“Artifacts, Images and Forms in Global Circulation: A Digital Approach of Visual Semantics”
13 and 14 June 2019
Ecole Normale Supérieure
45 rue d’Ulm, Paris.
As part of the 10th anniversary of the Artl@s project,
Artl@s are organizing an international conference on the digital approach to
the circulation of images and forms.
In his groundbreaking project, the Atlas Mnemosyne, Aby
Warburg suggested that some shapes travel, passing times and cultures. On their
way, accompanied by processes of mixture, borrowings, transfers and
resemanticizations that contribute to their impact, they become acting symbols.
Building on this idea, Herbert Read proposed in The origin of forms in art
(1965) that artistic forms can be formalized and reduced to certain shapes that
carry “lines of beauty” and thus symbolic meaning. Such ideas, we believe,
could serve as a starting point for cross-disciplinary research that would
bring together art historians, historians, linguists, and computer and
cognitive scientists with the aim to discover the basic units of a
generalizable “visual semantics” of artistic creation.
More and more art historical sources are available online
worldwide. This should not only excite us to reconstruct the global circulation
of images and artifacts, but also use these tools to (re-) consider the
mobility of images, patterns, and styles. Indeed, one of the greatest
limitations of the digital approach so far is that it has not been confronted
with the circulation of images (shapes, colours, layouts) in a massive way.
This international conference aims to assess the potential
of digital technology in renewing our study and understanding of artistic
circulations and in the collective and progressive deployment of alternative
narratives which are more de-centered and more inclusive.
Presentations on all historical periods addressing the
following themes are welcome.
1. Networks, (subaltern) Agents and the Politics of Visual
Circulation
How does a pattern circulate and inform the creation of new
visual and political meanings? Some visual productions (arts, graphics, poster,
cinema, TV, photography, video) have contributed to the transmission and
international diffusion of specific political, artistic and collective
memories. With the development of computer vision and deep learning on images,
today we have the means to study this circulation and better understand how
specific patterns and the political semiotics they convey circulate and
multiply. However, digital approaches have most often focused on linking actors
involved in the international circulation of images, styles, ideas or works of
art. We are interested in approaches that will not only present the tools used
for reconstructing and analyzing these networks, but above all that will show
the specific and innovative contribution of the digital compared to analog or
traditional approaches.
2. Canals, bottlenecks, intersections: digital geography of
artistic circulations
What do digital tools
contribute to our understanding of the geography of artistic circulations? What
are the bottlenecks? The intersections? The factors of circulation and
non-circulation? Their evolutions through time?
Moreover, can a digital geography of art convincingly lead us out of the
historiographical myth of centres and peripheries and of translatio imperii?
Recent studies have demonstrated that we cannot think of the world geography of
the arts as a homogeneous field dominated by a centre. In the field of Global
and Connected History, specialists have given contextualized complex answers to
the question of globalization and global cultural geography. Can computational,
quantitative approaches support and expand their conclusions?
3. Iconology in the digital age
Digital approaches work above all with textual data. For
instance, the tools in the Artl@s database of catalogues can already help track
the circulation of an artwork or of a motif through the analysis of artists’
names and the titles of artworks. But the starting point is still textual. What
information must be crossed to be sure that we talk about images, and not only
about their producers or their titles or their display? The availability of
huge visual databases, and the possibilities allowed by digital analysis
technologies, make it possible to ask again the questions of the old iconology
and to ask them on a massive scale. The challenge of globalization renews the
intuitions of art historians such as Heinrich Wölfflin or Aby Warburg who, more
than a century ago, wanted to understand the logic of stylistic dissemination.
Would it be an autonomy of forms once the historical and social logics had been
relativized? Can digital methods help answer this question? Could a pathos
formula (Pathosformel) be tracked by a recursive neural network?
Chairs: Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel, Paula Barreiro-Lopez,
Catherine Dossin.
This conference is organized in the framework of the
research projects Artl@s, Ecole Normale Supérieure – PSL /Institut d’Histoire Moderne et Contemporaine, in collaboration with MoDe(s)2 – Modernidad(es)Descentralizada(s): arte, política y contracultura en el eje transatlánticodurante la Guerra Fría HAR2017-82755-P and the Laboratoire de RechercheHistorique Rhône-Alpes (LARHRA).
Proposals should be sent before February 15, 2019 to
Béatrice Joyeux-Prunel (beatrice.joyeux-prunel@ens.fr): a summary of 300 words
max, accompanied by a CV in English.
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