Overview
The Courtauld has received a Getty Connecting Art Histories grant supporting the Mongol Connections research initiative led by Professor Sussan Babaie.
Mongol Connections is a travelling seminar that runs alongside a collaborative exhibition at The Royal Academy of Arts (2027) with Professor Babaie in partnership with Professor Shane McCausland at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and Dr. Adrian Locke at the Royal Academy of Arts (RA).
Mongol Connections approaches histories of the arts of the Mongol era (13-14th centuries) as intersecting, connecting, and competing histories of objects, artists, and technologies, across the Eurasian expanse of the Great Mongol State. The seminars will bring together scholars, conservators, archaeologists, and cultural heritage professionals from Mongolia, East, West and Central Asia with leading subject specialists from the U.S. and Europe. The traveling network will convene in Mongolia (2025), Uzbekistan (2026) and the United Kingdom (2027), with the programme to include study of archaeological sites and objects along with scholarly presentations at each area’s leading academic institutions. The travelling seminar will create a network of researchers of all career stages from multiple localities along the Mongol routes, to generate new collaborative and interdisciplinary research.
The Getty grant has also made possible the addition of a Postdoctoral Fellow at The Courtauld who will be project managing with Professor Babaie and will conduct research and teaching at The Courtauld for the duration of the grant, from 2024 to 2027.
This project is made possible with support from Getty through its Connecting Art Histories initiative.
Faculty
Call For Applications: Mongol Connections
We invite applications from early career (post-doctoral) and advanced doctoral levels for a three-year (2025-2027) travelling seminar project entitled Mongol Connections. Mongol Connections is made possible with support from Getty through its Connecting Art Histories initiative. We are seeking to develop a collaborative network of researchers and scholars in Art History and sister fields—anthropology, history, archaeology, among others—at different early career stages, to foster new connections between scholars across national and disciplinary boundaries, to stimulate and contribute to the burgeoning of a field in scholarship.
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