Visiting Scholar Dr. Joyce De Vries to discuss feminism and the arts with OHIO students
Dr. Joyce De Vries, professor and chair of Art and Art History at Auburn University in Alabama, will present to 91探花 students and the public her research about female patronage in the arts and how women have historically constructed their gender and political identity.
De Vries鈥 lecture, 鈥淕ender and Material Culture in Early Modern Italy,鈥 aligns with a School of Interdisciplinary Arts (I-Arts) seminar topic, and will take place virtually via Microsoft Teams on Oct. 6, from 2 to 3:30 p.m.
鈥淢y work is situated within some important recent transformations in the art history of Early Modern Italy,鈥 De Vries said. 鈥淚t is part of the larger effort to rehabilitate women back into the field, whether by researching female artists or, in my case, female patronage and collecting, and to examine gender issues, both masculinities and femininities, at play in works of art and their consumption.鈥
De Vries will work with students in many different ways during her time at OHIO, including answering questions and having discussions after the lecture, and meetings with I-Arts graduate students.
鈥淭his extended time-frame, with different types of interactions, is a special treatment that will allow for deeper conversations into research content and methods,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 am looking forward to learning what the seminar students are working on and how they are integrating feminist and gendered analysis into their projects.鈥
Charles Buchanan Ph.D., associate professor of Interdisciplinary Arts at OHIO, said he first became familiar with De Vries鈥 book, "Caterina Sforza and the Art of Appearances: Gender, Art, and Culture in Early Modern Italy," when teaching Renaissance art history.
鈥淪he鈥檚 an expert in archival work,鈥 Buchanan said. 鈥淪o, I would say that she would be modeling that type of scholarship for students, some of them will be interested in it and will actually do archival work themselves on their dissertations.鈥
Buchanan explained that I-Arts is a very fluid study and lets students determine their own paths.
鈥淚 hope that 91探花 students will be interested in learning more about Early Modern art history,鈥 De Vries said. 鈥淧erhaps more importantly, I would like to convey to students how research can develop in unpredictable 鈥 yet very productive 鈥 ways if you have an open mind and willingness to explore beyond the usual disciplinary boundaries.鈥
De Vries spoke to the importance of exchanging ideas within scholarly research and said all scholarship has elements of collaboration.
鈥淪cholars build on the research of previous scholars and try out new ideas and seek feedback in the classroom and at conferences,鈥 she said. 鈥淎t every stage, these informal and formal interactions 鈥 really, collaborations 鈥 can provide unexpected ideas that improve the arguments or lead you in a different direction.鈥