International Conference "Beyond Italy and New Spain"
This conference aims to open new dialogues on Iberian art and  architecture from the decade that saw the Aragonese conquest of Southern  Italy (1443) and the establishment of the first Portuguese trading  station on the African island of Arguim (1449) to that of the separation  of the Portuguese and the Spanish crowns (1640).
The two organizers — Michael Cole and Alessandra Russo — focus on  different geographical areas and were motivated to undertake this  project by a shared awareness of the fragmentation that currently  characterizes a major field of art history — the study of  sixteenth-century Iberian art and architecture. One of us started from a  perspective on what is now the country of Italy, but which in the  sixteenth-century belonged largely to Spain: the entire south, divided  between the Kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, was ruled by Spanish  viceroys; the Duchy of Milan had governors appointed by Spain;  territories from the Republic of Genoa to the city-states of the  northeast were essentially Spanish dependences. The other confronted the  anachronistically national point of view that often guides the study of  "Mexican," "Peruvian," "Brazilian" or "Indian" art history, when in  fact these territories were under the Spanish and the Portuguese crowns.  Referring to these territories as "colonial" possessions is equally  unhelpful for conceiving them in a larger and more dynamic frame — what  we call the "Iberian" atlas, which encompassed not only large parts of  America, Africa and Asia, but also broad regions within Europe itself.
The participants in the conference will discuss artistic dynamics in or  between at least two zones of the Iberian atlas (Portugal, Brazil,  Flanders, Spain, Goa, Macao, Milan, Naples, Peru, the Philippines,  Sicily, Sierra Leone, etc.). Themes will include the movement,  reinstallation, and reinterpretation of images and objects; the  materials of art making and their changing (or unchanging) meaning;  printed and other reproductions and their relationship to new originals;  the reinterpretation of architectural models in response to differing  landscapes, labor conditions, technologies, and functional requirements;  the travel of artists, patrons, and viewers; competing religious,  political, intellectual, or patronage networks (Jesuits vs Franciscans,  traders vs missionaries, Portuguese vs Dutch, etc.); the literature of  art and its forms across space. 


































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