Crafting Legacy with Broken Pieces: Lee Family Fragments at Winterthur
Hidden away at Winterthur is an archeological fragment collection donated by Mrs. Cazenove G. Lee in 1968 and 1969. The collection includes approximately 139 objects, primarily excavated, a term used loosely in this context), in early twentieth-century Virginia at Lee family homes. They are cataloged under collection numbers 1968.0312-0336 and 1969.0048-56, but this paper focuses on three objects: a stone, a pair of shingles, and a brick. As pieces collected following the destruction of the Civil War in a collection that largely ignores the southern United States, these fragments serve Winterthur as a means of preserving the destruction of the South, in contrast with the decorative arts that make up most of the museum’s collection. Additionally, many of these bricks, stones, ceramics, and glass pieces were likely crafted by enslaved Black workers, an ever-hidden legacy in the museum's collection. Eure starts by addressing the collection itself and the mythos around the Lee family and the fragment’s history. Then, she addresses the popularization of taking objects from the South in the economically unstable post-Civil War years. These fragments differ from the “pillaging the south” narrative for two reasons: First, the fragments were donated by a member of the Lee family, and second, the archaeological fragments are much more mundane than the rest of the objects held by Winterthur and are not on view. The fragments were accepted as part of the collection specifically to be a part of the study collection, according to the acquisition files. As fragments of what we might traditionally see at Winterthur, collected from elite properties, this collection of objects is a unique look into the role of archaeological fragments in material culture studies and the politics of legacy building.
Rebodying Stereotypes: Contemporary Indigenous Artists and the Body
In this piece from the 2022 Tools of the Trade symposium, the author analyzes how artists James Luna and Wendy Red Star utilize their bodies to subvert stereotypes through their representation of systemic issues, museums, and Indigenous presence. Using a decolonial and feminist lens, the piece deconstructs how the works of Luna and Red Star allow the artists to play with Indigenous stereotypes in different ways to create their own versions of themselves, through the portrayal and use of the body alongside their culture.
Knights of the Round Table: Knighthood in History vs. Medieval Arthurian Literature Part 3
Abstract: In the final part of this serialization, Krehbiel explores how the romance literature of the medieval period interprets and romanticizes reality through the lens of Arthuriana as a nostalgic, fantastical setting. This addresses the broad themes of romance literature, its origins, and authorship. Romances were written by the troubadours, who either were knights or worked for knights, and they wanted to aggrandize knighthood to their audience, who were also knights. Additionally, the themes of courtly love and chivalry, which define the genre as a whole are important to this discussion. In this piece, the actions and stories of Arthur’s knights, as shown in medieval literature, will be compared to those of real knights. Primarily, this uses works of romance from England and Northern France during the late 12th to mid-13th centuries. These sources will be used in direct comparison of monographs which focus on knights, as well as primary source documents relating to warfare and chivalry. These stories all presented supposedly ideal knights which strictly adhered to codes of chivalry and courtly love that, as we will see, were not followed by actual knights.
Knights of the Round Table: Knighthood in History vs. Medieval Arthurian Literature Part 2
In Part one of this three-piece serialization, this piece will compare and contrast fictional knights to their real-life counterparts living around the same time and place as when the legends were written. Primarily, this is in England and France from the mid-twelfth to the early fourteenth centuries. This analysis discusses the ways the literature from this period created an ideal knight that, while inspired by the knights living during this time, was very different.
Furthermore, this paper explores the influence this literature had on knights and their culture. In order to address the differences between fictional and real knights, part one discusses the historical reality of the archetypal knight. In this case, who were knights historically, what did they do, and what was their role in medieval society. While this is a broad topic and covers many centuries and an entire continent, for the sake of simplicity this paper focuses on western Europe, namely England and France from the eleventh to the fourteenth centuries. While some documents found in this research may fall outside of that purview, that is because the question of the development of knighthood is pertinent to this discussion. Furthermore, it should be noted that because knighthood was so quintessentially European, it existed and spread across the continent.
