Sites of Vital Materiality: Art History’s Apiaries and Ecologies of Everyday Life

Roberdeau, Wood. 2014. 'Sites of Vital Materiality: Art History’s Apiaries and Ecologies of Everyday Life'. In: Art History and Ecology: Association of Art Historians 40th Anniversary Conference. Royal College of Art, United Kingdom 10 - 12 April 2014. [Conference or Workshop Item]

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Abstract or Description

Taking the current crisis of the British honeybee’s survival as a point of departure, this paper considers the coded implications, organic materiality, and medium-specificity of honey by firstly looking to a number of historical works that have treated it metonymically or allegorically, and then to selected modern and contemporary works that indicate a shift towards its own ontology and ‘sculptural’ qualities with regards to everyday ethics and ‘green aesthetics’. From Piero di Cosimo’s The Discovery of Honey by Bacchus (1462-1561) to Joseph Beuys’s Honey Pump at the Workplace (1977) and beyond, art historical humanism will be juxtaposed with current theories pertaining to ‘ecology without Nature’; that is, by considering philosophical post-humanism alongside additional visual and literary works, the aim is to bring the fields of art history and ecology into closer proximity so as to conceptualize the act of cross-pollination.

Item Type:

Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Related URLs:

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Sociology > Kitchen Research Unit
Visual Cultures

Dates:

DateEvent
10 April 2014Completed

Event Location:

Royal College of Art, United Kingdom

Date range:

10 - 12 April 2014

Item ID:

35619

Date Deposited:

15 Mar 2024 15:35

Last Modified:

15 Mar 2024 15:35

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/35619

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