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Renaissance Society of America Annual Meeting, Toronto, 17-19 March 2019

 

Early Modern Technologies of Art Making

 

Can technologies of art enable us to reconsider the early modern
interactions between "local" and the "global?" Seeking to answer this
question, the proposed panel takes up art technology as a hermeneutic tool
to analyze production of art in the early modern period. In this period,
technologies of art involved specialized and often localized practices that
required systematic application of techniques, materials, and tools that did
not travel as readily as the objects they helped to generate. Although
embedded in cultural objects, artworks and materials exchanged across the
Silk Road and the Oceanic networks of trade, art technologies were seldom
known to those who acquired these objects of cross-cultural exchange. In
contrast to the mobility of inimitable artifacts and images art technologies
were often intangible and unknown, which heightened the foreignness and
desirability of objects produced with their application. Attempting to
recreate foreign objects using local technologies, practitioners across
Europe, Near East, Asia, and the Americas made all kinds of hybrid
things-things that were neither local nor foreign, but uniquely, early
modern.

 

Notable examples of objects and materials evoking the hybrid forms of early
modern art production include Indian dyed textiles that mirrored Dutch
prints, Mexican feather painting that turned an "Old-world" technology into
a "New World"-adaptation, Renaissance images that reproduced Ottoman
carpets, embroideries, and metalwork, as well as Chinese silk and porcelain,
and Japanese lacquer. Dyestuff, namely Cochineal, voyaged with the European
travelers from the South Americas to Europe and stimulated conversations on
dyeing techniques. Exploring some of these and other examples, papers can
investigate any subject or objects of visual and material culture that
throws light on how art technologies can expand and enrich our understanding
of the early modern world.

 

Please send a 150-word abstracts, along with a title, keywords, and a CV
(300 words maximum) to Rajarshi Sengupta ([log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> ) and Ivana Vranic
([log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> ) by August 5, 2018.

 

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Renaissance Society of America Annual Meeting, Toronto, 17-19 March 2019

 

Health in Medicine and Visual Arts, 1300-1550

 

Artists and architects contributed to cultures of health in medieval and
early modern societies, yet their ties to medical practice are often
overlooked in modern scholarship. This session invites historians across
disciplines to compare their approaches to visual cultures of medicine
between 1300 and 1550. Which perspectives and methods might be productively
shared among historians of medicine, science, art, architecture, and other
specialties focused on care for the body, mind, and soul? A key objective is
to advance research on interactions between learned medicine (i.e., taught
in universities) and visual arts.

 

Papers are invited to address the body of knowledge by which artifacts and
monuments were believed to be therapeutic and/or protective. How and why
were such effects ascribed to images, objects, and spaces?

 

Topics might include

- images in medical astrology: instructions for their making and use

- restorative spaces in domestic and institutional buildings

- therapeutic works on paper: books, almanacs, calendars, prints

- apothecaries and foreign ingredients in the service of medicine and
pigment-making

- objects and environments used in regimens for preserving health and
hygiene

 

Intercultural, interregional, and transoceanic topics are welcome.

 

Paper proposals are due by August 5, 2018 to Jordan Famularo, Institute of
Fine Arts, New York University ([log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> ).
Proposals should include two documents: an abstract with paper title (250
words maximum) and CV. Please indicate the presenter's title and
affiliation.

 

Submissions are considered commitments to attend the conference if the
proposed panel is accepted and to be responsible for registration and
membership fees. Submission guidelines are available at
https://www.rsa.org/page/2019SubmissionsGuide.

 

 

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