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CALL FOR PAPERS



THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS HAS PASSED

PROPOSALS ARE NO LONGER BEING ACCEPTED



Past Perfected: Antiquity and its Reinventions

A Conference Organized by the U.S. National Committee for the History of Art

in affiliation with the Comité International de l’Histoire d’Art

Los Angeles, April 6-8, 2006



The National Committee for the History of Art solicits 250-word proposals for 25-minute papers

for the sessions described below. Papers should present new scholarship that has not previously

been published. Proposals should be sent via email or hard copy to both of the

relevant session chairs.



1) What Makes Antiquity so Different, so Appealing? Issues and Debates

Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, Morning, 7 April 2006

Co-Chairs: Malcolm Baker, Professor, Department of Art History, University of

Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0047; mcbaker@usc.edu;

Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, Professor, Department of Art and Archaeology,

Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544-1081; kaufmann@princeton.edu.



Appropriation, imitation, revival and reproduction are familiar terms for describing the uses made

by many cultures of the artifacts produced by other, earlier cultures. As such, these terms and the

concepts they suggest are as applicable to the adaptation of Indian styles in nineteenth-century

England as to the use of antique motifs in Renaissance Florence. They are also employed in

discussions of the “classic” in other cultures, as well as transculturally, instances of which would

be appropriate to this session. Nonetheless, the idea of appropriation and revival within art

historical discourse very often carries with it the notion of the afterlife of the antique. While this

of course is part of a far wider response to the classical, is there something about the art of Greece

and Rome that encourages and prompts its appropriation and adoption as a norm so frequently in

European art? How might we account for the enduring appeal of antiquity? Are there blind spots

that have allowed us to view the classical past without seeing the whole picture?



Papers are invited that explore these issues and/or consider the re-use of the antique in a broader

context. Comparative discussions of the afterlives of the antique and other traditions would be

especially welcome.





2) Gardens of Contemplation, Delight and Desire

Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, Afternoon, 7 April 2006

Co-Chairs: Edward Harwood, Associate Professor, Department of Art and Visual

Culture, Bates College. Mailing address: 3412 O Street, N.W.,

Washington, DC 20007; eharwood@bates.edu;

Therese O’Malley, Associate Dean, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts,

National Gallery of Art. Mailing address: 2000B South Club Drive, Landover,

MD 20785; t-omalley@nga.gov.

This session explores the idea of the villa garden in the ancient world and its reinterpretation in

the modern period. The opening of the Getty Villa and the site of this meeting at Henry

Huntington's villa estate serve as obvious inspiration for a discussion of past and present

interpretations of ancient villa gardens. While the former is a literal recreation, and

transplantation, of the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum, the latter is a metaphorical re-

envisioning of a villa for a different time and place. Central to an understanding of both, however,

is an enduring dialogue that privileges the villa as a site for restorative, rural retreat, while, at the

same time, assuming its necessary proximity to an active urban center. The complexity of the

villa idea through time draws richly from this apparently contradictory, but interpretatively

essential, embrace of both the city and the country. Over centuries, interpretations of ancient villa

gardens have been built upon fragments of mythic history and contemporaneous ideologies, in

addition to, and at times even in conflict with, an ever growing body of archaeological evidence.

This session seeks papers that offer reassessments of the villa garden based on new archeological

or textual evidence. Papers may also address the history and historiography of ancient villa

gardens and their imaginative reconstructions through the reiteration, and reconfiguration, of

form and meaning from antiquity to the present.



3) The Body in Antiquity and the Modern Imagination

Getty Villa, Malibu, Morning, 8 April 2006

Co-Chairs: Peter Holliday, Associate Professor, Art Department, California State

University, Long Beach, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90840;

holliday@csulb.edu;

Richard Meyer, Associate Professor, Art History Department, University of

Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0047; rmeyer@usc.edu.



The human form was the principal motif in the visual arts of classical antiquity. The body

provided a fundamental vehicle for formal and aesthetic exploration, ethical and religious

enquiry, and the dissemination of ideology. Attempts to resuscitate antiquity's fascination with

the body have continually resurfaced in Western art, literature, philosophy, and culture from the

early modern period through postmodernism. This session invites papers that address the issue of

the modern longing to come to grips with ancient concepts--and images--of the body. Both

papers that reconstruct ancient approaches to the body and those addressing the modern

reconstructions of the antique are invited. How, this session asks, did classical themes and motifs

become the embodiment of aesthetic, political, or erotic ideals at particular historical moments

from antiquity to the present day? We are particularly interested in papers that pursue this

question through a close analysis of a particular "case study," whether that be an artist, a work, a

text, or another kind of cultural artifact.



4) Ancient Site/Modern Museum

Getty Villa, Malibu, Afternoon, 8 April 2006

Co-Chairs: Dana Arnold, Professor of Architectural History and Head of Research,

School of Humanities, University of Southampton, Highfield SO17 1BJ, U.K.;

d.r.arnold@soton.ac.uk;

Diane Favro, Professor, Department of Architecture and Urban Design, University of

California at Los Angeles, Box 51467, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1467;

dfavro@ucla.edu.



The potent exchange between ancient architecture and the modern museum is largely muted in

the contemporary discourse. Consideration of this nexus is critical at a time when divisions are

broadening between disciplines, institutions, and nations. For instance, the portability of

architecture, in fragments or in its entirety, across countries and continents provokes the

questioning of its relationship to the construction of national memories. The increasing number

of expansive archaeological zones, heritage parks of transported buildings, and digital recreations

of ancient environments is further challenging the definition of the museum. Indeed, the display

of large buildings and environments in a traditional museum setting transforms architecture into

an art work that „opens a world‟. But what is our experience of this „world‟ and what is the role of

the optic of the modern museum through which we view the architecture of the past? Ancient

architecture can, then, through the practices of museum display and multi media representations,

become either spectacle or something with which we have affinity. This session seeks papers that

consider these issues either through theoretically refined readings of particular case studies or

through comparative examples.







Proposals for papers (250 words) should be formatted in Microsoft Word for submission via

email attachment addressed to the two chairs of the relevant session; alternatively, proposals may

be submitted in hard copy via regular mail to the postal addresses of the two session chairs.

Those proposing papers should include in the body of their email message (or in a hard copy

cover letter for those submitting via regular mail) their name, email address, postal address,

telephone number(s), and institutional affiliation; a curriculum vitae should also be attached (or

sent with the submission via regular mail).



Session chairs will acknowledge receipt of proposal submissions.



Deadline for submission of proposals: 15 September 2005.

Notification of acceptance: 1 November 2005.

Deadline for submission of final papers: 15 February 2006.



THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS HAS PASSED

PROPOSALS ARE NO LONGER BEING ACCEPTED



For further information, please email info@nchart.org.





FUNDING AVAILABLE



Through the generosity of the Getty Foundation, funding is available to support

travel and other expenses for scholars (those presenting papers as well as attendees)

from developing countries, Central Europe and Eastern Europe. To apply, send a

curriculum vitae and a statement of purpose (not to exceed 350 words) describing

how attendance would enhance your professional activities and scholarship. Send

via email to info@nchart.org; or via regular mail to: Past Perfected Conference,

National Committee for the History of Art, Art History Department, University of

Southern California, Los Angeles CA 90089-0047, USA. Review of applications will

begin 15 October 2005.

Updated 26 May 2005



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