Monthly Archives: September 2016

Ships, Clocks & Stars: The Quest for Longitude Exhibition @ Australia National Maritime Museum

Ships, Clocks & Stars: The Quest for Longitude
Australia National Maritime Museum, Sydney
5 May–30 October 2016

More info and tickets: http://www.anmm.gov.au/longitude

Discover the extraordinary nautical instruments that led to maritime history’s greatest scientific breakthrough.

For hundreds of years, European merchants staked their fortunes on long-distance voyages. Travel at sea was dangerous and safe passage relied on fair weather and effective navigation. Unlike on land, the sea has no fixed points to help seamen determine their position. This could lead to unnecessarily long voyages or the loss of ships, cargo and life.

Travelling from the National Maritime Museum, London, this award-winning exhibition tells the story of the search for better ways of navigating by finding longitude – distance east and west. It was a problem that had frustrated the greatest minds since the late 1400s. Three hundred years ago the first Longitude Act offered life-changing rewards for workable solutions. Eventually two emerged – using clocks and stars – which cracked the longitude problem and helped re-shape our understanding of the world.

The Emotional Object: Seminar/Workshop of Interest @ The University of Western Australia

“The Emotional Object: The Materiality of Friendship, Longing and Trust Among Dutch Migrants in Denmark and Beyond”, Dr Jette Linaa (Moesgaard Museum, Denmark)

Date: Monday 12 September, 2016
Time: 2:00-4:00pm
Venue: Philippa Maddern Seminar Room, Arts 1.33, The University of Western Australia
Registration: This is a free event but places are limited due to the venue. Please RSVP to Pam Bond if you wish to attend.

This seminar/workshop is organised by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, in conjunction with the Discipline of Archeology at The University of Western Australia, with objects kindly supplied by the Western Australian Museum.

The presence of foreign material culture is abundantly documented in many Danish archaeological publications, and written sources speak clearly of large and influential diaspora communities, mainly of German and Dutch origin, occupying elite positions in many Scandinavian urban centers. Especially the 16th century saw a marked increase, and up to one third of the citizens of the larger cities were of foreign origin around 1600.

Nevertheless, foreign objects (books, paintings and prints and porcelain cups as well as Italian and Spanish majolica plates and jars) have rarely been seen in an ethnic/cultural framework as representing evidence of the emotions of these foreigners, negotiation feelings of loss, community, friendship and trust through the use and exchange of objects. In Danish historical archaeology these objects have seen as evidence of trade; the presence of immigrants has barely been investigated and the emotional significance of these objects are so far under researched. This seminar challenges this by focusing on the emotional value of these objects as tokens of friendship, longing and trust based on the following research questions:

  • Who possessed the objects?
  • What were the emotional value of these objects?
  • How did the emotional value formed over time and how is this mirrored in the material culture that we know from history and archaeology?
  • How did the emotional objects negotiate feelings of longing, friendship and trust in the migrant worldview?

Dr. Jette Linaa is a curator in Historical Archaeology at Moesgaard Museum, Denmark and a lecturer at the Department of Archaeology, University of Aarhus and at the Department of Maritime Archaeology at the University of Southern Denmark. She is currently the head of the Danish Council for Independent Research/Humanities project: Urban Diaspora: Diaspora Communities and Materiality in Early Modern Urban centres (2014-2017). This cross-national and cross-disciplinary research project unites 14 archaeologists, historians and scientists from 10 universities and museum in Denmark, Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands in the first large-scale effort to explore the materiality of migration in Scandinavia and beyond 1400-1700.

The Art of Adornment: Greek Jewellery from the 17th to 19th Centuries Exhibition @ Hellenic Museum Melbourne

The Art of Adornment: Greek Jewellery from the 17th to 19th Centuries
Hellenic Museum, Melbourne
From August 26, 2016

More info: http://www.hellenic.org.au/the-art-of-adornment

The latest collection from the Benaki Museum to travel to Australia’s Hellenic Museum tells a tale of more than just the wearing of jewellery. Opening Friday 26 August, 2016, The Art of Adornment: Greek Jewellery from the 17th to 19th Centuries features items that were said to bring the wearer good luck, enhance fertility, and ward off evil spirits for protection and prosperity.

The collection, that spans 300 years, features over 90 exquisite and intricate objects which highlight the artistry involved in jewellery making throughout this period as well as portraits in the gallery showing how these items were worn.

The exhibition has been divided geographically or thematically into seven main categories. They include: Greek islands; Jewellery and silverware for men; Asia Minor; Central Greece; Thessaly; Epirus; Northern Greece: Macedonia and Thrace.

Items in the collection include: a pair of earrings with pendants in the shape of caravels from Patmos, Dodecanese dated 18th c.; an amulet with a relief representation of St George on horseback slaying the dragon from the 19th c.; a head-cover ornament made up of silver, gilt details, corals, glass gems from Asia Minor dated 19th c.; a necklace consisting of three Austrian coins hung from a filigree chain from Thessaly dated second half of the 19th c.; marriage crowns decorated with flowers from Asia Minor dated second half of 19th c.; and a belt buckle decorated with polychrome enamel from Thessaly dated early 19th c.

