ICMA Annual Lecture: ‘Word/Play: Interiority, Performance, and Reading in Late Medieval Flanders’, with Alexa Sand, 14 May 2025, 5.30pm-7pm (BST)

The Courtauld Institute of Art, Vernon Square Campus, Lecture Theatre 2

Book your place and find out more on the Courtauld’s website.

A small group of devotional, literary, and spiritually instructional texts from late thirteenth and early fourteenth century Flanders and Northern France contain a remarkable array of marginalia depicting performance practices and play, ranging from puppet shows to violent ball sports. In the environment that produced these books, reading, especially in a devotional vein, was not merely transactional or functional, and the books are part of a performance culture in which engaging in various outward behaviours, especially those associated with “play” in all its aspects was critical to creating the awareness of and experience of inwardness, including a heightened sense of one’s spiritual visibility to the divine. Drawing on scholarship in dance history, performance studies, and the history of sports, and responding to recent work by fellow art historians focusing on the nexus of sensory experiences – haptic, visual, aural, gustatory, and olfactory – that constitute what is sometimes characterised as “medieval somaesthetics,” this work situates the illuminated manuscripts and the acts of reading they engendered as indices of a much larger realm of experience and practice that constituted the prima materia of late medieval selfhood.  Understanding how these particular objects, images, and performances constituted the field of its enactment, is pertinent to twenty-first-century phenomena of self-formation and self-perception within the relentlessly performative realm of media culture.

Alexa Sand is Professor of Art History and Associate Vice President for Research at Utah State University, where she has taught since 2004. She earned her Ph.D. in art history from UC Berkeley, with an emphasis on medieval French art and literature. Her book, Vision, Devotion, and Self-Representation in Late Medieval Art appeared with Cambridge University Press in 2014. Her most recent work has focused on medieval puppetry, including her 2021 essay in Gesta, “Puppets, Manuscripts, and Gendered Performance in the Hortus deliciarum.”  She is cohost of the podcast Real Fantastic Beasts.

Organised by Dr Jessica Barker, Senior Lecturer in Medieval Art History, The Courtauld. This event is kindly supported by the International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA), and the drinks reception sponsored by Sam Fogg. This Series made possible through the generosity of William M. Voelkle.

Conference: ‘Medieval Art on the Move’, Courtauld Institute’s Postgraduate colloquium, 28 March 2025, 10am – 5.45pm (GMT)

The Courtauld Institute of Art, Vernon Square Campus, Lecture Theatre 2

Book your tickets and find out more about the conference on the Courtauld’s website.

Now entombed in airless glass vitrines, medieval objects in museums appear static and immovable. But in the Middle Ages artworks were active and mobile: they were manipulated in the hand, processed through towns, and traded or gifted across very large geographic areas. Viewers were also on the move: they carried artworks on their body or processed alongside them in religious ceremonies. Merchants, soldiers, and pilgrims travelled to new places and brought artworks home with them. This colloquium will explore medieval artworks as sites of sophisticated meaning-making through the theme of movement, on small and large scales. Medieval works of art were often moved during ritual, and many artworks also integrated moving parts, such as wings or other hinged elements. In a broader context, artworks could travel huge distances, acquiring new significances as they transgressed political, cultural and religious borders. The Silk Roads exhibition currently open at the British Museum speaks to such journeys, presenting the people and objects travelling along overlapping and expansive networks of trade, and asking how these movements shaped meanings and cultures both along the way and at their destinations. To that end, the colloquium looks to open new dialogues regarding the movement of medieval artworks, initiating discussions on how it affected an object’s reception.

The colloquium will take place on Friday 28th March 2025 at The Courtauld Institute of Art’s Vernon Square campus in London. Lunch will be provided for speakers, and the event will be followed by drinks at the Courtauld Research Forum and dinner for speakers.

Organised by Courtauld PhD students Sophia Adams and Natalia Muñoz-Rojas, and generously supported by Sam Fogg. 

