CALL FOR PAPERS
Transcription
CALL FOR PAPERS
CALL FOR PAPERS NORDIK 2015 — Mapping Uncharted Territories The 11th Triannual Nordik Committee for Art History Conference 13–16 May 2015 University of Iceland and The Nordic House Reykjavík Keynote speakers: Professor Elaine O'Brien, Sacramento State University Professor Terence E. Smith, University of Pittsburg Gavin Jantjes, Chief Curator, National Museum for Art, Architecture, and Design, Oslo. T he 2015 conference will explore questions about the structure of the “art-world” and the establishment of hierarchies in terms of a dichotomy between “center” and “periphery” that have been important in art historical discourse for the past decades, within the Nordic countries as well as in other countries fnding themselves in a peripheral position. Many of those are questions related to ideas of identity and power, as well as attempts to address the possibilities of empowerment of those that perceive themselves to be in a marginal position. In recent decades it has become increasingly evident that the lack of research into the non-centric aspects of art has left us with a very incomplete picture of art history in general, its forms, structures and forces. We now perceive an increasing need to travel to those largely unchartered territories and attempt to map them, categorize them and understand, in order to criticize and disrupt the centric and provide a more coherent art-world view where both center and periphery are included in a comprehensive manner. We invite paper proposals for the 21 sessions spanning a wide range of topics. Submit a 1–2 page abstract, brief c.v. (two pages max.), and full contact information by September 25, 2014. NB: Please direct your communication both to the chairs of relevant sessions and to the conference organisers at: [email protected] NORDIK 2015: Overview of Sessions Annamari Vänskä & Hazel Clark: Critical Fashion Curating ....................................................................... 2 Harald Klinke: Digital Art History – a new frontier in research: ................................................................... 4 Mark Ian Jones: Discontinuities and Alternative Histories: Mapping the peripheral in Nordic Modernity ........ 6 Hans Hayden & Charlotta Krispinsson: Expanding Perspectives in the Study of Art Historiography ............... 8 Margrét Elísabet Ólafsdóttir,: Histories of Media Art in the Nordic and Baltic Countries ............................. 10 Arndís S. Árnadóttir: Mapping local/regional design history in the Nordic periphery ..................................... 12 Jón Proppé: Mapping the Art of the West-Nordic Countries ......................................................................... 14 Rasmus Kjærboe & Karen Westphal Eriksen: Marginal Modernisms within the Nordic countries ................ 16 Tonje H. Sørensen & Tove Kårstad Haugsbø: Meaningless Landscapes? From National Roots to Transnational Routes ................................................................................................................... 18 Mari Hvattum, Mari Lending, & Wallis Willer: Mediating Modern Architecture ...................................... 20 Marta Edling , Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir & Æsa Sigurjónsdóttir: Navigating in a landscape of conflicting views on artistic research: History, practices, policies ............................... 22 Tania Ørum: Nordic Avant-Garde Movements after World War II .............................................................. 24 Malin Hedlin Hayden & Magdalena Holdar: Performance As Visual Art In the Nordic Countries ............... 26 Melanie Klein & Isabel Wünsche: Progressive Art Education and the Spread of Modernism beyond Europe .. 28 Charlotte Bydler, & Mårten Snickare,: Resisting art world violence: Indigenous/Sámi art and material culture in a post-peripheral view .................................................................................. 30 Clarence Burton Sheffield, Jr.: The Aesthetics of the Margin: The Role of Global Literary theory for Scandinavian Modernism and Nordic Art History ........................................................................... 32 Guðrún Harðardóttir: The Mini as a reflection of the Macro. Miniatures as source material ......................... 34 Ann-Sofie Nielsen Gremaud & Gry Hedin: Uncharted nature: Nordic Landscapes in the Era of the Anthropocene ........................................................................................................................ 36 Dagný Heiðdal & Steinar Örn Atlason: Uncharted Photography: On the relationship between Photography and other Media, particularly Painting, in Nordic Pictorial Tradition ............................ 38 Renja Suominen-Kokkonen & Hanna Kemppi: Unwanted Monuments & The Silenced Pasts .................... 40 Sarah Timme: Vikings, Gods and Heroes. Northern Antiquity in Visual Art after the Middle Ages ................. 42 Ylva Sommerland & Margareta Wallin Wictorin: Writing comics into art history and art history into comics research ........................................................................................................................ 44 1 SESSION ORGANIZER: Annamari Vänskä, Adjunct Professor, Collegium Researcher, TIAS – Turku Institute for Advanced Studies University of Turku [email protected] Hazel Clark, Professor of Design Studies and Fashion Studies, Research Chair of Fashion, Parsons The New School for Design, New York, USA [email protected] TITLE: Critical Fashion Curating SHORT ABSTRACT: Fashion has fast become hard currency in the world of curating. It makes blockbuster exhibitions, establishes new museums and cultural organisations, and merges art with fashion. It also urges to ask, how does this new emerging field of curating change the practice itself? What is fashion curating? What is the role of the contemporary fashion curator? Critical Fashion Curating invites papers and presentations focusing on possibilities and challenges of contemporary fashion curating on a global scale. Themes can discuss for example: What is fashion curating, when did it emerge? What needs does it respond to? What is the relationship between art, fashion, design and industry? What are the challenges of fashion curating? How should the practice be developed? FULL DESCRIPTION: In autumn 2012, the shop windows of the fashion department store Selfridges in London were transformed into displays were art and fashion merged. Life-sized and miniature mannequin dolls modelled after the world-famous Japanese artist Yaoi Kusama wearing a red gown patterned by her signature white polka dots, were surrounded by Louis Vuitton hand-bags in diferent sizes and colours, also printed with Kusama’s polka dots. Simultaneously, the London-based Saatchi Gallery exhibited another show merging fashion with art. This was a travelling exhibition entitled “The Little Black Jacket”, a show dedicated to Chanel’s signature blazer, co-organised by the designer Karl Lagerfeld and former Vogue-editor Carine Roitfeld. It featured over a hundred, mostly black-and-white photographic portraits of Chanel’s models and other known celebrities, each making an interpretation of the jacket reflecting their own personal style. Both of these examples go to show how successfully fashion and art merge in contemporary culture despite the fact that fashion has long been regarded as a “stepchild” in the art world. Art has been regarded to be timeless by definition and fashion, on the other hand, has been regarded as the synonym with continuous change, dying and decay. These examples also go to show that the dichotomy between art and fashion is fast subsiding. On one hand, fashion has achieved a cultural status similar to art and art in turn is benefitting from fashion’s close ties with the popular, commercialism, and celebrity culture. Fashion has fast become hard currency in the world of curating. It makes 2 blockbuster exhibitions, establishes new museums and cultural organisations, and new ways of bringing art and fashion together. It also urges to ask, how does this new emerging field of curating change the practice itself? What is fashion curating? What is the role of the contemporary fashion curator? Critical Fashion Curating invites papers and presentations that focus on the possibilities and challenges of contemporary fashion curating on a global scale. Fashion curating has quickly become a new field of curating, opening new ways to theorize, and exhibit and experience fashion, clothing and textiles. The session stresses critical points of view to fashion curating, as w The session invites papers with a focus on following theoretical and practical questions about curating: What is fashion curating? When did it emerge and why, what needs does it respond to in contemporary world of curating and fashion? The session welcomes papers focusing on critical curatorial practices in fashion. The papers can discuss, for example, the relationship between art and fashion, design and industry; when and how did it become such an essential part of curating? What needs does fashion curating respond to in contemporary culture and fashion? How does fashion curating bring art and fashion together? How can art and fashion benefit one another, and teach to one another? What are the obstacles and challenges of fashion curating? What kind of audiences do fashion exhibitions invite? What are the challenges of fashion curating? How should the practice be developed? 3 SESSION ORGANIZER: Dr. Harald Klinke, Kunstgeschichtliches Seminar, Universität Göttingen [email protected] TITLE: Digital Art History – a new frontier in research: New approaches to intelligent image databases in art history, on the intersection of Art History and Information Sciences SHORT ABSTRACT: Art History is at the brink of new ways of accessing its material and gaining un precedented insights. While we are still using image databases that resemble slide libraries, Information Science has to ofer multiple ad#vanced approaches to images, such as content based search and classification that will become important tools for art historical research. Big Image Data will enable us to master the con tent of huge collections by making use of intelligent algorithms and visualising their results. What requirements does Art History have towards Information Technology? What projects do exist that can serve as best practice? Which direction does Art History go from here? FULL DESCRIPTION: Art History is at the brink of new ways of accessing its material and gaining un precedented insights. While we are still using image databases that resemble slide libraries, Information Science has to ofer multiple ad#vanced approaches to images, such as content based search and classification that will become important tools for art historical research. Big Image Data will enable us to master the con tent of huge collections by making use of intelligent algorithms and visualising their results. What requirements does Art History have towards Information Technology? What projects do exist that can serve as best practice? Which direction does Art History go from here? While we teach our students to amass a collection of artworks in their minds in order to recognise, compare and judge art, computers are able to store, make available and analyse more images than any human could see in a lifetime. The computer is increasingly able not only to search across meta data, but to derive information from the image itself, like colour information, similari#ties, entropy or content information. The computer is increasingly able to not only deal with pixels, but to virtually see what is on them. Moreover, computers can help to classify image, e.g. into epochs and artists. The so called Digital Humanities investigate the potential of the use of Information Technology (IT) in the humanities. Sciences that are dealing with images, like Art History, are slowly catching up. Still, the prototype of a department of art history has had two repositories of knowledge: the library and the slide library. The slide library has now been digitalised in databases of images with their respective meta data. But still they mimic slide libraries in structure, i.e. we can find what we already know. We have not yet raised its digital treasure to find what we do not know already. But Art History is at the brink of entirely new methods by means of IT. Soon we will have tools in our hands that will 4 revolutionise our discipline. Papers should consider questions such as: • Which advanced digital tools are suitable for image search in Art History? • How to visualise Big Image Data? • What are the future challenges for computer vision in the service of Art History? • What are the requirements for a rich image format that serves research in art? • How can we learn from experiences in museums? • What are concepts for an international IT infrastructure for Art History? • What are interdisciplinary approaches that can serve as best practice? • If the computer is increasingly intelligent, what is the role of the researcher and his relations to the tool being used? • If the computer is the new medium in research and teaching, how does that change the methods we are using and does that have precursors in the history of our discipline? • If Art History is about to experience fundamental change, what has to be the guiding line to de#velop digital tools that serve our scientific objectives? 