Summer School on campus

Bright Lights and Dark Visions: Nordic Art from the Danish Golden Age to Edvard Munch

Monday 4 July – Friday 8 July

i Peder Balke, Stormy sea, 1870, National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo, Image: Wikimedia Commons

Course 19 – Summer School on campus

Monday 4 July – Friday 8 July

MaryAnne Stevens
£585

Course description

The call for political independence and defined national identities marked the development of visual, literary and musical cultures in the Nordic countries during the long nineteenth century.  Artists sought to articulate unique national characteristics, as in the work of painters of the so–called Danish ‘Golden Age’, but were also confronted with constant challenges from international movements– from Naturalism to Symbolism, Expressionism and early Abstraction. This course considers how the national voices both proclaimed their specific visual identities and accommodated themselves to foreign visual manifestations as artists sought to capture the northern light and the region’s expansive terrains of untrammelled nature, complementing the music of Grieg and Sibelius and the writings of Ibsen. Sometimes, this accommodation reinforced the potency of artists’ distinct national visual languages, as seen in Peder Balke’s ghostly visions of snow–covered, mist wrapped landscapes or Carl Larsson’s scenes of quintessential Swedish domestic life. In others, it elicited powerful individual syntheses, as in the work of Vilhelm Hammershøi, Nikolai Astrup, August Strindberg and Edvard Munch. All, however, were aware of the Nordic region’s peculiar qualities of the brilliant clarity and haunting beauty of the light and the brooding darkness not just of winter but also of the individual soul.

Lecturer’s biography

MaryAnne Stevens is a historian of 18th- to early 20th-century art, with particular research interests in the arts of Britain, France and the Nordic countries.  Following a career in the academic world, she joined London’s Royal Academy of Arts as Director of Academic Affairs, establishing the Learning Department and Architecture Programme, professionalising the Collections, Library and Archive and serving as Acting Secretary (2005-2008).  She curated numerous major exhibitions, including Vilhelm Hammershøi: The Poetry of Silence (2008).  An independent art historian and curator since 2013, she curated Nikolai Astrup: Painting Norway (London, Oslo, Emden, 2016-2017), and Nikolai Astrup: Visions of Norway (Clark Art Institute, Williamstown MA, Bergen, Stockholm 2021 – 22), Alfred Sisley (Greenwich CT and Aix-en-Provence, 2017), and is preparing a major exhibition reviewing the emergence of avant-gardes in Europe 1886 – c. 1914 for the National Gallery, London and the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow in 2023 – 24.

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4 Jul - 8 Jul 2022

Monday 4 July – Friday 8 July

Vernon Square 

In July, Summer School returns to Vernon Square after a hiatus of two years!  Morning classroom sessions will once again be complemented by object-focused study in London’s museums, galleries, printrooms and churches in the afternoons.

We look forward to the particular sociability that teaching in person brings – not only in the classroom itself, and during visits, but also during shared morning refreshments and drinks receptions.

The recently re-opened Courtauld Gallery will host post-graduate talks introducing elements of the collections, will feature as a teaching resource in many of our  courses, and will be the splendid venue of one of our four Thursday evening Summer School parties.

Summer School 2022 includes a framework programme to which all students across the month are invited and which features a plenary lecture, a music recital, a film screening and an ‘in conversation with’ debate.

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