Baroque Splendor:
The Art and Architecture of Re-Catholicization in Bohemia and Franconia
Applications are invited for participation in the Summer School, Baroque Splendor:
The Art and Architecture of Re-Catholicization in Bohemia and Franconia, September 2-7, 2019, to take
place at nine key art historical monuments across Bohemia and Bavaria.
The revival
of Catholicism in Central Europe
employed a remarkably rich and complex artistic and architectural language
in order to convey the power and majesty of the Catholic
church and emphasize its role as the single
rout to salvation. Many of the most splendid
and important examples of this outpouring of spiritual fervor
occur in the massive, richly decorated rural monasteries and pilgrimage churches, as well as the elaborate palaces of the region’s powerful
prince-bishops (Fürstbischof). These key sites for the history of art are the subject of a Summer School
collaboration between the Institut für Kunstgeschichte at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität (FAU) in Erlangen-Nürnberg, represented by Dr. Sarah W. Lynch,
and the Institute of Art History,
Czech Academy of Sciences (IAH CAS), represented by Dr. Martin Mádl. The program
is conducted with the support
of the Bayerisch- Tschechische Hochschulagentur.
Both Bohemia
and Franconia had been deeply
influenced by the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century. In the seventeenth century
religious orders and bishops redoubled their efforts to re-catholicize these regions, using art and architecture as a primary
tool to persuade the population to return to the church
of Rome. The artists in this region
were inspired by examples of architecture, painting,
sculpture, and stucco
work from Italy,
France, and Austria, and they include some of the most prominent figures in the Central European Baroque and early Rococo:
the architects Johann Blasius Santini-Aichel, Balthasar Neumann,
and Kilian Ignaz, Leonhard, and Johann Dientzenhofer; the painters Johann
Jacob Stevens von Steinfels, Johann Christoph Lischka,
Jacob Anton Pink, Franz Anton Müller, Melchior Steidl, Johann Rudolf Byss,
Johann Michael Rottmayer, Giuseppe Appiani, Cosmas
Damian Asam, Franz Julius Lux; and the sculptors
Mathias Bernhard Braun, Egid Quirin Asam.
The program offers
MA and PhD students a unique opportunity to visit and study some of the most important monuments of the Central European
Baroque:
Bohemian
sites:
The Cistercian monastery
of Plasy (Plass)
The pilgrimage church of Mariánská
Týnice (Maria Teinitz) The Benedictine monastery at Kladruby (Kladrau)
The church of St. Clara,
Cheb Bavarian/Franconian sites:
The Waldsassen monastery in Oberpfalz
The pilgrimage church of Vierzehnheiligen The monastery
at Banz
The Neue Residenz in Bamberg Schloss Weissenstein in Pommersfelden
A tour of Baroque architecture in Erlangen
Organization:
Dates: 2.9.2019 – 7.9.2019
Accommodation and transportation are provided free of cost during the program. Some reimbursements for travel to and from the start and endpoints
of the program are available.
Each student will make a presentation related
to one of the sites we visit.
The Summer School is conducted in English.
Due to the regulations of our funding
source, the Summer
School is only open to students
from Czech and Bavarian universities.
Application:
To apply, please
send a statement of interest
in the Summer School (in English, German,
or Czech) and a CV to Sarah W. Lynch (sarah.lynch@fau.de) and Martin Mádl (madl@udu.cas.cz) no later than July 5.
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