Programme

Session 1:

  • Sara Salvadori, PhD student Università degli studi di Palermo, Fellow Institut für Kunst- und Bildgeschichte Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, ‘The Mobility and Liturgical Role of a Byzantine Ivory Diptych’.
  • Ricardo Mandelbaum Balla, PhD Candidate, The Courtauld, ‘Ramon Llull, man in perpetuum mobile: graphic representations of his life and theories’.
  • Elisabeth Niederdöckl, PhD Candidate at EHESS Paris (History) and KU Leuven (Art History), ‘Engraved Faith, Embedded Relics: The MET Portable Altar and the Conception of Medieval European Evangelization’.

Session 2:

  • Bernát Rácz, PhD Candidate, Central European University, Vienna, ‘The Reliquary of Pétermonostora: A Twelfth-Century Lotharingian Masterpiece from a Private Monastery in East-Central Europe’.
  • Lydia Lymbourides, Doctoral Fellow, University of Zürich, ‘Miracles and the Mediterranean. The Rock Crystal Cross in the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista di Venezia’.
  • Sophia Dumoulin, PhD Candidate, The Courtauld, ‘Security, Salvation and Shameless Self-Promotion: Framing Movement through Parclose Screens in Fifteenth-Century Westminster Abbey’.

Session 3:

  • Christien Schrover, PhD Candidate, Utrecht University, ‘Bridging the Distance in Time and Place: The Digital Reconstruction of Late Medieval Altarpieces’.
  • Isabella Inskip, PhD Candidate, University of Edinburgh, ‘Dynamic Spaces: Digital Visualisation and the Peripatetic Lifestyle of the Great Mughals’.

Pasold Research Fund Grants

The Pasold Research Fund

The Pasold Fund promotes and supports research on textile history;  embracing the economic, social and cultural history of textiles, their technological development, design and conservation, as well as the history of dress, and other uses of textiles from prehistory to the present.

Pasold research grants are awarded to fund high quality research, relating to all branches of textile history including the history of dress and fashion.

Applications are encouraged for projects where there will be a lasting outcome in the form of a publication or an exhibition or similar. This includes conservation related projects, leading to publications, but excludes the purchase or repair of objects and the purchase of hardware (eg cameras or computing equipment or computer software).

Applications will also be considered where preliminary work is needed for the preparation of a more substantial grant application to one of the major funding bodies.

Applications may be made to fund conference attendance – these applications may come from individuals or from conference organisers seeking funding for a named applicant.

However, it is important to provide an abstract of the paper and details of the nature of the conference and its significance. Where a conference organiser is seeking support for a named delegate details of the conference, a CV of the delegate and title and abstract of the paper are required.

All successful grant applicants, where appropriate, will be encouraged to consider submitting the outcome of their research to Textile History.

Publication would of course be subject to editorial refereeing and decision. Grants in aid of publicationfor a contribution towards illustrations, will be considered where a clear case is made explaining the absence of funding from other sources and the way in which the illustrative material is essential to the analysis and quality of the research output. Where funding is sought to complete or to part-finance a commissioned work and/or a work to be published under the auspices of a university, museum, gallery or similar, please specify the necessity, the case for, and the role of, the additional external funding.

APPLICATIONS

Application forms should be submitted electronically to: histart-pasold@york.ac.uk

DETAILS AND DEADLINES FOR RESEARCH GRANTS

The Pasold has recently changed its Grants structure. Please read carefully. 

Research Activity Grants (under £750).

Applications may be made at any time.

Research Project Grants (between £751 and £2,500).

Two deadlines 1 March and 1 October each year.

PhD Grants for PhD students registered at a British institution (up to £2,500). 

Single deadline: 15 June each year.

MA Grants for MA students registered at a British institution (up to £500).

Single deadline: 15 April each year.

Publication Grants (up to £1,000). 

Two deadlines: 15 February and 1 September each year.

Raine Grants to assist individual staff working in UK museums (up to £500).

One deadline: 30 June each year.

