鈥榌H]e who changes his country or place of habitation seems to change his nature, talents, character, and personal habits, insomuch that sometimes he seems to be not the same man but another, and all dazed and stupefied鈥櫶
Giorgio Vasari on Rosso Fiorentino, trans. Gaston du C. Vere (1909)
In tracing the patterns of movement of people in and through different geographic regions 鈥 whether as merchants, pilgrims, scholars, soldiers, vagrants or the like 鈥 the highly mobile nature of many communities from the medieval to the early modern period has come to the fore in recent scholarship with particular clarity. As part of this scholarly trend, art historians have increasingly adopted the term 鈥榤obility鈥 as a byword for the study of the cultural effects of not only the migration of people (most notably artists and patrons) but also the concomitant flow between different geographic locales of images, objects, artefacts, materials, techniques and ideas.
This symposium seeks to explore how modern perceptions of artistic practice and visual experience in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries have been, and continue to be, remapped according to this new academic topos of movement, restlessness and itinerancy. In particular, this symposium intends to address the following questions: what sits behind the label of 鈥榤obility鈥? Does the study of migration and movement simply reformulate age-old art-historical concerns or does it offer a new and profitable avenue for exploring the interplay between notions of artistic exchange, stylistic development and, above all, regional or cultural identity? Is it possible to explore the nature of artistic encounter within (or indeed without) Europe in these terms or is this question rooted in, and bound by, the very notions of cultural coherence and geographic fixity that the study of mobility challenges?
听PROGRAMME
10.30 鈥 11.00听 听听听听听听听听听Registration
11.00 鈥 11.15听听听听听听听听听听听Welcome and opening remarks
Session 1: At the crossroads 鈥 chaired by Emily Markham
11.15 鈥 11.35 听听听听听听听听听听Genevieve Verdigel (The Warburg Institute, London):听The Magnetism of the Montagna workshop : Reconsidering the dialogues between engravers active in the Veneto circa 1500
11.35 鈥 11.55听听听听听听听听听听听Giulio Dalvit (The Courtauld Institute, London): The Presence of Northern European Artists in Siena in the Fifteenth Century
11.55 鈥 12.10听听听听听听听听听听听Discussion
12.10 鈥 12.20听听听听听听听听听听听Short break听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听
Session 2: Travelling objects and styles 鈥 chaired by Peter Crack
12.20 鈥 12.40 听听听听听听听听听听Elizabeth Nicholson (The Courtauld Institute, London):听The Movement of the Este Bacchanals: from Court City to Global Significance
12.40 鈥 13.00听听听听听听听听听听听Marcello Calogero (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa): Travelling drawings: rethinking Raphael in Bologna
13.00 鈥 13.15听听听听听听听听听听听Discussion
13.15 鈥 14.15听听听听听听听听听听听Break for lunch (lunch provided for speakers only in Seminar Room 1)
Session 3: Activating spaces 鈥 chaired by Saida Bondini
14.15 鈥 14.35 听听听听听听听听听听Erin Giffin (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit盲t, Munich):听Seeking devotion: relocations of the Santa Casa di Loreto
14.35 鈥 14.55听听听听听听听听听听听Laura Maria Somenzi (Emory University, Atlanta): Painting鈥檚 Moving Effects in the Teodelinda Chapel in Monza
14.55听鈥撎15.10听听听听听听听听听听听Discussion
15.10听鈥撎15.40听听听听听听听听听听听Tea/coffee break (Seminar Rooms 1 & 2)
Session 4: Moving ideas 鈥 chaired by Anna Merlini
15.40 鈥 16.00听听听听听听听听听听听Adriana Concin (91制片厂, London): Travelling Landscapes and the Construction of Identity between Florence and Vienna in the second half of the sixteenth-century
16.00 鈥 16.20听听听听听听听听听听 Angela Benza (Universit茅 de Gen猫ve, Geneva): 鈥淲hen duety shall move very castles of stone鈥: Mobility and pictorial performance in Hilliard鈥檚 Cumberland鈥檚 miniature (c. 1590)
16.20 鈥 16.45听听听听听听听听听听 Carolin Alff (Universit盲t Heidelberg, Heidelberg): Printing 鈥渢he Other鈥: the Mobility of Printers and Printing Molds in Germany (1493-1580)
16.45听鈥撎17.15听听听听听听听听听听听Discussion and closing remarks
17.15听鈥撎18.15听听听听听听听听听 Reception