Gender, Sexuality, and Non-Pristine Nature in Northern European Art and Material Culture, ca. 1350 -1750
Co-chairs:
Sarah Mallory, Annette and Oscar de la Renta Assistant Curator of Drawings and Prints, The Morgan Library & Museum
Anna-Claire Stinebring, Assistant Curator of European Paintings, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
How might waste studies (or discard studies), as an emerging strain within eco-critical
methodologies, be put into productive conversation with (eco)feminist and queer theory? Such a question is apt in the context of early modern northern European art and material culture, born from an age in which the adage “cleanliness is next to godliness” had a particular resonance: close observation of nature was for artists a spiritual practice, which in turn spurred them to explore new methods for depicting their world, including mundane or unseemly details.This panel will examine notions of gender, sexuality, and non-pristine nature to shed new light
on the construction—or playfully subversive deconstruction—of normative social hierarchies in
early modern Northern European art and material culture. We build on the work of Mary
Douglas, Donna Haraway, Carolyn Merchant and on recent scholarship, including: Francesca
Borgo and Ruth Ezra (Wastework conference and edited volume); Emma Capron (The Ugly
Duchess: Beauty and Satire in the Renaissance); Lauren Jacobi and Daniel Zolli (Contamination
and Purity in Early Modern Art and Architecture); and Vittoria Di Palma (Wastelands: A
History).
Relevant topics include: gender in depictions of purity and contamination; wastelands;
urban or domestic environments; purity in the colonial context; and contemporary curatorial
responses. We welcome papers on all art forms and material culture produced in, or in connection with, the Northern Netherlands, Southern Netherlands, or Germany between the l4th and 18th centuries. Please send a proposal and CV to Sarah Mallory (smallory@themorgan.org) and Anna-Claire Stinebring (Anna-Claire.Stinebring@metmuseum.org) by August 29th.