5 SESSION ORGANIZER: Mark Ian Jones PhD University of New South Wales, College of Fine Arts, Sydney, Australia. [email protected] TITLE: Discontinuitiesand Alternative Histories: Mapping the peripheral in Nordic Modernity SHORT ABSTRACT: This session is concerned with both the inside and the other side of the inclusive/exclusive line in the discourses of Nordic Modernity and with what factors determined the delineation of diference, of inclusion and exclusion and what art and design historians wanted to see and wanted to stress. It is also interested in those artists and designers who straddled the line between central and peripheral and the details of their alternative histories. It proposes that geographic boundaries too have clouded the representation and description of Nordic design as opposed to Scandinavian design in discourse in those countries perceived as central are as important as those perceived as peripheral. FULL DESCRIPTION: Twentieth Century Nordic Modernity has largely defined how the world still views design and the applied arts from the Nordic region. In mapping the discourses of Swedish Modernity geographer Alan Pred situated the 1930 Stockholm Exhibition as the defining line, the “pure and simple line”, where: On the inside of the line is the new sense of national identity, a new sense of achieve ment, the sensibly modern, the rational and enlightened individual who bears her expanded freedom [...] On the other side of the line, outside and beyond, is the di#erent, the inferior, the repudiated, the disapproved and condemned, the unmodern, the irrational, the unenlightened. This line may be seen to have defined not only Swedish Modernity but also Scandinavian and Nordic Modernity as evidenced in the subsequent trajectory of international awareness of design from the region in discourses where national became blurred with regional. Discourse has the power to shape perceptions or knowledge around what is considered normal or accepted. In the case of Nordic Modernity, it can be argued that discourse presented knowledge of a particular aesthetic, grounded in issues of national and (exclusive) regional identity. As a result, Nordic design from the 20th century may be seen as exclusive and regional rather than inclusive and international, a view that runs counter to the democratic spirit of the region. As art and design historians we know this not to be true however knowledge as promoted by discourses was exclusive; that which did not fit, was not ‘accepted’, and thus either excluded or viewed as not representative of the truth. Cherry and Pollock have considered the female artist “intricated in class and gender power relations which have determined who is recorded, how, and by whom - and who is not. Foucault has speculated on the ‘discontinuities’ in history and posed the question “how is it that one particular statement appeared rather 6 than another? What conditions informed historical discourses and what are the consequences of the ‘traces’ they have left? This session is concerned with both the inside and the other side of the inclusive/exclusive line in the discourses of Nordic Modernity and with what factors determined the delineation of diference, of inclusion and exclusion and what art and design historians wanted to see and wanted to stress. It is also interested in those artists and designers who straddled the line between central and peripheral and the details of their alternative histories. It proposes that geographic boundaries too have clouded the representation and description of Nordic design as opposed to Scandinavian design in discourse in those countries perceived as central are as important as those perceived as peripheral. This session invites papers that address the questions: • Who were the dominant groups within art, design and the applied arts in the Nordic region and what were their roles as arbiters, judges, editors, promotors and commentators? • What implications did ‘power relations’ have on determining how art and design historians constructed discourses? • Who were the the artists and designers that straddled the line between central and peripheral and what are their alternative histories? • Who were the artists and designers that evaded inclusion or were marginalised and the victims of exclusion? • Who were the artists and designers that represent ‘discontinuities’ in Nordic art and design history? • Who were the artists and designers whose Other work is hitherto unknown? 7 SESSION ORGANIZER: Hans Hayden PhD, Dept. of Art History, Stockholm University [email protected] Charlotta Krispinsson PhD Student, Dept. of Art History, Stockholm University [email protected] TITLE: Expanding Perspectives in the Study of Art Historiography SHORT ABSTRACT: Since the study of art historiography was first formulated as a field of research in the 1980s, an underlying aim has been to turn attention to unconsidered methods, practices and ideologies. As an investigation into the past of the discipline, the core of art historiography has since then been an exploration of scholarships, conceptual foundations and institutional history. Today, we can see an expansion of possibilities in contemporary research, reflecting diferent conceptual, theoretical and contextual perspectives. The aim of this session is thus to explore what kind of critical examination of the historiography of art history exists and operates in recent research, and what they embrace. FULL DESCRIPTION: Since the study of art historiography was first formulated as a field of research in the 1980s, an underlying aim has been to turn the attention into the by then un considered methods, practices and ideologies. Historiography has shown that every approach has a history As an investigation into the past of the discipline, the core of art historiography has since then been an exploration of scholarships, conceptual foundations and institutional history. Today, research in art historiography has become an institutionalized part of the discipline. Institutionalization brings possibilities as well as challenges. Critical voices have been raised (eg. Dana Arnold, Art History 2009) that Art historiography would then imitate the development of art history in the 19th century, by moving from mapping and exploration into processes of constructing a canon of linear progression, hereby reinforcing a heritage of ’old masters’ and geographical limits set by national borders / (national restrictions).On the other hand, the scope of research has also been widened – from centering almost exclusively on the foundation and early history of the discipline in Germanspeaking languages, ’peripheries’ such as the Nordic countries has now been wider acknowledged in international research (see for example Matthew Rampley etc. eds., 2012). Writings in art historiography have also turned to new contexts of research, such as popular culture and cross-readings with critical theory (Frederic J. Schwartz 2005, Karen Lang 2006), recent theory (Michael Ann Holly 2013, Keith Moxey 2013) and ideology and politics (Christopher Wood 2000 and Rampley 2013). These are but a few examples of an expansion of perspectives in contemporary critical art historiographical research, whose objective is not to preserve a canonical narrative of the history of art history but rather to explore and move beyond such a narrative. 8 Here you can also tell a diference between center and periphery, where the historiographic research in the Nordic countries for example, may present a slightly diferent approach to the canonical narrative. In the past some parts of this field of research have strived to map and create awareness of national scholarly traditions in relation to an international context, when other parts has conducted critical surveys in the aftermath of New Art History. But where are we today? Is it possible for Nordic scholars to make use of the semi-peripheral position to open up new perspectives in the art historiographic research? Thus, the question is how do we comprehend such a multivalent development ourselves today? What kinds of alternative critical examination of the historiography of art history exist and operate today and what do they embrace? Do they involve interdisciplinary readings, studies in global art historiography, the history of feminist art historiography, the specific conditions of the semi-periphery (i.e. the art historiography of the Nordic countries), the unwritten practices of art historians as a profession outside the university – or something completely else? This session, thus, would like to gather papers that represent diferent methodological, theoretical and contextual perspectives of contemporary critical historiography of art history. 9 SESSION ORGANIZER: Margrét Elísabet Ólafsdóttir, PhD in aesthetics and art theory [email protected] TITLE: Histories of Media Art in the Nordic and Baltic Countries SHORT ABSTRACT: The session will focus on questions concerning historiographies of media art. Media art is generally understood as what used to be referred to as new media art, that was seen as an emerging practice in the late 1990’s. When new media art was still new it seemed to be without history and thus free from any art historical past. But gradually media art histories that went beyond the newest trends, started to emerge. Those histories are told through narratives that can be considered as equally new and raise questions as how media art histories are told. This panel encourages papers addressing case studies of media art in diferent periods and regions, as well as methodologies as of how media art histories are told. FULL DESCRIPTION: The session will focus on questions concerning historiographies of media art. Media art is generally understood as what used to be referred to as new media art. New media art was seen as an emerging practice in the late 1990’s that soon lost its pre-fix ‘new’. Both media art and contemporary art seemed to have entered a post-media era that some understood as the end of new media, while for others it meant that the media was everywhere. But in the 1990’s new media art was still new and as such it seemed to be without history and thus free from any art historical past. It was based on latest information technologies, and the artist’s awareness of how those technologies were changing societies, cultures and thus our world view. The awareness of the impact of digital technology on art gradually aroused interest in art historical narratives that went beyond the newest trends, and media art histories started to emerge. Those histories are told through narratives that can be considered as equally new and raise