Pasold Fellowships in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum  (up to £1,500).

The Research Fellowship schemes are suspended at present due to collections movement at both the V&A and Museum of London.

Neaverson Pasold Postdoctoral Fellowship (up to £20,000)

One deadline: 1 April 2025
 

THE CRITERIA APPLIED IN JUDGING RESEARCH GRANT APPLICATIONS

which can be in ANY area of the history of textiles including multidisciplinary approaches, are as follows:

  1. Originality and rigour of the research, especially where the study of the history of textiles is being approached from a new angle, using new sources or new methodology. You must demonstrate that the history of textiles is the central area of concern and study.
  2. The care given to laying out of objectives and design of the research.
  3. The viability of the research within the timescale laid out and in view of the research training or experience of the applicant.
  4. The contribution of the research in terms of publications, the development of web based materials, exhibitions or similar.
  5. Referees’ reports (at least one nominated referee should be from outside the applicant’s own institution).

PLEASE NOTE

  • The Pasold Research Fund will not fund salaries.
  • Only research expenses such as travel, subsistence, photocopying, microfilming and similar are funded.
  • We do not accept retrospective applications.
  • All costing must be in GB£ sterling;
  • Grants are awarded in GB£ sterling. A sterling cheque is sent to the grant recipient.
  • Successful applicants must wait a full calendar year following the end of their grant before submitting another application for Pasold funding.

IMPORTANT

Applications must be submitted at least 80 days before the beginning of the research project/conference attendance or other activity; or for grants schemes with named deadlines, the project should start at least 80 days after the deadline. The Pasold wishes to ensure that sufficient time is given to referees to assess applications and that applications’ outcomes are notified well in advance of the starting date of the research activity.

Please also note that the Pasold Research Fund will not fund salaries, only research expenses such as travel, subsistence, photocopying, microfilming and similar. We do not accept retrospective applications. All costings must be in GB£ sterling.

SOME REASONS WHY APPLICATIONS ARE TURNED DOWN

Competition for our grants has grown significantly in the last few years. We are sometimes surprised by the poor presentation of applications. We thought it would help applicants to know the most common reasons for applications being turned down:

  1. Applications in which the history of textiles is peripheral and not central to research (if in doubt please make preliminary enquiries to the Director).
  2. Applications which fail to convey the scope and significance of the research and its wider contribution. If it is necessary for applicants to write at length they should not confine themselves to the short space on the form. You are invited to use a continuation sheet. Many applicants ignore this.
  3. Applications where the costings are incomplete, inaccurate, do not give totals and sub-totals, are not in £ sterling or where the cheapest method of transport has not been investigated.
  4. Applications for travel to conferences which do not provide an abstract of the paper or the significance of the conference – a title is not enough.
  5. Carelessly prepared applications.

If you have further queries as to whether you are eligible or about the type of support do please contact the Pasold Research Fund’s Director, Dr Bethan Bide at histart-pasold@york.ac.uk or bethan.bide@york.ac.uk.

Online talk: ‘Unfolding Concertina-Fold Almanacs: The Making of an Exhibition’, 28 March 2025 12-1.30pm (EDT)

Presented by Sarah Griffin, Lambeth Palace Library, & Megan McNamee, University of Edinburgh

Hosted by: SIMS and Kislak Center

Unfolding Time: The Medieval Pocket Calendar, an exhibition presently on view at Lambeth Palace Library in London, explores ideas about time in the middle ages through the concertina-fold almanac, a rare and remarkable book type introduced in the fourteenth century. Concertinas are formed of oblong parchment strips, folded lengthwise and then in an accordion or concertina pattern. Cuts in the parchment allow different sections to be accessed without unfolding the entire sheet. People in medieval Europe tracked time through planetary motion, seasonal shift, historic events, and religious celebrations. Concertina-fold almanacs illuminate and align these varied cycles. In them, time is vividly expressed in colorful pictures, poems, tables, and devices. Just twenty-nine of these extremely fragile folded manuscripts are known to survive; the Lambeth exhibition brings a selection together, for the first time. In this talk, Sarah Griffin, curator of the exhibition, and Megan McNamee, a collaborator, will introduce the concertina corpus and discuss the process of putting these frighteningly fragile, fiendishly complex, and wonderfully dynamic little books on public view. They will also share some of the tools they developed to make the concertinas and temporalities that they embody understandable and exciting to seven- and seventy-year olds alike. 

