jueves, 8 de marzo de 2012

Conference: Medieval maps and diagrams.


9 March 2012,
The Warburg Institute (University of London, School of Advanced Study).


In the past, maps were defined as representations of the surface of the earth or a part of it, but modern cartographical theorists and map historians define maps more widely as forms of graphic representations facilitating ‘a spatial understanding of things, concepts, conditions, processes, or events’ (J. B. Harley and D. Woodward). This interdisciplinary workshop will explore the relationship between medieval maps and diagrams. Brief presentations (15 minutes each) will concentrate on specific examples, which will be discussed in view of wider topics such as the art of memory, divination, typology, and page layout. The concluding panel will be concerned with the underlying question of the relationship and distinctions between medieval diagrams and maps, with the ways in which they have been examined by scholars in the past, and with how they might be investigated in the future.


Programme

10.00 Doors Open, Registration
10.15 Peter Mack and Hanna Vorholt, Welcome and Introduction
Chair: Peter Tóth (Warburg Institute)
10.30 Catherine Delano-Smith (Institute of Historical Research, London)
One Image, Several Guises: the Mapping of the Desert Encampment (Numbers 2-3)
11.00 Peter Barber (British Library)
From Jerusalem to Alpine Pride: the Geographical Diagrams of Albrecht von Bonstetten of 1479
11.30 Coffee
Chair: Megan C. McNamee (Warburg Institute and University of Michigan)
12.00 Paul D. A. Harvey (University of Durham)
English Manorial Accounts: Their Visual Impact
12.30 Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute)
Mapping the Shoulderblade
13.00 Lunch
Chair: Michael Kauffmann (Courtauld Institute of Art and Warburg Institute)
14.00 Mary Carruthers (New York University and All Souls College, Oxford)
How the Tower of Wisdom Diagram Works
14.30 Sandy Heslop (University of East Anglia)
Typology as Diagram in the Stained Glass at Canterbury Cathedral
KEYNOTE LECTURE
15.00 Jeffrey Hamburger (Harvard University)
Rhabanus redivivus: Berthold of Nuremberg’s Marian Supplement to De laudibus sanctae crucis
15.45 Tea
Chairs: Alessandro Scafi and Hanna Vorholt
16:15 PANEL DISCUSSION
17:45 Reception

For further information please contact the organisers, Hanna Vorholt and Alessandro Scafi.

More info
Source: APILIST.

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