questions as how media art histories are told. They also raise questions as if media art history should be considered a specific field or be integrated into a more general art historical curriculum. New media art itself was seen as marginal in the art world, but when it lost its newness it was not automatically considered part of the mainstream contemporary art. Instead its existence has generated debates as whether its place is within the contemporary art or not. Such question may seem anecdotal but in concordance media art has been a marginal subject within art history. It thus seems that debates about media art in relation to contemporary art have gone through similar phases as older debates about older mechanical and electronic arts like photography and video where distinction were made between photography and artist’s photography, video art and artist’s video. Both photography and video have their origins in new technologies, but today the digital technologies have invaded older technologies and thus altered both photography and video. Media art might thus enclose photography and video that have become digital just like 10 media art. This can in itself be a subject of debate, but there are other factors to be taken into consideration, as how those changes have altered the way art historians look at the past. Those questions are of interest to this panel that would encourage papers addressing case studies of media art in diferent periods and regions, including individual artists, groups, areas and countries. It also encourages papers addressing methodologies as of how media art histories are told. They can include histories of older media and media arts, but also the historization of more recent (new) media art practices. The panel will also take into consideration proposals, addressing the dissemination of art works through mediation. Such topics would emphasis that the fact the media and more recently the digital revolution has not only had impact on how art is made, but how it circulates. Such topics are relevant to changes caused by the immediacy of information flow, through a global network that has afected older notion of the periphery and the center that should be of a particular interest to regions that used to think of themselves as situated on the margin. 11 SESSION ORGANIZER: Arndís S. Árnadóttir, design historian PhD [email protected] TITLE: Mapping local/regional design history in the Nordic periphery SHORT ABSTRACT: Design history is deeply rooted in art, industrial and architectural history and seeks to link to other disciplines exploring material culture in a variety of ways, including diverse actors such as designers, manufacturers, mechanics, craftsmen etc. ─ even ´anonymous´ design. Primarily the aim of this session is to focus on previously uncharted histories of design pertaining to marginal, non-centric, Nordic territories ─ and dicuss the changing role of design museums in documenting, researching and mediating design. FULL DESCRIPTION: In spite of the relatively recent discipline of design history, the inherent conflict between the “lesser arts and fine arts”, as pointed out by William Morris in the 19th century, is still prevalent in art historical circles. Let´s therefore open up the debate whether applied art / design is ´peripheral´ or ´center´ in reference to the theme of this conference. Design history, as a field of study, is deeply rooted in art history ─ as well as industrial and architectural history. It also seeks to link to other disciplines exploring objects, artefacts or material culture such as anthropology, histories of ideas and culture, business history, craft history, history of science and technology and sociology, to name a few. In recent years relevant forums on design history and design studies have been challenging the design historical map, focusing on peripheral territories that do not necessarily follow mainstream (or) trajectories from the centers in Europe and USA. This remapping of design history has often led to chance encounters and produced important “lost histories” ─ that explores works and diverse actors in uncharted terrritories ─ of designers, manufacturers, mechanics, craftsmen etc. ─ even ´anonymous´ design. Thus a more comprehensive view of design history towards a coherent vision of what is center and periphery in design has been achieved. Globally “Scandinavian design”, for example, became ´center´ in design during a certain period of time, but recently important alternative narratives of Scandinavian design have emerged, drawing from fields as diverse as transport, engineering, packaging, photography, law, interiors, and corporate identity. This remapping only covered histories from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden — Iceland and other Nordic regions are still more or less uncharted territories. Documentation and the role of design museums are relevant issues in light of design being a popular field of study at institutions of higher learning and design history and design studies have become important academic fields. Formerly museums of Decorative and Applied Arts have changed their names into Design Museums, creating a diferent image and some attracting visitors in record 12 numbers. Their function however, whether founded in the late 19th century or at the end of the 20th century, as important centers of documentation on local / national level, continue to be essential. In some areas research has been scarce and design is being poorly documented and even misinterpreted. The theme of the conference Mapping uncharted territories relates well to the design historical discourse in terms of a dichotomy between ´center´ and ´periphery´, creating an excellent opportunity for this session to explore further (but not limited to) the following: • What sets local –regional design apart from the global? • Studies and analysis on the material culture of design in a broad sense, seeking alternative histories of design in reference to marginal, non-centric, Nordic territories • What are the challenges and opportunities in documenting, writing and mediating such stories? • Entertainment for the public or essential centers of research on national/local level? The changing role of design museums. 13 SESSION ORGANIZER: Jón Proppé, independent writer and curator [email protected] TITLE: Mapping the Art of the West-Nordic Countries SHORT ABSTRACT: This session will try to establish an overview of the development of art in Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands and show how artistic production and discourse in these countries share certain characteristics and concerns while other, no less important traits divide them. On aim would be to define a discursive framework that takes into account the special concerns of artists and art professionals in these societies. Another central concern would be to discuss methods for supporting West-Nordic artists in the Nordic context and stimulate cooperation and communication with artists and art professionals throughout the area. Approaches will range from historiography, through contemporary practice to post-colonial theory. FULL DESCRIPTION: The discussion of art in the West-Nordic countries requires a diferent approach to that used in the continental Nordic countries although for the most part issues overlap in various ways. There are several external factors that must be considered, such as: The isolation and size of these societies (57 000 people in Greenland, 50 000 in the Faroe Islands and 325 000 in Iceland); the relative weakness of institutions, in the art world and in general; small and undeveloped art market; colonial history and a complicated relationship with Denmark. There are also other factors that seem to have influenced the development of art in these societies such as: The artists’ relationship to the harsh climate and nature; struggles for independence and a corresponding search for national identity; rapid social change in the twentieth century and the rapid adoption, in the art world, of modern Western approaches and styles. These and other issues can be seen in much of the art produced in the West-Nordic countries and this session is dedicated to mapping them and establishing a approach to their study. Art and cultural heritage. The most obvious division can be made between the Inuit culture in Greenland and the European culture of Iceland and the Faroe Islands. However, significant diferences can also be found between the latter two. More importantly, we should think about how artists in more recent times have related to their particular heritage, how they have built on or rejected it, reconciled it with international influences. In this it is useful to look to work already done in other former colonies and dependencies, and to the theoretical discourse on post-colonial art. West-Nordic art in relation to Nordic and European cooperation. Initiatives have been made to promote art projects and cooperation among the West-Nordic countries and they are included in the broader Nordic cooperative network. Necessarily, however, distance and the cost of travel and transportation 14 limits such involvement. The search has been for viable models for cooperation and papers would be sought on this subject. State of research and international exposure. While a great deal has been published in recent decades the focus has been mostly on Icelandic and Faroese art. More discussion and research is needed on mapping West-Nordic art generally and the art of Greenland in particular. This is also a prerequisite for efectively promoting international exposure which, due partly to the lack of research, has often been haphazard or led by political and economic concerns. West-Nordic artists in the Nordic art context. From the sculptor Thorvaldsen (born in Denmark of Icelandic parents) to the present day, West-Nordic artists have been closely involved in the art scenes of the other Nordic countries. This area and the issue of reciprocal influence have not been much studied and papers would be welcomed that throw more light on the subject. 15 SESSION ORGANIZER: Rasmus Kjærboe, PhD student, Aarhus University [email protected], [email protected] Karen Westphal Eriksen, PhD fellow, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen [email protected] TITLE: Marginal Modernisms within the Nordic countries SHORT ABSTRACT: This session seeks to address uncharted and peripheral modernisms in the visual arts, focusing on cases anchored in the Nordic countries roughly 1900-1960. Art produced in the Nordic countries is geographically already outside the heartland of Europe, but in some cases marginalization has further been put in place by recent and otherwise welcome critical and methodological discourses. The session seeks to address the periphery inside Europe by inviting case-based discussions concerned with the alternate, the regional, the provincial – everything that has been put aside, historically as well as the historiographically. Additionally, we look for cases of marginal modernisms that challenge our hegemonic concept of historic modernism, expand it or bypass it. FULL DESCRIPTION: This session seeks to address uncharted and peripheral modernisms in the visual arts, focusing on cases anchored in the Nordic countries roughly 1900-1960. Western modernism has been widely criticized as white man’s art, Eurocentric and imperialistic in its so-called universality. While institutional critique has had some success in challenging modernism as institution, the focus on dismantling discourse has not always been followed by the promised rewritings that should open up new vistas and perspectives. Instead, an unintended side efect of the deconstruction of a hegemonic discourse of art history has often been to assist in further burying the heterogeneous field of regional, European modernisms. Modernisms in plural have paradoxically just been sent further into oblivion by revisionist art history. Modernist art produced in the Nordic countries is geographically already outside the heartland