Lecture "Gothic and the Metamorphic Modern in Belgian Art and Spaces of Art, c.1890s-1910s"
Le 29/10/2024
by Juliet Simpson, visiting professor of MSH, Coventry University
In collaboration with Maison Hannon, the MODERNITAS team is honoured to present a lecture by Juliet Simpson on how the Gothic inspired modern art and how a generation of artists have integrated this inspiration into their work.
This talk focuses on the inspiration of late medieval Gothic art, and sites of art for Belgian modernist artists at the fin de siècle. It illuminates the powerful allure of Gothic art, beyond revivalist or nation-centric stories for key new creative practices, notably in the art of Georges Minne, Gustave van Woestyne, James Ensor and the Austrian-born British artist, Marianne Stokes’s Belgian reception. Discussion explores why and how the Gothic is perceived and re-imagined, as a metamorphic, ‘restless’ presence in modernity in John Ruskin’s words, changing ideas of nature, the erotic, domestic and spiritual, and for artists in this talk, of late nineteenth-century urban life and its sites of art. The presentation will consider how modern artists responded to the 1902 Bruges ‘Primitifs Flamands’ exhibition, its array of Flemish so-called ‘primitive’ and early German art, and in relation to Belgian art’s interactions with a Gothic modern circle of artists and interests beyond Belgium. Taking as its focus, evolving response to the late nineteenth-century urban-scape, the talk will highlight key Belgian modernist re-workings of the medieval Dance of Death, the cathedral, Christ as the Man of Sorrows and Marian iconographies, to transform the modern city and modern life themes into sites of liminality and alterity. To conclude, the exploration sheds light on the alternative visions of the city, its spaces, nature and the body, and their re-imagining as portals to a many-layered and different modernity.
Juliet Simpson is Full Professor of Art History, Chair of Cultural Memory and Research Director in the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities, Coventry University, UK. She is Guest Curator for the international exhibition, Gothic Modern – from Darkness to Light (Helsinki-Ateneum; Oslo-National Museum; Vienna-ALBERTINA, 2024-2026). She is an internationally-recognized expert in long nineteenth- and early twentieth-century art and transnational cultural memory, the emotions, Belgian art and the afterlives of Gothic and Northern Renaissance visual cultures, on which she has published extensively, most recently, her co-edited book, Gothic Modern – From Edvard Munch to Käthe Kollwitz (Hirmer-Chicago University Press: 2024) and co-edited special issue, Simpson-Rippl, eds. Emotional Objects – Northern Renaissance Afterlives in Object, Image and Word, Journal of the Northern Renaissance, 14 (2023). Prof. Simpson is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and Royal Historical Society, UK, and sits on the international Editorial Advisory Board of Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide.
Tuesday 29th October 2024, from 6 pm until 8 pm
Maison Hannon
Av. de la Jonction 1
1060 Saint-Gilles
Registration required here
Contacts : Petra.James@ulb.be & Barbora.svobodova@ulb.be