23:09 J.Art Historiography Issue: History of Architectural Historiography | |
Deadline: Jan 7, 2016
Journal of Art Historiography
Call for papers for the thematic issue dedicated to the history of
architectural historiography
In the beginning was Vasari and in the beginning was Palladio. In his
Vite Vasari described the lives of painters, sculptors and
architects—the context of architectural creation, one may be tempted to
say in our modern idiom. In the fourth book of his I quattro libri
Palladio presented extensive comprehensive surveys of Roman temples—his
was the first systematic publication of architectural works themselves.
Since the Renaissance, the discipline of architectural history has been
a combination of both approaches. Some architectural historians have
been originally trained as art historians, other as architects, and this
dual background has decisive for the development of architectural
historiography.
Journal of Art Historiography announces a call for paper for the
thematic issue dedicated to the history of architectural historiography:
the history of scholarly approaches, their implications and developments
through history—but also historical perspectives on where it is going,
including, for instance, the changes in scholarship effected by digital
technologies or the positioning of the discipline in the rapidly
changing academic world. Compared to the histories of painting or
sculpture, architectural history is more institutionalized, with a wide
range of established societies and specialist publications—but what is
the history of that institutionalisation and how did its goals change
through history? Many historians of painting or sculpture work in
museums, while architectural museums are rare; many architectural
historians are directly involved in the preservation of architectural
heritage, while few historians of painting or sculpture work in the
conservation of their objects of study. What is then the history of
architectural historians’ involvement with architectural heritage and
how did their approaches change through history? And more specifically,
pertaining to architectural history itself, how did the interest in our
discipline develop and how did it develop discipline-specific
methodological tools and devices?
The thematic issue of the Journal of Art Historiography dedicated to the
history of architectural historiography is planned for June 2016. The
deadline for the submission of papers is 7 January 2016; proposals for
the papers (including 300 words abstracts, no specific deadline) and
subsequently the papers should be sent to the editor of the special
issue at branko.mitrovic@ntnu.no. The submissions should conform to the
Journal’s submission guidelines (see
https://arthistoriography.wordpress.com/journal-submission-guidelines/ )
and will be peer-reviewed according to the Journal’s standard process
(see https://arthistoriography.wordpress.com/peer-review-process/ ).
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