of Europe. Remnants of a traditional discourse still casts this diverse field as primarily oriented toward one or several of a handful of centres: Paris, New York, Berlin. Art works, movements and artists not easily fitted to this model have had a hard time gaining scholarly recognition. Instead, these have sufered the misfortune of being seen as doubly peripheral: removed from the artistic centres, yet not quite ‘other’ enough to gain visibility through postcolonial critiques of modernism. Within the new global scholarship on art, Europe’s geographical periphery is increasingly being charted and given a narrative. However, the periphery within Europe still remains largely unspoken for. Kobena Mercer, Griselda Pollock, 16 Geofrey Batchen and other critics of western modernism have stringently rethought notions of centre-periphery and provincialism by replacing hegemonic modernism by regional and alternate currents. What, then, happens to the provincial and regional modernisms inside so-called hegemonic European Modernism? Overall, this session wishes to draw on the critique of hegemonic modernism and the concomitant rethinkings in terms of entangled and alternate currents, but to turn this focus back on Europe itself. The session therefore considers papers on diverse topics in order to address the periphery and the marginalized inside the visual arts of the Nordic countries. Papers should consider questions of marginalised and overlooked modernisms in the Nordic countries, particularly through case-based studies. Papers may be concerned with alternative centres such as periphery-to-periphery networks within or going outside of Europe. Additionally, we invite papers on modernisms oriented to the specifically regional or local, or on subjects considered marginal to modernism, such as the strongly social or politically invested. We further encourage focus on interactions between the hegemonic and the marginal in modernism, as well as papers charting alternative modernisms and aspects thereof in contrast to or negotiating hegemonic modernism. Papers could also consider methodological questions of how to research overlooked currents in the Nordic countries and the implications of positing alternative centres or mapping alternate networks. 17 SESSION ORGANIZER: Tonje H. Sørensen, PhD Candidate, University of Bergen [email protected] Tove Kårstad Haugsbø, Ph.D. Candidate, KODE Bergen Art Museum [email protected] TITLE: Meaningless Landscapes? From National Roots to Transnational Routes SHORT ABSTRACT: In Art History and Visual Culture, the search for cultural roots and construction of national narratives have limited the readings of landscape. This has even ob structed the transnational intertextualities within various media, such as painting, photography, cinema and sculpture from circa 1840-1920. This session welcomes papers dealing with these various media, addressing questions like, but not limited to, performativity of landscape outside of a national framework, bordercrossings and borderlands as sites in and of art, and explorations of the term “meaningless landscapes”. What happens when we seek to interpret landscapes in e.g. the Nordic countries, Siberia, and Northern America with an emphasis on the transnational? By tracking art's transnational routes, will we discover a "meaninglessness" in what we traditionally reckon as a national representation of landscape? FULL DESCRIPTION: Men sett nu at det slett ikke er det nasjonale som har interessert maleren i landskapet, tvert imot noe ganske annet, det almene, dets egenskaper av plass for mennesket overhodet, ikke nettopp for nordmenn, sa kan man ikke forlange noe nasjonalt preg over det. - Christian Krogh, 1902. But consider now that it is not at all the national which has made the painter interested in this landscape, but rather something else, the common, the character as a place for mankind in general, not only for Norwegians, then one cannot claim a national touch. - Christian Krogh, 1902. The lament of the Norwegian painter Christian Krogh highlights the way in which the genre of landscape has been interpreted through national and/or national romantic perspectives. Yet the fact remains that the interpretation of landscapes and nature as somehow typically representations of the national has been a mainstay in a majority of works within Art History and Visual Culture from circa 1840–1920. To a larger degree, the search for cultural roots and construction of national narratives have limited the readings of landscape and nature, at times even obstructing the transnational intertextualities of art. In engaging landscape art, Richard R. Brettell has used the provocative term “meaningless landscapes” to describe Claude Monet’s On the Bank of Seine at Benencourt (1868). While the title refers to a specific place, Brettell argues that “there is nothing that makes it interesting as a landscape motif”. Instead, we “should [...] interpret the work as a construction in paint that uses this particular scene as its organisational scaffolding”. This session would like to ask what happens when we seek to interpret landscapes of the northern 18 territories and marginal places, in e.g. The Nordic countries, Siberia, and Northern America, through the lens of Brettell’s term “meaningless landscape”. Does it allow us to break out of the national historiography and instead embrace transnational readings? To open up a reading of art, which emphasises the transnational, we suggest to employ James Clifford’s term “routes” in addition to the more bounded and stable “roots”. Routes indicate movement and interaction across borders, be they national, regional or ethnic, which could lead to more heterogeneous interpretations than the national narrative. One example might be Patricia Berman who in her study seeks to look at the Skagen paintings from the 1880s not as emblematic of something particularly Danish, but rather as the modern, industrialised world’s response to nature. This session will welcome papers dealing with various media, such as painting, photography, cinema and sculptures from circa 1840–1920, and considering questions like the performativity of landscape outside of a national framework, bordercrossings and borderlands as sites in and of art, and explorations of the term “meaningless landscapes”. These questions are not exclusive, but rather meant as guidelines to recognize the many diverse interpretations within the interplay between art and nature. For by tracking art's transnational routes, will we discover a "meaninglessness" in what we traditionally reckon as a national representation of landscape? 19 SESSION ORGANIZERS: Mari Hvattum, Oslo School of Architecture and Design [email protected] Mari Lending, Oslo School of Architecture and Design [email protected] Wallis Willer, University of Kentucky [email protected] TITLE: Mediating Modern Architecture SHORT ABSTRACT: This session studies the emergence of modern architecture by examining the relationship between architecture and new public media in the 19th and early 20th centuries. A marked shift in architectural publication took place in this period in which the treatise was supplemented by genres capable of efficiently disseminating visual and textual information to a large audience beyond the academies. The session, then, looks at how the new public sphere manifested itself architecturally not only in the form of buildings but also as debates, programs, reactions and negotiations in and over public space, making architecture a key vehicle for what Jürgen Habermas came to call the structural transformation of the public sphere. FULL DESCRIPTION: “[M]odern architecture only becomes modern with its engagement with the media" writes Beatriz Colomina in her ground-breaking study Privacy and Publicity: Architecture and Mass Media from 1994. This session studies the emergence of modern architecture by examining the relationship between architecture and new public media in the 19th and early 20th centuries. A marked shift in architectural publication took place in this period in which the treatise was supplemented by genres capable of efficiently disseminating visual and textual information to a large audience beyond the academies. The new public press played a particularly important role in this process, promoting a debate that placed the built environment firmly at the centre of modern public culture. In the early 20th century, newspapers and journals were supplemented by a rich array of popular genres such as ladies magazines and advertisement, presenting both the private home and the public monument as matters of profound cultural importance. Integrating words, images, and buildings – real or imaginary – in entirely new ways, these media contributed to shape a new public discourse on architecture, and to propel architecture into a novel visual culture. The session invites papers that explore new forms of architectural discourse in the 19th and the early 20th century, looking particularly at how architecture was disseminated in new media and to new audiences. Newspapers, illustrated journals, exhibition catalogues and ladies magazines provided their readers with a rich chronicle of architectural culture and contributed to break the hegemony of classicism by opening up a new and heterogeneous field of architectural expression and deliberation. Furthermore, these media put architecture at the 20 service of an entirely new public; the modern bourgeoisie. The session, then, looks at how the new public sphere manifested itself architecturally not only in the form of buildings but also as debates, programs, reactions and negotiations in and over public space, making architecture a key vehicle for what Jürgen Habermas came to call the structural transformation of the public sphere. We particularly welcome papers investigating the relationship between words, images and buildings in new public media, and encourage interdisciplinary contributions drawing on fields such as publication history and word-image studies, in addition to architectural and art history. Along with newspapers, magazines, journals, and catalogues, papers might look at photographic albums, travel guides, adult education programs and textbooks. The session invites papers from any part of the world to explore the public mediation of modern architecture in the designated period; an urgent task, it seems, at a time when public space is being rapidly reconfigured, both as a physical structure and a mediated environment. 