Symposium
Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Legacy of Homer in Europe and America
Sunday, October 9, 2005
McCosh 10
Princeton University
Symposium
The symposium will bring together art and literary historians and a
philosopher to explore aspects of the reception of Homer's texts and related
material in Europe and America in the seventeenth through twentieth
centuries. Speakers will expand on the exhibition's thesis that the French
Adadémie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture and its post-Revolutionary
successor, the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris, transmitted the Greek ideal,
using examples from Germany, England, and the United States.
Registration
There is no registration fee, but advanced registration is
required. Please contact Andrea Stearly, Conference and Event Services,
Princeton University, at (609) 258-1741, fax (609) 258-4656, or e-mail
astearlyprinceton.edu. Space is limited. Reservations will be accepted in
the order in which they are received.
Exhibition
The symposium is organized in conjunction with the exhibition The Legacy of
Homer: Four Centuries of Art from the École Nationale Supérieure des
Beaux-Arts, Paris, on view at the Princeton University Art Museum from
October 8, 2005, through January 15, 2006, and at the Dahesh Museum Art in
New York City from October 11, 2005, through January 22, 2006. The
exhibition, first presented in Paris in the fall of 2004, is supported in
the United States by the National Endowment for the Arts and includes over
one hundred objects divided between the Princeton University Art Museum and
the Dahesh Museum of Art.
Program
Morning Session
8:30-9:00 Registration, lobby of McCosh 10
9:00-9:15 Susan M. Taylor
Director
Princeton University Art Museum
Welcome and Introduction
9:15-9:45 Betsy J. Rosasco
Research Curator of Later Western Art
Princeton University Art Museum
Homer at Versailles
9:45-10:15 Roger Diederen
Curator, Dahesh Museum of Art
The Poet and His Portrait: Representing Homer
in the Nineteenth Century
10:15-10:30 Break
10:30-11:00 Nina M. Athanassaglou-Kallmyer
Professor of Art History, University of Delaware
Visiting Professor, Princeton University
Possessing Homer
11:00-11:30 David Van Zanten
Professor of Art History
Northwestern University
Garnier's Homeric Envoi: Nature, Clutter, and Paint
11:30-12:00 Larry Norman
Associate Professor of French Literature
University of Chicago
Homer and the Primitif
12:00-2:15 Lunch
Afternoon Session
2:15-2:45 Constanze Güthenke
Assistant Professor of Classics
Princeton University
The Tyranny of Greece? Homer in Germany
2:45-3:15 Robert Rosenblum
Henry Ittleson Jr. Professor of Modern European Art
New York University
From Heaven to Earth: The Apotheosis of
Homer and Its Aftermath
3:15-3:30 Break
3:30-4:00 Alexander Nehamas
Edmund N. Carpenter II, Class of 1943, Professor in
the Humanities
Princeton University
Closing Remarks
4:00-5:00 Discussion
Also on view at the Princeton University Art Museum
Picturesque Imaginings: Defining the Photographic within Nineteenth-Century
European Visual Culture
August 27, 2005 - October 30, 2005
Jacques-Louis David's Antiochus and Stratonice: The Poetics of French
History Painting
October 8, 2005-January 15, 2006
Homer's Laughter: Honoré Daumier's Ancient History
October 8, 2005-January 15, 2006
Homeric Themes in Italian Renaissance and Baroque Art
October 8, 2005-January 15, 2006
Directions
The symposium will take place in McCosh 10, just off Washington Road on the
Princeton University campus. Parking is available at three locations: Lot 10
off William Street, Lot 3 off Prospect Avenue, Lot 26 off Ivy Lane, and Lot
7, the university parking garage.
By Car from New York Take the New Jersey Turnpike to exit 9. Follow Route 1
south to Princeton and Washington Road (Route 571). Turn right onto
Washington Road. Turn right onto Prospect Avenue or William Street for
parking (see map).
By Car from Philadelphia Take I-95 north (295) to exit 67 onto Route 1
north. Follow Route 1 to Washington Road (Route 571) exit.
In order to turn left across route 1, follow the jughandle and turn onto
Washington Road. Turn right onto Prospect Avenue or William Street for
parking (see map).
By Rail New Jersey Transit or Amtrak to Princeton Junction; transfer to the
Shuttle (Dinky) to Princeton campus.
Accommodations
In Town
Nassau Inn, Palmer Square (609) 921-7500
Peacock Inn, 20 Bayard Lane (609) 924-1707
Route 1, North of Princeton
Courtyard by Marriot (609) 716-9100
Doral Forrestal (609) 452-7800
Hampton Inn (609) 951-0066
Westin at Forrestal Village (609) 452-7900
Route 1, South of Princeton
Amerisuites Princeton (609) 514-1362
Hyatt Regency (609) 987-1234
Palmer Inn (609) 452-2500
Residence Inn by Marriott (609) 799-0550
-------------------------------------------------
Ruta Smithson
Public Information Officer
Princeton University Art Museum
Princeton, NJ 08544-1018
Telephone (609) 258-3763
Facsimile (609) 258-3610
www.princetonartmuseum.org
Reference:
CONF: The Legacy of Homer (Princeton, 9 Oct 05). In: ArtHist.net, Sep 13, 2005 (accessed Oct 6, 2024), <https://arthist.net/archive/27450>.