How is war recorded in visual media? And what are we talking about when we talk about war? What, exactly, constitutes war and what qualifies as a visual representation of it? Human conflict and the visual arts have perhaps never remained completely separate from each other. Given war’s omnipresence throughout human history and its interconnectedness with politics and propaganda, the content of its imagery projects certain facets of warfare while concealing others. What is revealed through agency and to what extent is it permitted to prevail? Whose viewpoint is represented? How politicized or personal is an image of war? How does imagery produced by war participants compare with officially sanctioned works? How is such imagery digested and understood in our own age?
This conference will bring together multiple perspectives on representations of war in visual culture. It is intended that the conference will lead to the formation of a multidisciplinary, international scholarly community with its own calendar of events and digital presence. The publication of conference papers is planned.
Panels topics will include: the classical world, print culture of WWI and WWII, home front, women and war, memory, colonial encounters, commemoration and the built environment, bodies, senses and spaces of war; propaganda; art during the rise of fascism, the soldier’s body, resistance, battlefield imagery in Renaissance Italy, artist as witness (including official war artists), photography, film, identity, internment, soldier-artists, responses to contemporary conflicts, trauma, perspectives of curators and archivists.
PLENARY SPEAKERS:
Prof Brendan Dooley (University College Cork)
Prof Paul Gough (University of the West of England)
Dr Laura Brandon (Canadian War Museum)
Dr Paul Fox (University College London)
Dr Sabine Kriebel (University College Cork)
We acknowledge the support of the Dept of History of Art and the School of History, University College Cork in funding this event, and the generosity of the Crawford Art Gallery, Cork in hosting the event on Day 3 in their historic building.
Organizers: Ann Murray (Department of History of Art, UCC); Alan Drumm (School of History, UCC)
PROVISIONAL PROGRAM:
THURSDAY 12 SEPTEMBER
Western Gateway Building, Ground Floor
Registration 08.30 - 09.15, Ground floor corridor
SESSION 1: 09.15 – 11.00
WGB_G02
Panel 1: Battlefield Imagery in Sixteenth Century Europe
Chair:
The Battle of Pavia: Exploring a Scenery of War in the Tapestry collection of Charles Quint [Charles V of Spain]
Dr Cecilia Paredes, Brussels University (SOCIAAM)
Battlefields. Representing War in the Italian Renaissance
Francesca Borgo, Harvard University
Thinking and painting battle in XVIth century Italy : the case of Raphael
Pauline Lafille, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE), Paris.
WGB_G03
Panel 2: Print Culture of WWI and WWII
Chair: Dr Finola Doyle-O’Neill, University College Cork
‘There’s Dependability for You!’ The Representation of British Buildings, Monuments and Institutions in the Press Advertising of the Second World War
Dr David. J. Clampin, Liverpool John Moores University
The German Posters of World War I: Powerful Images for a Modern Public
Dr Claire Whitner, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
War and Humour: an Unlikely Couple?
Bettina Müller, German Research Foundation, Heidelberg University
Blinded for You! Picturing Disability, Heroism and Sacrifice in First World War Publicity Campaigns
Leanne Green, Manchester Metropolitan University and Imperial War Museum, London
WGB_G04
Panel 3: Art during the Rise of Fascism
Chair:
An Image for the New Empire: the Aesthetics of Politics in Italy during the Thirties and Forties
Dr Giovanni Arena, Second University of Naples/Institute National Optical
Photography, Photomontage and War: Artists Documenting Violence in the 1930’s
Joan-Robledo Palop, Yale University
Picasso’s Guernica: Topple Militarism!
