
Date
- May 20 - 21 2023
- Expired!
Time
UTC+1- 8:00 am - 6:00 pm
Local Time
- Timezone: America/New_York
- Date: May 20 - 21 2023
- Time: 3:00 am - 1:00 pm
Cost
- £150.00
Location
Other Locations
Online
Organiser

London Arts-Based Research Centre
Website
https://jungian.directory/related_organisation/london-arts-based-research-centre/Divine Art: Iconography, Ekphrasis and Archaeology
How can religious artefacts shape our understanding of the divine? What type of ekphrastic responses may be generated between different mediums of religious art? What factors come into play in the making and development of iconography and other art of religious significance? How can archaeological findings tell us more about the history of the sacred in our psyche?
Ever since the dawn of time, people have created and developed ritualistic relationships with artefacts in order to help them understand, express, and communicate with the divine. From jewellery to iconography, music, garments, sculptures, architecture, incense, and more, these objects of art have encapsulated and preserved religious symbols and traditions over many generations.
This conference aims to bring together researchers, postgraduate students, creatives, and scholars interested in the role that religious artefacts can play in our perception of the sacred. In this interdisciplinary forum, we will be sharing ideas relating to all aspects of art and the divine, especially regarding matter, materials, and materiality in religious cultures throughout the ages. Art is associated with religious traditions around the world, and objects (such as icons, sculptures, jewellery, garments, architecture, etc.) have the capacity to depict and describe archetypal, spiritual concepts and religious content through matter. We would like to explore topics revolving around the connection between religions and material culture, especially in observing the relationships between people and sacred artefacts, whether these relationships are of spiritual, informative, creative, scientific or ekphrastic nature.
Ekphrasis, or the translation of art between mediums, is also an area we would like to unpack and further examine in the context of art with religious significance[1]. The ekphrastic poet, for example, may have an emotional engagement with, or a direct address to, or symbolically interpret, personify, or add dimensions to a work of art through writing poetry.
Registration fees:
- In-person participation: £150 for two days (including refreshments). Please let us know of any access needs or dietary restrictions.
- Virtual participation: £90 for the two conference days
The event is finished.
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