Modern Identities – European Revivals research project International Conference 10-12 October 2012 in Ateneum Art Museum

Towards the end of the nineteenth-century, European artists began to express a new profound interest in their unique local pasts and cultural inheritances. This growing sense of identity prompted a major flowering of Nationalist debate concerning the fast disappearing regional cultures throughout Europe. This was a discourse largely shaped by the desire within several countries for cultural and artistic, and ultimately social and economic, independence.

The project and its aim:

Established in 2009, the ‘European Revivals’ research project aims to reflect upon these national revivals in Europe, where art historical scholarship on the subject has already been broadly established. However, there has never been a joint project that examines this phenomenon on a wider-scale and that has sought to analyse the multifarious connections and correspondences, which helped shape the identities of each of these modern nations. The ‘European Revivals’ project, therefore, aims to study and show the similarities and differences of these countries for the first time on a European-scale and will explore different aspects at each conference. ‘European Revivals’ will continue to 2017 and will end with a publication and an international exhibition.

European Revivals – Modern Identities, International Conference will be held the 10th – 12th October 2012. Our aim is to continue the project in Helsinki by drawing National Museums and Galleries and scholars together in the second European Revivals Conference at Ateneum Art Museum, Finnish National Gallery.

The Modern Identities Conference will be accompanied by an extensive exhibition on Helene Schjerfbeck (1862−1946). The major retrospective exhibition shows artworks throughout her career from the 1870s to 1940s. The exhibition is open to delegates during the conference.

See the conference programme

Booking fee:
60 euros (speaker) or 100 euros (delegate) participating in the excursion
30 euros (speaker), 50 euros (delegate)

70 euros (student) participating in the excursion
30 euros (student) without the excursion

Conference fee will include the Reception on Wednesday, visiting the Ateneum Art Museum and Helene Schjerfbeck (1862-1946) exhibition, the conference programme (Wed-Fri) and coffee/tea.

Conference fees exclude: travel, accommodation and lunch (Thu-Fri).

The Excursion day on Saturday will include lunch, refreshments and visits to the museums and transportation.

Registration form and payment info

For further information please contact:

Conference Producer Anu Utriainen
anu.utriainen@ateneum.fi
tel. +358 9 17336 385, mobile +358 40 673 5064
Finnish National Gallery
Kaivokatu 2, 00100 Helsinki, Finland

Curator Anna-Maria von Bonsdorff
abonsdor@ateneum.fi
Finnish National Gallery
Kaivokatu 2, 00100 Helsinki, Finland

Special viewing of Helene Schjerfbeck – for members only!

The Birch and the Star organizes a private viewing of the exhibition Helene Schjerfbeck, at Ateneum, on Monday 17th September 2012 at 14.30 for members only. Since the museum is closed, please remember to be at the C entrance (main façade, right door) at 14.30 sharp!

Click here if you are interested in becoming a member

 

Call for Papers: Seminar on Beda Stjernschantz, 10 April 2013

An exhibition on the work of the Finnish artist Beda Stjernschantz (1867-1910) is scheduled to open at the Amos Anderson Art Museum in February 2014. Beda Stjernschantz was an important member of the generation of Finnish Symbolist artists that emerged in the 1890s but art historical research on her work is insufficient, in part due to her limited oeuvre. Thus, The Birch and the Star and Amos Anderson Art Museum are organizing a one-day seminar to bring together researchers who share an interest in Beda Stjernschantz and the art and culture of the fin-de-siècle. The aim of the seminar will be to coalesce and interpret existing art historical knowledge pertaining to Beda Stjernschantz and to reassess the significance of her work in an international context. Interdisciplinary by nature, the seminar will act as a springboard for the exhibition and will hopefully open up new and interesting perspectives on the artist who has hitherto remained under the scholarly radar.

The organizers invite proposals for 30 minute presentations that provide scholarly perspectives into the life and work of Beda Stjernschantz. We particularly welcome papers that examine Beda Stjernschantz’s artistic activities in the international context of fin-de-siècle art and culture and thus help to shed new light on her relationship with other artists, art forms, and cultural phenomena.

Those interested in presenting a paper at the seminar should send an abstract proposal of circa 300 words to marja.lahelma@helsinki.fi and birchandstar@gmail.com by 15 November 2012. Proposals may be written in English, Finnish, or Swedish.