Book your spot and find out more here.

New Open Access Publication: ‘Art médiéval et médiévalisme’, edited by Philippe Cordez

The ‘Middle Ages’ is a recent and shifting creation, at once a stratified historiographical elaboration and an appreciation of historical objects in the present. What we know and imagine shapes our perception. Studying the medieval arts therefore requires us to study medievalisms, and vice versa.

This volume, the result of work carried out in 2015/2016 at the German Centre for Art History in Paris, brings together fifteen studies on medieval artefacts and their subsequent history, up to the present day. They are accompanied by a review of German-language studies of medieval art in France since 1933.

With contributions by Philippe Cordez, Eveline Deneer, Frédéric Elsig, Iris Grötecke, Lukas Huppertz, Jacqueline E. Jung, Thomas Kirchner, Stephanie Luther, Kathrin Müller, Andrew Murray, Assaf Pinkus, Nina Reiss, Martin Schwarz, Judith Soria, Jean-Michel Spieser, Susanne Wittekind.

Read the volume now. 


Philippe Cordez was Deputy Director of the German Centre for Art History in Paris from 2018 to 2023. He is now Deputy Director of the Museum Studies and Research Support Department of the Louvre Museum.

Juan Facundo Riaño Essay Prize & ARTES-CEEH Scholarships, deadline 30 April 2025

ARTES and the Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica (CEEH) are delighted to invite applications for the 2025 Juan Facundo Riaño Essay Prize and ARTES-CEEH Scholarships. These awards are designed to support students and early-career researchers exploring Spanish visual culture and art history.

The deadline for these applications are midnight on 30 April 2025. Winners will be announced on 31 May 2025 and an award ceremony for the winners of the Juan Facundo Riaño Essay Prize and the ARTES Travel Scholarship for Artists will be held on 27 June 2025 at the Spanish Embassy in London. The winners of these last two awards must be able to attend the ceremony on that date in order to be eligible to claim the prizes.

The Juan Facundo Riaño Essay Prize is awarded to students and early career scholars for the best art-historical essay on a Hispanic theme, kindly supported by the Office for Cultural & Scientific Affairs of the Spanish Embassy in London. Full details are available here.

Generous support from the Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica (CEEH) also allows ARTES to award the following scholarships to students working on any aspect of Spanish visual culture before 1900:

Travel scholarships

Final year undergraduates and postgraduate students registered for a full- or part-time degree course at a UK university may apply for up to £1,000 towards the costs of travel to Spain for research purposes (which may include field work, attendance at a conference, or other recognised forms of research).  

£3,000 scholarship for PhD students at a UK university 

ARTES offers one scholarship each year to a student registered for a full- or part-time doctoral degree at a UK university. The scholarship is intended to contribute towards the costs of tuition, living and/or research, and therefore students with full funding are not eligible. 

£3,000 scholarship for PhD students or post-doctoral scholars who wish to conduct research in the UK 

Doctoral students or those who received their doctorate fewer than four years before the application deadline may apply for this scholarship provided that they were or are registered for doctoral study at a university in Spain. 

ARTES is also proud to offer a new prize to support artists to travel to Spain, Portugal or Hispano/Lusophone regions. Applicants must engage creatively with the rich and distinctive visual cultures of Iberia and Latin America and be based in the UK and may be at any stage of their career.

