AHRC Fully Funded Collaborative Doctoral Award Studentship 2017, University of York, UK! Deadline: May 19, 2017
The Bowes Museum’s recently-acquired St Luke Drawing the Virgin and Child by the Bouts workshop both depicts and was made by an artist setting his subject. Combining elements of portraiture, religious subject, interior and landscape, the composition depicts the Virgin and Child posing before a cloth of honour, while Saint Luke uses metalpoint drawing to transform the figures into a head-and-shoulders rendition. In the right background, a partially painted panel indicates figural outlines and a first layer of the Virgin’s red cloak, though it is not clear whether Saint Luke intends to give this in-progress panel an entirely abstract background (like the Bouts-workshop Mater Dolorosawith a gold ground, NG711, c. 1470-75), or will set the Virgin and Child against a depiction of cloth (as in the Bouts-workshop Virgin and Child, NG708, c. 1465), or perhaps frame them with elements of an interior with a view out onto landscape (as in the Bouts Virgin and Child, NG2595, c. 1465). Any of these choices would create a different effect from the main scene’s full-sized, semi-narrative rendition of the Virgin and Child situated in a well-articulated space.
Settings and Subjects takes this Bouts-workshop painting, which will form the heart of an exhibition opening at York Art Gallery in Autumn 2019, as a starting point for investigating how and why early Netherlandish artists formulated varying contexts for figural subjects. These settings ranged widely from entirely abstract grounds, to cloth backdrops, to dividing balustrades, to glimpses of a room corner, to more detailed interiors with or without exterior views, to outdoors (whether landscape or cityscape, entirely open or within garden walls). Recent scholarship has investigated the spatial and conceptual relationships between the separate panels of diptychs and triptychs, while other studies have examined the iconographic significance of particular types of settings such as landscape or domestic interiors, but there has been no systematic study of how the wide range of possible settings in early Netherlandish paintings affected artists’ creative processes and viewers’ interpretive experiences.
This project will focus primarily on portraiture and on depictions of the Virgin in order to examine the stark contrasts in effect between fully abstract grounds vs extensively articulated interiors, as well as the more subtle variations arising from different forms of depicted spaces. Starting from the premise that the meanings of figures and their settings are inextricably interconnected, the project as a whole will question how settings may have affected figural design, and vice versa; how the function of panels, or the requirements of particular patrons, may have affected the choice of setting; how different settings might alter a viewer’s experience of the same subject; how settings contribute to iconography and meaning of both secular and sacred figures; and whether consistent patterns in selection or design of settings can be detected within or between workshops in the period c. 1425-1525. The National Gallery’s excellent early Netherlandish collections and the rich body of technical and art-historical work carried out on them in recent decades will form the nucleus of the project’s case studies.
The PhD candidate will be given considerable freedom to develop his/her own dissertation topic within the wider remit of this project, and s/he will have the opportunity to contribute to the development of the 2019 exhibition.
Funding
This Collaborative Doctoral Partnership PhD studentship is funded by the AHRC. The full studentship award for students with UK residency* includes fees and a stipend of £14,553 per annum plus £550 p.a. additional stipend payment for Collaborative Doctoral students for 3 years. In addition, the Student Development Fund (equivalent to 0.5 years of stipend payments) is also available to support the cost of training, work placements, and other development opportunities. Students with EU residency are eligible for a fees-only studentship award. International applicants are normally not eligible to apply for this studentship. The National Gallery will provide up to £1000 a year to cover travel and other costs the student incurs travelling to carry out research at the Gallery and other locations. Both partners and the CDP consortium will provide opportunities for training and career development.
*UK residency means having settled status in the UK that is no restriction on how long you can stay in the UK; and having been "ordinarily resident" in the UK for 3 years prior to the start of the studentship that is you must have been normally residing in the UK apart from temporary or occasional absences; and not been residing in the UK wholly or mainly for the purposes of full-time education.
Deadline
Closing date for receipt of applications is midnight (GMT) Friday 19 May 2017. Interviews are preliminarily scheduled for Thursday 8 June 2017 at the University of York. Studentships start in October 2017.
Eligible Country: International
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