48th Byzantine Spring Symposium

Whose Mediterranean is it anyway?
Cross-cultural interaction between Byzantium and the West 1204-1669

The Open University, Milton Keynes
28-30 March 2015

Programme

Saturday 28th March

Registration and Welcome – Berrill Building

09.30-10.15: Registration / coffee

10.15-10.30: Angeliki Lymberopoulou (Milton Keynes) – Welcome

Morning Session – Berrill Building
Chair: Liz James

10.30-11.00: Angeliki Lymberopoulou (Milton Keynes) – Framing of the 48th Spring Byzantine Symposium

11.00-11.40: Jane Baun (Oxford) – Whose Church is it anyway? Mediterranean Christianities in cross-cultural context

11.40-12.00: Discussion

12.00-13.30: Lunch (Berril Building)

Saturday 28th March
Afternoon Session – Berrill Building
Chair: Leslie Brubaker

13.30-14.10: Liz James (Sussex) – Made in Byzantium? Mosaics after 1204

14.10-14.50: Stefania Gerevini (Rome) – Beyond 1204? The Baptistery of San Marco, the chapel of St Isidore, and the meaning of Byzantine visual language in fourteenth-century Venice

14.50-15.30: Michele Bacci (Freiburg) – Enhancing the Authority of Icons: Italian Frames for Byzantine Images

15.30-15.55: Discussion

16.00-16.30: Coffee / Tea (Berrill Building)

16.00-17.30: SPBS Meeting (Hub Theatre)
(Coffee / Tea for those attending this meeting will be served at the Hub Theatre)

Open Lecture – Berrill Building
Chair: Angeliki Lymberopoulou

17.45-19.00: Leslie Brubaker (Birmingham) – Space, place and culture: processions across the Mediterranean

Symposium Feast – Hilton Hotel
19.45


Sunday 29th March

Please note: British Summer time begins on Sunday 29th March – clocks go forward one hour

Morning Session – Berrill Building
Chair: Rembrandt Duits

9.00-09:40 Diana Newall (Kent) – Artistic and Cultural Tradition through Candia in the 15th century

09:40-10.20: Maria Constantoudaki (Athens) – Aspects of Artistic Exchange on Crete. Remarks and Question Marks

10.20-10.50: Coffee / Tea (Berrill Building)

10.50-11.30: Sharon Gerstel (Los Angeles) – Between east and West: Locating Monumental Painting from the Peloponnesos

11.30-11.55: Discussion

12.00-13.30: Lunch (Berrill Building)

12.45-13.30: SPBS AGM (Berrill Building)

13.30-15.30: Communications – Two Parallel Sessions (please see additional programme)

Session A: Berrill Building – Chair: Diana Newall
Session B: Hub Theatre – Chair: Tony Eastmond 

15.30-16.00: Coffee / Tea (Berril Building for all)

Sunday 29th March
Afternoon Session – Berrill Building
Chair: Dionysios Stathakopoulos

16.00-16.20: Ioanna Christoforaki (Athens – in absentia) – Crossing Boundaries: Colonial and Local Identities in the Visual Culture of Medieval Cyprus

16.20-17.00: Tassos Papacostas (London) – Where Byzantine, Gothic and Renaissance architecture crossed paths: Cyprus under Latin rule

17.00-17.15: Discussion

Open Lecture – Berrill Building
Chair: Angeliki Lymberopoulou

17.30-18.45: Dionysios Stathakopoulos (London) – ‘Latin basillisses’: transcultural marriages in late medieval Greece

18.45: Reception – Berrill Building: Sponsored by Ashgate


Monday 30th March

Morning Session – Berrill Building
Chair: Tassos Papacostas

09.00-09.40: Tony Eastmond (London) – Contesting Art in the Thirteenth Century

09.40-10.20: Hans Bloemsma (Middelburg) – Byzantine nearness and Renaissance distance in Early Italian Painting

10.20-11.00: Rembrandt Duits (London) – Byzantine Influences in the Iconography of Last Judgment in Late Medieval Italy

11.00-11.30: Tea / Coffee (Berrill Building)

11.30-12.10: Francesca Marchetti (London) – O insignis Graecia, ecce iam tuum finem. Illustrated medical manuscripts in Late Palaeologan Constantinople and their fortune in Sixteenth Century Italy

12.10-12.45: Discussion and Closure of the 48th Spring Byzantine Symposium

12.45-14.00: Lunch (Berrill Building)

 

Communications

Sunday 29th March 2014, 13.30 -15.30

**Please Note: The allocated time per communication is 12 minutes plus 3 minutes for questions – a total of 15 minutes per communication. The 20 minute allocation in the programme is provided for those who would like to move between the Berrill Building and the Hub Theatre in the Open University campus to attend different communications. Chairs are advised to be ‘Bryer’-ruthless in their time keeping. Thank you for your co-operation.**

Session A: Berril Building – Chair Diana Newall

13.30-13.50: Livia Bevilacqua (Venice) – Venice in Byzantium: Art and Patronage in the Venetian Quarter of Constantinople (13th-15th centuries)

13.50-14.10: Matthew Kinloch (Oxford) – Shared Cultures of Power: Cities and power in Byzantium and Italy

14.10-14.30: Christopher Wright (London) – Prizes or prisons: the Latins and power over islands in the Palaiologan Byzantium

14.30-14.50: Anestis Vasilakeris (Istanbul) – The Drawing Process in Byzantine and Italian Painting around 1300

14.50-15.10: Andrea Mattiello (Birmingham) – The elephant on the page: Ciriaco de’Pizzicolli D’Ancona in Mystras

15.10-15.30: Maria-Vassiliki Farmaki (Athens) – Theatre Arts and Life in Byzantium: the Connection between Byzantine and Latin Theatre