Speakers will present their papers and engage in roundtable talks. After the seminar speakers will have the opportunity to elaborate on their papers and produce essays for the exhibition catalogue. Deadline for the final essays is 15 May 2013.

For further enquiries, please contact Marja Lahelma, marja.lahelma@helsinki.fi.

Venue: Amos Anderson Art Museum, Yrjönkatu 27, 00100 Helsinki, Finland, www.amosanderson.fi

International Conference: Symbolist Landscape in Europe 1880-1910, Edinburgh Thursday 4 & Friday 5 October 2012

The 2-day international conference will take place on 4 and 5 October 2012 at the National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh. Eight 30-minute papers and a plenary lecture will be given and will include a visit to the exhibition Van Gogh to Kandinsky: Symbolist Landscape in Europe 1880-1910 (14th July ? 14th October 2012).

The distinguished group of speakers include Sharon Hirsh (Rosemont College), Patricia Berman (Wellesley College), Michel Draguet (Royal Fine Arts Museums of Belgium) and Dario Gamboni (University of Geneva).

Click here for full programme

Booking Information

Tickets* cost £25 (£15 concessions); £10 student ticket and are available from the Information Desk at the Scottish National Gallery or call 0131 624 6560 between 9.30am-4.30pm with debit/credit card details.

*Includes exhibition ticket and wine reception

For enquiries, please contact Craig.Landt@ed.ac.uk (0131 651 4248)

http://sites.ace.ed.ac.uk/symbolism/

http://www.nationalgalleries.org

For entrance to the National Galleries: http://www.nationalgalleries.org/visit/gardens-entrance/

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Redefining European Symbolism, 1880-1910 is a network funded by the Leverhulme Trust. The partners are the University of Edinburgh, the National Galleries of Scotland, the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, the Musée d?Orsay  and the Institut National d?Histoire de l?Art, Paris and the University of Geneva. It has staged two research seminars (on the Nabis, VGM, November 2010 and Symbolist landscape, INHA, March 2011) and two conferences: on the Nabis, Amsterdam, VGM, October 2011 and on European Symbolism, Musée d’Orsay, April 2012. Further information can be found on the website: http://sites.ace.ed.ac.uk/symbolism.

 

CFP: Modern Identities – European Revivals research project, International Conference 10 – 12 October 2012

Towards the end of the nineteenth-century, European artists began to express a new profound interest in their unique local pasts and cultural inheritances. This growing sense of identity prompted a major flowering of Nationalist debate concerning the fast disappearing regional cultures throughout Europe. This was a discourse largely shaped by the desire within several countries for cultural and artistic, and ultimately social and economic, independence.

As the new century dawned national mythological epics and literature, such as the Kalevala in Finland, the Cuchulainn legend in Ireland and stories of Ossian in Scotland, became a major vehicle of cultural expression and created some of the most important art of the age. Several of the most influential artists of the period were also key figures in this movement. They worked across all artistic media from small-scale traditional domestic crafts and large-scale design to major schemes of architecture and often rather than producing easel-painting artists undertook monumental programmes of mural decoration or stained glass because of the social implications such public art held. For those countries that had not yet achieved their dream of self-sovereignty it became imperative to promote their unique distinctive cultural present as unbroken with the past. This became particularly important for those small nations on the northern, eastern and western fringes of Europe and especially those that had been conquered and divided by powerful neighbours.

Although it is well known that countries on such fringes of Europe’s borders such as Finland, Norway, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Czech, Poland and Hungary had unique and far-reaching cultural renaissances in the form of a ‘Revival’, it is less well known that although each was distinctive they also had much in common. And although direct connections existed, between Finnish and Hungarian artists or Irish and Scottish artists, several other factors contributed to a largely undocumented system of interaction and exchange from the educational and exhibiting opportunities in Paris, London, Berlin and Vienna; and the foundation of national collections of museums and research into vernacular and folk cultures; the rise of mythology and legendary history in literature and music; to the multitude of localised ‘national’ exhibitions of contemporary art and new forms of integrated art and architecture in various local manifestations of the Gesamtkunstwerk; and the major role played by displays at the International Exhibitions and World’s Fairs of the period.

