This website uses cookies

Royal Danish Academy – Architecture, Design, Conservation uses cookies to create a better user experience, to interact with social platforms and for anonymised statistics of traffic on our website.

Social media cookies enable us to interact with well-known social media platforms and content. This may be for statistical or marketing reasons.
Neccesary to display YouTube videos
Neccesary to display Vimeo videos
Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
Is used for UI states

Window Gazes and World Views – from Ancient to Modern Times

Date
20.03.2024
Time
16:00 - 17:00
Address
Royal Danish Academy
Auditorium 5
Danneskiold-Samsøes Allé 53 Copenhagen K
Price
Free

The Royal Danish Academy – Architecture, Design, Conservation presents an open lecture by Prof. Dr. Daniel Jütte (New York University). 
This lecture will focus on what might at first seem a rather unlikely topic of historical study: the view from the window. Looking out the window - a practice that might now seem monotonous and even trivial - was a favorite pastime in premodern times. It is also a motif with rich connotations in the history of European art, including Danish art.

Caspar D. Friedrich, Woman at the Window, 1822. ©Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Nationalgalerie/J.P. Anders Public Domain Mark 1.0

The lecture will begin with the ancient Near East and ends with the modern West, linked through the story of medieval and early modern Europe, where the practice of looking out the window became a particularly contested issue and sparked larger questions about the visual perception of the world. An interdisciplinary exploration of this type has the potential to open, quite literally, a new window on our understanding of the changing ways in which human societies have viewed the natural and built environment that surrounds them.

The lecture is in English.