Home
4 Events
- 1
Sort
-
Ottawa
Call for papers - Representation
Machines and the Musical Imagination (1900-1950)
Drawing on historical, aesthetic, theoretical and sociocultural perspectives, this study day seeks to reconsider the place of machines in the musical imagination during the first half of the twentieth century, a period marked by the proliferation of mass technology.
-
Medford
Call for papers - Representation
Ancient Greek and Roman painting and the Digital Humanities
When in 1921, A. Reinach published the Recueil des textes grecs et latins relatifs à la peinture ancienne (Recueil Milliet), it was mainly to make accessible these texts about painting and aesthetics to a broader audience. Since two years, a team gathered around the Perseus Digital Library and the Perseids Project (Tufts University) seek to revitalize the Recueil Milliet (an essential tool for historians of Greek and Roman Art) implementing it into a digitalized format (http://digmill.perseids.org/commentary). In relation to the work made, the proposed conference seek to question methodologies which combine Digital Humanities and scientific research, especially in the field of history of Greek and Roman art. But also, to put forward the relationship between textual sources and the most recent archaeological findings.
-
New Orleans
Session at the 64th Renaissance Society of America (RSA) Conference
As the Renaissance Society of America is heading to La Nouvelle Orléans, this panel aims to take stockof two groundbreaking French art history texts currently celebrating,respectively, their 40th and 30th anniversary. Louis Marin’s To DestroyPainting and The Origin of Perspective by Hubert Damisch were bothtranslated into English and other languages, and had considerableimpact on art historical discussions around their topics. For this panel, we seek papers discussing one of these seminal books – or indeed both together – and the legacy of Damisch’s and Marin’s contributions to the discipline.
-
West Lafayette
Thinking the National and Transnational in a Global Perspective
L'histoire de l'art est-elle suffisamment globale pour relever le défi du transnational, sans négliger pour autant les processus de territorialisation et de nationalismes culturels ? L'approche spatiale et cartographique peut-elle la renouveler ? Autour d'Artlas (artlas.ens.fr), le colloque de Purdue (West Lafayette, USA, 27-29 septembre 2012) invite les chercheurs à réfléchir aux stratégies possibles pour étudier les processus de circulation et de globalisation, sans laisser de côté les questions d'ethnicité ou de nationalité, échappant ainsi autant aux limites de la simple narration qu'à celles d'un globalisme aveugle.
4 Events
- 1
Choose a filter
Events
- Past (4)
event format
Languages
- English (4)
Secondary languages
- French
Years
Subjects
- Society (3)
- Sociology (1)
- History (3)
- Industrial history (1)
- Social history (1)
- Mind and language (4)
- Language (1)
- Literature (1)
- Information (1)
- Representation (4)
- Cultural history (2)
- History of art
- Visual studies (1)
- Epistemology and methodology (1)
- Archaeology (1)
- Digital humanities (1)
- Language (1)
- Periods (2)
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)
- Greek history (1)
- Roman history (1)
- Modern (1)
- Prehistory and Antiquity (1)