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Art History Graduate Symposia |
Symposiums
are in alphabetical order by host institution. If no CFP for the
upcoming symposium has been issued, information for the most recent
past symposium is provided. If you are organizing a symposium or
have information on one or if you have a correction to any of the
listings, please email Doug Singsen at dsingsen@hotmail.com.
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Arizona State
University
2nd Annual Art History Graduate Symposium: Multiplicity and Modernity:
Perspectives on Nineteenth and Early Twentieth-Century Art in France
March 7, 2008
This interdisciplinary symposium will coincide with the Phoenix
Art Museum’s major exhibition “Masterpiece Replayed:
Monet, Matisse and More” (January 20-May 4, 2008) and will
explore the various roles of the copy, series, and repetition in
the works of artists working in France in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century. Possible themes for investigation include
but are not limited to the roles of the French Academy and the avant-garde
in defining the boundaries of imitation, the increasing
autonomy of the copy for the artist and viewer, as well as pertinent
issues such as originality, print media and visual culture, gender,
politics and urban space. Participants in disciplines other than
art history are encouraged to present relevant material.
For more information, visit our website at http://www.asu.edu/clubs/cogah/COGAH |
Bard
Graduate Student Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 29, 2006 (Fourth annual), Passing Fancies:
Fixing The Unfixed
Website (currently blank): http://www.bgc.bard.edu/academic/events.shtml
Contact info (from previous symposium): The BGC Graduate Student
Symposium Committee, The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the
Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture, 18 West 86th Street New York,
NY 10024. E-mail: gradsymp@bgc.bard.edu. |
The
24th Annual Boston University Graduate Student Symposium on the
History of Art
Friday, March 28, 2008, 5:30 p.m.
Boston University Art Gallery
855 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA, 02215
Keynote Speaker: TBA
Graduate Symposium: Saturday, March 29, 2008, 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Riley Seminar Room
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115
Damage
The 24th Annual Boston University Graduate Student Symposium on
the History of Art invites submissions for an interdisciplinary
symposium on art and/as sabotage, destruction, and radical revision.
We seek proposals that extend and challenge traditional notions
of the term vandalism as it relates to art and which propose new
ways of understanding the violence of artistic production or the
violent changes that occur in objects over their histories. Topics
include, but are not limited to: natural or accidental destruction;
economically and politically motivated destruction; vandalism as
ritual; iconoclasm; censorship; over-painting and the methods for
its reversal; the appropriation and confiscation of art; interventions
in built and natural environments; graffiti art, tagging, and street
art; destruction as a form of creation; and the relationship of
conservation, preservation, and restoration to defacement. We welcome
submissions from graduate students at all stages of their studies,
working in any discipline. Please email your cv and a one-page abstract
to Melissa Renn, Symposium Coordinator, Department of Art History,
Boston University at mrenn@bu.edu
by December 1, 2007. We will notify selected speakers by January
1, 2008 .
Website: http://www.bu.edu/ah/news/2007-2008/symposium.html |
Cornell University
Annual Graduate Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: February 17-18, 2006
Website (currently blank): http://www.arts.cornell.edu/histart/symposium.html
Contact info (from previous symposium): Kelly Cook and Emily Kelley,
email ek236@cornell.edu |
Florida
State University Annual Art History Graduate Student Symposium
Next symposium: Fall 2008, exact date not yet announced
Previous symposium: February 23-24, 2007 (25th Annual), all topics
accepted
Website (out of date): http://www.fsu.edu/~arh/pages/events/symposium.shtml
Contact info (from previous symposium):
Prof. Karen A. Bearor, Symposium Coordinator
Department of Art History
Florida State University
Fine Arts Building
P.O. Box 3061151
Tallahassee, FL 32306-1151
Fax: 850-644-3259
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The
Frick Collection and the Institute of Fine Arts of New York University:
A Symposium on the History of Art
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 20-21, 2007
Website (Frick): http://frick.org/lectures/symposium.htm
Website (IFA): http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/fineart/ifa/students/frick.htm
To participate you must be enrolled in one of the
14 member institutions and be nominated by your department. |
The CUNY Graduate
Center's Annual Art History Graduate Student Symposium
Saturday, March 29, 2008
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Keynote Speaker: TBA
Globalization Then and Now: Cultural Exchange Across Borders
The Department of Art History at The Graduate Center, CUNY, invites
submissions for a Graduate Student Symposium on the theme of cultural
exchange. "Globalization: Then and Now" will attempt to
expand and explore concepts of cultural dialogue, moving from physical
concerns with geographic borders, towards conceptual, temporal,
and methodological ones. Topics could include but are not limited
to: a reevaluation of the effects of colonialism; reenactment and
reinvestigation of one culture by another; the role of exile or
immigration in the development of art historical methodology; the
function of capitalism in cultural exchange; artistic movements
and figures that transgress national borders (i.e., baroque, dada,
surrealism, Joseph Beuys, Robert Frank, et al); cultural dialogue
before the age of exploration; the ties between art and advertising;
art as a symbol of a global economy; the exchange of technology,
materials and techniques across borders. The goal of the symposium
is to offer a wide range of responses to the concept of cultural
exchange, positing new readings of and even antecedents to the current
state of globalization.