Call for journal submissions: Venezia Arti 2025, vol. 34, theme: Soglia / Threshold, deadline 31 March 2025 

Ca’ Foscari’s (Venice) art history journal Venezia Arti. Thematic call: Soglia / Threshold and ALIA ITINERA miscellaneous section

In medieval art, the theme of the threshold, as the passage from one dimension to another, is crucial from a symbolic point of view and involves both spatiality and temporality (T. Bawden, Die Schwelle im Mittelalter, 2014). The definition that Christ gives of himself in the Gospel had great resonance in the realm of the sacred: “I am the door; if anyone enters through me, he will be saved” (Jn 10:9). Hence the high significance that Christianity attributes to the boundary between the human and the transcendent, between sin and salvation. Within the domain of representation, this message is conveyed both on a figurative level and in instances where lines of demarcation are drawn between the earthly world and the hereafter (P. Florenskij, Iconostasis, 1996). It is expressed also in architecture, as witnessed by the density of inscriptions and artistic expressions at the entrances to places of worship (M. Pastoureau, Tympans et portails romans, 2014) and, within them, between the space reserved for the faithful and the presbytery. The concept of the threshold is also linked to the temporal structuring of festivities, from the anxious anticipation on the eve to the celebration itself. A prime example of this can be found in the rite of baptism and the significance attributed to the spaces in which it takes place (R.M. Jensen, Living Water, 2011). These spaces are meticulously constructed and embellished with great creative effort, with multisensory mises-en-scène playing a pivotal role in the experience. The monumentalisation of entrances, rites of passage, and liminal zones exerts an influence on the secular world, manifesting in the form of urban infrastructure, such as city walls, as well as in the entrances to princely residences and military fortresses. Nor, on the other hand, would it be fair to separate the secular dimension from the religious one: suffice it to consider the fact that in Byzantium Iconoclasm began in 726 with the order – given by Leo III the Isauric – to remove the effigy of Christ on the Chalke, the gate of the imperial palace in Constantinople.

In the Early modern period until the Enlightenment, the European cultural universe has expanded and transformed beyond the borders of the Pillars of Hercules (F.A. Yates, Astrea. The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century, 1975). The introduction of unprecedented objects, naturalia and mirabilia to the European continent, as evidenced by a prolonged process extending throughout the 17th century, significantly influenced the prevailing mentalities of the era, thereby facilitating new forms of experimentation and figurative elaboration. The dissemination of knowledge from unknown civilisations, as exemplified by renowned Jesuits such as the geographer, mathematician and cartographer Matteo Ricci of Macerata and later Athanasius Kircher, who pioneered a form of Egyptology, resulted in the generation of new ways of contamination and unprecedented cross-fertilisation at the intersection of the ‘imaginary’ and the ‘imagined’ East. The encounter with the ‘other’ thus becomes a crucial interpretative framework, imbued with political and propagandistic connotations, and alternative forms of knowledge that are articulated through diverse media (an example of this is the encounter/clash with the infidels of the faith, in a paradigm where the image of the Turk become a symbol of the evil, following the political instability of the Mediterranean region – see for example, Images in the Borderlands, eds I. Čapeta Rakić, G. Capriotti, 2022). In this sense, the concept of threshold can be considered as a flexible framework that can be applied at will when exploring the ‘history’ of a cultural product in the broadest sense, as the outcome of a process of double-edged correspondence between one civilisation and another. Early modern period is in itself a season in which crossing a threshold becomes crossing a limit, whether geographical or cultural and esthetical as well, towards a “new unexplored worlds”. This development was significantly furthered by the revolution that followed the scientific discoveries of Galileo (1564-1642). Once considered insurmountable and as a limit (be it for political, religious, philosophical or technological reasons), the threshold is transformed, metaphorically speaking, into a springboard towards the globalised world (T. Brook, Vermeer’s Hat. The Seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World, 2006).

