BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Colonial Networks: Remapping the “Paris” Art World in a 1786 Map of Saint Domingue
PRODID:-//Harvard events data//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:event_1571106_0
SUMMARY:Colonial Networks: Remapping the “Paris” Art World in a 1786 Map of Saint Domingue
DESCRIPTION:<h2>	<img alt="abstract horizontal pattern" height="324" src="https://static.hwpi.harvard.edu/files/styles/os_files_xxlarge/public/mahindra/files/visualrepresentation.jpg?m=1587660436&amp;itok=o0uHsVbu" title="" width="900"><a href="internal:/visual-representation-materiality-and-medium" title="">VISUAL REPRESENTATION, MATERIALITY, AND MEDIUM</a></h2><h2>	SPEAKERS: Meredith Martin, Institute of Fine Arts; Hannah Williams, Queen Mary University of London</h2><p>	This talk focuses on a 1786 property map of the French colony of Saint-Domingue (Haiti) dedicated to the comte de Vaudreuil, a prominent Paris-based courtier and art collector whose father had governed the colony. The map records the parceling of land around Cap Français, the so-called “Paris of the Antilles,” where several of the oldest, most lucrative sugar plantations were located. Instead of place names, the map is inscribed with surnames, each belonging to a plantation owner. When we, specialists of eighteenth-century French art, first came across this map, we were startled to see that its names read like a “who’s who” of the Paris art world: although aware of some of these connections, the map had a powerful, visceral impact unlike any document we had come across. Furthermore, the deeper histories of the links it visualizes between colonial commerce and art world activities are largely unknown.</p><h3>	About the Speakers</h3><p>	<strong>Meredith Martin</strong> is Professor of Art History at New York University and the Institute of Fine Arts and a founding editor of Journal18. A specialist in early modern French art and empire, she is the co-author (with Gillian Weiss) of the award-winning book <em>The Sun King at Sea: Maritime Art and Galley Slavery in Louis XIV’s France</em> (Getty, 2022). Martin is also the author of <em>Dairy Queens: The Politics of Pastoral Architecture from Catherine de’ Medici to Marie-Antoinette</em> (Harvard, 2011), and a co-author of <em>Meltdown: Picturing the World’s First Bubble Economy</em> (2020), which is related to an exhibition she co-curated for The New York Public Library. Together with the choreographer Phil Chan, Martin reimagined and restaged a lost 1739 French ballet known as the <em>Ballet des Porcelaines</em> that was performed throughout the U.S. and Europe in 2021-22.</p><p>	<strong>Hannah Williams</strong> is Senior Lecturer in the History of Art at Queen Mary University of London. A specialist in French art and history of the long eighteenth century, she is co-author (with Katie Scott) of <em>Artists’ Things: Rediscovering Lost Property from Eighteenth-Century France</em> (Getty, 2024); author of <em>Académie Royale: A History in Portraits</em> (Routledge, 2015), winner of the Prix Marianne Roland Michel; and is currently writing a book on Art and Religion in Enlightenment Paris. Williams is also director of the digital mapping project <em>Artists in Paris: Mapping the 18th-Century Art World</em>, awarded the BSECS Digital Prize in 2020, and a founding co-editor of <em>Journal18</em>.</p>
LOCATION:Sackler Building, Room 422
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20240416T210000Z
DTEND:20240416T210000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR