Cultural Encounters and Shared Spaces in the Renaissance City, 1300-1700
A Conference in Memory of Shona Kelly Wray
Recent scholarship in the history of information, art, and science has emphasized how knowledge and ideas flowed in varied ways and circulated between people of different social status with distinct levels of formal education and access to power. This interdisciplinary conference seeks to explore in greater depth the ways that material spaces of the early modern city functioned to facilitate cultural encounters and the nature of these exchanges. Where did the exchange of knowledge take place (from workshops to streets to bridges to classrooms to marketplaces to churches, etc.)? Was the physical arrangement of these places conducive to interaction (e.g. openness to street; benches outside)? How open or closed were spaces to different kinds of people? What sort of information did city dwellers and travelers seek and why; what knowledge and information did they bring to these encounters and what did they receive? Were ideas shared openly and how was information demonstrated? How did visitors participate (did they simply watch or did they take part)?
We hope to uncover cases of unexpected encounters (in terms of participants and information) by using creatively the surviving evidence (e.g. graffiti, architecture, marginalia, sketches, books of secrets, ricordanze, archival records, etc.). In addition we aim to illuminate the ways in which the activities and vocabulary of different spaces permeated multiple disciplines and discourses (e.g. politics, poetry, philosophy, etc.), often generating new ideas.
Program
Friday, September 12, 2014
409 Tier building
The University of Manitoba
9:00: welcome: David Watt, Institute for the Humanities, University of Manitoba
Introductory remarks: Roisin Cossar, Filippo De Vivo, Christina Neilson
9:30: Niall Atkinson, University of Chicago: The Sonic Dimensions of the Florentine Piazza
10:00: Christina Neilson, Oberlin College: The Display of Knowledge: Making and Knowing in Renaissance Artists’ Workshops
10:30: Comment, Nicholas Terpstra, University of Toronto, questions and discussion from audience
11:00: coffee break
11:30: Yvonne Elet, Vassar College: Symbolic Topography at Villa Madama
12:00: Nicoletta Marcelli, University of Macerata: Florentine intellectuals in an “open” space: the Orti Orcellari circle, 1502-1522
12:30: comment, Nicholas Terpstra, questions and discussion
1:00: lunch
2:00-4:00: afternoon workshop session for presenters and discussants only
Saturday, September 13, 2014
9:30: Cecilia Hewlett, Monash University: Rotten eggs and tainted bread: the politics of the marketplace in Renaissance Florence
10:00: Roisin Cossar, University of Manitoba: Notarial Networks in Trecento Venice
10:30: comment, Tom Cohen and Elizabeth Cohen, York University, questions and discussion with audience
11:00: coffee break
11:30: Dario Tessicini, Durham University: Talking Statues discuss comets: the circulation of astrological prognostications in Venice at the end of the 16th century
12:00: Filippo De Vivo, Birkbeck College, The University of London: Walking in Renaissance Venice
12:30: comment, Tom Cohen and Elizabeth Cohen, and questions from audience
1:00: lunch
2:00-4:00: afternoon workshop session for presenters and discussants only
Advanced registration for the conference is necessary. Please register by September 1 at: http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/cultural-encounters-and-shared-spaces-in-the-renaissance-city-1300-1700-tickets-11922491493?utm_campaign=new_eventv2&utm_medium=email&utm_source=eb_email&utm_term=eventurl_text
Please provide your name and institutional affiliation.
Due to budgetary restrictions, lunches are open to presenters and discussants only.
This conference is generously funded by The Lila Wallace – Reader’s Digest Special Project Grant from Villa I Tatti: The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies and a Connection Grant from the Canadian Government’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. Thanks also to the University of Manitoba’s Institute for the Humanities and Department of History.
Quellennachweis:
CONF: Cultural Encounters in the Renaissance City (Winnipeg, 12-13 Sep 14). In: ArtHist.net, 10.07.2014. Letzter Zugriff 24.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/8175>.