Call for Papers ‘Fiction and Faction in Byzantine Literature’ (Buenos Aires, 3-5 April 2024)

https://www.arts.kuleuven.be/byzantium/nieuws/fifthcolloquiumuba

Fifth Byzantine Colloquium of the University of Buenos Aires

Continuing the tradition of the Buenos Aires conferences, the topic of the fifth instalment is primarily narratological. The aim of this colloquium is to discuss case studies from the Byzantine millennium that show the tension between the narration of ficta res and of events ‘that really happened’.

We invite proposals for 20-minute on any topic pertinent to narrative in Byzantium in the widest sense, including art. Submissions of English presentations are particularly welcome. Please submit your abstract by 31 January 2024 to the conveners.

All information can be found here and in the attached document.

Reinhart Ceulemans (Leuven), also on behalf of Tomás Fernández and Paloma Cortez (Buenos Aires)

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Call for participants: Studying East of Byzantium X: Communities

The Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard University and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture at Hellenic College Holy Cross in Brookline, MA, are pleased to invite abstracts for the next Studying East of Byzantium workshop: Studying East of Byzantium IX: Communities.

Studying East of Byzantium IX: Communities is a three-part workshop that intends to bring together doctoral students and very recent PhDs studying the Christian East to reflect on how to reflect on the usefulness of the concept of “Community” in studying the Christian East, to share methodologies, and to discuss their research with workshop respondents, Michael Pifer, University of Michigan, and Salam Rassi, University of Edinburgh. The workshop will meet on November 17, 2023, February 9, 2024, and June 6–7, 2024, on Zoom. The timing of the workshop meetings will be determined when the participant list is finalized.

We invite all graduate students and recent PhDs working in the Christian East whose work considers, or hopes to consider, the theme of communities in their own research to apply.

Participation is limited to 10 students. The full workshop description is available on the East of Byzantium website (https://eastofbyzantium.org/upcoming-events/). Those interested in attending should submit a C.V. and 200-word abstract through the East of Byzantium website no later than September 13, 2023.

For questions, please contact East of Byzantium organizers, Christina Maranci, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies, Harvard University, and Brandie Ratliff, Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture at contact@eastofbyzantium.org.

EAST OF BYZANTIUM is a partnership between the Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard University and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture at Hellenic College Holy Cross in Brookline, MA. It explores the cultures of the eastern frontier of the Byzantine Empire in the late antique and medieval periods.

Job Opportunity: University of Vienna

Byzantine Art History

The University of Vienna is internationally renowned for its excellence in teaching and research, and counts more than 7,500 academics from all disciplines. This breadth of expertise offers unique opportunities to address the complex challenges of modern society, to develop comprehensive new approaches, and educate the problem-solvers of tomorrow from a multidisciplinary perspective.

At the Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies, the University of Vienna seeks to appoint a

Full Professor of Byzantine Art History

 The position:

We are interested in researchers with a focus on different genres and periods of Byzantine art. We expect a willingness to teach the temporal and regional diversity of Byzantine art history at all levels (BA, MA, PhD).

The professorship is affiliated with the Department of Art History, one of the oldest and world’s largest institutions in this field. Cooperation with the Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies and their research projects is desired.

Your academic profile:

·       Doctoral degree/PhD

·       Outstanding research achievements, excellent publication and funding record, international reputation

·       Proven leadership qualities

·       Experience in designing and managing large research projects

·       Enthusiasm for excellent teaching and supervision at the bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral level

·       Willingness to take on organisational and administrative responsibilities within the Faculty and/or the University

 The University of Vienna expects the successful candidate to acquire, within three years, proficiency in German sufficient for teaching in bachelor’s programmes and for participation in university committees.

 We offer:

       ·       a dynamic research environment

·       a wide range of research and teaching support services

·       attractive working conditions in a city with a high quality of life

·       an attractive salary according to the Collective Bargaining Agreement for University Staff (§98 UG, level A1, to be negotiated individually) and an organisational retirement plan

·       a “start-up package”, in particular for the initiation of research projects

·       comprehensive relocation support

Museum of Russian Icons seeks new curator

PLEASE SHARE!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Museum of Russian Icons Seeks New Curator

CLINTON, MA–– The Museum of Russian Icons offers a unique opportunity to play an important role in shaping a leading institute for icons and Eastern Christian art in the USA. The Museum is currently in the last phase of a reorientation and rebranding project, and its new plans will be shared with the public in the second half of 2023. The curator will also spearhead the Study Center which will be an essential part of the new Museum.  

The Museum seeks a dynamic and highly motivated individual who is excited by this challenge. The ideal candidate will be an experienced, published scholar passionately interested in the arts of the Eastern Christian world, and deeply committed to the Museum’s mission. The ideal candidate should be fully able to employ the latest technologies to connect to global audiences. The candidate reports to and works closely with Executive Director Simon Morsink.