In more recent times, the out-of-frame device has prompted a heated debate in the arts, spanning from painting (V. Stoichita, A Short History of the Shadow, 1997) to cinema (A. Bazin, What is Cinema?, 1967; D. Morgan, The Lure of the Image, 2021). In the context of the ongoing development of virtual, immersive and interactive spaces, the distinction between image and reality is increasingly blurring (P. Conte, Unframing Aesthetics, 2020; A. Pinotti, Alla soglia dell’immagine, 2021). At the same time, the vanishing boundary between human contribution and generative development is the object of studies investigating the historical, aesthetical and ethical ramifications of artificial intelligence (R. Pedrazzi, Futuri possibili, 2021; M. Pasquinelli, The Eye of the Master, 2023; L. Manovich, E. Arielli, Artificial Aesthetics, 2024). In the context of the Cultural Cold War Studies, the concept of the threshold comes into play by questioning an alleged impenetrability of the Iron Curtain, whose points of contact are instead probed as generators of cultural, artistic and exhibition practices. Thresholds is the title of the exhibition hosted in the German pavilion at the Venice Art Biennale in 2024 as the debut, in the history of German participation, of a venue outside Giardini, in line with that ‘expanded format’ to multiple possibilities – physical or virtual – that characterises the format of Biennials on a global scale (C. Jones, The Global Work of Art, 2017). Finally, the concept of trespassing, in the sense of insisting on demarcation lines and on their political, social and cultural implications, is the object of artistic and curatorial practices that can be ascribed to the broader interdisciplinary field of the Border Studies

As is now customary, the 2025 issue will also welcome a number of contributions outside the monographic theme, in the specific section Alia itinera.

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS:

  • Abstract of approx. 2000 characters (including spaces), in the language of the article, with a title proposal.
  • Only proposals from scholars holding a Ph.D  may be considered.  

ABSTRACT DEADLINES: 

Abstracts deadline: 31 March 2025 

Notification of accepted abstracts: 14 April 2025

CALL FOR SELECTED PAPERS:

Admissible length: between 30,000 and 40,000 characters, including spaces and footnotes (not included in the final count: abstract, captions, bibliography).

The essay must be written according to the editorial standards of the journal.

The essay must also include:

  • an abstract in English of approx. 1000 characters including spaces;
  • 5 keywords in English;
  • a final, complete bibliography, written in alphabetical order according to Edizioni Ca’ Foscari editorial standards
  • image captions including photo credits.

Illustrations: max 10 images,  in Jpeg format, 300 dpi resolution, with specification of credits already paid or authorised.

Languages allowed: Italian, English, French.

DEADLINES FOR ARTICLES

Deadline for the final version: 31 August 2025

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

Please contact venezia.arti@unive.it.

CFP: ‘Good Governance and the Built Environment of Late Medieval Cities (ca. 1200–1600)’, deadline 7 April 2025

Brussels, 3-5 September 2025

In the late Middle Ages, cities were governed through constant dialogue. Rulers, nobility, citizens and other social groups all found ways to shape urban governance, each articulating complex views on what “good” governance entailed. In order to meet expectations of justice, protection, economic welfare, and the common good, all the aforementioned individuals would often invest in the city’s built environment, either by initiating new architectural and infrastructural projects, or by securing the maintenance of existing ones.

The city as a built space thus required constant development, and in this upkeep and expansion, rulers and governors were attributed a specific responsibility. Scholarship has already extensively explored various policies initiated by rulers and governors for the construction and maintenance of the city’s built environment; Previous studies have, for example, drawn attention to the governmental structures set up in late medieval cities or have explored the legal measures implemented to control urban environments. Similarly, scholarly attention has also focused on individual architectural and infrastructural projects initiated by rulers and governors as a means to meet expectations regarding their governmental responsibilities. However, a systematic overview of how these tasks and obligations regarding the built environment of the city were linked to ideals of good governance is missing, as well as the scope to set individual cases within an overarching framework.

This conference seeks to address this lacuna by asking specifically how the built environment of late medieval cities was conceptualised and physically shaped in relation to ideals of good governance. The focus will be on urban centers in diverse geographical regions (from North-Western Europe and the Mediterranean to the Middle East), and this in the period of 1200 to 1600.

