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Making Worlds: Art, Materiality, and Early Modern Globalization

Apr 28, 2017 - Apr 29, 2017

The early modern period (c. 1450-1750) witnessed a massive dislocation of people and artifacts as a result of migration, religious conflicts, expanding trade routes, missionary activities, slavery, and colonization. The confrontation between materiality and mobility that ensued gave rise to new, often unexpected, forms of creativity. Focusing on art — on making and engaging with it, on performance and self-representation – this conference foregrounds the critical creative and imaginative processes involved in making worlds.

Organized by Bronwen Wilson (Department of Art History, UCLA) and Angela Vanhaelen (Department of Art History and Communication Studies, McGill University), as part of the Making Worlds research project, this conference shifts the focus from regional considerations and area studies to explore how visual and material forms emerged across and between worlds, broadly construed, and ways in which imagining, digesting, and translating worlds have been central to their making and remaking.

Advance registration not required. No fee. Limited seating.

Funding for this conference is provided by the Armand Hammer Endowment for the UCLA Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

Friday, April 28, 2017 | UCLA Royce Hall Room 314
4:00 Welcoming Remarks

Massimo Ciavolella (Director CMRS)

Angela Vanhaelen (McGill University)

Session I – Chair: Bronwen Wilson (UCLA)
Liz Horodowich (New Mexico State University) and
Alex Nagel (New York University)
“Amerasia in the European Imaginary During the First Global Age”
5:15 Discussion
Saturday, April 29, 2017 | UCLA Royce Hall Room 314
9:00 Coffee, Fruit & Pastries
9:30 Opening Remarks: Bronwen Wilson (UCLA)
Session II – Chair: Gail Feigenbaum (Getty Research Institute)
9:45 Saygin Salgirli (University of British Columbia)
“Motifs and Counterpoints in Early Ottoman Architecture: An Alternative Story of Mediterranean Connectivity”
10:15 David Kim (University of Pennsylvania)
“Points on a Field: Gentile da Fabriano and Goldground”
10:45 Discussion
11:15 Break
Session III – Chair: Lyle Massey (UC Irvine)
11:30 Samuel Luterbacher (Yale University)
“Surfaces for Reflection: Namban Lacquer in the Iberian World”
12:00 Charlene Villaseñor-Black (UCLA)
“Enconchados and Iridescence: Materials, Meaning, and Trade”
12:30 Discussion
1:00 Lunch Break
Session IV – Chair: Naoko Takahatake (LACMA)
2:30 Susan Dackerman (Getty Research Institute)
“Dürer’s Knots”
3:00 Tomasz Grusiecki (McGill University)
“Of Mixed Origins: Michał Boym’s Flora Sinensis and the Circulation of Images”
3:30 Discussion
4:00 Break
Session V – Chair Angela Vanhaelen (McGill University)
4:15 Emanuele Lugli (York University)
“The Book of Ribbons: The Medicis’ Chart of the World’s Measurements”
4:45 Discussion
5:00 Benjamin Schmidt (University of Washington)
Questions/Interventions

Organizer

CMRS
Phone
310-825-1880
Email
cmrs@humnet.ucla.edu
View Organizer Website