CfP “Pieter Bruegel the Elder and his predecessors” (Brussel, 24-25 Januari 2019)

Pieter Bruegel the Elder and his predecessors:  

Culture and Visual art and in the late 15th and 16th centuries

Masterclass with Reindert Falkenburg and Michel Weemans, organised by the Vlaamse werkgroep mediëvistiek (VWM) and the Réseau des médiévistes  belges de langue française (RMBLF)

2019 marks the 450th anniversary of the death of Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c. 1525/30-1569), one of the most renowned Flemish artists of the 16th century. In Belgium, several exhibitions (at the KBR, the MRBAB-KMSKB, the Mayer van den Bergh Museum, the Castle of Gaasbeek…) and other scientific activities are planned to highlight the artistic production of the master. This “Bruegel year” constitutes a great opportunity for the VWM and the RMBLF to explore this fascinating personality and the artistic, cultural and intellectual context in which he emerged through a vivid dialogue between young and senior scholars. Indeed, we aim at taking part to this celebration by organizing a masterclass with two specialists of Pieter Bruegel’s work, Reindert Falkenburg (NYU Abu Dhabi) and Michel Weemans (ENSA Bourges and EHESS), whose forthcoming book explores the religious and exegetical character of Bruegel’s landscapes and their relationship with landscape painters of the first half of the 16th century such as Hieronymus Bosch, Joachim Patinir or Herri met de Blès.[1] This masterclass will gather up to eight young researchers (PhD students, postdocs, young lecturers) coming from various disciplines (art history, literature, history…) who will have the opportunity to present and discuss their work on the visual art and culture at the time of Pieter Bruegel the Elder and his predecessors with both respondents and the audience.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder is a complex artistic figure. Often considered as “both a proponent and an exponent of popular culture”[2], the Flemish painter was also appreciated and admired by the high nobility whose members praised the exceptional quality of his oeuvre and owned paintings by his hand. His work also enjoyed a great deal of success among a wider audience thanks to the diffusion of his engravings. From an artistic point of view, Bruegel was deeply influenced by the Flemish pictorial tradition of the late 15th and early 16th century, and especially by Hieronymus Bosch. He also played a crucial role in the emergence of genre and landscape painting, a topic which is at the core of the new publication of Michel Weemans and Reindert Falkenburg. Bruegel also had close links with humanists and scholars such as Abraham Ortelius, and with the Antwerp chambers of rhetoric (rederijkerskamers) like the Violieren (the Gillyflower). In other words, he belonged to the Antwerp intellectual circles of his time. His artistic production is deeply influenced by this intellectual and cultural context, just as it nurtured it in return.

Recent scholarship on Bruegel[3] has highlighted the multi-layered complexity of his (painted, printed and drawn) pictures, which are rooted in the rich artistic, cultural and literary context that we will investigate during this masterclass. More precisely, we would like Pieter Bruegel the Elder to act as a prism through which young scholars will explore, among others, the visual interactions between artists and between pictorial practices, the relationships between literary groups such as the rederijkers and the visual culture of their time, the social and intellectual networks of Pieter Bruegel and other Flemish artists of the late 15th century and 16th century, the impact of the complex religious context on the artistic production of the time, the links between humanists and artists, the influence of Flemish artists of the previous generations on Bruegel and his contemporaries, etc.

Early career researchers are invited to submit proposals for a 15-minutes paper. The languages of the masterclass will be Dutch, French, and English. A description of the proposed paper (max. one page) and a short CV should be submitted to Micol Long (micol.long@ugent.be) and Ingrid Falque (ingrid.falque@uclouvain.be), no later than October 15. Selected researchers will be notified in the first week of November.

This masterclass is jointly organised by the Vlaamse Werkgroep Mediëvistiek (Flemish Medievalist Association) and the Réseau des Médiévistes belges de Langue Française (Network of French-speaking Belgian Medievalists), with financial support of the F.R.S.-FNRS and the Fondation pour la protection du patrimoine culturel, historique et artisanal (Lausanne). The event will take place In Brussels (precise location to be announced later) on 25 January. On 24 January, Michel Weemans and Reindert Falkenburg will give a public lecture on their forthcoming book. Further practical details will be announced at a later stage.