21 SESSION ORGANIZERS: Marta Edling, PhD, Forskare Historiska institutionen Uppsala universitet, Professor Konstvetenskap, Södertörns högskola [email protected] Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir, PhD Art Research [email protected] Æsa Sigurjónsdóttir, Associate Professor, University of Iceland [email protected] TITLE: Navigating in a landscape of conflicting views on artistic research : History, practices, policies SHORT ABSTRACT: Artistic research has and is subject to many debates. In 2013 it was formally integrated into art history through its critical implications in Documenta XIII one of the main contemporary art events. Within artistic research there are diferent opinions and emphasis at play and surveys have identified two main parallel tendencies across the field. Still there is little information on these practices, their efect or an analysis of the knowledge produced with in these. This session seeks to shed some light on this important aspect of artistic practice with a view to analyse core values and arguments. FULL DESCRIPTION: Artistic research has during the last decades been subject to many extended and often afected debates. Today the increasing significance of artistic research or art as research cannot be ignored, and these practices have in fact already been integrated into the current art-historical canon after its critical implications in Documenta 13. Even if this research is an established phenomenon its role and status shifts. Artistic research projects can on the one hand be an integrated part of academic praxis and simultaneously deviate from what is perceived as fundamental academic values. This is not only due to the presence of art as part of the research process and a presentation of results, but it also claims that artistic processes produce a special kind of practice-based knowledge. In the ongoing discussion on this seemingly ambivalent status, some suggest that the adjustment to research templates divert energy from the content and spirit of the work resulting in overly textual and overly theoretical artworks. Others point to the fact that art as research processes and displays might be understood as the result of long-term developments within art practice itself – and the diferent place art has now in the world. Surveys of the global development of artistic research, confirm this problematic duality. They claim to find two parallel tendencies; on the one hand models where the autonomy of art is stressed, and on the other hand hybrid formats, more or less adherent to traditional academic ideals (see e.g Camp & Siska 2011, Elkins 2013, Borgdorf 2011). The Nordic countries ofer in this 22 sense an interesting case. Here the history of artistic doctoral programs demonstrates a shift from an early ‘academic’ phase with a written thesis, to fully autonomous programs with distinctive artistic graduate degrees. In 2000 we can see the first clear signs of this shift of focus in Finland, Norway and Sweden (Karlsson 2002) However, there is to date no research on the origins of this model, its distinctive practices and policies, or its efects, and we know little about the products of these activities as art or as a special kind of knowledge production. Another relevant factor is the question how artistic research afects surrounding institutions and practices. What sort of impact can be detected on knowledge production, on artistic institutions, on artistic careers and on art in general? The session welcomes contributions that shed light on this important phase of the contemporary history of artistic research in the Nordic countries. Papers could address higher education politics central for this development, or concern themselves with discourse analysis of core values and arguments. Surveys or discussions on art projects that have been awarded doctoral degrees are welcome, as well as analyses on the importance (or not) of a doctoral degree for a career in in the field of contemporary art. All contributions should however take a meta perspective on the topic, either analytically or art historically. The session aims for presentations of research on artistic research, not artistic research as such. 23 SESSION ORGANIZER: Tania Ørum, Ass. Professor, Department for Cultural Studies and the Arts, Comparative Literature and Studies in Modern Culture, Univ. of Copenhagen [email protected] TITLE: Nordic Avant-Garde Movements after World War II SHORT ABSTRACT: After World War II the Nordic avant-garde movements are no longer as marginal as before the war. There is a lively interaction with the European and the American art scene, and independent movements develop in the Nordic countries. International connections are created by large institutions. But self-organised networks among artists also connect the Nordic avant-garde to the rest of the world. However, non-Nordic resident artists have rarely been included in national art histories. Inter-Nordic co-operation and independent Nordic currents have also remained largely invisible. This session will discuss the positions of the Nordic avant-garde movements in relation to the European and American art centres and the specific character of the postwar avant-garde in the Nordic countries. FULL DESCRIPTION: After World War II the Nordic avant-garde movements are no longer as marginal as before the war. There is a lively interaction with both the European and the American art scene, the start of today’s global art scene, but independent movements also develop in the Nordic countries. The international connections are partly due to the official networks of large institutions such as the Moderna Museet in Stockholm. But self-organised networks among artists, such as Fluxus and the Situationists, also help connect the Nordic avant-garde to the rest of the world. Nordic artists such as Asger Jorn, Öyvind Fahlström and Steina Vasulka and others make an international career in Europe or the US. And individual artists from abroad , such as Dieter Roth, Arthur Köpcke and Yoshio Nakajima, settle for a large part of their lives in the Nordic countries. Although art history has tended to describe the art of the centres as dominant, and Nordic art as an echo of international developments, it seems that non-Nordic resident artists have rarely been integrated into the national art histories and museums. Nor has the inter-Nordic co-operation during the postwar period been much visible in the Nordic art history of the period. Just as the independent Nordic movements and contributions to international art history in the postwar period have remained largely invisible in international art history until very recently. This session will discuss the positions of the Nordic avant-garde movements in relation to the European and, increasingly, American art centres and the specific character of the postwar avant-garde in the Nordic countries, 24 Papers should consider questions such as: • What are the new features of the postwar avant-garde in the Nordic countries? • Papers on this subject may include consideration of such subquestions as: • Whether the welfare state and public art funding leave a specific Nordic imprint on postwar art? Whether international trends take the same shape in (all of ) the Nordic countries? or whether the Nordic countries develop new kinds of art currents which are specific to the area? • What opportunities does the view from the Nordic countries offer? • Papers on this subject may include considerations of centre and periphery, for instance what it means that the art history of the period has mainly been written “from the centres” and has thus largely left out the local art histories? and whether art history would look diferent or should be written diferently in order to include art from non-central areas. • To what extent have international and inter-Nordic relations been integrated into the art history of the Nordic countries? • Papers on this subject may consider what would be the theoretical and methodological implications of doing so? And what the importance of such interrelations is? 25 SESSION ORGANIZER: Malin Hedlin Hayden, PhD/Assistant Professor Department of Art History Stockholm University [email protected] Magdalena Holdar, PhD, Senior lecturer, Depy. of Art History, Stockholm Univ. [email protected] TITLE: Performance As Visual Art In The Nordic Countries SHORT ABSTRACT: Performance art has been centre staged in narratives of post-war and contemporary art. Current research on performance art is broad but nonetheless theoretically and geographically limited; especially regarding surveys circulating in higher education curricula. Despite a number of international publications, scholarly research on performance as a visual form of fine art in the Nordic countries is limited. Performance art as visual art does not need national translations or adjustments, yet its historic situation diverge between diferent countries in several aspects. Issues of paramount importance are the conceptual, theoretical, and methodological possibilities and/or constraints provided by the framing of performance as visual art, and how performance art is addressed and displayed within art collections that call for specific legacies and archives. FULL DESCRIPTION: During the last five decades, performance art has been centre staged in narratives of post-war and contemporary art, often described as a radically new method of artistic practice. Despite a number of international publications on performance art, scholarly research on performance as a visual form of fine art in the Nordic countries is limited. Thus, a key field within artistic practices is almost non-existent as a research field in academia, which limits the possibilities to seriously ad dress it in art historical education. Whereas theories of how to interpret performance art as visual art does not need national translations or adjustments, its historic situation diverge between diferent countries in several aspects. For example, in Sweden performance art emerged in situations and sites outside of a fine art context and was not established as a “proper” art form until the 1990s, partly through the appearance of the independent curator. The independent curator’s entrance onto the art scene created a new balance and focus: performance did no longer appear as a subcategory of dance, theatre and music but became the art for alternative spaces. This shift has consequences for the theoretical and historical contexts in which performance is inscribed, interpreted, collected, and taught. Developments in recent years testify to an increasing interest and more systematic inclusion of performance art in exhibitions and collections, both in larger institutions such as MoMA and Whitney, and smaller Kunsthalles such as Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall. Simultaneously, higher art educations in Sweden and other countries have initiated courses and established professorships in performance. This, however, highlights anew the lack of serious, in-depth, 26 investigations within the field of art history emphasizing the notion of art as a particular legacy related to conceptual perspectives. The session invites papers that present critical perspectives on and analyses of performance as a visual art form, contemporary curating of performance art, the presence of performance in the curriculum of higher art education, and its status in contemporary art collections. Topical questions include, but are not restricted to the following: • How can the diverse practices of performance art be theorized and historicized when framed by a fine art concept? • What conceptual, theoretical, and methodological possibilities and/or constraints are provided by the framing of performance as visual art? • In what ways have contemporary curatorial practices and interventions been informed by performance art, and vice versa? • How is performance art addressed and displayed within art collections that, inevitably, call for specific legacies and archives? Current research on performance art is broad but nonetheless theoretically and geographically limited; especially regarding surveys circulating in higher education curricula. Amongst these are notably, RoseLee Goldberg's seminal historical survey Performance Art, first published in 1979, and her Performance: live art since the 60’s (1998), 2004, which remain the primary textbooks. Internationally, numerous essays and art critique have been written as well as monographs on particular and by now canonized artists. The present situation can be exemplified by the following titles: This is performance art, 2011, deals explicitly on Mel Brimfield’s work and its take on historiographical issues as integrated in her work, Jen Harvie's Fair Play: art, performance and neoliberalism (2013) investigates a particular political potential of performance art, whereas the anthology Performing memory in art and popular culture (2013) departs from the concept of memory addressing performing arts in a broad sense. Two recent publications that both deal with performance and live art in relation to representation, reenactments and the concept of art are Rebecca Schneider’s Performing remains: art and war in times of theatrical re-enactment (2011), and Perform ,repeat, record: live art in history (2012) edited by Amelia Jones and Adrian Heathfield. 