The Museum of Russian Icons, founded in 2006 by the American entrepreneur Gordon Lankton, holds the most comprehensive collection of Russian icons in the US, as well as a growing collection of Greek, Veneto-Cretan, and Ethiopian icons. The Museum serves as a place for contemplation and for experiencing the beauty and spirituality of icons. The permanent collection and temporary exhibitions offer unparalleled opportunities to situate Eastern Christian art within a global context and to explore its connection to contemporary concerns and ideas. The Museum’s Study Center stimulates object-based learning and multidisciplinary research and aims to share its research in the field of Eastern Christian art with wide audiences through an active slate of academic and public programs.  

Essential Functions and Responsibilities: 

  • Maintain and care for the collections. 
  • Research, propose, and organize high-level exhibitions.  
  • Develop and lead the Study Center, including the library, in collaboration with the Executive Director. 
  • Organize and moderate conferences and lectures, online and in person. 
  • Publish proceedings of conferences on the website and act as key author for online content. 
  • Collaborate with Executive Director to refine collections through acquisitions and de-accessioning. 
  • Maintain extensive contacts with curators, scholars, donors, collectors, dealers, and consultants. 
  • Work closely with Registrar, restorers, contractors, and others participating in art installations. 
  • Work with marketing staff to generate publicity for exhibitions and initiatives.  
  • Oversee the galleries, including related signage, labels, and printed and online museum publications.  
  • Deliver talks on the permanent collection and special projects or exhibitions. 

Experience and Skills: 

  • Excellent interpersonal and communication skills. 
  • Minimum of three years of museum or institutional experience.   
  • Proven record of scholarly research and publishing in area(s) of specialty. 
  • Proven ability to execute complex projects, preferably exhibitions or other public-facing initiatives. 
  • Strong computer skills and an interest in contributing to the Museum’s social media platforms. 
  • Superior ability to present ideas and projects.  
  • Strong planning and project management skills.   
  • Able to directly engage with diversity, equity, access, and inclusion (DEAI) initiatives at the Museum. 

Education: 

PhD in art history or equivalent through publications with a focus on icons and Eastern Christian art.  

Personal Qualities: 

  • Result-driven 
  • Intellectually rigorous 
  • Creative and innovative 
  • Inspirational, passionate, curious 
  • Generous and collaborative team worker 
  • Possessing superior judgment, discretion, tact, and diplomacy 

Staff Position 

Full Time, 40 hours per week (part-time may be considered)  

Salary Range 

$80,000–$95,000 (with extensive benefits) 

Working conditions: 

Hybrid (at the Museum in Clinton MA and remote). Flexible hours. 

How to Apply: 

Please send your application incl. a letter of interest, a resume, and names of 3 references to Simon Morsink, Executive Director: jobs@museumofrussianicons.org. No phone calls please. 

Consideration of candidates will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. 

Call for Blog Post Submissions: The Blog on Medieval Arts & Rituals

The Network for Medieval Arts & Rituals (NetMAR) invites proposals for blog posts that will be published on its official website). 

Through a series of NetMAR monthly blogposts, medievalists share their insights, original research, ideas and opinions concerning medieval arts and rituals in a way that is accessible to wider audiences.

Among the subjects that are broached in our monthly posts are the following:

What do we mean by heritage and how can we protect it?
How do medieval arts and rituals survive in contemporary theatre?
Manuscripts produced in medieval Cyprus for church rituals.
Storytelling in monastic contexts
Rituals of medieval breastfeeding
A Cistercian nunnery in medieval Nicosia.

For more information, visit our website
Please prepare your blog texts by using the attached template (files here and here). 
Send your proposals to Stavroula Constantinou (konstans@ucy.ac.cy).

18th International Congress of Christian Archaeology

Dear Colleague(s), The Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade, will host the 18th International Congress of Christian Archaeology, in cooperation with the Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana, the National Museum of Serbia and the Faculty of Philosophy of the Belgrade University. The congress has a special place in the fields of Early Christian archaeology and Late Roman studies, with a tradition established in 1894. We are glad to announce that the website of the 18th International Congress of Christian Archaeology is launched. The Congress, entitled Early Christianity Between Liturgical Practice and Everyday Life, will be held in Belgrade between 2 and 6 September 2024. Please visit: https://www.18ciac.com/. On the website you may also find the first circular containing more detailed information (https://www.18ciac.com/first-circular/). We are looking forward to meeting you in Belgrade!  