After Shakespeare Exhibition @ The University of Melbourne

After Shakespeare
15 July 2016 – 15 January 2017
Noel Shaw Gallery, Baillieu Library, The University of Melbourne

More info: http://library.unimelb.edu.au/museumsandcollections/whats_on/exhibitions/current-items/after-shakespeare

To mark the 400th anniversary of the Bard’s death, the Baillieu Library exhibition After Shakespeare explores the author’s posthumous legacy, both in terms of writers who imitated or adapted his works (that is, literally wrote ‘after’ his style) and in terms of Shakespeare’s reputation and significance in the four centuries after his demise, with a particular emphasis on how his work has been received in Australia.

Bringing together for the first time two of only five known Australian copies of the Second Folio of Shakespeare’s works (1632), a unique promptbook for a slated Gold Rush era performance of Antony and Cleopatra at Melbourne’s Theatre Royal in 1856, and numerous production artefacts and ephemera, After Shakespeare offers a rare glimpse of important Shakespeariana from the University of Melbourne, the State Library of Victoria and the Melbourne Theatre Company.

In the Light of Gloriana Conference – Registration Closes on October 1

In the Light of Gloriana Conference
Tower of London
Nov 18-21, 2016

Join us on for 70 scholarly presentations and performances on a wide range of topics relating to the Elizabethan era, including 3 keynote speeches by Dr. Tracy Borman, Dr. John Cooper, and Dr. Carole Levin. We are also honored to have special guest speaker The Most Honorable Marquess of Salisbury.

Keynote speakers:

  • Dr. Tracy Borman: “The Private Life of Elizabeth I”
  • Dr. John Cooper: “Elizabeth I and the Palace of Westminster”
  • Dr. Carole Levin: “Boudicca and Elizabeth Rally Their Troops: ‘Two Queens Both Alike in Dignity’”

Registration closes on October 1, 2016.

For more information on the presentations and registration, please see our website (https://glorianasociety.org), and follow our Facebook page (www.facebook.com/GlorianaSociety) and Twitter feed (@glorianasoc).

University of Cambridge (St John’s College): Research Fellowships in Historical & Philosophical Studies – Call For Applications

University of Cambridge – St John’s College
Research Fellowships in Historical & Philosophical Studies

Location: Cambridge
Salary: Not specified
Hours: Full Time
Contract Type: Contract / Temporary

Research Fellowships, 2017

Applications are invited for Research Fellowships in Historical & Philosophical Studies and related fields intended for outstanding researchers early in their careers. The Fellowships offer an opportunity to carry out independent research in a stimulating and supportive academic environment. Applications will be accepted from any graduate of a university within or outside the United Kingdom.

All candidates should note that these Research Fellowships are extremely competitive and typically less than one candidate in 100 is successful.

Successful candidates are expected to be either graduate students, probably in the latter stages of their research leading to a PhD Degree, or post-doctoral researchers who have been awarded their PhD Degree after 1 October 2015. Candidates who do not fulfil these criteria are unlikely to be considered.

For full details and to apply, please visit http://research-fellowships.joh.cam.ac.uk

Applications must be submitted online and received by 17.00 BST on Monday 3 October, 2016.

God Save the Queen: Queenship and Prayerful Power – Call For Papers

God Save the Queen: Queenship and Prayerful Power

The use of prayers to support queenship is not new but has a long history. This collection of essays seeks to offer scholarship focused on examining the relationship between queens and the power of prayers. It is the aim of this collection to include essays on queens and queenship, including queen consorts, regnant queens, and queen mothers, fictional or historical queens, as well as incipient female heirs to the throne from the middle ages through the early modern and modern eras; and to include essays on queens from a broad region, including but not limited to European, Russian, Ottoman, Byzantine, Mongol, or New World queens. Essays should consider queens and the use, or power, of prayers in the context of: queens’ personal prayers, either written for or by them; prayer books; prayers as politics; public prayers, in praise and support, as well as in supplication, petition, or admonishment; private prayers; policy as prayer; images of queens at prayer. In addition, papers might examine what contemporaries considered appropriate realms of prayer for queens, including but not limited to prayers on occasions such as marriage, accession, childbirth, sickness, death, or intervention. What do prayers by or for queens suggest about religious identity, national identity, or authority (by definition not female)? What do prayers written for, or by, queens to a masculine deity reveal about gender ideals or anxieties?

Although previously some scholars have explored this subject in relation to individual queens in separate articles and books, the editors of this collection hope that this volume will allow people to assess similarities and differences in the ways that prayers were used in connection to queens across countries and across time. If you are interested in contributing to this volume, please send a 250 word abstract to the editors: sduncan@shc.edu, Renee.Bricker@ung.edu, and Margaret.Oakes@furman.edu.

Cerae (Vol. 4): Influence and Appropriation – Call For Papers

Influence and Appropriation

CERAE: An Australasian Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies is seeking contributions for its upcoming volume on the theme of “Influence and Appropriation”, to be published in 2017. We are, additionally, delighted to announce a prize of $200 for the best article published in this volume by a graduate student or early career researcher (details below).