27 SESSION ORGANIZERS: Dr. Melanie Klein, DFG Research Group “Transcultural Negotiations in the Ambits of Art”, Freie Universitaet Berlin. [email protected] Prof. Dr. Isabel Wünsche, Sch. of Hum. and Social Sciences, Jacobs University. [email protected] TITLE: Progressive Art Education and the Spread of Modernism beyond Europe SHORT ABSTRACT: In this session the interrelations between the emergence of modernist art and ideas of progressive art education brought to art schools and workshops in Africa, Asia, Australia and the Americas are examined by means of specific case studies. The transformation of art educational concepts within cultural traditions and local art scenes are brought into focus as are the relevance of gender roles, reciprocal dynamics between educators and students in the production of art as well as the impact of hierarchical structures and forms of agency within colonial and postcolonial contexts. Art educational venues are perceived as contact zones that formed modernist art beyond Europe through polyphonic theoretical and practical approaches. FULL DESCRIPTION: The crucial role that progressive art education played in the spread, reception, and adaptation of European Modernism beyond Europe has largely been neglected in art history writing. The session examines the interrelations between modernist art and contemporary concepts of progressive education and the role that art played in Reformpädagogik. Discussing the educational activities of modernist artists and art educators as well as the educational reform eforts at modernist art schools that shaped the spread of Modernism to Africa, Asia, Australia, Latin and South America, particular focus is on its reception and adaptation within the cultural traditions and domestic art scenes of these regions. Furthermore, the session wishes to contrast the various pedagogical eforts with the theoretical positions and institutional policies of major exponents of modernist art history and to addresses gender roles in the production, dissemination, and adaptation of modernist art beyond the Western World. Questions about what role art should play in Africa, Asia, Australia, or the Americas, what cultural image or “inner” condition it should transport, how it could be related to “traditional” creativity, and how it should be positioned in the face of emerging modernisms were of prominent importance within the contact zone of educational institutions. For example, European art teachers in South Africa first established provisional art educational venues for Black students within the curricula of mission schools and then as workshops and schools in their own right. They transferred modernistic concepts from Europe – like the concepts of authenticity and originality – into the African context yet were also confronted with restricted material conditions as well as divergent conceptions 28 and expectations of their students. A closer look at selected case studies reveals ambivalent and polyphonic theoretical approaches of educators and diferent visual translations of students. Here, the teachers’ attitudes seem to oscillate between the search for an “authentic” idiom in the native art of the region and the claim to partake in global archives and in the making of an art history that is imagined as universally applicable. Students, however, follow diverse paths: some delve into the imitation and interpretation of European models, others continue their studies abroad and become part of a modern art world. After all, art educational institutions perceived as transcultural contact zones exemplify a genesis of modern art from Africa, Asia, Australia, or the Americas that was formed by difering and mutually influencing perspectives rather than permanent homogeneous schemes. Papers might explore, but are not limited to the following topics: • Roots and routes of modernist and avant-garde “travelling concepts” in educational venues • Transformations and deviant definitions of such concepts • Material and intellectual context of art production and the generation of art historical narratives • Definition of “agency” within contexts of limitations and freedom • Dynamics of gender relations within educational contact zones We invite paper proposals to the sessions from a variety of fields, including art history, art pedagogy, cultural history, visual culture, and anthropology. 29 SESSION ORGANIZER: Charlotte Bydler, PhD in Art History, Lecturer, History and Theory of Art, School of Culture and Education för kultur, Södertörn University [email protected] Mårten Snickare, PhD in Art History, Associate professor, Department of Art History, Stockholm University [email protected] TITLE: Resisting art world violence: Indigenous/Sámi art and material culture in a postperipheral view SHORT ABSTRACT: Since the seventeenth century, Sámi art works have been collected in Nordic capitals as a colonial part in a larger nation-state project. In distinction to the state’s representative art world, Sámi artworks are mainly defined and displayed as crafts or ethnography. This panel investigates institutional categorization and resistance past and present. It looks at relations between on the one hand indigenous art worlds and on the other hand museums and academia. Can they collaborate or is it a better option to delink and form local communities? We want contributions that address the dynamics of Sámi poetics and colonial guilt. FULL DESCRIPTION: With today’s resistance against industrial interests in the polar area, indigenous/Sámi art history is topical. Since the seventeenth century, Sámi art and material culture have constituted a colonial battlefield. In those days goavddis (ceremonial drums) and other aesthetic objects were confiscated by state officials. Today, the reduction of Sámi art continues through institutional exclusion and self-justifying dichotomies such as art/ethnography and art/crafts. Through acts of epistemic violence, ideas of centre and periphery are maintained. Art is what takes place within the centre, defined by art academies, art museums, and academic art history. In the peripheries there is ethnography, folk art, and crafts. An artworld is an autopoetic conceptual world that creates its rules and mode of being. The artworld system is made up of networked and partly overlapping institutional practices. These ignore whatever falls beyond their operative definitions of art and aesthetic values. Here, we want to move beyond the idea of art worlds as necessarily tied to a historical institutional set-up and open up the field to multiple art worlds. Even critical terms such as post-colonial maintain established limits and exclusions. Equal conditions in scholarship on the history and theory of art and poetic production require un- learning established Eurocentrist privileges. The expanding research field of Sámi art, architecture and crafts (Horsberg Hansen, Snarby, et al.) calls on those who enjoy the privilege of “sanctioned ignorance” (Spivak) to learn about its knowledge gaps. The challenge of institutionalizing Sámi poetics is also known through doctoral dissertations and chairs in duodji, Sámi crafts (Dunfjeld, Guttorm, et al.). 30 For this panel, we invite papers that deal with Sámi art and material culture from the early modern period until today. We especially encourage papers that question established borders and naturalised dichotomies of centre/periphery, art/non-art. Papers may discuss, but are not limited to the following questions: Who has the right to the Sámi cultural heritage? Since the seventeenth century, Sámi art works have been collected and displayed in museums in Stockholm and other state capitals. However, in recent years objects are transferred to new museums in the Sámi region such as Ájtte in Jokkmokk, today Sweden’s main museum for Sámi afairs. Is this a new de-centrering course of development? Sámi artworks are mainly defined as crafts or ethnography (i.e. not art) and collected and displayed accordingly. How do these institutional categorizations work? Are there working strategies for blurring borders in museums and academia? What can we learn from previous resistance to epistemic violence? Artists have reacted against mining interests in e.g. Giron/Kiruna and Gallok/Kallak with radical projects and manifestations. How have methods and expressions changed since the 1979-1982 Uprising over the exploitation of the river Alta in northern Norway? Are the national majority institutions and art scenes involved or is this an occasion for delinking and forming local communities like the Maze/Masi group did? How much does research in Sámi poetics owe its current strength to colonial guilt and frequent flyers who publish in global English? 31 SESSION ORGANIZER: Clarence Burton Sheffield, Jr., Ph. D, Associate Professor, History of Art, College of Imaging Arts and Sciences, Rochester Institute of Technology [email protected] TITLE: The Aesthetics of the Margin: The Role of Global Literary theory for Scandinavian Modernism and Nordic Art History SHORT ABSTRACT: Recent scholarship has underscored the key role of Scandinavian literature within European modernism. An “aesthetics of dependency” emerged at the Scandinavian periphery according to Leonardo Lisi, which sought to negotiate the gap between urban and rural, modern and anti-modern, ideal and real, optimism and pessimism, homogeneity and heterogeneity, unification and fragmentation. Its impact was decisive. Can this notion also elucidate the importance of Nordic art within modern art history? Did Nordic art demonstrate a comparable power of resistance to the center? What representational forms did this take, and were there also occasional instances of indiference to such a strategy? Was the belief that the artistic center was moving north itself, naïve and a cliché? Papers in this session might consider the following sorts of questions with respect to Nordic art: the role of exile and a longing for home, the fluidity of identity, the significance of cultural interaction, cooperation and interchange, the category of the artistwriter and the writer-artist, as well as what constituted formal innovation and the avant-garde. FULL DESCRIPTION: Recent scholarship by Leonardo Lisi, Arnold Weinstein, James McFarlane, and others, has underscored the central role of Scandinavian literature within the development of European modernism. Instead of a marginal, peripheral status, authors such as Kierkegaard, Ibsen, Strindberg, Jacobsen, Brandes and Hamsun, to name only a few—exerted a deep and lasting power on James Joyce, Henry James, Rainer Maria Rilke, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and Franz Kafka, as well as Walter Benjamin, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Martin Heidegger. Did a similar relationship exist for Scandinavian artists? In other words, are there important parallels between the influence and impact of Scandinavian literature on European modernism, and that of Scandinavian art? Can literary theory help to elucidate the importance of Nordic art within modern art history? Do literary innovations and radical, avantgarde impulses have a similar trajectory in Nordic visual culture? Immanuel Wallerstein, in particular, has argued that culture is precisely the one domain in which the peripheries can mount a meaningful resistance to the economic and political hegemony of the center. It is important to critically examine how Nordic art has exercised such a power of resistance, and what representational forms this has taken, as well as to identify instances of the occasional indiference to such a strategy. Nordic writers and artists were acutely aware of their peripheral position and 32 the irony of often needing to obtain recognition and legitimacy abroad, before it could ensue at home. They frequently engaged in extended periods of voluntary exile. Transnationalism, in other words, is an important link between Nordic writers and artists, as well as extremely fluid notions of identity, border-crossing, cultural interaction, and interchange. In certain instances, this required a mediation of the tensions between urban and rural, modern and anti-modern, ideal and real, optimism and pessimism, homogeneity and heterogeneity, unification and fragmentation. Negotiating this tension or gap is the key to the aesthetics of dependency traced by Lisi’s alternative account of European modernism, which he identifies as first emerging within the peripheral context of nineteenth-century Scandinavian culture. Many Nordic artists were themselves writers, and they often shared an intense camaraderie with their literary contemporaries. Edvard Munch and Christian Krohg are two prime examples. Furthermore, writers such as Ibsen and Strindberg were also artists. The tendency to work across media, therefore, is an important aspect of Nordic art, and it warrants further reflection and close scrutiny. It suggests a more nuanced and subtle relationship between the literary and artistic spheres of Scandinavian modernism. Papers in this session might consider the following sorts of questions with respect to Nordic art: • Did its marginality and peripheral status permit a more experimental and less fixed notion of medium? • Was monumentality and public art more significant; what factors contributed to this? • How did cosmopolitan exile and a longing for home (the provincial) condition national identity? • Were gender, class, and racial diference respected more, and was there a stronger sense of cooperation? • What were the criteria for artistic and cultural innovation? • Was there a greater tolerance for foreign impulses, and more willingness to engage with them? • Did the center’s economic and political power encounter more resistance; what specific forms did this take? • Was the optimistic belief that the artistic center was moving north itself, naïve and a cliché? 