We encourage submissions in a variety of fields from medieval to
contemporary to non-western, including fine arts, architecture,
photography, design, film, new media, and visual culture as well
as art theory and criticism, from graduate students within the CUNY
system and across the country working in the wide-ranging discipline
of Art History. Please e-mail your CV and a 250-word abstract to
Andrew Cappetta and Jillian Russo at gcsymposium@gmail.com
by Tuesday, January 15, 2008. We will notify selected speakers by
Friday, February 15, 2008. |
Latin America:
The Last Avant-Garde
Co-sponsored by the Department of Art History, The Graduate Center,
CUNY and the Department of the History of Art, Yale University
April 4-5 2008, New York City
This symposium is organized around the conceit that Latin America
is the site of the last avant-garde. We are not interested in the
truth or falsity of this conceit, but how it operates as an interpretive
paradigm. In several key episodes of Latin American art, artists
and critics have positioned the region as a privileged, even mythological,
site for the final realization of an avant-garde project initiated
in Europe. In other instances, avant-gardism provided a discourse
of rupture by which Latin American artists aligned themselves with
revolutionary, utopian, and universalist aims while disavowing European
cultural dependency and advancing a claim for the unique character
of the national or regional avant-garde. In both cases, the original
military metaphor of the avant-garde, with its associations of innovation,
radicality, and novelty, has been brought to bear on artistic movements
and individual experiments that have self-consciously figured "lastness"
as a strategic paradigm.
The conjoining of these two impulses within the Latin American
avant-garde forces into view key structural contradictions between
modernity, Modernism, and the avant-garde. How is characterization
of the Latin American avant-garde as either unitary or merely reactive
complicated by the avant-garde's fundamentally international character?
How has avant-gardism intersected with political, economic and military
pressures particular to the region? How have Latin American artists
engaged in interdisciplinary collaborations and expanded networks
of informational flow in order to catalyze new, or "final"
articulations of the avant-garde? How have artists exploited temporal
delay and geographic marginality as aesthetic and conceptual gambits,
and how might such articulations debunk the very notion of the avant-garde's
originality?
In recent years, Latin American modern art has reemerged as a
priority within academic departments and museum collections, an
interest that coincides with a shift away from regionalism and identity
politics as the central tropes of its study. In this sense too,
Latin American art can be considered the "last," or most
recent, avant-garde to be canonized (or colonized) within art historical
Modernism. How can new studies and interpretations of Latin American
avant-garde art allow us to refigure histories of "prewar"
and "postwar" art, modernity and cultural exchange, theories
of the avant-garde and neo-avant-garde, and other modernist methodologies?
How might recent theoretical models posited in exhibitions such
as Inverted Utopias and The Geometry of Hope such as the "constellation,"
"regressive utopia," or "deformed modernity"
impact the study of avant-gardism in Latin America? At a current
moment in which the dialectic between "local" and "global"
has taken center stage, how might art historians help shape a history
of the region that accounts for and challenges larger threads of
avant-gardism?
We welcome submissions for 20-minute papers that employ, problematize,
and expand concepts of the avant-garde in order to address 20th
century Latin American art and its critical reception. Papers will
be published in PART, Journal of the CUNY PhD Program in Art History.
Please e-mail a 300 word abstract and CV to koyaanisquiles@gmail.com
and Irene.small@yale.edu
by November 15, 2007. |
The
Museum of Modern Art's Annual Graduate Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 13-14, 2007 (Third Annual)
Website (academic programs): http://moma.org/education/adults.html#academic
Website (previous symposium): http://moma.org/education/symposium_2007.html |
Northwestern
University Annual Graduate Student Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 29, 2006 (17th Annual), Mapping and Locative
Practices
Website (department): http://www.wcas.northwestern.edu/arthistory/ |
2008 Graduate
Student Symposium
Department of The History of Art, University of California, Berkeley
Keynote Speaker: TBA
More than Meets the Eye: The Five Senses
Friday and Saturday, March 14-15
The experience of an artwork, so often reduced to the visual and the
tactile, is in fact a complex phenomenon with its own contentious
history of trans-sensorial experiments. From the dual modalities of
the East Asian brush arts to the site-specificity of the 1970s, from
altars to installations, from the physical consumption of medieval
manuscripts to the integration of sound into Minimalist and post-Minimalist
performative practices, the history of art-in all of its periods,
cultures, and media-is rich with examples of works which problematize
a unidirectional understanding of art as an exclusively visual experience,
speaking, sometimes through idiosyncratic uses of media, to the emergence
of an embodied viewer.