Egyptian Textiles and Medieval Indian Ocean Trade

Friday, October 13, 2023
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Applications due: July 17, 2023

In conjunction with the ongoing interdepartmental project “Passage Between Worlds: Exchanges Along the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean in the Middle Ages,” the 2023 Dumbarton Oaks Museum Graduate Study Day Egyptian Textiles and Medieval Indian Ocean Trade will consider Indian cotton textiles found in Egypt, India, and Indonesia and emblematic of a vibrant maritime trade network found east of the Mediterranean Sea in the late antique and medieval periods.

The workshop will be co-taught by Elizabeth Dospel Williams (Dumbarton Oaks), Anna Kelley (University of St. Andrews), Sumru Belger Krody (The George Washington Museum and The Textile Museum), and Arielle Winnik (Yale University), who will discuss the trade, manufacture, and use of textiles across the Indian Ocean in the premodern periods.

In the morning, these scholars will present their current research, with a particular focus on recent exhibitions featuring Indian textiles. After lunch, participants will spend the afternoon studying textiles from the Dumbarton Oaks Collection in object storage and the Cotsen Textiles Collection at the Textile Museum.

Funding 

Dumbarton Oaks will reserve participants’ accommodation in its on-site Guest House for one night (October 12) and will arrange for Friday lunch in the Refectory. Participants should book their own travel to Washington, to be reimbursed up to $600 upon submission of receipts.

Applications 

Currently enrolled graduate students in good standing are eligible to apply. Dumbarton Oaks does not sponsor J1 visas for Study Day attendees. We encourage applicants from graduate programs in art history, archaeology, history, classics, religious studies, and other fields who might benefit from close engagement with our collections and from training in material culture approaches.

To apply, please submit a CV and cover letter with a brief summary of the candidate’s research interests, plans for future research, and an explanation of why attendance is important to the candidate’s intellectual and professional development. All materials should be submitted as one pdf to museum@doaks.org. Applications are due July 17, 2023.

Call for papers: “Dressing Bodies, Dressing Spaces: Challenges and New Approaches to Textiles and Adornment (300-1600) / Habiller le corps, Habiller l’espace: Enjeux et approches aux textiles et à l’adornement (300-1600)”

We invite proposals for the session CIHA202400009 “Dressing Bodies, Dressing Spaces: Challenges and New Approaches to Textiles and Adornment (300-1600) / Habiller le corps, Habiller l’espace: Enjeux et approches aux textiles et à l’adornement (300-1600)” at CIHA (Lyon, France June 23-28, 2024).  

Session description:  

Holistic consideration of the interrelationships of pre- and early modern bodies and spaces across Eurasia (300—1600) has been limited by conceptual frameworks divided into geographic, temporal, and methodological specialization. Thus, work on dress has dealt with personal appearance, highlighting questions about identity through clothing, jewelry, and accessories. Likewise, scholarship on interior decoration has considered the relationship of ephemeral design elements to permanent architectural forms through function and placement. Further, scholarship on the body’s presence in space has tended to work with movement, placement, and perception of abstracted bodies, rather than concrete figures weighed down by clothing and jewels.  

These approaches, divided largely by medium, reflect art historiographical biases and technical specializations which silo, on the one hand, experts in textiles (weaving), jewelry (metalwork), and sculpture (architecture), or of art historians, archaeologists, and architectural historians, on the other. Similar divisions of body and interior also occur in the broader perspective of material culture theory, while modernist aesthetics have further obscured the interrelatedness of human form and spatial environment. Museum contexts reinforce this divide: objects tend to be isolated within cases, leading to a view of these pieces as context-free, while the museumification of historical spaces means that attendant furnishings are often displayed in special exhibition spaces, whereas historical rooms lie empty.  

The proposed panel considers adorned human bodies in their spatial environments to forge new theoretical frameworks drawn from decorative arts historiography, ornament studies, sensory archaeology, anthropology, and material spatiality. An intermedial approach is essential, such as advocated in Luke Lavan and Ellen Swift’s (2009) work on late antique dress and interior decoration and in Jonathan Hay’s (2010) explorations of the somatic experiences of surfaces in early modern Chinese decorative arts objects. Recent efforts to draw together diverse Eurasian experiences of dress and furnishing textiles include a conference on medieval wearables at the Bard Graduate Center (2022) and a panel on embodied movement and interior decoration at the ICMS-Kalamazoo (2023).  

We seek papers that:  

• articulate new theoretical approaches that treat pre- and early modern dress and furnishings as coherent visual and material systems;  

• consider the concept and metaphor of “dress,” viewing bodies as structures for adornment and decor, and buildings as immersive environments that respond to the embellished body;  

• evaluate dress and furnishings in a cross-cultural or comparative global framework, particularly in terms of status, value, ritual, identity, and somatic experience;  

• include contributions that draw from museum collections, given the history of textile research and collections in Lyon      

Submission deadline: 15 September 2023

Candidates should send the following information:
– Title of the paper
– Paper proposal :
An abstract of 350 to 500 words, in English or French, including 4 to 6 key words and a possible bibliography.
– CV of 500 characters :
First name, last name, title, position, institution, with a link to the personal or professional page if applicable.