Prof Jörg Merz, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Institut für Kunstgeschichte
WGB_G17
Panel 4: Responses to Contemporary Warfare
Chair:
Experimenting with space: Visual Arts and the Iraq war in the UK
Dr Alan Ingram, University College London
Polyrhythmic and Migrating Voices
Dr Leonida Kovac, Academy of Fine Arts, University of Zagreb
11.00 – 11.15 COFFEE BREAK
SESSION 2: 11.15-12.30
WGB_G02
Panel 1: Ruptures: Bodies, Senses and Spaces of War
Chair:
Modern War/Sensory Rupture, 1914-2014
Dr Ana Carden-Coyne, Centre for the Cultural History of War, University of Manchester
Local and Global Collections and the Sensory Impact of War in Contemporary Art
David Morris, Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
The Ruptured Portrait: War and the Aesthetics of Disfigurement
Dr Suzannah Biernoff, University of London
WGB_G03
Panel 2: Colonial Encounters
Chair:
Agency Permeates between the Medium and the Message: Western Polynesian War Art and its Western Representation
Dr Andy Mills, University of East Anglia (Fijian Art Project)
Painting the Zulu War: Mythologizing Massacre and Venerating Victory
Dr Maebh O’Regan, National College of Art and Design, Dublin
WGB_G04
Panel 3: Commemoration and the Built Environment 1
Chair: Gary Haines, University College London
‘The Face of Death/Faces of the Dead’: Memory and the Ideal in Images of the Dead on British First World War Memorial Sculpture
Dr Jonathan Black FRSA, Kingston University
Images and Forms of the First Balcanic War (1912) in the Monumental Charnel-House on Zebrnjak Hill (1937)
Dr Aleksandar Kadijevic, University of Belgrade
The Age of Monuments: Sculptural, Architectural, Urbanistic and Other Ways of Commemorating The Homeland War in Croatia
Dr Sandra Kri?i? Roban, Institute of Art History, Zagreb
WGB_G17
Panel 4: Propaganda 1
Chair:
Wartime Cartoon Publications in Guangzhou
Dr Paul Bevan, Oxford University
‘Strange but True’: Re-examining State Artistic Patronage in Britain during the First World War
Dr Richard Slocombe, Imperial War Museum, London
From Personal Accomplishment to Imperial Achievement: Images of War in Late Imperial China
Prof Ya-Chen Ma, Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Fight Die Man Woman: Representing a War over 1600 Years
Amy Hwang, Princeton University
WGB_G03 12.30-13.30 PLENARY PRESENTATION
Professor Brendan Dooley, University College Cork
title of paper tba
13.30 – 14.30: LUNCH
SESSION 3: 14.30-16.00
WGB_G02
Panel 1: Commemoration and the Built Environment 2
Chair:
Of Highways and Roadblocks: The First World War and Utopian Public Memory in Australia, Then and Now
Dr Ryan Johnson, Australian War Memorial, Canberra
The Stone Flower in the Pannonian plane
Dr Josip Zanki,University of Zadar/President of the Croatian Artists’ Association
The Arts and Crafts Aesthetic and Memorials for the Fallen in World War I Britain
Prof Carolyn Malone, Ball State University, Muncie
WGB_G03
Panel 2: Propaganda 2
Chair:
Portable Propaganda and Contentious Miniature Histories: the Art Medal in Wartime
Philip Dutton, Imperial War Museum, London
The General Government through the Eyes of German Artists: Art in the Service of Imperial Propaganda of the Second World War Years – Occupation, Invasion, Appropriation
Dr Tadeusz Zadro?ny, Institute of art, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw
Futurists at the Front: War of the Italian Avant-Garde (1915-1918)
Dr Selena Daly, University College Dublin
