CFP: “Future of the Antique” Conference

7. April 2025

Call For Papers: The Future of the Antique, Warburg Insti­tute and Insti­tute of Clas­sical Studies (Univer­sity of London)

Wednesday 10, Thursday 11, Friday 12 December 2025

Dead­line: 15 May 2025

The original 1981 Yale Univer­sity Press edition of Taste and the Antique signi­fi­cantly shaped the field’s direc­tion over four decades, influen­cing both academic rese­arch and cura­to­rial practices.

The revised and expanded three-volume edition, featuring nume­rous newly commis­sioned photo­graphs, substan­ti­ally updates the scho­lar­ship with rese­arch from recent decades. It broa­dens the explo­ra­tion of these works’ recep­tion and influence, from Renais­sance coll­ec­tors to contem­po­rary artists. The edition parti­cu­larly examines how clas­sical statues impacted Euro­pean imagery beyond direct repli­ca­tion, including:

  • Their adapt­a­tion across diverse media
  • Their impact on art and archi­tec­tural theory and pedagogy
  • Their influence on anato­mical study and propor­tional theory
  • Their role in moder­nist culture and modern / post­mo­dern popular culture
  • Their endu­ring presence in contem­po­rary imagery and concep­tions of the human body

This two-day confe­rence aims to assess the current state of rese­arch, rethink estab­lished metho­do­lo­gies and explore possible future direc­tions in the field. Its primary goal is to foster discus­sion among diffe­rent gene­ra­tions of scho­lars whose rese­arch outputs are often sepa­rated by language and metho­do­lo­gical barriers.

We invite propo­sals for twenty-minute papers on inter­re­lated topics such as the follo­wing, outlined by the book or exten­ding beyond it. Prio­rity will be given to inno­va­tive papers focu­sing on the legacy of antique sculp­tural models in European/Colonial art and culture since the Renaissance:

Academy and Canon (exami­ning their estab­lish­ment, radical altera­tion, and disso­lu­tion in the modern era).

New Canons (the antique in modern and post­mo­dern theo­re­tical frame­works and practices).

Antique/Modern Bodies (clas­sical statuary’s influence on human anato­mical study; propor­tioned and dispro­por­tioned body concepts; the repre­sen­ta­tion of the male and fema­le­body; physio­gnomy; concep­tions of race and ethnicity).

Empire and its Enemies (poli­tical and racial impli­ca­tions of the antique).

Prio­ri­ties and Display (the antique within modern museum contexts).

Resto­ra­tions and Forgery (recon­fi­gu­ra­tions of the antique and notions of authenticity).

Narra­tive Patterns (the clas­sical language of gesture, story-tellin­g/n­ar­ra­tive).

Please submit your title and abstract of no more than 200 words, along with a short biography (about 100 words — please do not send CVs) to Mattia Ciani (m [dot] ciani8 [at] student [dot] unisi [dot] it) by noon (BST), 15 May 2025. The abstract and biography should be combined in a single Word docu­ment and submitted as an email attach­ment. Incom­plete or late submis­sions will not be considered.

Noti­fi­ca­tion of the outcome will be commu­ni­cated via email by 1 July 2025. We intend to publish the procee­dings of the conference.

The confe­rence is orga­nised by Adriano Aymo­nino and Kath­leen Christian