33 SESSION ORGANIZER: Guðrún Harðardóttir, The National Museum of Iceland [email protected] TITLE: The Mini as a reflection of the Macro. Miniatures as source material SHORT ABSTRACT: This session proposes to study the language of miniatures and how they reflect general trends and symbolic threads of a shared culture of each time. How miniatures could be used as source material for the general. In this context, seals are of great interest as they are official visual validations of the authority of individuals or institutions. The same applies to heraldry in general. Papers should consider questions such as: How useful are miniatures as a source material for the stylistic development of a certain period? Do miniatures in diferent means tell similar stories about the general at each period of time? How is the general reflected in the particular? How do, for example, miniatures represent ships or ecclesiastical utensilia? FULL DESCRIPTION: Modern logos and medieval miniatures share the common feature of being small scale representations of a general visual culture. As part of the general trends of each time, miniatures tend to be more legible in the context of their own time of production than when they are seen out of context. This session proposes to study the language of miniatures and how they reflect general trends or types of a shared culture of each time. How miniatures could be used as source material for the general. It would be of interest to examine the symbolic conciousness of society at certain periods of time. How did, for example, the symbolic thought of the midde ages present itself on the pages of manuscripts or in the decoration of the utensilia of the church? In this context, seals are of great interest as they are official visual validations of the authority of individuals or institutions. The same applies to heraldry in general and the relationship of miniatures to the symbolic reality of a certain period. The question of authority and identity is very relevant as well as what kind of reality the miniatures reflect. What kind of truth or propaganda is represented in this kind of media? To what extent are these representations relevant to the history of buildings, ships, liturgical vestment as well as general ornament of each period? How much do miniatures in manuscripts present the physical reality of the time? What kind of visual source material are they? 34 Papers should consider questions such as: How useful are miniatures as a source material for the stylistic development of a certain period? Do miniatures in diferent means tell similar stories about the general at each period of time? How is the general reflected in the particular? How do, for example, miniatures represent ships or ecclesiastical utensilia? 35 SESSION ORGANIZER: Ann-Sofie Nielsen Gremaud, PhD in Visual Culture [email protected] Gry Hedin, PhD in Scandinavian art and literature [email protected] TITLE: Uncharted nature: Nordic Landscapes in the Era of the Anthropocene SHORT ABSTRACT: In the era of the anthropocene, artists and scientists are facing a new paradigm in their attempts to map nature. This session focuses on art as Anthropocene laboratory where human control, mapping, and aestheticizing of landscape is thematised. It is our aim to cultivate a discussion of how art has interacted – and still interacts – with the natural sciences in interpreting the Antropocene in relation to Nordic landscapes. We want to focus on contemporary art but also want to bring forward previously overlooked connections between contemporary and historical representational practices as human impact on landscape as well as the difficulty of controlling nature is a theme that artists and scientists have dealt with from c. 1800. FULL DESCRIPTION: The Anthropocene thesis, that human activities have had a significant and irreversible impact on the Earth’s ecosystems, was formulated by Crutzen and Stroemer in the 2000s. Thus today, artists and scientists are facing a new paradigm in their attempts to map nature. Currently this thesis is high on the agenda and has placed the Arctic as a new geopolitical center. Thus a region previously defined as periphery has turned to the center of attention, and a discourse that is inevitable in the Nordic region is influencing the way landscape and nature is understood. We wish to discuss how artists’ conceptualizations of the landscape of the West Nordic region and Scandinavia have contributed to the development of this thesis. Currently artists are involved in the new conceptualization of the Arctic as a region where natural resources and melting ice has made the relationship between man and nature a primary focus. The thesis states that the era starts with industrialism when steam engines left traces in the geological strata as analyses of polar ice cores have revealed. Indeed human impact on landscape as well as the difficulty of controlling nature is a theme that artists and scientists have dealt with from c. 1800, and we want to address the historic links between contemporary art and earlier practices as these are yet to be examined and discussed. Thus today and historically, science and art are in close interaction in the interpretation of the Anthropocene. Though their modes of representation are diferent, they share a common desire for insight and a wish for a coming to terms with our place in nature. The objective of this session is to investigate relationships between these diferent representational cultures, along with their respective research methods. Here is a point of convergence for the – often diferent – questions that art and science pose. Interfaces emerge between the 36 practices and foci in relation to landscape as research field for interpretation and representation of environmental changes. Thus this session focuses on art as Anthropocene laboratory where human control, mapping, and aestheticizing of landscape is thematised. It is our aim to cultivate a discussion of how art has interacted – and still interacts – with the natural sciences in interpreting the Antropocene in relation to Nordic landscapes and to bring forward previously overlooked connections between contemporary and historical representational practices. Questions dealt with in this session could be (but are not limited to) the following: • How do artists deal with the Anthropocene in their depiction of Nordic landscapes? • The influence of artists on scientists in relation to the Antropocene. • The collaborations between scientists and artists in the investigation of Nordic landscapes. • Alternative discourses and views on climate change in Nordic art. • The influence of sciences such as anthropology, geography, geology and biology on Nordic landscape art. • The relationship between technological developments and artistic approaches. 37 SESSION ORGANIZER: Dagný Heiðdal, MA in Art Theory, National Gallery of Iceland [email protected] Steinar Örn Atlason, MA in Philosophy, National Gallery of Iceland [email protected] TITLE: Uncharted Photography: On the relationship between Photography and other Media, particularly Painting, in Nordic Pictorial Tradition SHORT ABSTRACT: The main objective of the session is to investigate the historical and artistic relationship between photography and painting from the mid nineteenth century to the present times in Scandinavia. This relationship is complicated in many ways and is related to pictorial representation in general, that is pictorial types and visions, and the ideological, historical and social grounds of picture making. Welcome are also papers that further explore the relationship between photography and other media e.g. graphic arts, happenings, installations, performances and videos. Interesting things to explore in regard to the new media are art and the film still, the new possibilities that digital images create and the implications that those images have with regards to art, authenticity and truth etc. FULL DESCRIPTION: The main objective of the session is to investigate the relationship between photography and painting from the mid nineteenth century to the present times in Scandinavia. In a recent general account of Icelandic history of art, Íslensk listasaga. Frá síðari hluta 19. aldar til upphafs 20. aldar, little attempt is made to treat photography as an artistic medium and therefore to define the historical relationship between photography and painting. The session is born as a response to the criticism on the methodological and ideological underpinnings of the work. In fact, the relationship is quite important in Iceland as it is the only country in Europe that had not established a pictorial tradition when photographers started to make pictures of the almost uncharted territory, and where photographers were actually forerunners of painters with regards to, for example, the landscape tradition. The practice and experiments with painting and photography in the works of Edvard Munch and August Strindberg, the most famous Scandinavian artists who have worked and developed their art using both mediums, is well know and leads way into modern practices of photography with regards to portraiture and selfimage, and artistic-scientific speculations. But how have Scandinavian artists used these mediums since and how have photography and painting afected each other throughout the 20th century? In Reisubókarkorn the nobel laureate Halldór Laxness wrote on the relationship between photography and painting and made a clear distinction 38 between the mechanical copy of the photographer and the creative work of the painter. The relationship between the two mediums is much more complicated than the opposite mechanical copy / original creation indicates, and is related to pictorial representation in general, that is pictorial types and visions, and the ideological, historical and social grounds of picture making. The session explores the relationship between photography and painting through these questions and concepts, and is at the same time directed at the concept of art and the question of what is art. Welcome are also papers that further explore the relationship not only between photography and painting, but also between photography and other media e.g. graphic arts, happenings, installations, performances and videos. Interesting things to explore in regard to the new media are art and the film still, the new possibilities that digital images create and the implications that those images have with regards to art, authenticity and truth etc. This session welcomes papers considering the above mentioned mediums, the concepts that define them and the historical and artistic relationship between photography, painting and other media in Scandinavia and in general. 