WGB_G04
Panel 3: [Collective] Memory
Chair:
No End to the Image War: Photography and the Contentious Memories of the Korean War
Prof Jung Joon Lee, The City University of New York/Visiting Curator, the Thomas J. Walsh Art Gallery, Fairfield University
Remembering Port Said 1956: Images of Popular Resistance in Egyptian Documentaries
Prof Rania Abdelrahman, Cairo University
Vietnam: Memory of Desecration in dePalma’s Casualties of War
Prof Nanette Norris, Royal Military College, Saint-Jean, Quebec
Artist as Witness: Commemorative Strategies in the Work of Miroslaw Balka and Doris Salcedo
Lisa Moran, Irish Museum of Modern Art/National College of Art and Design
16.00 – 16.15: COFFEE BREAK
WGB_03 16.30-17.15
PLENARY PRESENTATION
Painting Operation Herrick: Jules George, Special Artist
Dr Paul Fox, University College London
SESSION 4: POSTGRADUATE SESSION 17.15-18.30
WGB_G02
POSTGRADUATE PANEL 1: Propaganda
Chair:
An Image of the Ally in the Propaganda of the Countries of the Entente (1914-1915): a comparative analysis
Yudin Nickolay, Moscow State University
Laughter as ‘the royal way to truth’ – An Irish Painter’s Vision of the Western Front
Miruna Cuzman, Edinburgh College of Art, The University of Edinburgh
The Lion and the Vulture: The Use of National Animals in Soviet Cold War Visual Propaganda
Reeta Kangas, University of Turku, Finland
Depicting the Defeat: The Battle of Dogali (1887)
Carmen Belmonte, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz- Max-Planck-Institut, University of Udine
WGB_G03
POSTGRADUATE PANEL 2: Representing War
Chair:
Representation and Context [on the Vietnam War] in Hollywood War Cinema
Lisa Hayman, Monash University, Melbourne
The Pastrana Tapestries
An Image of War in the Late Medieval Period
Inês Meira Araújo, University of Lisbon
Incarnation and representation of war: the knight and his armour
Juliette Allix, École du Louvre, Paris Université Paris 1 – Panthéon-Sorbonne IRSEM
Images of War between Abstraction and Figuration: Lyotard’s Criticism of Conventional Depictions of Violence
Inge Tappe, Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design/Université Paris-Diderot (Paris VII)
WGB_G04
POSTGRADUATE PANEL 3: Trauma and Representations of Post-Conflict Art
Chair:
Coming Close to Touch: Trauma, Empathy and Affect in the Site-Specific Installations of Rebecca Horn
Sarah Kelleher, University College Cork
Behind the Masks of Paul Klee
Julie Daunt, University College Cork
Let there be no more War. Jack B. Yeats’ Anti-War Painting Grief in Context
Elizabeth Ansel, Technische Universität, Dresden
Truth Commissions and the Arts: Case Studies in Timor-Leste and Northern Ireland
Ashley Soutor, The New School, New York
19.30 FOOD AND WINE RECEPTION, SCHOOL OF HISTORY (TYRCONNEL, PERROTT AVE)
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FRIDAY 13 SEPTEMBER
Western Gateway Building, ground floor
SESSION 1: 09.15 – 11.00
WGB_G02
Panel 1: The Soldier’s Body
Chair:
Politics of Memory: Repressed Representation of the Body in Visual Documents of World War I
Dr Dorota Sajewska, Institute of Polish Culture, University of Warsaw
Marsden Hartley’s Portrait of a German Officer: (Be)Speaking the Unutterable
Dr Edyta Frelik and Prof Jerzy Kutnik, Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Lublin
The Graphic Experience of War: Heinrich Hoerle’s Krüppelmappe (1920)
Dr Dorothy Rowe, University of Bristol
The impact of the Unseeing: The blinded First World War soldier in Art.
