Forthcoming FAN Activities August-October 2008
EUROPEAN VISUAL CULTURE SEMINAR
Monday 18 August 2008, 6.30 pm, Room 148, Elisabeth Murdoch Building.
Diana Hiller.
'Un repas frugal' or una festa? Male refectories, food and Last Supper frescoes in Quattrocento Florence.
Lent is a period of penance and privation in the church calendar. However, in some male religious houses in Florence the Easter period may also have involved festal elements. Documentary materials will be explored for their potential to contextualise some of the innovative iconographical features of the Last Supper images in which lamb and unseasonal fruits, and not penitential fish, were depicted on the tables. The paper will offer the view that the Last Supper refectory images in these houses may be seen as reflecting some of the dichotomous aspects of celebration and penance associated with Easter and Holy Thursday.
Please RSVP Mark Shepheard (shepm@unimelb.edu.au ) if you plan to join us for dinner in Lygon st afterwards.
The Fine Arts Network and the Art History Discipline, School of Culture and Communication, present:
The Fine Arts Network 2008 Postdoctoral Lecture
Dr Ruth Pullin
A way of looking at nature: Eugene von Guérard in Europe and Australia
6:30 pm, Tuesday 16 September 2008, Elisabeth Murdoch Theatre, the University of Melbourne
All Welcome. FAN Members Drinks at 6.00 pm RSVP drinks: AHCCA-FAN@unimelb.edu.au
The discovery of a group of oil sketches painted by Eugen von Guérard in the 1840s has shed new light on the artist and his conception of landscape painting. Painted in the open-air under the influence of his teacher, the Düsseldorf landscape painter J.W. Schirmer, these truthful, botanically-specific studies constituted the ideal apprenticeship for the artist who sought to realize the goals for landscape painting expressed by Alexander von Humboldt. Von Guérard rose to Humboldt's challenge to landscape painters to pass the narrow limits of the Mediterranean' and to seize, with the genuine freshness of a pure and youthful spirit, on the true image of the varied forms of nature'. Studies of the environmentally-significant German Neandertal anticipate his response to Australian subjects such as Tower Hill while others of the volcanic Eifel region signal his commitment to geological subjects. In the Australian colonies he pursued his interest in the new science of geology, or geognosy , a discipline with direct relevance to landscape painting, through his responses to the volcanic geology of Victoria's Western District, the granite tors of Mount Kosciuszko, Victoria's dramatic coastline and the dolerite embankments on the southern tip of Tasman Island.
In this lecture it will be argued that von Guérard's extensive and often arduous travel throughout the south-eastern colonies of Australia to portray its landscape was driven by a scientifically-informed vision of landscape painting, a vision founded on the influential theories of scientists such as Humboldt and Carl Gustav Carus, practised by colleagues in the Düsseldorf school of landscape painting and confirmed by contemporary scientists and artists in Melbourne.
The Fine Arts Network and the Art History Discipline, School of Culture and Communication, present:
The 2008 Margaret Manion Lecture
Robyn Sloggett
Director, Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation
The Living Object
6:30 pm, 22 October 2008, Elisabeth Murdoch Theatre, the University of Melbourne
The Fine Arts Network, in collaboration with the Art History Discipline, presents the 2008 Margaret Manion Lecture: 'The Living Object'. In this anniversary presentation which celebrates the 10th annual Margaret Manion Lecture, Associate Professor Robyn Sloggett, Director, Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation, explores how scientific enquiry, predominantly framed within cultural materials conservation studies, is used to gather evidence of how objects have been made, used or have traveled across time and place. With a capacity to 'humanize the humanities'; science draws out stories that help us to elucidate the past and make predictions for the future. These stories form the basis for this lecture. This lecture also pays tribute to Professor Manion for her work towards the establishment of Conservation as a discipline at the University of Melbourne.
For FAN Membership forms and further information visit:
www.melbourneartjournal.unimelb.edu.au/FAN.