 

Session B: Hub Theatre – Chair Tony Eastmond

13.30-13.50: Dion Smythe (Belfast) –Nέα ελληνική κουζίνα: ‘Oil and water in the same cup’

13.50-14.10: Grant Schrama (Ontario) – Home is where your heart is: Latin Diaspora and Identity in Constantinople and Greece, 1204-1300

14.10-14.30: Leonela Fundic (Brisbane) – Epiros between Byzantium and the West in the Thirteenth and Early Fourteenth Centuries: Visual Evidence

14.30-14.50: Teodora Konach (Cracow) – The gesture of Dessislava – Byzantine and Western contexts at the Cultural Crossroads

14.50-15.10: Agnes Kriza (Cambridge) – The Royal Deesis: an anti-Latin imagery of Late Byzantine Art

15.10-15.30: Alex Rodriguez Suarez (London) – Bell-ringing in Byzantium during the late Byzantine period: an introduction

Colloque – Byzance et ses voisins, XIIIe-XVe siècle : art, identité, pouvoir

Colloque International

19-20 mars 2015, INHA salle Vasari

Le Laboratoire de recherche en histoire de l’art (UMR 8150) du Centre Chastel, dans le cadre du Labex EHNE (Ecrire une histoire nouvelle de l’Europe), vous invitent à participer au colloque sur le thème :

Byzance et ses voisins, XIIIe-XVe siècle : art, identité, pouvoir

Depuis l’occupation latine en 1204 et jusqu’à la chute de Constantinople en 1453, l’empire byzantin a connu un grand éclatement territorial et perdu de nombreuses et importantes provinces. L’indépendance des peuples qui autrefois étaient sous l’autorité de Byzance, la présence des Latins dans plusieurs régions de l’empire même après la fin de l’occupation latine et l’avancement progressif des Ottomans ont forgé de nouveaux points de repères et créé des interactions dans tous les domaines.

Le but de ce colloque serait d’étudier les relations qu’entretient Byzance avec les peuples indépendants des Balkans, les Latins, les Ottomans et les Arabes. Les communications mettront en évidence les particularités de ces rapports à travers, d’une part les interférences artistiques et d’autre part les conflits de pouvoir et d’identité religieuse.

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Programme

Appel à contribution – Telling stories in Byzantium

Call for papers

Telling stories in Byzantium

An experimental workshop on Byzantine narration
and recent developments within narratology

HOSTED BY Uppsala University, 26–28 November 2015

“Man is fond of fables, and in all stations of life takes pleasure in narratives”. This declaration, quoted from the scholia on Dionysius Thrax’s Technē grammatikē, appeals to the notion of story-telling as an anthropological universal in order to give grounds for the preoccupation of Byzantine secular education with poetic fictions and rhetorical fables. Mastering the art of delivering tales, true of false, was recognized as an advantageous skill in all spheres of human life and society, not least for actors in performative and textual culture. The surviving corpus of Byzantine oratory, progymnasmata, hagiography, historiography, novels, liturgy, dialogues and other less easily classifiable texts abound in inventive and complex applications of the art of storytelling. Since several decades, modern Byzantine studies have often turned to classical narratology for heuristic tools or rigorous methodologies to study the logic and principles of narrative representation in these texts. In recent years, however, this curiosity appears to have declined, or at least remained unconnected to the advancement of the state of the art of narratology since the 1970s and 80s. What (if anything) can scholars studying Byzantine narrative gain from engaging with present-day discussions within the diversified field of post-classical narratology on topics such as media studies and narratology, gender and narratology, cognitive approaches to narration, unreliable narration or “unnatural narratology”?

The aim of this workshop is to accommodate open-minded discussions and experimental studies of narrative representations from all periods of Byzantine literary history. Contributors are strongly encouraged to test unfamiliar methodologies and to theorize their practice. It is the first of three annual events hosted by Uppsala University within the collaborative research network “Texte et récit à Byzance”, in cooperation with Monde byzantin (UMR 8167 Orient et Méditerranée) and Centre d’Études Byzantines, Néo-Helléniques et Sud-Est Européennes,bÉcole des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales. The deadline for abstract submission is Monday, 1 June 2015. If you would like to propose a contribution, please send the title and a short abstract (not more than 250 words) to Ingela.Nilsson@lingfil.uu.se.

Confirmed guests
Charis Messis (École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris)
Margaret Mullett (Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Washington)
Aglae Pizzone (Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Universitet, Odense

Pour le fichier pdf, cliquez ici.

Dumbarton Oaks’ Holy Apostles Symposium

Advanced registration information for the Holy Apostles Symposium is being held on Friday, April 24, 2015 to Sunday, April 26. Please register online by clicking on the following link: http://goo.gl/forms/civwnyBcHO

Space for this event is limited, and registration will be handled on a first come, first served basis. For further information, including preliminary abstracts, please visit the event page or contact Seh Hee Koh, Program Coordinator in Byzantine Studies – Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, at byzantine@doaks.org.

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Culture matérielle et contacts diplomatiques entre l’Occident latin, Byzance et l’Orient islamique (XIe-XVIe s.)

Culture matérielle et contacts diplomatiques entre l’Occident latin, Byzance et l’Orient islamique (XIe-XVIe s.)

Colloque international
27-28 avril 2015
Université de Liège


Seconde rencontre scientifique de l’axe 2 du programme quinquennal (2012-2016) de l’IFAO et de l’équipe Islam médiéval de l’UMR 8167.

Responsables : Denise Aigle (EPHE, UMR 8167), Frédéric Bauden (univ. Liège), Nicolas Drocourt (univ. Nantes, CRHIA) et Stéphane Péquignot (EPHE, équipe SAPRAT)

Pour le programme, cliquez ici.