Medieval Women: Subjects and Makers of Art
Fascinating online tour from London Art Week of an exhibition at Sam Fogg looking at Medieval women as the subject and makers of art.
Jana Gajdosova, Medieval specialist at Sam Fogg and Alexandra Gajewski of Burlington Magazine took us round the show with four brief videos of the installation then picked out specific images to highlight themes. I loved the image of St Avia shown here which would probably have been set in a wall and fascinated to hear about Shrine Madonna’s which open up down the chest to reveal an image, often a Trinity, and fell out of fashion due to the theological contradiction that them implied the Virgin came before all aspects of the Trinity not just the son.
They kept mentioning a previous round table discussion which I found on the Sam Fogg website which involved the two speakers from the talk plus Jeffrey Hamburger from Harvard University and Madeline Caviness from Tuft University. This talked more about the themes involved including the idea of who creates the art of this period, the artist/craftsperson or the patron who commissions it. This led them to look at art commissioned by nuns and for convents. They also talked about the assumption we make that works of art by an anonymous artist are assumed to be made by a man.
Two interesting talks full of ideas to think about and follow up.
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