Knights of the Round Table: Knighthood in History vs. Medieval Arthurian Literature Part 1
In Part one of this three-piece serialization, this piece will compare and contrast fictional knights to their real-life counterparts living around the same time and place as when the legends were written. Primarily, this is in England and France from the mid-twelfth to the early fourteenth centuries. This analysis discusses the ways the literature from this period created an ideal knight that, while inspired by the knights living during this time, was very different.
Furthermore, this paper explores the influence this literature had on knights and their culture. In order to address the differences between fictional and real knights, part one discusses the historical reality of the archetypal knight. In this case, who were knights historically, what did they do, and what was their role in medieval society. While this is a broad topic and covers many centuries and an entire continent, for the sake of simplicity this paper focuses on western Europe, namely England and France from the eleventh to the fourteenth centuries. While some documents found in this research may fall outside of that purview, that is because the question of the development of knighthood is pertinent to this discussion. Furthermore, it should be noted that because knighthood was so quintessentially European, it existed and spread across the continent.
Picturing Materiality: Timothy O’Sullivan, Geology, and the American Landscape
The survey photographs of Timothy O’Sullivan have long been associated with the canon of American photography and the material culture of the later nineteenth-century that precipitated artistic modernism. O’Sullivan’s photographs are renowned for their rendering of the harsh desert landscapes of the American Southwest and the particular attention they pay to the geological features of the terrain. In the critical literature, debate about whether the photographs are to be seen as objects of artistic expression or scientific documentation has preoccupied the scholarship. Such a framing, however, distorts O’Sullivan’s more complicated engagement with the materiality of the landscape conceived in evolutionary terms as a dynamic process that changes over time to which the photographic apparatus comes into material relation as a capture of light in duration. This article argues that O’Sullivan’s interest in the materiality of the earth and in photography as a material process originates in an earlier nineteenth-century dialogue between geological science and American landscape painting. The article demonstrates how the visual culture of the American West is part of this relationship and how O’Sullivan’s photography belongs to this wider interest in the material formation of the earth in nineteenth-century American culture. With this historical perspective in mind, the paper argues that O’Sullivan’s photographs exhibit a proto-ecological awareness of the landscape as raw material and subject matter, as well as comment on the relation between photography and nature. More broadly, the article suggests that the problem of materiality, usually associated with twentieth-century art theory, has its origins in the scientific culture of the nineteenth-century, when the distinctions between scientific, utilitarian, and artistic objects were blurred
Peering Through the Hood: The Material/Visual Culture of the Second KKK
This piece takes a new look at the second Ku Klux Klan by utilizing the lenses of material and visual culture. Previous scholars have addressed the Klan as a business, such as Charles Alexander, Nancy Maclean, and Kathleen Blee. However, their research did not focus primarily on the manufactured materials, literature, and regalia produced by the Klan. Using 20th -century material culture as a lens for analysis is critical in understanding how collective groups of people relate to one another through objects and shared ideologies. This piece argues that focusing on the visual and material culture produced by the Klan opens new insights into the second iteration of the KKK. Primarily, the piece examines manufactured cultural items such as catalogs, brochures, newspapers, photos, and propaganda produced by and for the Klan. The central aims are twofold: to explain the cultural importance of the visual and material cultural objects and to show how the Klan was able to use merchandising to fund its “Invisible Empire.”
Encountering Eurocentric Beauty Ideals and Childhood Identity Formation in Collages by Deborah Roberts
Using Deborah Roberts’ photocollage works as a lens, this article contemplates the influence of Eurocentric standards of beauty and stereotypes of Blackness on identity formation as represented by the child subject. Deborah Roberts reappropriates found images and materials from magazines, the internet, and her daily life to bring attention to the historic and continued treatment of the Black body within the realm of cultural production and to the vulnerability of children to the resulting conditions of objectivity and suppression. Theories of intersectionality highlight that women and children are susceptible to multiple layers of oppression as part of a minority race and subordinated gender.[1] Roberts’ focus on children brings attention to another regularly overlooked layer of subjugation and bias, as young people’s identities are in a highly developmental state that is often the most susceptible to ideas promoted by the masses. By emphasizing and subverting the original intentions of her materials and reinventing them as works of fine art, Roberts gives power back to her young Black subjects.
