Subject: Forum on painting and polychrome sculpture, 1100-1600
Painting and polychrome sculpture, 1100-1600 Interpretation, material histories and conservation Museum of Cultural History University of Oslo Frederiksgate 2 0164 Oslo (Norway) 26-27 November 2010 Conservation Studies at the University of Oslo will host a forum around the theme of medieval and late-medieval painting and polychrome sculpture. Speakers include conservators, conservation scientists and historians. Papers and discussion points will explore issues related to the interpretation and conservation of northern-European liturgical furniture, circa 1100 to 1600. Programme <URL:http://osloforum.wordpress.com/> The University of Oslo owns a rich collection of altar frontals and polychrome objects. Over the past 30 years, scholarship has focused on medieval painting techniques identified in Norwegian frontals and sculptures. A major study of 31 frontals dating from 1250 to 1350 was completed in 2006 and the mapping of materials in surviving sculptures that date between 1100 and 1350 is in progress. These projects have been especially meaningful because those works that pre-date the 1340s are, with few exceptions, the products of Norwegian workshops. Platform for new research: The paintings and sculpture in the Oslo collection that are thought to date after the first wave of Bubonic plague and through the Reformation (c. 1350-1600) are a far less homogenous group. The majority are thought to have been imported to Norway from the Low Countries and north German/Baltic regions, but these objects have been explored far less extensively than those which pre-date 1350. Therefore, many questions remain about their origins, circumstances of production and materials, as well as their current state of preservation. This part of the collection will be the focus of a new research project based in Conservation Studies at UiO, led by Noelle Streeton in collaboration with Kaja Kollandsrud and the Museum of Cultural History. This forum is intended to aid the development of a research platform for the long-term study of this late-medieval collection. Cost NOK 800 (NOK 400 for students and concessions) Cost includes lunch (2 days) and drinks reception. Registration and hotels: Please register online. A place will be reserved once payment is registered. Details of local hotels are also given in these pages. Please direct questions that are not addressed in the web pages to Hildegunn Gullasen <hildegunn.gullasen<-at->iakh<.>uio<.>no> Organisers Noelle Streeton Associate Professor, Conservation Studies Institute of Archaeology, Conservation and History, UiO n.l.w.streeton<-at->iakh<.>uio<.>no Kaja Kollandsrud Senior Conservator, Museum of Cultural History, UiO kaja.kollandsrud<-at->khm<.>uio<.>no Hildegunn Gullasen Research Assistant, Conservation Studies Institute of Archaeology, Conservation and History, UiO hildegunn.gullasen<-at->iakh<.>uio<.>no *** Conservation DistList Instance 24:18 Distributed: Thursday, September 30, 2010 Message Id: cdl-24-18-015 ***Received on Monday, 27 September, 2010