[spectre] CONF: Socialist Internationalism & the Global Contemporary (Leipzig, 23-25 Nov 17)

Andreas Broeckmann ab at mikro.in-berlin.de
Mon Nov 13 11:32:01 CET 2017


From: Antje Kempe <antje.kempe at uni-greifswald.de>
Date: Nov 13, 2017
Subject: CONF: Socialist Internationalism & the Global Contemporary 
(Leipzig, 23-25 Nov 17)

Leipzig, Leibniz-Institute für Geschichte und Kultur des östlichen 
Europa (GWZO), November 23 - 25, 2017

Socialist Internationalism & the Global Contemporary: Transnational Art 
Historiographies from Eastern and East-Central Europe

The international conference Socialist Internationalism and the Global 
Contemporary explores a possible alternative beginning of Global Art 
History and World Art Studies: methodologies that set a worldwide focus 
in the study of art around the 2000s. In the countries of the former 
Socialist Bloc, "universal art history" or Weltkunstgeschichte were 
introduced as frameworks for the teaching and writing of art history. 
Conference presentations interrogate a tentative link between socialist 
internationalism as a political and cultural diplomatic principle and 
the prevalent approaches to art historiography during Socialist times. 
Did “universal art history” and “world art history” as practiced in the 
“Second World” have aspirations and achievements comparable to those of 
Global Art History and World Art Studies today? Or, was this knowledge 
production in an internationalist paradigm a mere foil for communist 
rhetoric? In either case, did Socialist scholars come up with innovative 
propositions or a more inclusive canon? Equally importantly, whatever 
happened to this scholarly output: would it be possible to re-purpose 
particular aspects of it today?

PROGRAM

THURSDAY 23 November

3.30 pm Welcome Christian Lübke, Direktor (GWZO)
Frank Hadler, Head of Department "Entanglements and Globalization" (GWZO)
Arnold Bartetzky, Head of Department „Culture and Imagination“ (GWZO)

Introduction
Marina Dmitrieva (GWZO), Antje Kempe (Greifswald)

4.00–6.00 pm    PANEL 1    TOWARDS A SOCIALIST WORLD ART HISTORY? 
Chair/Moderator: Beáta Hock (GWZO)

Corinne Geering (Gießen): Pluralism within regions: Soviet world art 
history in the context of international cultural policy

Michaela Marek (Berlin): Internationality as required. Italy vs. 
neighboring countries in Czech art historiography

Nikolas Drosos (Toronto): Realist International: Twentieth-century 
global Realism according to the Soviet Universal History of Art (1956–66)

6.00–6.30 pm Coffee break

6.30–8.00 pm Keynote address    Anthony Gardner (Oxford): 1955: A Year 
of fragile legacies and possible directions

8.00–9.00 pm Reception
     FRIDAY 24 November

9.00 am –1.00 pm
PANEL 2    FROM WORLDWIDE CULTURAL INTEGRATION TO ARTISTIC PLURALISM 
Chair/Moderator:  Marina Dmitrieva (GWZO)

Elena Sharnova (Moscow): The concept of “Russian painting among European 
Schools” in Soviet-Russian art history, 1970-1990s

Maja and Reuben Fowkes (London/Budapest): Art history in a suitcase: The 
itinerary of art trends in socialist art criticism

Igor Dukhan (Minsk): “Il faut être absolument moderne”: The idea of 
contemporaneity in the Soviet Bloc’s art and architecture, 1955–80

11.00-11.30 am Coffee Break

11.30 am-1.00 pm
Chair/Moderator: Sandra Frimmel (Zürich)

Piotr Juszkiewicz (Poznan): Modern, primitive, folk and socialist. 
Mexican art in Polish art history and art criticism 1949–1972

Nadine Siegert (Bayreuth): “Socialist Angolanidade”: What did art 
history writing mean in the Angolan Socialist period?

1.00–2.30 pm Lunch Break

2.30–4.00 pm
PANEL 3    IDEOLOGICAL PROJECTIONS AND THE PAST Chair/Moderator: Tanja 
Zimmermann (Leipzig)

Ivan Gerát (Bratislava/Trnava): Military saints between universal 
archetypes and historical functions

Olga Etinhof (Moscow): The study of Byzantine art in the USSR in the 
second half of the 20th century

4.00-4.30 pm Coffee Break

4.30-6.30 pm PANEL 4    SOCIALIST INTERNATIONALISM AS HEURISTIC TOOL 
Chair/Moderator: Arnold Bartetzky (GWZO)

Matteo Bertelé (Venice/Leipzig): Showcasing international Socialism: The 
Exhibition of Socialist Countries (1958)

Douglas Gabriel & Adri Kácsor (Chicago): Knowledge in fraternity: 
Socialist art and architecture between Budapest and Pyongyang in the 1950s

Adam Mayer (Hewler): Naija Marxism before and after 1989: Revolutionary 
thought and art in a comparative perspective
     SATURDAY 25 November

10.00 am –2.15 pm PANEL 5    NETWORKS OF KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION 
Chair/Moderator: Katja Bernhardt (Berlin) and Robert Born (GWZO)

Éva Forgács (Pasadena): Efforts for a European integration of the arts 
and the art discourse, 1945–48

Krista Kodres (Tallinn): Translations: Disseminating Socialist art 
history in the 1960s

Mari Laanemets (Tallinn): World art history from an Eastern perspective: 
Eastern European contributions to the debates within AICA in the 1970s

12.00 am–1.00 pm Lunch Break

1.00–2.15 pm    Olga Olkheft (Leipzig): Re-evaluation: Moscow–Paris: 
1900–1930 as a turning point in Soviet art history

Virve Sarapik (Tallinn): CIHA congresses and Soviet internationalism

2.15 pm     FINAL DISCUSSION & CONCLUSION Moderators: Michaela Marek 
(Berlin), Krista Kodres (Tallinn)
     VENUE
GWZO, Specks Hof (Entrance A, 4th floor)
Reichsstraße 4, 04109 Leipzig

CONCEPT AND COORDINATION: Marina Dmitrieva (GWZO), Beata Hock (GWZO), 
Antje Kempe (University of Greifswald)
In cooperation with the Academy of Arts of Estonia and Chair of Art 
History of Eastern Europe at the HU Berlin

CONTACT
Marina Dmitrieva marina.dmitrieva at leibniz-gwzo.de

Beata Hock beata.hock at leibniz-gwzo.de

Antje Kempe
antje.kempe at uni-greifswald.de

Supported by GWZO and Leibniz Science Campus “Eastern Europe”


Reference / Quellennachweis:
CONF: Socialist Internationalism & the Global Contemporary (Leipzig, 
23-25 Nov 17). In: ArtHist.net, Nov 13, 2017. 
<https://arthist.net/archive/16708>.




More information about the SPECTRE mailing list