Gary Haines, University of London
WGB_G03
Panel 2: The Art of Resistance
Chair:
Strategies of Liberation: Dubuffet’s Métro Series of Gouaches (March 1943)
Dr Caroline Perret, Group for War and Culture Studies, University of Westminster, London
Laughter at War
Prof Anna Markowska, University of Wroclaw
The Soldier’s Diary
Dr Agn? Naruštyt?, Vilnius Academy of Arts, Lithuania
WGB_G04
Panel 3: The Image of the Home Front during WWI and WWII: Women and War
Chair:
War at a Distance: War’s Affects by Women Artists on the Home Front
Professor Catherine Speck, University of Adelaide
‘Comments on Dereliction and Wreckage’: the War Art of Edith Collier and Frances Hodgkins
Professor Joanne Drayton, UNITEC Institute of Technology, Auckland
Visions of the Second World War in British Women’s War Art
Dr Elizabeth de Cacqueray, Université de Toulouse
Within "The Home Fronts of Iowa": Images of Women from Propaganda to Pulitzer during the Second World War
Dr Lisa Payne Ossian, History Professor, Des Moines Area Community College, USA
WGB_G17
Panel 4: Artist as Witness: War as Desolation [temporary title]
Chair:
Hieronymus Bosch: Human Violence and Earthly Terror - Reprimand and Moralized Ethical Lessons
Professor Yona Pinson, Tel Aviv University
The Disasters of War: Francisco Goya versus Artur Grottger
Prof Irena Kossowka, Copernicus University, Torun/Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw
K?rlis Padegs’ ‘Red Laughter’: the High Song of Insanity
Prof J?nis Kalna?s, Vidzeme University of Applied Art, Latvia
Magic Realism painting in Italy and Germany
Dr Sara Cecchini, Independent scholar
WGB_G03 11.15-12.30
PLENARY PRESENTATION
‘Exactitude is Truth’: the Search for Authenticity and Interpretation in the Commissioning of Artists
Professor Paul Gough, University of the West of England
12.30 – 13.30: LUNCH
SESSION 2: 13.30 – 15.15
WGB_G02
Panel 1: The Classical World
Chair:
Depiction of War on Roman Imperial Coinage: Patterns and Problems
Dr David Woods, University College Cork
The «mythological battle» in the Greek architectural relief of the Classical period
Dr Nadezda Nalimova, Lomonosov Moscow State University
WGB_G03
Panel 2: Truth and agency in Modern and Contemporary Photography and Film [temporary title]
Chair:
Curating Violence: The Mobility and Re-Presentation of ‘Conscious-Shocking’ Images
Prof Jacob A. Mundy, Peace and Conflict Studies, Colgate University, New York and Nathanael J. Andreini, Columbia University, New York
Archival Documents from the Fakhouri File: Histories of War, Trauma and Memory in the Work of Walid Raad
Dr Anna Rådström, Umeå University
‘(Un)-Veiled Truths’?: The Politics of War in Contemporary Documentary Photography
Dr Elena Stylianou, European University Cyprus, Nicosia and Maria Petrides, independent scholar
Different Ways of Seeing: Camerawork and Northern Ireland in the 1970s
Noni Stacey, University of the Arts, London
WGB_G04
Panel 3: Identity [temporary title]
Chair: Dr Donal Maguire, National Gallery of Ireland
World War One and Irish Nationalism: Art in Service to the Spirits of the Age
Dr Éimear O’Connor HRHA, TRIARC, Trinity College Dublin
William Orpen: Representations of Self and the Great War
Angeria Rigamonti di Cutò, Independent Scholar
Imagining the Great War: Self-Fashioning and Cultural Identification in Otto Dix’s Self-Portraits, 1914-1915
Dr Michele Wijegoonaratna, Independent Scholar
15.15 – 15.30: COFFEE BREAK
SESSION 3: 15.30 – 17.00
WGB_G02
Panel 1: Internment [temporary title]
Chair:
Women-Inmates Visual Art during the Holocaust: Embellished Testimonies or Reflections of Reality?