[1] Reindert L. Falkenburg and Michel Weemans, Bruegel (Paris, Hazan: 2018).

[2] Mark Meadow, Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s Netherlandish Proverbs and the Practice of Rhetoric (Zwolle, Waanders Publishers: 2002), 14.

[3] See among others: Walter S. Gibson, Pieter Bruegel and the Art of Laughter (Berkeley, University of California press<: 2006); Todd M. Richardson, Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Art Discourse in the Sixteenth-Century Netherlands (Farnham, Ashgate: 2011); Bertram Kaschek, Weltzeit und Endzeit. Die »Monatsbilder« Piter Bruegels d.Ä. (München, Wilhelm Fink Verlag: 2012); Christina Currie and Dominique Allart, The Brueg(H)el Phenomenon. Paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Pieter Brueghel the Younger with a Special Focus on Technique and Copying Practice (Brussels, Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage: 2012); Claudia Goldstein, Pieter Bruegel and the Culture of Early Modern Dinner Party (Farnham, Ashgate: 2013); Stephen Graham Hitchins, Art as History, history as Art. Jheronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder Assembling Knowledge not Setting Puzzles (Turnhout, Brepols: 2014); Jospeh Leo Koerner, Bosch and Bruegel. From Enemy Painting to Everyday Life (Princeton, Princeton University Press: 2016).

Workshop Transkribus, 21 September 2018 Gent

On 21 September 2018, we want to organise a workshop on Transkribus. The location will normally be the UGent, pending confirmation, initially planned from 13:00 until 16:00, with the possibility to join us for a drink afterwards (at your own expense).

The aim of this workshop is to offer a hands-on Transkribus session of three hours. It will be delivered by Dr. Louise Seaward (University College London) of the Bentham Project. Transkribus is a free and open platform for automated recognition, transcription and searching of historical documents, using Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) and Optical Character Recognition (OCR). The workshop is aimed at scholars who are involved in the transcription and editing of historical documents. It already has promising results, as the Huygens ING has already reached a 98% recognition-rate on printed texts from the 17th and 18th century. Hence our aim to offer some necessary first training to get to grips with the platform and the technology to be able to use and to apply it in our own research.

Participation is not limited to a specific university. Registration is free but please register by sending an email to workshopdh18@gmail.com. Do remember: you will need to bring your own laptop to this workshop. If you have already registered, there is no need to send us another email.

Please note that for this first workshop the number of participants is limited and registrations will be accepted in the order of arrival. We will work with a waiting list and if there is enough interest, we will soon organise another workshop. Let us know if you do not want your data to be stored for this purpose. In addition, a workshop on Transkribus within the framework of the Doctoral Schools is being planned (with the necessary credits for those that need this). Please let us know if you are interested, then we can work together with the Transkribus team to get such an event organised.

Thank you for your interest,
Kind regards,

Nina Lamal (FWO postdoctoral researcher, University of Antwerp)

Annemieke Romein (NWO-Rubicon postdoctoral researcher, Ghent University/Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Praktijkassistent geschiedenis, KU Leuven Campus Kulak Kortrijk

Deeltijdse (50%) vacature praktijkassistent geschiedenis (met specialiteit ancien régime) aan KU Leuven Campus Kulak Kortrijk.

De functie van praktijkassistent bestaat uit:

  • Begeleiding van de studenten bij de onderzoekstaken en papers
  • Onderwijsondersteuning bij de colleges van prof. Paul Trio
  • Enkele taken binnen de organisatie van de faculteit Letteren (Kulak)
  • Meer algemeen: een gevarieerd takenpakket en een flexibel werkschema

Voor meer informatie, klik hier.

HPIMS Autumn School on medieval philosophy: Gent, 16-19 October

Registration for the 2018 edition of the international HPIMS Autumn School for MA and PhD students is now open! This year, our Autumn School revolves around the theme of medieval philosophy. It will take place in Ghent, 16th-19th of October 2018. The programme, filled with international experts, is designed to provide participants with an overview of the philosophical problems, concepts, and debates that are specific to the Middle Ages. Equal attention will be paid to three cultural areas: the Latin West, Byzantium, and the Islamic world. The AS 2018 is free for participants of the HPIMS and the Dutch Research School for Medieval Studies. Others pay a fee of EUR 150 (all lectures, activities, lunches & coffee breaks). You can read all about the exciting programme and registration requirements on the Pirenne website. The poster/leaflet can be downloaded here.