The Symposium will provide a forum in which to critically assess the
dynamic relations and interrelations of the senses not only as they
materialize within the art work itself, but also as pertains to art
production, theory, and criticism. We intend this Symposium to reflect
as broad a geographical and chronological scope as possible; accordingly,
we invite pertinent applications from all fields and periods in the
humanities and social sciences.
Please email your one-page abstract (300 words maximum) and CV as
an attachment to BerkeleySymposium2008@gmail.com
by January 20th. Final presentations should be no more than 20 minutes
in length. Presenters will be notified by January 31. |
Annual
UCLA Art History Graduate Student Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: October 13, 2006 (42nd Annual), Collaboration
and Collectivity in Art
Website (previous symposium): http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/arthist/ahgsa/co/index.html
Contact info (from pervious symposium):
Department of Art History, UCLA
100 Dodd Hall
University of California, Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1417
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The
University of Florida's Annual Graduate Student Symposium
Next symposium: not yet announced
Website: http://www.arts.ufl.edu/art/SAHG/
Previous symposium: February 3, 2007 (5th Annual),
Muses & Means: Patronizing the Arts
Website: http://www.arts.ufl.edu/art/SAHG/currentsympindex.html |
University
of Iowa Graduate Student Symposium
Fun and Games, the Principle of Pleasure in Art: Aspects
of Play, Leisure, and Entertainment
Annual Graduate Art History Symposium, 7-8 March 2008
The University of Iowa School of Art and Art History, Iowa City,
Iowa
Art and architecture are serious stuff. We have no time for fun
and games. Or do we? References to play, entertainment, and leisure
abound in the discipline—from an Athenian amphora adorned
with dice players and signed by Exekias to enigmatic Maya “ballcourts”;
from Judith Leyster’s paintings of comic figures to woodblock
views of festivals by Utagawa Hiroshige; from Marcel Duchamp’s
“malic” chessmen to much of Claes Oldenberg’s
entire oeuvre. In the last half a century or so, an interest in
the subject has permeated the scholarly literature and become integral
to a range of methodological approaches. Robert Venturi offered
lessons on the forms of the Las Vegas Strip, while T.J. Clark drank
in the leisure activities of modern life. And Jacques Derrida took
pleasure in jouissance, while Henry Louis Gates “signified”
a provocative reading of African American trickster figures.
The graduate students of The University of Iowa
Art History Society have decided that it is high time we made time
to consider this zenith of “lowbrow” subject matter.
AHS hereby solicits applications for participation in our 2008 graduate
student symposium on Fun and Games: The Principle of Pleasure in
Art. Papers may treat works of any genre, historical period, or
geographical designation. Proposals must take the form detailed
below. Final papers must be 20-25 minutes in length. Proposals must
be postmarked by December 7, 2007.
Topics might include, but are not limited to, the
following:
- Art that treats, or relates to, pleasure, play, leisure, and
entertainment (subjects might include tourism, sports, reading,
shopping, games, dancing, music, gardening, or humor)
- “Entertainment architecture”—spaces and places
created for amusement, sport, or leisure activities (for example,
museums, opera houses, festivals, world fairs, tourist attractions,
and gardens)
- Artists/architects as entertainers
Proposals must include the following components:
With the authors’ permission, a selection
of participants’ papers will be published in Montage, the
online journal of The University of Iowa Art History Society (http://www.uiowa.edu/~montage/).
AHS will provide a small honorarium to accepted participants, as
our final budget permits; further information will be provided upon
acceptance. Participants will be required to submit their papers,
in full, four weeks prior to the event. For more information, contact
Symposium Chair Megan Masana, at masanam@aol.com.
Website (currently blank): http://www.uiowa.edu/~montage/symposium/2008/
CFP on H-Net: http://www.h-net.org/announce/show.cgi?ID=157381
CFP on CAA: http://www.collegeart.org/opportunities/listing/1596/ |
University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 27, 2007 (7th Annual), portraiture
Website: ?