“Few Ladies Ever Sit”: Examining Women’s Presence in the Madison White House Parlors
In 1809, Dolley Madison and architect Benjamin Henry Latrobe embarked on extensive efforts to transform the White House interiors into spaces ladened with significance. Throughout the first term of the Madison administration, thousands of Americans witnessed their work while attending weekly parlor gatherings. However, nearly all the materials they saw were burned by the British in 1814. Using correspondence, business ledgers, and the few surviving furnishings, historians have since sought to reconceptualize the Madison White House parlors and the messages that they conveyed. This study builds on such work by exploring the uniqueness of white women’s interactions with these interiors. A closer look reveals that at the parlor gatherings, white women took in material-based messages that played a significant role in their ability to negotiate their political and social standing in the new American republic.
The Science of Light in the Spiritualist Works of Evelyn De Morgan
Evelyn De Morgan (1855–1919) was an English painter and, behind closed doors, a practiced spirit medium. Her paintings have historically been characterized by a unique amalgamation of her association with the Pre-Raphaelites, her time in Great Britain and Italy, and her involvement in Victorian-era Spiritualism, a movement that became fairly mainstream in her lifetime. De Morgan was especially fascinated by the ascent of the soul beyond the physical world and increasingly explored this subject in her later works.
From about 1900 until her death in 1919, De Morgan’s paintings demonstrate the height of her desire to reconcile the material and the mystical realms. To visually express her personal theology as it evolved, De Morgan gravitated towards the concept of light both spiritually and scientifically. De Morgan likely gleaned concepts and imagery from 19th-century science publications on light, including well-known writings on prismatic refraction and chromo-mentalism, to formulate and legitimize the unique Spiritualist iconography present in her later works. This article discusses how she might have viewed and utilized scientific principles in tandem with contemporary spiritualist discourse, including an anonymously published compilation of her own automatic writing transcripts, aptly titled The Result of an Experiment.
Much like a glass prism can be used to expand the scope of the visible world, the act of studying and painting light was how Evelyn De Morgan attempted to materialize the mystical and bridge the gap between science and Spiritualism.
Lenguaje, Llengua, y La Vanguardia: Avant-gardism in Barcelona and Madrid from 1915 to 1925
Utilizing the work of Ramón Gómez de la Serna and Joan Miró as illustrative examples of their intellectual circles, this essay builds a dialogue between avant-garde practices in Madrid and Barcelona from 1915 to 1925 to identify the similarities in their linguistic practices and differences in ideologies. In the context of this essay, the word “language” in Spanish, lenguaje, and in Catalan, llengua, serve as signifiers for the artistic languages of Gómez de la Serna and Miró respectively. And departing from the literal meaning of these two words, these two signifiers help to further elucidate the thesis of this paper: while on the level of artistic practice both Miró and Gómez de la Serna were engaged with a kind of artistic avant-gardism involving the play of language, on the conceptual level, the lenguaje of Gómez de la Serna differed from the llengua of Miró.
Abolitionist Broadsides and Anti-Slavery Imagery
In the early nineteenth century, broadsides were a common form of mass media, which were produced in bulk and intended for single use – as such, few nineteenth-century broadsides have survived. Those preserved in collections give historians an inside look at the ideology of anti-slavery societies and pro-slavery institutions, along with documenting design sensibilities and imagery of historical propaganda. Broadsides published by anti-slavery societies advocated for immediate abolition. Surviving broadsides show their dedication to the cause, mixing established design with passionate writing and occasional imagery to capture and hold the reader’s attention. Yet, this passion cannot mask the way their message emphasized the superiority of its intended highly educated Northern white audience.
