top of page

Coins and Visual Media: Influences, Connections and Intersections - 13/06/2019, Warwick (England)



This interdisciplinary colloquium aims to gather contributions from scholars specialised in the study of different cultures (Greek, Celtic, Roman, Ancient Near East, Mediaeval) to compare examples of visual culture adopted on coins with imagery used on other media, both on monumental objects (sculpture, relief and architectural decoration) and on small objects of public as well as of private use (silverware, terracotta lamps, tiles, amphorae, tokens). The research questions addressed in the colloquium will try to gain a better insight into the processes of development and transformation of coin imagery and into the dynamics of transfer and re-adaptation of patterns of visual representation from coins to other media, and vice-versa. Special emphasis will be given to interdisciplinary case studies on the reuse of the same pattern in different socio-cultural contexts (e.g. Celtic and Roman, Roman and Persian, pagan and Christian) and in different periods (e.g. ancient and mediaeval), also looking at examples of later reception of classical models (e.g. Renaissance studies).

FECHA /DATE/DATA: 13/06/2019

ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: The Department of Classics and Ancient History of the University of Warwick

INFO: web - D.Calomino@warwick.ac.uk

INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE: Aquí/here/qui Deadline: 03/06/2019

PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA:


Thursday 13th June - Warwick University Campus, Oculus Building: OC0.01


10:00 am

Dr Dario Calomino - Department of Classics and Ancient History, Warwick University

Welcome and introduction


Royal and Imperial Imagery between the Near East and the Roman World


10:15 am

Dr Vesta Sarkhosh Curtis - Curator of Middle Easters Coins, Departments of Coins and Medals, British Museum

The Ancient Persian Kings: Royal Titles, Crowns and Divine Imagery


10:50 am

David Swan - PhD Candidate, Department of Classics and Ancient History, Warwick University

The Love of the Monstrous: How Celtic Coin Iconography Encouraged the Import of Classical Monsters to Britain


11:25 am

Dr Richard Hobbs - Weston Curator of Roman Britain, Departments of Britain, Europe and Prehistory, British Museum

Coins, Kingship and Gold and Silver Plate in Rome and Persia


12:00pm - Lunch Break


‘Functional’ Imagery in Greece and Rome’s Everyday Life

1:30 pm

Prof Mariangela Puglisi - Associate Professor in Classical Numismatics, University of Messina

Public and Private Iconography: Differences and Analogies between Coinages and Instrumentum Domesticum in Greek Sicily

2:05 pm

Prof Clare Rowan - Department of Classics and Ancient History, Warwick University

A Community of Images? Coins, Tokens and Everyday Objects in the Roman Empire

Sacred and Ceremonial Visual Language in the Roman East

2:40 pm

Prof Zahra Newby - Department of Classics and Ancient History, Warwick University

Celebrating Festivals in the Public Imagery of Perge in Pamphylia

3:15 pm - Coffee Break

3:40 pm

Dr Marguerite Spoerri Butcher - Research Fellow, Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

Miletus and the Sanctuary of Didyma: Coin Iconography, Architecture and Epigraphy


The Aftermath and Reception of Rome

4:15 pm

Dr Rory Naismith - Lecturer, King’s College London

Imago et Nomen: Representations of Authority and Early Medieval Coinage

4:50 pm

Dr Andrew Burnett - Honorary Professor, Institute of Archaeology, UCL

Coins on Buildings of Quattrocento Lombardy

5.30 pm

Prof Kevin Butcher - Department of Classics and Ancient History, Warwick University

Concluding Remarks and Discussion

categorías / tags / categorie

bottom of page