Institut für Kunstgeschichte
print


Navigationspfad


Inhaltsbereich

Contested forms

The limits of the sacred image and the normative power of art in early modern Europe

02.11.2017 – 03.11.2017

This conference explores the limits of the sacred image and the normative power of art in Europe between 1450 and 1650, discussing the normativity of sacred images in two ways:
on the one hand, we propose to map European cases of images contested by external and often competing agencies (religious and political authorities, image theoreticians, the various
Inquisitions etc.); on the other, we will focus on the visual traditions and norms created, adapted or changed by artists, during the various stages of conceptualization and finalization of their works.

Contributions include cases of contested portraits, objects and iconographies, the use of images in trials, the limits of the representation of suffering bodies, the tensions between theology and art,
and the significance of copies and adaptations for the establishing of visual norms from the main geographical areas explored by the project: Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, France, and Germany.

“Contested forms” is the first of a series of planned conferences and workshops organised by the Sacrima team over the duration of the fiveyear project. These events will open discussions with
the larger scientific community regarding the main research questions of the project and/or provide closer analysis of associated sub-projects and case studies.
02_Programma_verticale