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Espace doctorants en danse

Appel à contribution • Géographies de l’art, septembre 2012, États-Unis

Géographies de l’art
Penser le national et le transnational dans une perspective globale

The Spaces of Arts
Thinking the National and Transnational in a Global Perspective

•> Date limite : 15 mai 2012

L’histoire de l’art est-elle suffisamment globale pour relever le défi du transnational, sans négliger pour autant les processus de territorialisation et de nationalismes culturels ? L’approche spatiale et cartographique peut-elle la renouveler ? Autour d’Artlas (artlas.ens.fr), le colloque de Purdue (West Lafayette, USA, 27-29 septembre 2012) invite les chercheurs à réfléchir aux stratégies possibles pour étudier les processus de circulation et de globalisation, sans laisser de côté les questions d’ethnicité ou de nationalité, échappant ainsi autant aux limites de la simple narration qu’à celles d’un globalisme aveugle.

Is art history global enough to take up the challenge of cultural mixing, transnationalism, internationalization, and globalization, without neglecting cultural nationalisms and artistic territorialization processes, which are the fabric of our discipline ? How do we understand the relationships between circulations, globalizations, and the production of ethnicity or nationality in the arts ? What strategies can we develop, besides narration and description, to write a new history of the arts that escapes both historiographical nationalism and blind globalism, while paying due to the national and transnational dimensions of artistic creation ?

In response to these questions the École normale supérieure in Paris (ENS-Ulm) and Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel launched a vast research project in 2009. The ambition was to study arts and letters in a socio-spatial perspective that takes into account the spatial turn of Social Sciences. The result is ARTLAS, a digital atlas of arts and literature history which combines spatial, social, cultural, and esthetic questionings, with a narrative/descriptive approach, and visualization techniques, including charts and maps created with GIS technologies (Geographic Information Service).
The reliance on a cartographic approach and multi-scale analysis grows from the conviction that we can transform the geohistorical reflections that Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann presented in Toward a Geography of Art (2004) into maps, and that the atlas model can contribute to meeting the challenge of global art history James Elkins exposed with Is Art History Global ? (2006). Still, the format of ARTLAS is motivated by the conviction that we cannot separate the analysis of artistic circulations and globalization from the study of territorialization of artistic practices.

In order to present ARTLAS on the American continents and engage in a dialogue with American scholars, the ENS is teaming with Purdue University to organize a conference which will take place on September 27-29, 2012 at Purdue. We have invited Professor DaCosta Kaufmann and Professor Elkins to present their respective takes on a global art history and the use of maps as art historical tools, while philosopher Edward S. Casey will address the links between art and maps.
We are now inviting scholars, whose research is grounded in socio-spatial analysis and/or aims at meeting the daunting challenge of ubiquity in art history, to join the conversation and offer their perspectives. We welcome papers that explore the connection between the national and transnational in a global perspective for any object, period, and place in the history of arts and letters.
On Saturday morning, a round table discussion animated by Professor David Lubin will provide the opportunity to reflect on everyone’s propositions, debate, and hopefully come up with concrete directions for the discipline. During the conference, The Atlas for Experimental Poiesis, an exhibition by London based artist Katherine E. Bash, will allow us to consider cartography in contemporary artistic practices.

Informations :
Papers and discussions generated by the conference will be published as a special issue of the ARTLAS Bulletin, a new publication series of the ENS in early 2013.

Please send inquiries and proposals of no more than 500 words, along with a short CV, to the conference organizers, Catherine Dossin (cdossin@purdue.edu) and Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel (beatrice.joyeux-prunel@ens.fr) before 15 May 2012.
The proposals will be reviewed by our scientific committee. Those accepted to present at the conference will be notified by June 15.
Scientific Committee :

  • Edward S. Casey (Stony Brook University)
  • Christophe Charle (Paris Sorbonne)
  • Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann (Princeton Univ.)
  • Catherine Dossin (Purdue Univ.)
  • James Elkins (Chicago Art Institute)
  • Michel Espagne (Labex TransferS), Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel (ENS)
  • Ségolène Le Men (univ. Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense)
  • David Lubin (Wake Forest Univ.)
  • Blaise Wilfert-Portal (ENS)

For more information on the conference, see : http://www.spacesofarts.org
For more information on ARTLAS, see : http://artlas.ens.fr

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