Using a Venetian case study from the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, this article demonstrates how archival research enables us to trace the spatial life of artworks. The Revolutionary and Napoleonic policy of the suppression of religious corporations, followed by the appropriation of their patrimony, as well as the widespread looting of artworks, led to the centralisation of patrimony in newly established museums in the capitals of the Empire and its satellite kingdoms. This made the geographical and contextual displacement, transnationalisation, and change in the value of artworks inevitable
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Most digital mapping in art history today divides the research process from the visualization aspect...
International audienceMemory Places and Spatial Invention in 13th and 14th Century Italian Painting....
Introducing the 'Journal of Contemporary History' Special Issue ‘The Restitution of Looted Art in th...
This contribution examines the social, material, and epistemic practices of historians and their cou...
The use of cartography in art history is less than common. Because of its link to the old artistic g...
This contribution examines the social, material, and epistemic practices of historians and their cou...
After having been valued mainly as conveyors of visual information, prints in nineteenth-century wes...
Computational analysis of the potential historical professional networks inferred from surviving pri...
It has been more than 20 years since the raids on the premises at the Geneva Freeport were linked to...
Introducing the Journal of Contemporary History Special Issue ‘The Restitution of Looted Art in the ...
This article presents a project launched by a multidisciplinary team based at Purdue University in p...
abstract: From inception, the earliest museums in Europe were a haven for artifacts, many of which r...
This article takes as its point of departure Sudhir Hazareesingh’s research on the “cult of seditiou...
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Most digital mapping in art history today divides the research process from the visualization aspect...
International audienceMemory Places and Spatial Invention in 13th and 14th Century Italian Painting....
Introducing the 'Journal of Contemporary History' Special Issue ‘The Restitution of Looted Art in th...
This contribution examines the social, material, and epistemic practices of historians and their cou...
The use of cartography in art history is less than common. Because of its link to the old artistic g...
This contribution examines the social, material, and epistemic practices of historians and their cou...
After having been valued mainly as conveyors of visual information, prints in nineteenth-century wes...
Computational analysis of the potential historical professional networks inferred from surviving pri...
It has been more than 20 years since the raids on the premises at the Geneva Freeport were linked to...
Introducing the Journal of Contemporary History Special Issue ‘The Restitution of Looted Art in the ...
This article presents a project launched by a multidisciplinary team based at Purdue University in p...
abstract: From inception, the earliest museums in Europe were a haven for artifacts, many of which r...
This article takes as its point of departure Sudhir Hazareesingh’s research on the “cult of seditiou...
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Provenance – an object’s history of ownership – is a historically contingent concept and research pr...
Most digital mapping in art history today divides the research process from the visualization aspect...