In-person/online conference: ‘The Challenge of Historical Distance Historicism and Anachronism in the Study of Art’, 6-7 November 2025

International Conference | 6-7 November 2025
Nederlands Interuniversitair Kunsthistorisch Instituut (NIKI), Florence, Italy

Please follow this link to view the full programme and register in person or online.

How can art historians explore, understand, or even ‘feel’ the material evidence of the past? How can we approach the problem of historical distance, of our anachronistic nostalgia and our intellectual desire for pre-modern periods and artefacts? Can we inhabit the time of past artworks, or do artworks constantly re-construct their own times? And what role do contemporary concerns play in our interpretations of the ancient, medieval, and early modern periods?

Numerous recent publications have explored the study of the past through different lenses. They have complicated the idea of ‘historical contexts’ by showing the ability of artworks to simultaneously refer to various time periods. They have also encouraged cross-temporal and sometimes ahistorical interpretations of premodern artefacts in the light of modern theories and concerns. This conference will bridge the ‘historicist’ and ‘anachronist’ camp in an attempt to theorise the thorny issue of time which sits at the core of both history and art history.

The conference is organised in celebration of the scholarship of Prof. Gervase Rosser and in honour of his retirement from the University of Oxford. One aspect of Rosser’s career that we particularly want to celebrate is his prominence as both historian and art historian, and his inspirational interrogation of both disciplines.

View the programme here.

Speakers include: 

  • Armin Bergmeier (University of Leipzig)
  • Saida Bondini (Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz)
  • Donal Cooper (University of Cambridge)
  • Heiko Droste (Stockholm University)
  • Jas Elsner (University of Oxford)
  • Michael Ann Holly (Clark Institute)
  • Maria Loh (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
  • Keith Moxey (Barnard College)
  • Susie Nash (The Courtauld Institute of Art); Caspar Pearson (The Warburg Institute)
  • Hannah Skoda (University of Oxford)
  • Nancy Thebaut (University of Oxford)
  • Ben Thomas (Trinity College Dublin).

Find out more on the Nederlands Interuniversitair Kunsthistorisch Instituut website.


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Published by Roisin Astell

Dr Roisin Astell has a First Class Honours in History of Art at the University of York, an MSt. in Medieval Studies at the University of Oxford, and PhD from the University of Kent’s Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies.

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