Call for Papers
Reinventing the Old Master: Fact, Fiction, and Fabrication in the Afterlives
of the Early Modern Artist
Renaissance Society of America
March 19-21, 2009 at UCLA & The Getty Museum, Malibu
Scholars have long recognized that the nineteenth century saw a surge of
interest in the lives of Renaissance and Early Modern artists, an interest
made manifest in a variety of media, including painting, prints, critical
biographies, popular literature, theater, opera, and caricature. Much
attention, for instance, has been paid to the proliferation of imagery
recreating episodes from biographies of artists from Giotto to Rembrandt. Of
particular import is the recognition that the majority of these
interpretations adhere to traditional literary topoi and biographical
patterns, such as the artist as madman, bohemian, child prodigy, or sexual
deviant. These later interpretations present themselves as history, but, in
actuality, fact, fiction, and fabrication are inextricably entwined in the
nineteenth-century Nachleben of the Early Modern artist. How do we reconcile
contradictions between the popular perception of the artist and historical
evidence?
This session seeks to examine the reinvention of the Old Master from an
interdisciplinary standpoint, starting with a basic question: what can these
later “lives” offer the modern historian? To what degree were artists
subject to myth and to what degree did the artist shape his own mythic
persona? How has modern scholarship been colored by Romantic interpretation
- and in what ways is Romantic interpretation itself dependent on tropes
created by the Early Modern biographers and artists? This panel welcomes
papers addressing these issues in relation to all forms of textual, verbal,
and/or visual material.
Please submit an abstract of no more than 150 words and a short CV via email to
Dr. Mia Reinoso Genoni at genoniRSAgmail.com by May 23, 2008.
Reference:
CFP: Reinventing the Old Master (RSA, Malibu, March 2009). In: ArtHist.net, Apr 28, 2008 (accessed May 14, 2025), <https://arthist.net/archive/30294>.