Dr Pnina Rosenberg, The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel
Aliens on our Shores: The Art of Internment in Australia during the First and Second World Wars [working title]
Dr Claire Baddeley, Australian War Memorial, Canberra
WGB_G03
Panel 2: Documentary Photography and Reportage
Chair:
U. S. Civil War Stereography of the Dead
Prof Emily Godbey, Iowa State University
Mathew Brady, Ernest Appert, illustrations of wars (1861-1871). Dr Stephanie Sotteau Soualle, Independent Scholar
Reading Horror: Re-anchoring images of the Liberation of Bergen Belsen
Helen Lewis, University of Technology, Sydney
WGB_G04
Panel 3: Civilian Resistance in Modern and Contemporary Art
Chair:
Pakistani Art and the Debunking of the Government and Jihadist Warfare Ideology
Dr Christine Vial-Kayser, Associate Researcher, Paris I (Pantheon-Sorbonne University)
Graffiti Traces of Arab Upraising: The Everyday Iconography of Interactions in Contemporary Warfare
Rebecca Gulowski and Dominik Raphael Molnar, Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Augsburg
Another Egyptian Revolution: Khayamiya as War Art
Dr Sam Bowker, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga
WGB_G17
Panel 4: Soldiers Documenting War [WWI]
Chair:
C R W Nevinson: The Twenty-first Century
Jan D. Cox, University of Leeds
A Paroxysm in History Painting: The Works of Sousa Lopes at Lisbon's Military Museum.Carlos Silveira, Institute of Art History, New University of Lisbon
Otto Dix, the Frontschwein and the War Experience
Prof James A. van Dyke, University of Missouri-Columbia
Military painters facing painting officers: an Extract of Napoleonic wars in French military art
Aude Antoinette Nicolas, Independent Scholar/Vice-president of the Association for the Promotion of History and Military Heritage
17.00-17.15 COFFEE BREAK
WGB_G_03 17.15-18.15
PLENARY PRESENTATION
Dr Sabine Kriebel, University College Cork
Title of paper tba
19.30: OPTIONAL:
CONFERENCE DINNER
[may be moved to Saturday evening, depending on program adjustments]
CITY CENTRE RESTAURANT, VENUE TBC
COST: €30 MAXIMUM COST FOR THREE COURSES
SATURDAY 14 SEPTEMBER
CRAWFORD ART GALLERY, EMMET PLACE, CITY CENTRE
LECTURE THEATRE, GROUND FLOOR
SESSION 1: 09.30 – 11.15
Panel 1: Current artistic practice and responses to war [perspectives of practitioners]
Chair:
A Visual Artist’s Response to the World War One Artefacts in the Ulster Museum Collection
Gail Ritchie, Artist-in-Residence, Ulster Museum
Herdi Ali Kardi: Images of War in Contemporary Kurdistan
Herdi Ali Kardi, University of Worcester
The Dresden Archive Project
Alan Turnbull, Newcastle University
Re-imaging and the Fugitive Narrative
Peter Neill, Photographer and Course Director, BA Photography, Belfast School of Art, University of Ulster
11.15 – 11.30: COFFEE BREAK
SESSION 2: 11.30-13.15
Panel 2: Curatorial Perspectives: Contemporary War Art
Chair: Ms Anne Hodge, National Gallery of Ireland
On Exhibitions and War: Signals in the Dark: Art in the Shadow of War
Seamus Kealy, Director of The Model, Sligo
Terms of Engagement: Ambivalence and Identity in Canadian War Art Now
Dr Christine Conley, University of Ottawa
Panel 3: Military Culture in sixteenth century Italy
Chair:
The Gonzagas’ Army in the Shrine of B. V. delle Grazie near Mantua. A Double Discovery: Missaglia’s and the Polymateric Armours (XVIth Century)
Dr Paolo Bertelli, University of Verona
The Maniera at War: the Military Imagery of the Salone dei Cinquecento
Dr Maurizio Arfaioli, The Medici Archive Project
13.15-14.15 LUNCH
14.15 – 15.15: PLENARY PRESENTATION
Otto Dix and A. Y. Jackson: Dispatches from the Curatorial Front
Dr Laura Brandon, Canadian War Museum, Ottawa
15.15 – 15.30 COFFEE BREAK
Session 3: 15.15 – 17.30
Panel 4: Perspectives on WWI and WWII [temporary title]
Chair:
Patriots, insurgents, saints. Re-ordering conflicted memories in the Warsaw Rising Museum.
