Art Conservation Newsletter
The new yearly art conservation Newsletter is out. Learn what exciting new things happened during the last school year: Art Conservation Newsletter 2022-2023
The new yearly art conservation Newsletter is out. Learn what exciting new things happened during the last school year: Art Conservation Newsletter 2022-2023
Date
Wednesday November 15, 2023Location
AGNES presents:
In-person and online, Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts
15 November 2023
7:30–9 pm, with reception to follow“Encounter as Author in Early Modern Images from the Atlantic World”
Presented by Dr Cécile Fromont
Early modern central Africa comes to life in the vivid full-page paintings Italian Capuchin Franciscans, veterans of the Kongo and Angola ŃýĽ§Ö±˛Ąs, composed between 1650 and 1750 for the training of future ŃýĽ§Ö±˛Ąaries. Their “practical guides” present the intricacies of the natural, social, and religious environment of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century west-central Africa and outline the primarily visual catechization methods they devised for the region.
Unfolding outside of a European colonial project, at the demand of local rulers, and among populations who had engaged with the visual and material culture of Europe and Christianity for more than one hundred and fifty years, the Capuchin central African apostolate is without parallel in the early modern world. Equally unique are the images that emerged in the friars’ sustained and fraught interactions with the men and women of Kongo and Angola.
In this presentation, I analyze this overlooked visual corpus to demonstrate how such visual creations, though European in form and craftsmanship, did not emerge from a single perspective but rather were and should be read as the products of cross-cultural interaction. With this intervention, I aim to model a way to think anew about images created across cultures, bringing to the fore the formative role that encounter itself played in their conception, execution, and modes of operation.>
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ASL interpretation and automated live captions. Watch via livestream at the .
BIOGRAPHY
Dr Cécile Fromont is Professor of the History of Art at Yale University. Her writing and teaching focus on the visual, material, and religious culture of Africa and Latin America with special emphasis on the early modern period (around 1500–1800), on the Portuguese-speaking Atlantic World, and on the slave trade.
This program is supported by the Bader Legacy Fund and in partnership with The Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts, in recognition of Bader Day on 15 November.Agnes Etherington Art Centre
Situated within territories of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee and Huron-Wendat, the Agnes Etherington Art Centre is a curatorially-driven and research-intensive professional art centre that proudly serves a dual mandate as a leading, internationally recognized public art gallery and as an active pedagogical resource at Queen’s University in Kingston. By comŃýĽ§Ö±˛Ąing, researching, collecting and stewarding works of art, and by exhibiting and interpreting visual culture through an intersectional lens, Agnes creates opportunities for participation and exchange across communities, cultures, histories and geographies.
Agnes is committed to anti-racism. We work to eradicate institutional biases and develop accountable programs that centre the artistic expression and lived experience of Black, Indigenous and People of Colour. Agnes promotes 2SLGBTQIAP+ positive spaces.
36 University Avenue
Kingston, ON K7L 3N6
Date
Wednesday November 1, 2023Location
Macintosh-Corry Room B201Join the esteemed art historian, museum director, and former Senator, Honourable Pat Bovey, as she discusses the contemporary legacy of the famed "Kingston Conference", held in June of 1941. A watershed moment in the Canadian art world, the "Kingston Conference" brought more than 150 artists, museum directors, art historians and members of the public to ŃýĽ§Ö±˛Ą to discuss the place of the artist in society and its role within Canada. What is the contemporary legacy of that conference, and how does it relate to current legislation in the arts, including cultural diplomacy and reconciliation?
This lecture is organized and sponsored by the Department of Art History and Art Conservation.
Wednesday, November 1, 6:00 - 7:15 PM. Macintosh-Corry Room B201
Ph.D. Candidate
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: late medieval and early Renaissance polychrome sculpture and panel painting in Italy, articulated crucifixes, cultural heritage preservation, technical art history
Undergraduate Experience: BAH in Art History, Queen’s University
Graduate Experience: MA in Art History, ŃýĽ§Ö±˛Ą
Supervisor: Dr. Una D'Elia
M.A. Student
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: History of photography; photography & death; visual culture; nineteenth century studies
Undergraduate Experience: BFA in Art History (with distinction), Concordia University, 2023
MA Thesis Topic: Post-mortem portrait photography and spirit photography in Canada during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
Supervisor: Dr. Allison Morehead
Ph.D. Candidate
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Design History; Architecture, Interiors, and Furniture Design; Material Culture Studies; Gender and Sexuality Studies.
Undergraduate Experience: Concordia University; B.F.A in Music (Major) & Art History (Minor).
Graduate Experience: Concordia University; M.A. in Art History (2021).
MA Thesis: “Queer Interwar Design: Eyre de Lanux and her Sapphic Spaces”
PhD Thesis: "Mapping Material Bonds between Women across Empire"
Supervisor: Dr. Antonia Behan
M.A. Student
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: Historical gardens and architecture, especially in Poland.
Undergraduate Experience: B.A. from Wilfrid Laurier University, majoring in Archaeology and Heritage Studies and double minoring in Ancient Studies and Medievalism Studies.
Supervisor: Dr. Gauvin Bailey
Ph.D. Candidate
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: Turn-of-the-century craft history; history of pedagogy; textiles & ceramics; cross-cultural exchange between East Asia and Europe.
Undergraduate Experience: University of Toronto; B.A. in Art History Specialization, Anthropology Minor, and Material Culture Minor (2019)
Graduate Experience: Bard Graduate Center; M.A. in Decorative Arts, Design History, & Material Culture (2021)
Supervisor: Dr. Antonia Behan
Ph.D. Candidate
Art History Program
Major Fields of Interest: Cultural Heritage Preservation in Europe, History of Archaeology, Cultural Politics, Ancient Roman Archaeology
Undergraduate Experience: Queen’s University, (B.A. Honours) in Classics and Archaeology (2020).
Graduate Experience: Queen’s University, M.A. in Classics (Classical Studies and Archaeology) (2022).
PhD Thesis Title: Curating a Sardinian Past: Museums, Archaeological Collections, and Cultural Politics, 1861-1939
Supervisor: Dr. Cathleen Hoeniger and Dr. Cristiana Zaccagnino (Classics).