previous February 2013 previous
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
              
             
             
             
             
   
             
Show the events for this month as a list

Click the date in the calendar grid or the gray plus sign to show all of the day's events.
Event Details

Annual Art History Lecture: Paint, Possessions, and Polity: Fifteenth-Century Foundations of French Painting

Location: Palamountain Hall: Davis Auditorium

Date: 02/06/2013

Time: 5:30 PM

Speaker: Jennifer Courts, Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Art History

Description:
Annual Art History Lecture by Jennifer Courts, Visiting Assistant Professor "Paint, Possessions, and Polity: Fifteenth-Century Foundations of French Painting" France's position in the development of fifteenth-century oil painting is often overlooked for a number of reasons, foremost of which is the national economic and emotional toll of the Hundred Years' War. Traditional scholarship has viewed the French adoption of oil painting as motivated by a change in taste among wealthy Parisians, away from the International Gothic and toward "modern" painting in the style of Jan van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden. But what exactly made oil painting, ostensibly the domain of the wealthy merchants of the duchy of Burgundy during the early fifteenth century, of interest to an audience composed of the sovereign and his closest advisors at the heart of the kingdom of France? I will address this question by focusing on the unique ability of oil painting to recreate the people, places and objects of the material world. Using the example of the Crucifixion of the Parlement de Paris (1449-53; Paris: Louvre), this talk explores the political environment of Paris circa 1450, a city in the middle of rebuilding its economy and relationship with the king in the wake of the Hundred Years' War, to explain the choice of the oil medium to construct a much-needed vision of a centralized and powerful French nation grounded in the details of materiality. Taking advantage of the capacity of oil painting to credibly recreate the details of the physical world, the painting recombines reality to construct a utopian view of France as prosperous and most Christian kingdom under the wise rule of Charles VII.

Sponsor:
Department of Art History

Contact:
Terri Brandt
580-5053

Display Options
View Featured Events

View Different Event Types:
On-going Events
Daily Events

Change Calendar Layout:
List View
Calendar View
For best results select all categories that apply.

Admissions Alumni
Art Athletics
Career Development Center Dance
Faculty/Staff General Events
Lectures Music
Science Special Events
Student/SGA Summer Programs
Tang Museum Theater
  • To use the calendar: click on the grey headers in the right column to see features such as search categories and event details
  • To view more information about an event: click the event name in the calendar grid
  • To view all events for a specific date: click the date in the calendar grid or the gray plus sign that appears when a day has more events than displayed
  • To search for an event: use the search box at the top of the calendar for keywords, or click on the Categories section in the right column to search by pre-selected categories
  • To view another month in the calendar: click the letter in the upper left corner, or use the white arrows next to the month name
First Name:
Last Name:
Email:


Please enter text in image:

This service is for those without a valid Skidmore College email account.
Click the title of each gray area to view the corresponding text.