Both individuals and entire cultural groups are influenced consciously and subconsciously as part of a receptive process, but they may actively respond to such influences by appropriating them for new purposes. Perhaps human beings cannot escape their influences, but think in terms of them regardless of whether they are taken as right or wrong, useful or otherwise. Such influences may have enduring effects on the lives of people and ideas, and may be co-opted for new social contexts to fit new purposes.
Contributors to this issue may consider some of the following areas:

  • How writers adapt received ideas and novel conceptual frameworks or adapt to them
  • How entire cultural groupings (national, vocational, socio-economic, religious, and so on) may be influenced by contact and exchange
  • The mentorship and authority of ideas and people
  • The use and abuse of old concepts for new polemics
  • The shifting influence of canonical texts across time
  • The way received ideas influence behaviours in specific situations
  • How medieval and early modern ideas are reshaped for use in modern situations

These topics are intended as guides. Any potential contributors who are unsure about the suitability of their idea are encouraged to contact the journal’s editor (Keagan Brewer) at editorcerae@gmail.com.

The deadline for themed submissions is Friday 18 November, 2016. In addition to themed articles, however, we also welcome non-themed submissions, which can be made at any point throughout the year.

SUBMISSION DETAILS:

Articles should be approximately 5000-7000 words. Further details regarding submission, including author guidelines and the journal’s style sheet, can be found online at http://openjournals.arts.uwa.edu.au/index.php/cerae/about/submissions.

PRIZES:

Cerae is delighted to announce a prize of $200 for the best article to be published in Volume 4 by a graduate student or early career researcher (defined as five years out from PhD completion). Cerae is able to offer this prize thanks to the generosity of our sponsors. For a full list of organizations which have supported us in the past, see our sponsorship page. The journal reserves the right not to award a prize in any given year if no articles of sufficiently high standard are submitted.

Private Collecting and Public Display: Art Markets and Museums – Call For Papers

Private Collecting and Public Display: Art Markets and Museums
University of Leeds
30-31 March, 2017

Keynote Speaker: Dr. Susanna Avery-Quash, Senior Research Curator (History of Collecting) at the National Gallery, London

This two-day conference investigates the relationships between ‘private’ collections of art (fine art, decorative art and antiquities), and the changing dynamics of their display in ‘public’ exhibitions and museums. This shift from ‘private’ to ‘public’ involves a complex dialectic of socio-cultural forces, together with an increasing engagement with the art market. The conference aims to explore the relationship between the ‘private’ and ‘public’ spheres of the home and the museum, and to situate this within the scholarship of the histories of the art market and collecting.

Art collections occupy a cultural space which can represent the individual identity of a collector; often as a manifestation of self-expression and social class. Many museums today arose from ‘private’ collections including the Wallace Collection, Musée Nissim de Camondo, the Frick Museum and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Whilst they now exist as ‘public’ spaces, many still signify the residues of the ‘private’ home of a collector. What processes do collections undergo when they move from a ‘private’ sphere to a ‘public’ exhibition space? In what ways are collections viewed differently in these environments?

How and when do ‘private’ collections move into the ‘public’ domain, and what does this tell us about the increasingly porous nature of these boundaries? Whilst the relationship between ‘private’ and ‘public’ art collecting takes on particular forms from the early modern period onwards, it emerged particularly in the latter half of the nineteenth century, with the creation of temporary exhibitions and permanent displays in museums that relied on donations from collectors. Many national museums are indebted to loans made by private individuals. The Waddesdon Bequest at the British Museum, the Wrightsman Galleries at the Metropolitan Museum, and the John Jones collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum, are key examples of the continuity of the private in the public. What are the ‘private’ to ‘public’ dynamics of these exchanges? How have museums negotiated the restrictions proposed by the collector for the display, containment, expansion or reinterpretation of their collection? What is the implication for the status and value of an object when ‘public’ works are sold and re-enter the art market? What meanings are attached to ‘public’ art objects when they begin, once again, to circulate in the art market?

The PGR subcommittee of the Centre for the Study of the Art and Antiques Market welcomes proposals for 20-minute papers which explore these themes or which address any other aspect of the private collecting and public display of collections, from the Early Modern period until the 21st century.

Topics can include but are not limited to:

  • The relationships between ‘private’ and ‘public’ spheres
  • The role and impact of the art market in the ‘public’ and ‘private’ realms
  • The history and role of temporary loan exhibitions
  • The role played by gender in collecting practices and bequests
  • Collecting and loaning objects by minority groups
  • Legacies of the collector
  • Philanthropy vs self-promotion
  • Deaccessioning- public museums selling art back into art market/into private collections
  • The dynamic of contemporary art collecting and public art galleries

To propose a paper: Please send a Word document with your contact information, paper title, an abstract of 300-500 words, and a short biographical note. Full session proposals for a panel
of three papers are also welcomed. Some travel bursaries will be available for accepted speakers.

Proposals should be sent to csaa@leeds.ac.uk by 1 November, 2016.