise Hardiman (CCRAC),
Professor Rosalind P. Blakesley (University of Cambridge and CCRAC),
Professor John Milner (The Courtauld Institute of Art and CCRAC) and Michael
Hall (Editor, The Burlington Magazine).
logos-page-001.jpg
 
---
Kamila Kocialkowska
PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge 
Administrator, Cambridge Courtauld Russian Art Centre
Email:  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] 
 
Visit our website:  <http://www.ccrac.org.uk/> www.ccrac.org.uk
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www.facebook.com/groups/278013969001080/
 
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