CFP: Arrival Cities: Migrating Artists and New
Metropolitan Topographies
Arrival Cities: Migrating Artists and New Metropolitan
Topographies
Focusing on the intersections of exile, artistic practice
and urban space, this international conference will bring together researchers committed
to revising the historiography of ‘modern’ art. Part of the ERC research project
Relocating Modernism: Global
Metropolises, Modern Art and Exile (METROMOD), it will address metropolitan
areas that were settled by migrant
artists in the first half of the 20th century. These so-called
“arrival cities” (Doug Saunders, 2011), were hubs of artistic activities and transcultural
contact zones where ideas circulated, collaborations emerged and concepts
developed. Taking cities as a starting point, this conference will explore how
urban topographies and artistic landscapes were modified by exiled artists re-establishing their practices in
metropolises across the world. It will address questions such as: How did
the migration of artists to different urban spaces impact their work and the
historiography of art? How did the urban environments in which the artists
moved and worked affect professional negotiations as well as cultural and
linguistic exchange?
While papers addressing METROMOD’s six focus cities—Bombay
(now Mumbai) Buenos Aires, Istanbul, London, New York and Shanghai—are welcome,
we also encourage contributions that expand the project’s geographical reach
and explore diverse
urbanities. Similarly, while METROMOD studies
European exile, we are also interested in cases of exile and migration from
other geographic areas that demonstrate connections with developing artistic
concepts of ‘modernism’. We invite contributions that consider mobilities and trajectories, neighbourhoods and networks,
social spaces and artscapes, as well as infrastructures and artistic practices.
Neighbourhoods such as Belgrano in Buenos Aires, Hampstead in London, or Washington
Heights in New York, which became home to a large number of migrants, could be
examined in relation to how they supported segregation, exchange and inclusion.
How accessible were these areas in terms of public transit? What institutions
and social spaces did they offer? Did the foreign artists create their own
informal gallery structures, or rely on existing venues? While authors
should direct their studies toward the first half of the 20th century, papers
dealing with methodological issues and comparative questions can address
a longer period.
“Arrival Cities: Migrating Artists and New Metropolitan
Topographies” aims to encourage the discussion between
international scholars from different research fields, such as Exile Studies,
Art History, History of Sociology, Architectural History, Architecture and Urban
Studies. We invite empirically grounded papers on a range of topics that will
contribute to expanding the historiography of modern art, urbanism and
architecture. Extended versions of selected presentations will be published in
an edited volume in late 2019. Contributions for the book must be submitted in
complete form by 1 March,2019.
Proposals in English of up to 300
words along with a half-page CV should be submitted in one
document (pdf) to laura.karp.lugo@kunstgeschichte.uni-muenchen.de by 15 April
2018. Accommodation and return travel costs within Europe, and a significant
portion of return flights for overseas participants will be covered.
The conference, which will be held in English,
is convened by the METROMOD research team: Burcu Dogramaci,
Laura Karp Lugo, Rachel Lee, and Helene Roth.
For more information about METROMOD, please
consult the LMU website:
http://www.kunstgeschichte.uni-muenchen.de/forschung/erc-projekt_-metromod/index.html
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