Contact info (from previous symposium):
OGSAH/Art History Department
University of Massachusetts
317B Bartlett Hall
130 Hicks Way
Amherst, MA 01003-9269
or send submissions via email: umassarthistsymposium@gmail.com
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University
of Oregon
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: April 20-21, 2007 (Fourth Annual), topic: the
human figure
Website (out of date): http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~uoaha/symposium.html
Contact info (from previous symposium):
Graduate submissions: mbuerkle@uoregon.edu
Undergraduate submissions: jparks@uoregon.edu.
Or mail submissions to:
Meridith Buerkle
Art History Department
Lawrence Hall
5229 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-5229
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| Visualizing
Technology: Transcending the Boundaries of Art
Presented by the Art History Association of the University of South
Florida
March 28th, 2008
Scientific innovations and new technologies have, historically,
informed art-making practices. Today, new imaging techniques and
media (such as the use of medical and satellite imaging, or studies
in film and video game theory) have expanded our understanding of
the visual. As a result, the boundaries that have traditionally
limited art historical inquiry to certain kinds of imaging practices
have undergone considerable revision. In recent years, a number
of disciplines have explored fundamental questions concerning how
scientific images operate within the realm of social and cultural
practice. This year’s symposium seeks to address
such modes of visual production, both contemporary and historical,
which, by their very nature as processes with pictorial outcomes,
have the potential of existing within the realm of art historical
discourse.
In the ongoing debates, which pit the study of "art history"?
against, or in an adversarial relationship to visual culture, where
are the lines drawn? When and in what ways do objects transcend
the boundaries of art or science? How have artists and practitioners
used the scientific and technological advancements of their times
to blur these boundaries? Are the products of visual media today
contributing to the growth of visual intelligence about the past?
With our focus on frames for understanding the visual, we will
be connecting the arts with the cognitive and natural sciences,
history, anthropology, philosophy, film, and cultural and media
studies. We welcome projects that will illuminate the arts through
the exploration of interdisciplinary visual media, or that will
expand understandings of interdisciplinary visual media through
a focus on the arts. Possible topics might include: current artistic
explorations in scientific and medical imaging; the communication
of ideas and popular images using historical technologies, such
as technologies of the book, or, in contemporary societies, through
the use of the Internet; explorations of cartography and urban planning,
as well as any other discipline-specific imaging conventions not
traditionally associated with the art world that has begun to inform
contemporary art practice.
Featured Speaker:
James Elkins is currently E.C. Chadbourne Chair in the Department
of Art History, Theory, and Criticism as well as teacher at the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago. With degrees in both Art
History and Studio art, his writing focuses on the history and theory
of images in art, science, and nature. Some of his books are exclusively
on fine art (What Painting Is, Why Are Our Pictures Puzzles?). Others
include scientific and non-art images, writing systems, and archaeology
(The Domain of Images, On Pictures and the Words That Fail Them),
and some are about natural history (How to Use Your Eyes).
Eligibility:
Submissions will be accepted from currently enrolled Undergraduate,
MA, MFA, and PhD students as well as those who have received degrees
in 2007.
How to propose papers:
Papers must include full citations and bibliography, as well as
necessary or appropriate illustrations. Along with a Curriculum
Vitae, please provide a separate cover sheet identifying the author's
name, institutional affiliation, mailing address, and e-mail address.
Please also clearly specify whether paper submitted is intended
for graduate or undergraduate consideration. Chapters of dissertations
or theses are acceptable only if sufficiently edited in order to
read as an independent paper.
Undergraduate papers should be approximately 8-12 typed, double-spaced
pages.
Graduate papers should be approximately 10-15 typed, double-spaced
pages.
Mail or hand-deliver to:
Valerie Palazzolo
C/O School of Art and Art History
College of Visual and Performing Arts
FAH 110
University of South Florida
4202 E. Fowler Ave.
Tampa, FL 33620-7350
Or email to:
vpalazzo@mail.usf.edu
Timeline:
Submit by January 25th, 2008. Notification by February 8th, 2008.
For questions, please email Valerie Palazzolo at vpalazzo@mail.usf.edu. |
University
of Southern California
Next symposium: not yet announced
Previous symposium: March 3, 2007 (11th Annual), A Useful Thing?
Shifting Values, Uses & Interpretations of Art
Website: ?
Contact info (from previous symposium):
Email: uscgradsymposium@gmail.com
Address: Graduate Symposium Committee
Department of Art History
University of Southern California
VKC 351 - MC 0047
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0047
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