Dr Olga Topol, University of London
Witnessing the First Great Industrial War: American War Artists on the Western Front, 1918
Barton C. Hacker and Margaret Vining, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
America’s Forgotten Soldier Art: The World War Two Camp Art Programs
Peter Harrington, Curator, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection, Brown University Library
17.30: CLOSING REMARKS
OPTIONAL: 20.30 TO CLOSE
LEE SESSIONS
AN EVENING OF (REAL) TRADITIONAL MUSIC AND STOUT TASTING
LOCATION: CHOICE CITY PUB, TBA
Cost: the proprietor is happy if you buy a drink!
Note: we will move the Lee Sessions to Friday evening if the conference dinner is rescheduled
Lee Sessions website: http://www.theleesessions.com/
SUNDAY, 15 SEPTEMBER
OPTIONAL: COST-SUBSIDIZED FULL DAY CULTURAL EXCURSION
1.WALKING TOUR AND VISIT TO THE HERITAGE CENTRE, COBH
2.GUIDED TOUR AND LUNCH AT FOTA HOUSE, LITTLE ISLAND
3.GUIDED VISIT TO SPIKE ISLAND MILITARY FORTRESS AND PRISON
Tour details: You will be collected from the main campus on Sunday morning at 9.30am and make a 30 minute coach trip to historic Cobh, the last port of call for HMS Titanic. There, we will commence with the Titanic Trail, which has been filmed by 20th Century Fox, National Geographic and featured in numerous other travel documentaries. Cork historian Dr Michael Martin (founder and director of the Titanic Trail) and his team of specially trained guides, will direct our visit. After the hour-long walking tour, we will visit the Cobh Heritage Centre to explore its colourful maritime history.
We will then take a short coach trip to Fota House, a beautifully restored Neo-Classical mansion for a guided visit of the house and lunch. Good photo opportunities inside and out. Arboretum located next to the house.
We will then return to Cobh to take the ferry across the harbour to Spike Island, home to a classic star-shaped military fortress which in its time witnessed the horror of the Great Famine (1848-51) and held internees during the War of Independence (1919-21). The visit includes access to a restored 6 inch coastal artillery weapon. The tour of the island is based on Dr Martin’s research for his book, Spike Island: Saints, Felons and Famine (Dublin, 2007).
About our guide: Dr Michael Martin served in the Irish Navy for 23 years (1975-98). In 1987, at the age of 29, he became the youngest ever person in Ireland to be promoted into the rank of Warrant Officer. His service included a voluntary peacekeeping tour of duty as a member of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon. On retirement, Michael set up and still runs a number of historical tours of Cobh. He received the Cobh Mayor’s award in 2005 for his work for the town and was made an honorary citizen of Baltimore USA by the Mayor there in 2003. In 2004 he went back to full time education in University College Cork and University of California, Berkeley, completing his PhD on Irish Civil Military Relations in 2010. Michael regularly lectures on his work and has been a guest speaker on numerous television and radio programmes, both in Ireland and abroad.
PRICES (maximum cost, based on 25 persons taking the tour; prices drop if numbers are larger)
Tour including light lunch at Fota House (soup, sandwiches and tea/coffee) 60 euro.
Tour including served gourmet lunch (choice of main course, dessert and tea/coffee) 70 euro.
Tour without pre-paid food 50 euro. The cafe at Fota serves hot lunches, soups, salads, snacks, cakes, scones and tarts. The average cost of a hot lunch is €13; Sandwiches €5-6; coffee/tea €2.50; soup €4.50-5.
Prices include the group discount on entry fees and food, plus a subsidy.
More information:
The Titanic Trail: http://www.titanic.ie
Cobh Heritage Centre: http://www.cobhheritage.com/
Fota House and Estate: http://www.fotahouse.com/
Quellennachweis:
CONF: War in the Visual Arts (Cork, 12-14 Sep 13). In: ArtHist.net, 15.05.2013. Letzter Zugriff 22.12.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/5357>.