Submissions should be made through the conference websitehttps://www.cihalyon2024.fr/fr/appel-a-communications  

Virtual Exhibition: “Nordic Tales, Byzantine Paths”

This virtual exhibition is a collaboration between the Swedish Research Institute in Istanbul (SRII) and Koç University Stavros Niarchos Foundation Center for Late Antique and Byzantine Studies (GABAM). It has been supported by Yapı Kredi Culture and Arts Publications (Yapı Kredi Kültür Sanat Yayıncılık), Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation and Retracing Connections Project, Uppsala. The exhibition traces the long and winding story of Nordic-Byzantine interactions through the medium of objects, art, stories and original accounts from the ninth to the thirteenth century. More than thirty essays by leading experts in the field are accompanied by visuals, source materials and maps. A number of clickable panels, specially drawn for the exhibition by Per Demervall, co-author of the comic Siri and the Vikings, offer a playful way of accessing a diverse and multi-layered material.

More information: https://nordictalesbyzantinepaths.ku.edu.tr/en

Call For Papers: Les modes d’argumentation dans la pensée chrétienne de l’Antiquité

Les modes d’argumentation dans la pensée chrétienne de l’Antiquité 

Projet organisé par Rémi Gounelle (Université de Strasbourg) et Sébastien Morlet (Sorbonne Université)  

Colloque n° 1 : Les chrétiens de l’Antiquité et la dialectique 

Paris, Sorbonne Université, 13-14 décembre 2023 

Dans un de ses articles les plus importants (« Philosophie, dialectique, rhétorique dans l’Antiquité »), Pierre Hadot a précisé l’histoire des rapports entre dialectique et rhétorique dans l’Antiquité, tout en montrant la diversité des formes prises par la dialectique, terme qui n’a pas toujours désigné la même chose au cours du temps. La thèse de Pierre Hadot est que le cours de philosophie, dans l’Antiquité, a vu la montée en puissance de la rhétorique au détriment de la dialectique : les questions-réponses entre le maître et le disciple cèdent de plus en plus la place à un cours magistral, sans interaction avec les disciples.  

Comme souvent, le corpus de Pierre Hadot est celui des textes philosophiques. Il reste toujours à étudier l’histoire des modes d’argumentation dans les textes chrétiens de l’Antiquité, et plus précisément le rapport, dans ces textes, entre dialectique et rhétorique

Ce premier colloque consacré aux modes d’argumentation chez les chrétiens vise à préciser les différents visages de la « dialectique » dans les textes chrétiens du Ier au VIe s. Les questions qui se poseront seront notamment les suivantes : 

1) Du point de vue théorique :  

– Que recouvre le mot « dialectique » chez les auteurs chrétiens ? A quelles traditions intellectuelles peut-on éventuellement rattacher ces significations ?  

La « dialectique » est-elle liée aux questions-réponses ou bien désigne-t-elle plutôt la méthode logique ? Est-elle liée à la « philosophie » ? Sert-elle à présenter le christianisme comme une philosophie ?  

– Quels sont les rapports entre dialectique et rhétorique chez les chrétiens ? L’usage de la dialectique exclut-il l’usage de la rhétorique, et inversement ?  

2) Du point de vue de la méthode mise en œuvre : quels sont les usages de la méthode dichotomique chez les chrétiens ? Quelle importance le schéma « questions-réponses » revêt-il chez les auteurs chrétiens ? La référence à l’auditeur joue-t-elle un rôle aussi fondamental dans l’argumentation théologique que dans la philosophie antique ? Quel est le rôle joué par les notions communes dans l’argumentaire théologique des chrétiens de l’Antiquité ?  

3) Quel est le rôle de la dialectique dans l’enseignement chrétien (catéchèse, écoles, homilétique) et dans la polémique religieuse ? 

On prendra soin d’étudier des modes d’argumentation précis qui peuvent avec raison être associés à la « dialectique », parce que le terme est utilisé, ou parce que l’argumentation correspond à des principes qualifiés de « dialectiques » dans l’Antiquité. On évitera ainsi, contrairement à une certaine tendance de la critique, à qualifier trop vite un auteur de « dialecticien » ou de voir de la « dialectique » là où il n’y en a pas.  

Ce premier colloque sera suivi en 2024 par un colloque sur les modes d’argumentation lors des conciles de l’Antiquité, et en 2025 par un colloque sur la diatribe.  

Les propositions doivent être envoyées avant le 31 juillet 2023 à rgounelle@unistra.fr et sebastien.morlet@sorbonne-universite.fr