Beyond the Visual: Autumn Symposium.
Western aesthetics since Plato have privileged the visual over the corporeal, leading to a limited understanding of artefacts, both outside and inside the West. As anthropologist David Howes writes in The Craft of Senses, the conventional western hierarchy of the senses “heaps honors on vision as the ‘noblest sense’ while relegating touch to the lowest, most ‘primitive’ rung of the sensorium” (2011: 1). The bodily senses of smell, taste and touch have been viewed as ‘nonaesthetic’ while sight and sound are classified as ‘aesthetic’ or ‘intellectual’ senses and granted superiority on epistemic, moral and aesthetic grounds (Caroline Korsmeyer 2019: 358). Recently, the ‘sensory turn’ and the ‘material turn’ have challenged this paradigm.
The 2025 Autumn Symposium organised by the Doctoral and Early Career Committee will explore the complex interplay between the senses when creating and experiencing artistic objects. Our aim is to go beyond the traditional emphasis on the visual gaze and to investigate how other sensory experiences have shaped, and keep shaping, our understanding and appreciation of artistic practices. How can attending to meanings achieved by other bodily senses offer alternative ways to understand works of art?
This conference interrogates the sensory dimensions of art beyond the primacy of vision, exploring how tactile, auditory, and other non-visual modalities elicit emotional responses and complicate established definitions of “art.” It considers the historical privileging of the gaze and its impact on the reception of objects and practices designed for haptic or oral engagement, as well as the afterlives of such works when reframed through visual regimes. Attention will also be given to the entanglement of visuality with imperialist agendas and to the ways contemporary artists draw on historical practices to forge new aesthetic forms that challenge ocularcentrism. Speakers will examine diverse artistic expressions in diverse chronological and geographical contexts, exploring the full sensory experiences they offer. By providing a platform for discussion across disciplinary lines, we hope to cultivate a deeper understanding of the complexity of artifacts in their production and their reception.
Organised by our Doctoral and Early Career Research Committee, the Symposium takes place annually. It is intended for current or recent PhD students, and early career researchers in the arts, humanities, and museum sector and disciplines beyond these.
Programme
09:30 – 09:45
Welcome & Opening Remarks
Chair: Ed Kettleborough
Panel 1 | 09:45 – 10:30
Bodily Experiences in Art History before the 20th Century
09:45 – 10:00 | Olivia Birkelund
Fertile Liquidity: Moiré and Touch in Mantegna and Raphael
10:00 – 10:15 | Gianna French
Material Hauntings: The Sensory Afterlife of Rossetti’s The Raven
10:15 – 10:30
Discussion
10:30 – 10:45
Coffee Break
Panel 2 | 10:45 – 12:45
Modernist Accounts of Bodily Art Histories
10:45 – 11:00 | Jan Zacharias
Towards a Bodily Art Criticism? Robert Collingwood, Adrian Stokes and the Sense of Touch
11:00 – 11:45 | Christina Ntanovasili
Sensing the Cosmos: Matter and Spirit in Hilma af Klint and Modern European Art and Culture
11:45 – 12:15
Discussion
12:15 – 13:15
Lunch provided
Panel 3 | 13:15 – 14:30
Post-War Artists and Bodily Experiences
13:15 – 13:30 | Jelena Sofronijevic
Chewed Up: Zeljko Kujundzic, Dusan Kusmic, and Zoran Mušič’s Representations of the Body through War
13:30 – 13:45 | Martina Borghi
13:45 – 14:00 | Nicola Baird
Beyond the Visual: Expanded Sculpture and Paul Neagu’s Palpable Art Practice
14:00 – 14:30
Discussion
14:30 – 14:45
Coffee Break
Panel 4 | 14:45 – 16:00
Rethinking Museums, Archives and Media Beyond the Visual
14:45 – 15:00 | Michaela Clarence
Pressing Your Head Against the Glass: Haptic Memory and the Temporalities of Dress in the Museum
15:00 – 15:15 | Denise Startin
Re-citing the Archive: Fieldwork, Fiction and the Politics of Memory
15:15 – 15:30 | Megan Carnrite
Beyond Visuality: Atkins, Derges, and the Body
15:30 – 16:00
Discussion
16:00 – 16:15
Coffee Break
16:15 – 17:15 | Christina Bradstreet
Keynote Lecture
Following the Fragrance Trail: Writing and curating Scented Visions
17:15 – 17:30
Closing Remarks
17:30-18:30
Drinks Reception
Full programme details at: https://forarthistory.org.uk/events/autumn-symposium-2025/
Reference:
CONF: Beyond the Visual (London, 7 Oct 25). In: ArtHist.net, Sep 24, 2025 (accessed Oct 14, 2025), <https://arthist.net/archive/50693>.