Renowned Scholar of French Art and
Culture
to Speak at Buffalo History Museum
to Speak at Buffalo History Museum
Talk investigates impact of electrification of Paris on turn of the
century art
Buffalo,
NY – The University at Buffalo Department of Visual Studies is pleased to host
Dr. S. Hollis Clayson, professor of art history and Bergen Evans Professor in
the Humanities at Northwestern University. Clayson’s talk, titled John Singer Sargent's Paris Moon Light:
Twilight Disenchanted?, will explore her work analyzing the electrification
of Paris and its impact on the art of the time. Clayson will speak at 7pm on
Thursday March 28, 2013, at the Buffalo History Museum. The talk is free and
open to the public.
Specializing
in the social history of nineteenth-century Parisian art, Clayson has organized
3 exhibitions and has written: 2 books; more than 30 articles, book chapters
and exhibition catalogs; and given more than 100 conference talks. The
recipient of numerous grants and fellowships for her scholarly work, her
excellence in teaching has also been recognized by several awards. Her long
career has culminated in appointment as next year's Samuel H. Kress Professor
at the National Gallery of Art, one of the most prestigious academic appointments
in the world.
Jonathan
D. Katz, Director of the Visual Studies PhD program will introduce Clayson and
said of her work: “Long celebrated as one of the premier voices in the study of
19th century French art, Holly Clayson has worked on everything from the image
of the courtesan in Impressionism to the conditions of life and art in Paris
under the siege of 1870-71. After earning recognition for redefining
Impressionism through including the perspective of the unheard, Clayson now
sets out to chart the impact of the unseen; the electrification that literally
redefined visibility in the last quarter of the 19th century."
Of late,
Clayson has begun turning her attention to the effects of electricity in the
development of modern painting, and it is out of that research that this
project emerges. Entitled John Singer Sargent's Paris Moon Light: Twilight
Disenchanted?, Clayson argues that Sargent's supposedly most
"impressionist" canvases, the two Luxembourg Garden paintings of
1879, are nothing of the kind. They are
read instead as extraordinary redefinitions of the Whistlerian nocturne that
respond explicitly and imaginatively to the electric street lights that newly
impinged upon the Jardin du Luxembourg, the largest green space on the Left Bank.
From within the matrix of illumination discourse, Sargent's canvases displace
the brutality of electric into the poetry of reflected moon light.
Hosted by the University at Buffalo’s Department of Visual Studies, Clayson’s talk is co-sponsored by: the Buffalo History Museum; the New York Power Authority; M. Pascal Soarès, Honorary Consul, Consulat Général de France; and the Alliance Française de Buffalo.
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