Workshop “The Drive for Purity: The Roles of Monastic Orders and the Papacy” (13 en 14 september 2018, Historisches Seminar van de Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz)

The Drive for Purity: the Role of Monastic Orders and the Papacy is the final workshop in a series of four that aims to investigate the concept of institutional change within the medieval church between 900 and 1150 and how the term ‘reform’ comes to be applied to this. In this workshop we will explore the idea of purity as a motive for change and will trace how different national historical schools vary in highlighting the roles of monasticism and the papacy in instigating programmes of change.

Speakers

Katy Cubitt, University of East Anglia
Jochen Johrendt, Bergische Universität Wuppertal
Conrad Leyser, University of Oxford
Rob Meens, Universiteit Utrecht
Brigitte Meijns, KU Leuven
Maroula Perisanidi, University of Leeds
Isabelle Rosé, Université Rennes 2

The workshop is part of a larger international project entitled Rethinking Reform 900-1150: Conceptualising Change in Medieval Religious Institutions, funded by the Leverhulme Trust. It brings together scholars and research students from across Europe to focus on how changes in medieval churches were understood and explained in their own day and on how they have been reinterpreted in post-Reformation and especially post-Napoleonic historical writing.

The project is coordinated by the University of Leeds (UK), with partners from UEA, Paris VIII, Mainz, KU Leuven, Ghent and Durham. Workshops in January and September 2017, held respectively at York and KU Leuven, and at Leeds in April 2018, gave groups of scholars the chance to reflect on the choice of vocabulary used to define change between the early middle ages and the twelfth century and also the ways in which medieval institutions and individuals created narratives of change. A final conference bringing the themes of the project together and concluding the discussions will be held at Ghent University in May 2019.

The workshop is FREE to attend but places are limited and booking is essential.
Refreshments will be served, including lunch on Friday.

To reserve a place please email Prof Dr Ludger Körntgen: ludger.koerntgen@uni-mainz.de
For more information about the project contact:

Principal Investigator,
Professor Julia Barrow, University of
Leeds: j.s.barrow@leeds.ac.uk
Network Facilitator,
Dr Ceri Pitches, University of Leeds:
c.l.pitches@leeds.ac.uk

The flyer can be downloaded here.

Masterclass “Religie en Culturele transfer”: 17-18 September, Antwerpen

De zevende editie van interuniversitaire Masterclass Cultuur en Religie gaat dit jaar door aan de Universiteit van Antwerpen op 17 en 18 September 2018 en heeft als thema ‘Religie en culturele transfer’.

De laatste decennia is binnen cultural studies een verhoogde aandacht ontstaan voor het fenomeen van circulatie van culturele producten (teksten, beelden, ideeën) en in het bijzonder voor de wijze waarop deze culturele goederen temporele, geografische, nationale en ideologische grenzen overschrijden: welke transformaties ondergaan teksten, beelden en ideeën bij hun transfer naar nieuwe contexten?; hoe interageren ze met andere culturele producten uit de nieuwe contexten?; welke bemiddelaars en communicatiecentra zijn bij de transfer betrokken?

In deze tweedaagse masterclass worden de doctorandi en postdoctorandi vertrouwd gemaakt met de belangrijkste concepten en methoden uit cultural transfer-studies, om ze vervolgens te leren toepassen op het domein van het onderzoek naar religie en cultuur in het algemeen en op (een aspect van) hun eigen onderzoeksproject in het bijzonder. Keynote lezingen worden gegeven door Geert Janssen (Universiteit Amsterdam) en Sabrina Corbellini (Universiteit Groningen). Het volledige programma volgt later.

Doctorandi die een casus uit hun onderzoek willen presenteren in het kader van deze interuniversitaire masterclass, kunnen dat melden bij een lid van het wetenschappelijke comité uit de instelling waar ze werkzaam zijn (zie lijst hieronder) of rechtstreeks bij Nina Lamal (nina.lamal@uantwerpen.be).

