ASECS 2017

I am chairing the Historians of Eighteenth-Century Art and Architecture Anne Schroder New Scholars’ Session at the annual American Society of Eighteenth-Century Studies conference in 2017, which will be held in Minneapolis, MN. If you are or know a graduate student or recently-finished grad student working on art, architecture, or visual/material culture of the long eighteenth century (1680-1815) — any region or country! — please encourage them to apply/please apply.

Proposals can be sent to j.fripp at tcu.edu by September 15, 2016.

Kimbell Lecture: Wednesday, October 7th, 2015

François-André Vincent, Caricature of the Painter Pierre-Charles Jombert,

François-André Vincent, Caricature of the Painter Pierre-Charles Jombert, 1773-1775, black chalk, Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

I’ll be giving an “Art in Context” lecture at the Kimbell Museum of Art on October 7th, 2015, at 12:30 pm.

From the Kimbell’s site:

Forming Friendships in the Eighteenth Century: Studying Abroad at the French Academy in Rome
Jessica L. Fripp, assistant professor of art history, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth
Wednesday, October 7, 2015 – 12:30 PM

About this lecture: Winning the Prix de Rome was the capstone in an aspiring artist’s career in eighteenth-century France. This talk examines the history of the French Academy in Rome as a site for social networking and forming friendships with other young artists from all over Europe. Jessica Fripp will discuss a group of artists who were in Rome between roughly 1771 and 1774, focusing on a large group of caricatures and paintings by the French painter François-André Vincent (1746–1816).

Free; no reservations required.  Seating is limited.

Kahn Auditorium

Also to note, my colleague at TCU, Babette Bohn, will be speaking in the same series on December 2nd, “Color is the keyboard”: Drawing with Color in Early Modern Italy.”

CFP: “Satirical Images: Between Sociability, Animosity, and Entertainment”

I’m happy to announce I’ll be co-chairing a panel with Kathryn Desplanque at the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Annual Conference in Pittsburgh, March 31-April 3, 2016. The full list of panels is here.

If you would like to submit a proposal, please email an abstract to kathryn.desplanque@duke.edu and j.fripp@tcu.edu by September 15th, 2015.

“Satirical Images: Between Sociability, Animosity, and Entertainment” Kathryn Desplanque and Jessica Fripp, (Desplanque) AAHVS, Duke University, PO Box 90766, Duham, NC 27708; (Fripp) TCU School of Art, PO Box 298000, Ft Worth, TX, 76129;  E-mail: kathryn.desplanque@duke.edu AND j.fripp@tcu.edu

The use of graphic satire proliferated in the eighteenth century, from the caricature and portrait charges of the Grand Tour (Pier Leoni Ghezzi, Thomas Patch, François-André Vincent), to political caricature on the continent and in England, to the verbal-visual puns of broadside imagery and street cries series, to the complex allegories that criticized and supported the French Revolution. These different genres of graphic satire are difficult to reconcile because they vary widely in tone: some are oppositional, others are sociable, and others still seemed destined primarily for entertainment. Scholarship on eighteenth-century graphic satire has privileged oppositional and political imagery, neglecting the prolific sociable, amusing, and cultural caricatures whose imagery and tone are often more challenging to decode. Recent scholarship, such as The Efflorescence of Caricature (2010), The Saint-Aubin ‘Livre de caricatures’ (2012), L’Art de la caricature (2014), and Ann Bermingham’s 2015 Clifford Lecture, “Coffee-House Characters and British Visual Humor at the End of the Eighteenth Century,” has begun to bridge persistent gaps in the study of graphic satire, putting into conversation formerly disparate genres of satirical imagery. This panel seeks papers that nuance, overturn, or refine the categories applied to graphic satire—oppositional versus entertaining; political versus cultural; sociable versus slanderous. Possible topics might include, but are not limited to: satire (especially political satire) in the light of sociability; how the circulation of these images through commercial or social exchange relates to their format, including tone or medium; and how satire informs our understanding of relationships between individuals and groups, such as friendship, enmity, rivalry, or camaraderie.

Some notes on the blog

I hope to use this space to post occasional updates about my research and teaching assignments, so watch this space.

In the meantime, I’m very excited that I will soon be able to see the Caillebotte exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, which opens June 28th. It will be traveling to the Kimbell in the fall, just in time for me to make use of it in both of my courses next semester.