Episodit
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This week we're finally getting around to discussing all things Bridgerton, from the images and objects that make up the show's material cultures, to its sense of historical accuracy (or lack thereof!), and how it represents a range of identities both historical and contempory. We also talk about Regencycore, and both Caroline and Serena share their experiences of Bridgerton-themed parties. Enjoy!
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This week, we're joined by Dr Danielle Thom and Dr Lucie Whitmore to talk about their exhibition, London Making Now, currently on show at the Museum of London. We chat about how the show explores London's diverse histories of craft, industry and making, and the exciting links to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that many of the objects on display conjure. Catch the show before it closes on the 24th of February!
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Puuttuva jakso?
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Join us this week for a very special festive edition of the Travelling Sisterhood of Art Historians podcast. First up, we (drunkenly) talk about some wintery images and objects, Christmas traditions, and our love for the Muppets' Christmas Carol. Then we're joined by our brilliant guests Sarah Coomer and Dr Jane Suzanne Carroll, who discuss why Christmas is the perfect time for a ghost story, and what looking at children's books can tell us about material culture, histories of consumption, and Christmas gifts.
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In this very special episode we're joined by the brilliant Isabella Rosner, the host of one of our favourite podcasts, Sew What?, to discuss our favourite historical boxes. Expect lots of innuendo, plus discussion of issues like craft and amateurism, historical accuracy (we don't believe in it), colonialism, and objects as potentially unstable source materials for our understanding of the past.
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It’s our last episode of the series! Join us as we chat about all kinds of objects made from wood. Our guest is Alyce Perry Englund, Associate Curator of American Decorative Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. We talk about paying attention to our surroundings during lockdown, our shared love of antiquing, & generally enthuse about old furniture!
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Join us this week as we discuss all things stone with the brilliant Dr Cora Gilroy-Ware. We chat about stylistic labels like neoclassicism, materials such as marble, and the relationship between classicising sculpture and race.
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This episode we’re talking about paint with the brilliant Kate Nichols, who tells us about how paint figures in her current project, a global history of Victorian art. We chat about what paint is and what it is made from, alongside some broader contexts such as portability, gender, messiness, animal-human relations, and global trade.
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This episode, we're talking about a material that has been at the heart of a range of art historical practices for hundreds of years - paper! Join us as we discuss paper and its manifestations in the form of collages, paper cuts, inkblots, prints, and as labels. Our guest this week is Professor Catriona Macleod, who gives us a tantalising glimpse at her current project on the Romantic Scrap.
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Join us this week as we explore the weird and wonderful world of wax with our guest, Professor Laura Engel. We talk about everything from the uncanny nature of wax, its resemblance to human flesh, celebrity, and of course, wax model-maker extraordinaire, Marie Tussaud!
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This week we explore the wonderful world of glass in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Our guest is Dr Kit Maxwell, Curator of European Glass at The Corning Museum of Glass, and we discuss everything from shop windows, graffitied surfaces, technological processes, politeness, race, and consumable goods.
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Join us this week as we discuss what ceramics tell us about political dramas, national mourning, ideas of the home, and childhood. Our guest is Professor Matt Smith, whose ceramics have been displayed at the Pitt Rivers Museum, the Potteries Museum & Art Gallery, and the V&A.
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This week, we talk Marie Antoinette's fabric samples, bog bodies and patchwork-stealing criminals. Join us in conversation with our guest this week, Isabella Rosner, to hear more about her wonderful work on Quaker women's needlework...
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The trailer episode for the Travelling Sisterhood of Art Historians podcast. Join us for a chat around our name, logo and what we'll be discussing in series one...