Amazon Warriors in Classical Greek Art: Exploring Patriarchal Foundations in Ancient Greece
This paper explores the iconographic representation of Amazons, a race of women warriors, in classical Greek art from the fifth century BCE through the lens of gender theory. Studying Amazonian representation provides insightful opportunities into how gender was regarded in ancient Greece, including how Ancient Greek women had little to no political voice and were controlled by men at virtually every stage of their lives. This was driven by biological notions of sex, whereas today, patriarchal oppression has evolved into a desire to overcome the “other.”i This paper discusses the mysterious history of the Amazons to establish a foundation for the narratives they tell in art, the most prevalent being a trope of the Amazon as wounded, defeated, and submissive. By focusing on a singular case study of the Marble Statue of a Wounded Amazon at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the central discussion will expand to include broader themes of the male gaze, female representation, and gender roles that became archetypes for modern society.
Lost and Found: Anna Belle Mitchell, Jane Osti, and the “Revival” of Cherokee Pottery in Oklahoma
The tradition of Cherokee pottery is often denoted as a ‘lost’ art. Most documentation and scholarship about Cherokee potters problematize them as the last artists of their craft, and primarily focus on potters from the Southeast. Most of these scholarly viewpoints were from an anthropological or archeological perspective. Despite these narratives, Cherokee ceramicists in the Southeast have continued the allegedly lost tradition of pottery for generations. These misdirected narratives exclude how Cherokee pottery was indeed lost after the Cherokee removal and the Trail of Tears in the early 19th century for those displaced and sent to Indian Territory.
Not until the mid-1950s was Cherokee pottery revived in Oklahoma when Anna Belle Mitchell traveled to South Carolina and sought this traditional knowledge. Since her passing in 2012, Mitchell’s legacy and the continued art form of Cherokee pottery lives on in her pupil, JaneOsti. Osti has established a successful art career by utilizing and teaching Cherokee pottery techniques in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. Explaining the significance of carrying on the Cherokee pottery tradition, Osti has stated, “Pottery is one of the greatest historians… I know that oral traditions are wonderful, but pottery can tell us the story of our people.” Preservation and practice of Cherokee pottery in Oklahoma by artists like Mitchell and Osti’s shows that the art form is resilient and ongoing rather than a revival or stagnant. This paper opens a discourse about the continuous misrepresentative pedagogy and specific wording, such as ‘lost’ or ‘revival’, that codes stasis narratives about Native American art in contemporary scholarship.
“Three is a Magic Number”: The Triple Threat of Being Black, Female, and a Panther
The Black Panther Party played a critical role during the United States Civil Rights era. The Party created a space for many black and brown individuals and offered protections that were often violated by laws, policies, government officials and law enforcement. This research in no way is an attempt to negate the good that the Black Panther Party did for their communities but instead aims to take a critical look at the abuses and diminishment of women within the movement. Looking with a critical gaze at the way women were treated within the Party is really looking at the mistreatment and abuse rendered upon black women and women of color within society. This piece looks at intersectionality and how the identities of women within the movement were marked by society due to their race, gender, and Party status. These labels made women targets both internally and externally and made it systematically difficult for women to be recognized for their role within the movement.
Women within the Black Panther Movement were confronted, both internally and externally, with discrimination and abuse due to racism, sexism, and Black Panther Party membership; the critical role women played within the party was diminished by the intersectionality of being black, female, and a member. There would be a much different discussion surrounding the Black Panther Party and the impact it had (or did not have) on society if women were not involved.
“Conquête Militaire”: The Ethics of Restitution of the Louvre’s Napoleonic Legacy
While art provides a physical and transportable object within which heritage and, by extension, national identity is stored and displayed, it nonetheless also exudes and absorbs these same intangible concepts. The Wedding Feast at Cana, one of the largest and most prominent paintings removed from Venice during the 1797 French invasion, is one of those works under discussion when defining where and to whom material culture belongs. This article explores the history and the ethics behind the story of the Wedding Feast at Cana and examines the viewpoints from which ownership and intangible connection for material culture is often viewed.