39 SESSION ORGANIZER: Renja Suominen-Kokkonen, PHD, Senior Lecturer in Art History, Adjunct Professor at the Universities of Helsinki and Turku [email protected] Hanna Kemppi, MA, University of Helsinki [email protected] TITLE: Unwanted Monuments & The Silenced Pasts SHORT ABSTRACT: Monuments and memorials can mark a clear distinction with written history, forcing us to look at things through their presence alone. Complex historical events and narratives are crystallized in these physical artefacts. Alois Riegl already observed that in reality not all art monuments are valued on an equal basis, because the contemporary values of scholars and political decision-makers afect choices and actions. Since explaining the past also influences the future, it is relevant to find diferent alternatives to our practices. This session aims at challenging art history practices, the way how the discipline has evaluated, analysed, and understood monuments of silenced pasts. And asks, are we ready to deal with complex questions of the past, including the marginal, the forgotten? FULL DESCRIPTION: It is not irrelevant how a society explains its own past, how we have arrived here where we are. With the image of history, societies also control the present, and in many cases the images of history are quite selective. Forgetting is one part of the process of de-politicizing the past. It creates a past with which people can live, a pleasant picture of one’s own history. The pressing issue is then how these histories are told, what sources have been used, who tells them, who benefits from them and who does not. In this respect, monuments and memorials can mark a clear distinction with written history, forcing us to look at things through their presence alone. Complex historical events and narratives are crystallized in these physical artefacts. Alois Riegl already observed that in reality not all old art monuments are valued on an equal basis, because the contemporary values of scholars and political decision-makers always afect choices and actions. In a recent publication, Matthew Rampley has noted that heritage practices play a key role in providing ongoing political projects to construct national, regional, and super-national identities. Cultural plurality has not necessarily been a central issue when maintaining national heritage, and the problems of how people should react to a dissonant heritage that does not conform to the prevailing political, cultural, and religious norms of the majority have posed a haunting question. Cultural heritage is not something once lost and then found, but instead the result of active processes of choices at a given present moment. Since explaining the past at many levels also influences the future, it is relevant to 40 find diferent alternatives to our practices. Also Claire Farago has stressed the ongoing debates about the ownership of cultural property, which involve not only the physical remains of the past but also, and very importantly, our perceptions of the past and our articulations of these views. She asks what our responsibilities are as art historians. Are we ready to deal with complex questions of the past, including the marginal, the forgotten and the problematic? This session aims at challenging art history practices, the way how the discipline has evaluated, analysed, and understood monuments of silenced pasts. With reference to heritage, the session emphasizes contradictions, repressed pasts. The papers can deal with the questions of the ownership of cultural property, the questions of whose interpretation counts, and of whose past is told. The unwanted past may include erasures of architectural and other monuments of local, regional, or national importance. 41 SESSION ORGANIZER: Dr. des. Sarah Timme (née Lütje) Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main Institut für Skandinavistik [email protected] TITLE: Vikings, Gods and Heroes. Northern Antiquity in Visual Art after the Middle Ages SHORT ABSTRACT: The session asks for the post-medieval reception of Northern antiquity in visual art, for artworks inspired by Old Norse literature or covering other subjects from the Northern past. There has been an interest in such subjects from the Renaissance on – in the early modern era quite sporadic but increasing from the end of the 18th century, then serving as an alternative and complement to the classical tradition. During the 19th century the subjects spread into mass culture as well (book illustration, advertising) and the interest has not waned until today (e.g. Jonathan Meese). The session welcomes talks concerning iconographic traditions, sources, formal representation, contexts … of the artworks. FULL DESCRIPTION: The session asks for the post-medieval reception of Northern antiquity in visual art, for artworks inspired by Old Norse literature (e.g. Poetic Edda, Prose Edda, Sagas) or covering other subjects from the Northern past (e.g. Vikings, rune stones or burial mounds). There has been an interest in such subjects from the Renaissance on, though in the early modern era it was quite sporadic (e.g. book illustrations in Johannes Magnus’ Historia de omnibus Gothorum Sueonumque regibus [1554] or the Kronborg Series commissioned by the Danish king Christan IV. in 1637) but became increasing strong from the end of the 18th century. In the context of Classicism and the Romantic Movement Northern antiquity served as an alternative and complement to the classical tradition for artists such as Henry Fuseli, William Blake or Nicolai Abildgaard. During the 19th century plenty of artworks were produced that intersected with these interests, in sculpture and painting (Bengt Erland Fogelberg, Peter Nicolai Arbo) as well as in the genres of the emerging mass culture: book illustration and later on advertising. In Germany especially, but also in other countries, Richard Wagner’s operatic adaptation The Ring of the Niblungs (1876) also led to a spread of the subject through the visual arts. Two strands of reception can be distinguished here: a conservative and nationalistic one in the context of primarily German Wagnerism (featuring little known artists such as Herrmann Hendrich or Franz Stassen), and a more international and modernistic response represented by artists mostly concerned with the aesthetic quality of Wagner’s work (e.g. Henri FantinLatour, Odilon Redon, Edward Burne-Jones). The interest in these subjects has not waned during the 20th and 21st centuries as artists such as Anselm Kiefer, Bjørn Nørgaard and lately Jonathan Meese all treat subjects derived from Northern antiquity. This immense field has received little attention from researchers until now. 42 There are some surveys on reception primarily in Scandinavia (e.g. Grandien 1987, Larsson 2001, Haavardsholm 1998, Stenroth 2012) and a few exhibition catalogues (e.g. Wilson 1997, Allzén 1990). Also the Wagnerian strand has attracted some attention (eg. Richard Wagner 2005). However, very little has been written regarding reception outside Scandinavia, and there are a lack of thorough case studies and almost no research conducted on popular images not traditionally regarded as fine art (book illustrations, advertising, etc). The session therefore seeks to assemble researchers on this topic to help build a network that is still lacking. It aims therefore to present a survey of the state of research in the broad field outlined above and welcomes talks referring to the following topical questions: • How is Northern antiquity represented in artworks? • What iconographic traditions can be described? • Which type of formal representation is chosen for the subjects? • What are the sources the artists depend on? • Which texts and images transmit the knowledge of the subjects to the artists? In which contexts do the artworks emerge? Reykjavík represents a very apt venue for this session given the number of medieval textual sources that are of Icelandic origin. 43 SESSION ORGANIZER: Ylva Sommerland, Ph.D. Art History and Visual Studies, Un. of Gothenburg. [email protected] Margareta Wallin Wictorin , PhD, senior lecturer in Art History and Visual Studies, Linneaus university [email protected] TITLE: Writing comics into art history and art history into comics research. SHORT ABSTRACT: Comics and graphics novels are characterised by an intermedial structure combining words and images. Although clearly a material where the visual aspects stand as key features, comics have not been given much research attention in the art historical discipline. We think it is about time to write comics deeper into art history, and discuss art historical methods in comics research. Papers at this session should consider questions such as: • Why have comics been so scarcely included in Art historical studies? • How could comics be included in art historical studies? • How can Art history contribute to the development of methods and theories regarding comics? FULL DESCRIPTION: During the winter 2013-14 the Musée de l’histoire de l’immigration in Paris showed the exhibition Albums – Bande dessinée et immigration. 1913-2013. It presented comics created by 120 artists telling diferent stories from one hundred years of worldwide migration. Other interesting examples of sequential art can be found in the anthology Kolor Klimax. It contains comics from all the Nordic countries, and shows a rich variety of genres and styles, from bold or tiny black and white to monochrome or polychrome lines and shapes. Comics and graphics novels are characterised by an intermedial structure combining words and images. Although clearly a material where the visual aspects stand as key features, comics have not been given much research attention in the art historical discipline. Sequential and narrative elements of comics tend to place the media among literary and language studies. Exceptions from this are David Carrier (2000), Lena Johannesson (1979, 1986) and David Kunzle (1973, 1990, 2007) who have elaborated on art historical aspects. On a Nordic level comics have quite recently started to be included in art historical research (e.g. Mejhammar, 1999 ; Eriksson, 2006, Sommerland, 2007, 2011, 2012 ; Wallin Wictorin, 2011, 2013). Researchers in other disciplines have elaborated more on the subject. Regarding research on the formal structure of comics the most acclaimed attempts have been done by using structuralistic and semiotic theories as theoretical and methodological tools. (Groensteen, 2007; Groensteen, 2013; Magnussen, 2000, Postema, 2013). Recent publications deal with comics from 44 historical, cognitive and pedagogical perspectives (Babic, 2014; Kukkonen, 2013 and 2013; Syma and Weiner (eds.), 2013), and a number of new books and articles argue for linguistic characteristics of comics. (Cohn, 2013; Miodrag, 2013). Autobiographical and feministic perspectives on comics are treated in books by Chute (2010) and El Refaie (2012). Furthermore, researchers from other fields than art history are starting to discuss the relation between comics and art, e.g. Bart Beaty in Comics versus art (2012). In the last chapter of his book Comics and Narration (2013), ( Bande dessinée et narration, 2011), Thierry Groensteen poses the question: “Is comics a branch of contemporary art?” We think it is about time to write comics deeper into art history, and discuss art historical methods in comics research. Papers at this session should consider questions such as: • Why have comics been so scarcely included in Art historical studies? • How could comics be included in art historical studies? • How can Art history contribute to the development of methods and theories regarding comics? • Examples of how art historical and visual aspects have been included in Comics research. • Examples of artists and art works related to comics and how to do research about them. 45