It is within this Europe-wide movement that the idea of a renewal of art and design as a cornerstone of modern society was forged. The influence of unique local artistic traditions found fullest expression in forms of indigenous folk art and, although the globalising industrial revolution threatened many such folk traditions with extinction, at the heart of the ‘revivals’ movement was a desire to refine art and society for the modern age. Thus, the focus on themes drawn from the life of the people, indigenous material culture, question of identity, mythological past, and the native landscape carries an enduring significance that is still powerfully resonant in our own contemporary cultures in the twenty-first century.

The project and its aim:

Established in 2009, the ‘European Revivals’ research project aims to reflect upon these national revivals in Europe, where art historical scholarship on the subject has already been broadly established. However, there has never been a joint project that examines this phenomenon on a wider-scale and that has sought to analyse the multifarious connections and correspondences, which helped shape the identities of each of these modern nations. The ‘European Revivals’ project, therefore, aims to study and show the similarities and differences of these countries for the first time on a European-scale and will explore different aspects at each conference. ‘European Revivals’ will continue to 2017 and will end with a publication and an international exhibition.

We invite researchers and museum professionals to join the European Revivals – Modern Identities, International Conference in Helsinki the 10 -12 October 2012 and to participate in a workshop on multimedia and display. Our aim is to continue the project in Helsinki by drawing National Museums and Galleries and scholars together in the second European Revivals Conference at Ateneum Art Museum, Finnish National Gallery.

Proposals for 20-minute presentations (400 words max) and a brief curriculum vitae should be sent to Anna-Maria von Bonsdorff, abonsdor@ateneum.fi

Plenary speakers will be announced soon

Deadline for proposals 20th of August 2012

Presentations on the following topics are sought:

Artistic Exchange

  • The importance of the metropolis: Paris, London, Berlin, Vienna
  • Occulture, theosophy, spiritualism and symbolism
  • Beyond Europe: Artists’ travels
  • Artists’ colonies and communities in Europe and beyond

The Question of Identity  

  • Modern identity and the revivalist phenomena
  • Shifting identities: japonisme and exoticism
  • The cultural, economic and artistic pre-conditions of the ‘revivalist movement’
  • Text and image: reinventing visual language

Gesamtkunstwerk as an ideology

  • ‘Revivals’ and cultural hierarchies
  • Reinventing painting: mural art and stained glass
  • Architecture as metaphor for rebuilding modern identity
  • Exploring boundaries between fine art, decorative art and architecture
  • Material culture: Folk art and vernacular revivalism

The Modern Identities Conference will be accompanied by an extensive exhibition on Helene Schjerfbeck (1862-1946). The major retrospective exhibition shows artworks throughout her career from 1870s to 1940s. The exhibition is open to delegates during the conference.

Booking fee: 60 euros (speaker) and 100 euros (delegate) participating the excursion
30 euros (speaker) and 50 euros (delegate) and 30 euros (student) without the excursion

Conference fee will include the Reception on Wednesday, visiting the Ateneum Art Museum and Helene Schjerfbeck (1862-1946) exhibition, the conference programme and coffee/tea, and also the Excursion day with lunch and visits to the museums and transportation.

For further information please contact:
Curator Anna-Maria von Bonsdorff, abonsdor@ateneum.fi
Finnish National Gallery
Kaivokatu 2
00100 Helsinki
Finland

http://www.ateneum.fi/default.asp?docId=13811

Symbolist Dualities – Upcoming conference organized by the ALMSD

The Symbolists often created images and forms that had a dual meaning. Symbolist dualities include, but are not limited to, the sacred and profane and evoke the myriad of depictions of women as saints/demons and creators/destroyers. The idea of duality even informs experiments in which Symbolists combined different media, as they expressed their philosophy through the visual arts, literature, music, and theater. This session will examine Symbolist dualities and how the division of unity was inherent to Symbolist theories regarding the transforming nature of visual art and related disciplines.

Call for papers:

ALMSD (Art, Literature and Music in Symbolism and Decadence) is inviting to submit the proposals before May 20, 2012 to present papers at the College Art Association (CAA), February 13-16, 2013 in NYC.

The proposal should be about 300 words and should be sent to rnegi1@uis.edu and deborah.cibelli@nicholls.edu. Please include a short version of your CV. If you have questions, please contact Rosina Neginsky at rnegi1@uis.edu.

Dr. Rosina Neginsky, University of Illinois, Springfield

Dr. Deborah Cibelli, Nicholls State University

http://www.uis.edu/hosted-orgs/ALMSD/conference.html