 

Organiserend comité: Veerle Fraeters, Nina Lamal, Guido Marnef, Patricia Stoop

Beyond the Divide? Town Archaeology and Urban History (23 Mei 2018, Brussels)

De onderzoeksalliantie Stadsgeschiedenis UGent-VUB kondigt in samenwerking met het Henri Pirenne Instituut en Bruxelles Urbanisme et Patrimoine een nieuwe studiedag aan die zal handelen over stadsarcheologie en haar moeilijke, maar vruchtbare relatie met stadsgeschiedenis. Deze studiedag vindt plaats op 23 mei in Brussel, Information Point, Zaal Brel (9u30-16u30). Sprekers zijn Barbora Wouters (VUB), Petra Maclot (KUL), Gitte Hansen (University of Bergen), Koen de Groote (Flemish Heritage Institute) en Peter Stabel (UA). Meer info en inschrijven via Dries.Tys@vub.be. De uitnodiging kan gedownload worden hier: Programma Beyond the Divide

Cfp Congres “Ad Brudgias Portum” (Brugge, 24-26/10/2018)

Ad Brudgias Portum. Bruges’ medieval port system as a maritime cultural landscape

In October 2018, Ghent University and Raakvlak organise an international conference that centres around medieval harbour hubs as gateways for goods, people and thoughts. Bruges’ maritime cultural landscape will be the guideline for these three days of medieval maritime connectivity

Scope of the conference

With this international symposium the organisers wish to present recent research on the medieval harbour landscape of Bruges to a wider scientific audience, but foremost they aim to frame the Bruges’ project into a wider, international maritime context of interdisciplinary research on maritime cultural port-landscapes.

Confirmed Keynote Speakers

Prof. dr. Christer Westerdahl (Norway)
Prof. dr. Ben Jervis (United Kingdom)
Dr. Adrie De Kraker (The Netherlands)
Bieke Hillewaert (Belgium)

Save the date: 24-26/10/2018

The conference will start on wednesday the 24th of october in the morning, and will end friday the 26th around midday.

Your port of call: Bruges

The conference will be held in the centre of Bruges. Day two includes an excursion into the medieval harbour area, a stopover in Damme and an afternoon session in the Zwin Nature Reserve.

Call for papers

We call for papers that focus on:

Tidal river trade hubs
Medieval harbour infrastructure
Material culture of harbour societies
International networks
Commodity flows

Abstracts (max. 250 words) can be submitted to
Jan.Trachet@ugent.be

More information and a conference website will follow soon!

Important dates & deadlines

1st of July 2018 Deadline abstracts

1st of August 2018 Final programme & Start inscriptions

21st of September 2018 Deadline inscriptions

24th – 26th of October Conference

Vacature docent Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde (Groningen)

Bij de afdeling Nederlands aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen bestaat m.i.v. 1 augustus a.s. een vacature voor een docent Oudere Nederlandse Letterkunde. Het gaat om een aanstelling van 0.6 voor één jaar, voornamelijk voor het geven van onderwijs. De aanstelling bevat geen onderzoekstijd.
Voor de tekst van de vacature volg onderstaande link:

Pas verschenen: ‘Dark Age Nunneries. The Ambiguous Identity of Female Monasticism, 800–1050’, Steven Vanderputten

Onlangs verscheen het nieuwste boek van Steven Vanderputten, getiteld Dark Age Nunneries. The Ambiguous Identity of Female Monasticism, 800–1050. Meer informatie vindt u op de website van Cornell University Press

In Dark Age Nunneries, Steven Vanderputten dismantles the common view of women religious between 800 and 1050 as disempowered or even disinterested witnesses to their own lives. It is based on a study of primary sources from forty female monastic communities in Lotharingia—a politically and culturally diverse region that boasted an extraordinarily high number of such institutions. Vanderputten highlights the attempts by women religious and their leaders, as well as the clerics and the laymen and -women sympathetic to their cause, to construct localized narratives of self, preserve or expand their agency as religious communities, and remain involved in shaping the attitudes and behaviors of the laity amid changing contexts and expectations on the part of the Church and secular authorities.