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REFINEMENT AND/OR REDUCTION REVISITED: Gothic Art, Architecture and Culture, c. 1250 to 1350

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Venue: Online

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This one-day conference organised by the Architecture, Space and Society Centre aims at an interdisciplinary reassessment of Gothic art and architecture between c. 1250 and 1350 in a broad European perspective. In this period of increased diversity of patrons and new technical facilities, the design options for artists and architects alike extended to a virtuoso refinement across media. At the same time new modes of reduction emerged, probably originating in economic, technical or programmatic tendencies of the time. The study day – an extension of a larger international conference on his subject held at Halle University in June - will examine this paradox and its cultural context on series of outstanding examples across Europe.

Speakers:

Lindy Grant (University of Reading)

The Aesthetics of Ascetism: Louis IX and Court Culture after the Return from the 1248-54 Crusade.

Tim Ayers (University of York)

Less is More: The Chapter House of York Minster

Tom Nickson (The Courtauld)

Two for One: Berenguer de Montagut, Manresa, and Catalan Gothic

Jana Gajdošová (Sam Fogg)

Transforming Tradition: The Šivetice Rotunda and its Architectural Innovations 

Michalis Olympios (University of Cyprus)

Architecture and Ritual at the Laon Cathedral Chapels

Alexandra Gajewski (Burlington Magazine/Institute for Historical Research)

Becoming Papal Residence: Churches and Chapels in Avignon, from John XXII to Clement VI

Zoë Opacic (Birkbeck)

Erfordia turrita: 'Reduktionsgotik' and Urban Refinement in Fourteenth-century Erfurt

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