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Summer School: Assisi in a Transcultural Perspective, Italy

Deadline: 30.06.2013.

Scholarship administrator: Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut
Level: short course
Field of study: Social Sciences
Place of study: Italy

 

Summer School: Assisi in a Transcultural Perspective
Florence, Italy

 

Announcement follows

September 9 - 15, 2013
Deadline: Jun 30, 2013

Images, Objects and a Sacred Site: Assisi in a Transcultural Perspective

Summer School of the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz -
Max-Planck-Institut (Studienkurs)
9 - 15 September 2013

Concept and organization: Vera-Simone Schulz and Gerhard Wolf

The 2013 Summer School of the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz - Max-Planck-Institut (Studienkurs) will be held in Assisi, birthplace of Saint Francis, the founder of the Franciscan order, and locus of its monumental mother church San Francesco. The Summer School will discuss the making of this sacred topography, a city-sanctuary perched high on a hill, in a trans-regional or even global perspective from its antique Umbrian-Roman origins through the centuries to the present day.

Francis was the son of a cloth merchant, a fact which raises the topic of the multiple late medieval trading networks in which Assisi participated. Once the new order was founded, Assisi's influence as an international nodal point spread out in many directions: Franciscan missionaries were sent throughout the known world, to the Mongol Empire as far as China, as well as to Africa; the martyrdom of the five Franciscan friars in Marrakesh in 1220 is represented on one of the glass windows in San Francesco. Meanwhile, Assisi became one of the most important pilgrimage sites on the Italian peninsula, with ever larger masses of pilgrims arriving in the Umbrian town. Objects and artefacts were brought or sent to the sanctuary forming a treasury which is partially still preserved.

Taking these dynamics into account, the Summer School invites participants to rethink the process, of how, from the 13th century onwards, the 'locus sanctus' quickly became a major 'locus imaginum', a sacred site housing images, most famously the wall paintings in San Francesco. The Summer School will take a fresh look at these frescoes which have led to the centuries long debate regarding the style, provenance and identity of the artists that were involved in their production. We will analyse not only their narrative strategies and iconic dimension, but also the relationship between built, (liturgically/performatively) used and painted space, the representation of objects in painting, as well as the crucial role of framing devices and vegetal, interlaced and geometrical ornament.
Furthermore, the Summer School will pay attention to the specific qualities of media and the materiality of artworks in the city: we will analyse for example the interplay between stained glass windows, wall paintings, wooden panel paintings and woven images such as the 'paliotto' of Sixtus IV.

The Summer School will discuss the production and reception of images and artefacts in the city through the centuries, not only San Francesco, but also its "female counterpart" Santa Chiara as well as the sites in the surrounding area, even during the rather neglected periods after 1500. We will also consider the history of the restoration campaigns (up to those after the earthquake of 1997).
Finally, we will discuss the role of Assisi in the discipline of art history, its reception by artists such as Johann Anton Ramboux and the approaches to 13th- and 14th-century painting in classical modern art.

The Summer School welcomes graduate students and doctoral candidates of all nationalities. The number of participants is restricted to 13-15 and each of them is expected to contribute to the success of the course not only by presenting a paper but also by actively participating in discussions, which will be held in English, Italian and/or German.

Applications should include a motivation letter (with two suggested topics for papers to be given on site), a detailed CV, a short summary of the current research project/interests (max. 500 words) and the names of two references. These materials are welcome in all three languages. Accommodation will be paid by the Institute, which will also reimburse participants for half of their travel costs and provide a per diem.

Applications should be addressed to the Director Prof. Dr. Gerhard Wolf and sent by e-mail at the latest by June, 30, 2013 to dirwolf@khi.fi.it

E-mail inquiries concerning the application process and other aspects of the summer school should also be sent to dirwolf@khi.fi.it

Website: http://www.khi.fi.it/en/ausschreibungen/stellenangebote/stellenangebot111/index.html
Email: dirwolf@khi.fi.it

 

 

 

 

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