Rutgers Art History Graduate Student Symposium Call for Papers

The Rutgers University Art History Graduate Student Symposium is now soliciting abstracts for its 8th annual meeting:

 

Making a Spectacle: Audience and the Art of Engagement

 

Friday April 20, 2018

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Alexander Library, Pane Room

New Brunswick, NJ 08901

 

Keynote Speaker: Professor Bridget Alsdorf, Princeton University

 

“The spectacle is not a collection of images; rather, it is a social relationship between people that is mediated by images.” – Guy Debord, The Society of the Spectacle, 1967

 

What is spectacle and how do we represent it? What is at stake in these representations? How does spectacle operate in different spaces and eras? For centuries, artists and critical thinkers have reflected on the nature of spectacle and its role within society. In a famous philosophical text, French theorist Guy Debord offered one possible definition, which highlights the impact of visual culture on communal relations. His observation remains equally relevant today, in a world saturated with images and divertissements that clamor for our attention and influence the ways we interact with each other.

 

With this surfeit in mind, the Rutgers University Art History Graduate Student Organization invites proposals that address any of the above-mentioned questions. Abstracts are welcome from all historical periods, geographical areas, and cultural, theoretical, and methodological perspectives. Submissions within the fields of art and architectural history, archaeology, history, and visual and material culture will be considered for 20-minute presentations in English. After the symposium, one paper will be selected for publication in the 35th volume of the Rutgers Art Review (pending the outside reader review).

 

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

 

  • Pageants, parades, and processions
  • Role of ephemeral objects and architecture in processions
  • The ballet, theater, commedia dell’arte, and café-concert
  • Carnevale, festivals, world fairs, and other public events/exhibitions
  • Minstrelsy, masquerade, and racially charged forms of entertainment
  • Circus performers, saltimbanques, and street artists
  • The cultural phenomena of flânerie (strolling) and badauderie (gawking)
  • Panoramas, dioramas, and other technologies of spectacle
  • Performance art and audience participation
  • Public monuments and cultural heritage sites
  • Visitor engagement and display practices in museums
  • Advertising posters and other visual propaganda

 

Please send your abstract and a current CV to rutgersarthistorygradsymposium@gmail.com by December 30, 2017. Abstracts should be no more than 300 words.