“Take Heed of Revelations:”Puritanism, Spirituality, and Mental Instability in the Case of Dorothy Talbye
This project is a detailed exploration into the spectacle of Dorothy Talbye’s execution in Massachusetts in 1638, where I speculate on how this event reflects colonial attitudes toward punishment, spirituality, and mental illness. Talbye was hanged for the murder of her three-year-old daughter, Difficulty. While this is not the first case of child murder in early America, Talbye’s case has a significant historical legacy due to the controversial nature of the court’s ruling regarding her mental stability and execution. In his journal, Governor John Winthrop wrote that he believed that Talbye did not act out of malice but murdered her daughter because of Satan’s persuasions. By examining Winthrop’s entry on Talbye’s offenses and other legal documents, I argue that Winthrop’s perspective provides a lens through which we can understand how New England Puritans understood mental illness as a spiritual or religious problem that could be cured with faith, frequent confession of sins, and repentance.
Cultural Colonialism at the Museum of the Bible: Have They Found Redemption?
The Museum of the Bible (opened 2017) has been a popular topic in the news for its many collecting missteps. Most of these errs are associated with the Green Family Collection, donated by the Green family headed by Steve Green, whose father founded Hobby Lobby. The evangelical businessman collected for more than a decade with the intention of opening a museum. With that vision turned reality, the family’s frenzy to collect biblical material to fit their specific narrative about the Bible has come under scrutiny. The Greens have purchased stolen and looted artifacts, bought forgeries, and even lied on U.S. Customs forms to import such materials. Although these actions are morally corrupt, and contrary to the Greens’ evangelical background, the family serves as more than a story of malpractice and unethical behavior. By using their private wealth to exploit the antiquities markets in areas of political unrest, the Greens exemplify contemporary cultural colonialism. In part two, I apply the theories explicated in part one to review two case studies about the Greens and the Museum of the Bible. These studies demonstrate their cultural colonial practices and the colonial matrices of power in the family’s collection dealings. The first case study regards the Greens’ illegally importation of artifacts from Iraq in 2011. The second case study concerns their collection of papyri obtained from an Oxford University professor. I end by contemplating how several countries in the Middle East, the main source and site of the Green family’s collection, are attempting to regain their agencies within these matrices of power dominated by the Greens.
Cultural Colonialism at the Museum of the Bible: Have They Found Redemption?
The Museum of the Bible (opened 2017) has been a popular topic in the news for its many collecting missteps. Most of these errs are associated with the Green Family Collection, donated by the Green family headed by Steve Green, whose father founded Hobby Lobby. The evangelical businessman collected for more than a decade with the intention of opening a ultheir specific narrative about the Bible has come under scrutiny. The Greens have purchased stolen and looted artifacts, bought forgeries, and even lied on U.S. Customs forms to import such materials. Although these actions are morally corrupt, and contrary to the Greens’ evangelical background, the family serves as more than a story of malpractice and unethical behavior. By using their private wealth to exploit the antiquities markets in areas of political unrest, the Greens exemplify contemporary cultural colonialism. In part one, I explore the background of the Green family and Hobby Lobby and their connections to the Museum of the Bible. Then, I define and examine the terms “cultural colonialism” and “colonial matrices of power,” and their relevance to contemporary contexts.
A Closer Look: Funerary Studies, Material Culture, and the Maya
The following analysis investigates literature from the field regarding a carbonate stone bowl, designated as “Bowl with Anthropomorphic Cacao Trees,” found in a tomb and located today in the collection of Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. The three-roundel bowl is regarded to feature a personified Chocolate God as its central figure. On the other hand, some scholars in the field, including Simon Martin and Karl Taube, posit that the figure considered the “Chocolate God” on this funerary bowl is instead intended to represent the Maize God embodying the Chocolate God in a call for generational rebirth. The following seeks to offer an object biography under the lens of funerary studies and the material culture of the Maya. Visual analysis and study of Maya religious principles are also employed.