We invite contributions coming from a variety of disciplines (architectural history, art history, literary history, political history and so on) to explore how—and to what extent—building was integral to governing a late medieval city.

Themes may include, but are not limited to:

  • The relationship between political and architectural thought with regards to good governance and the construction and maintenance of the city’s built environment.
  • The various media (texts, images, etc.) through which political thinking on good governance with regards to the city’s built environment was expressed.
  • The tasks, responsibilities, and expectations towards rulers and governing bodies in the construction and maintenance of a city’s built environment.
  • The means through which rulers and governors hoped to translate policy for the city’s built environment into practice (administrative bodies, legal measures, direct patronage).
  • Specific architectural and infrastructural projects initiated and overviewed by rulers, governors, but also other urban groups, and their relation to political ideals (such as authority, the common good, urban health, justice…).
  • The overlapping jurisdictions and governmental structures within late medieval cities and their impact on the construction and maintenance of the urban built environment.

Applications

Please send an abstract (max 500 words) with a short CV (2 pages max) to governingandbuildingthecity@gmail.com by 7 April 2025.

Contributions should be in English and the result of original research. Contributions should not be previously published or in the process of being published. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by the end of April.

Conference information

The conference is organised within the research project “Governing and Building the City: Mirrors-for-Magistrates as a lieu for theoretical reflection on architecture (1200-1600)” funded by an Incentive Grant for Scientific Research (FNRS, Belgium).

For more information on the project: http://governingandbuilding.com 

Organisers:

  • Nele De Raedt, professor of history, theory and criticism of architecture, LOCI/LAB, UCLouvain
  • Minne De Boodt, post-doctoral researcher in political history, LOCI/LAB, UCLouvain/ Research Group Medieval History, KU Leuven
  • Philip Muijtjens, post-doctoral researcher in art history, LOCI/LAB, UCLouvain

CPF: ‘Communication – Cooperation – Confrontation: Queens, Noblewomen, and Burgher Women in the Middle Ages’, deadline 20 April 2025

Academic Conference Center, Prague, 16–17 October 2025

Medieval women were not isolated figures in society. As part of a complex system of relations – personal, ideological, or material –, they lived and worked within various networks. The terms “communication, cooperation and confrontation” can served as analytical categories for comprehending how women exerted influence and power, gained support for the realization of their goals, and navigated around their social, economic and other obstacles. With this conference, we seek to apply these lenses to the investigation of the manifold relations between medieval women and material culture in the broadest sense. The conference focuses on three main areas depending on the nature of these relations:

1. Women and their public image

As widely demonstrated in scholarship, women frequently shaped their own public image and used different media to achieve that goal. We are interested in the communication strategies women were choosing to promote their agenda and to overcome diverging interests, and within this scope, we wish to give particular attention to artwork commissions by women: architecture, altarpieces, books, seals and other types of objects. How were these inscribed or imprinted, for example, with tension in such cases as problematic succession or contested authority, either religious or secular, or with the politics of fama when women had to face various accusations?

2. Women and their entourages

To a large extent, women in the Middle Ages exercised agency through a specific engagement with material culture. Within those negotiations in which they could actively take part, women often participated in the exchange of gifts such as jewels, books and artworks, combining cultural and political influence. We wish to investigate with particular attention the instances in which women sought through donations to secure or strengthen cooperation in various social circles with which they were involved: families, households, noble courts, religious houses etc. We also hope for a comparative discussion of such acts in different situations and contexts: Can some be characterized as products of long-term strategy while others, perhaps, as tactical or even ad hoc, reactive measures?

3. Women and their artists

While the scarcity of sources typically precludes an examination of the entire process behind works commissioned by women, its details are often worth inquiring into. We invite discussions of the various modes of interaction and cooperation between the commissioners, the artists (e.g. painters, sculptors, architects, goldsmiths, writers, poets, musicians) and, where relevant, also the go-betweens. On what grounds were decisions and choices made? What factors influenced the choice of a particular artist or workshop? How important were the material and social constraints or the personal networks involved? When faced with obstacles in their pursuits, how did women react, what course of action did they take, and what other agents did they, perhaps, seek to collaborate with?

Within these three areas, we invite contributions from various fields of research: art history, history, literary studies, musicology archeology and others.

The language of the conference proceedings will be English and each paper should be a maximum of twenty-minutes long and include a slide presentation.

We are able to cover accommodation expenses in Prague for the conference speakers.

If you wish to take part, please let us know by 20 April 2025, sending the title of your paper with an abstract (one standard page long at most) and specifying your affiliation.

Please write jointly to all three of the conference organisers:

  • Helena Dáňová (danova@udu.cas.cz);
  • Klára Mezihoráková (mezihorakova@udu.cas.cz)
  • Věra Soukupová (soukupova@ucl.cas.cz)

This international conference will be the third meeting in a row on the topic “Queens, Noblewomen, and Burgher Women in the Middle Ages” organized by the Institute of Art History of the Czech Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Czech Literature of the Czech Academy of Sciences with the support of the Strategy AV 21 Programme – Anatomy of European Society: History, Tradition, Culture, Identity. The aim of the conference continues to be the development of an international platform for research on the topic of women patrons, their social standing and way they presented themselves in medieval Europe. In connection with the conference, a volume on the topic will be published by the Institute of Art History, Prague.

Symposium: ‘From Jean le Bon to Good Duke Humfrey: a new manuscript witness to Anglo-French cultural exchange’, Weston Library, Friday 21 March 2025, 11am–5pm (GMT)

 Free and all welcome, booking required | At the Weston Library and online (book here)

About the event

The Bodleian Libraries have recently acquired a previously unknown manuscript from the library of Humfrey Duke of Gloucester. First written and illuminated in Paris towards the end of the 13th century, the manuscript is an early example of the translation of the New Testament into French. Owned by Jean le Bon, King of France, in the middle of the 14th century, by the early 15th it was in England and came into the hands of a series of Lancastrian royal princes.

This symposium provides a first opportunity to explore this outstanding arrival and to point the way for future research. Coffee and tea will be provided.

This symposium will be followed by a drinks reception in Blackwell Hall.

Programme

10.30–11am: Arrival and coffee

11–11.15am: Welcome from Richard Ovenden; Introduction by Martin Kauffmann

11.15am–12.30pm: Origins (chaired by Daron Burrows)

Clive Sneddon, Translating the Bible into medieval French
Emily Guerry, The Cholet Master and manuscript illumination in Paris at the end of the 13th century

12.30–2pm: Lunch (not provided)

2–3.15pm: From France to England (chaired by Jocelyn Wogan-Browne)

Laure Rioust, Biblical manuscripts in the libraries of Kings John II the Good and Charles V the Wise: heritage and dispersal
Laure Miolo and Jean-Patrice Boudet, The circulation and spoliation of scientific manuscripts between France and England in the Hundred Years’ War

3.15–3.45pm: Tea

3.45–5pm: The manuscript in England (chaired by Daniel Wakelin)

David Rundle, The Lancastrian moment: the manuscript’s English owners
Daniel Wakelin, Conclusion and avenues for further research

Followed by a drinks reception and launch of the digital facsimile of MS. Duke Humfrey c. 1

Speakers

  • Jean-Patrice Boudet, Université d’Orléans
  • Emily Guerry, University of Oxford
  • Laure Rioust, Bibliothèque nationale de France
  • David Rundle
  • Laure Miolo, University of Oxford
  • Clive Sneddon, University of St Andrews
  • Daniel Wakelin, University of Oxford

Booking information

This event is free but booking is required. You can attend this event in person at the Weston Library or online via Zoom.

When you have booked your place, the ticketing system will send you an automated confirmation. If you book to attend this event online, you will receive details for joining the Zoom webinar by email.

Book now – in person

Book now – online

Location

This symposium takes place in person in the Sir Victor Blank Lecture Theatre at the Weston Library.

Weston Library, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BG.