formularioRDF
The itinerary <em>TITULORECORRIDO</em> has been successfully created. Now you can add in works from the Collection browser
<em>TITULOOBRA</em> added to <em>TITULORECORRIDO</em> itinerary

Academic Chair

Cátedra del Prado Conferences
The Artist as an Art Historian

Maria Stavrinaki

Thursdays November 5, 12, 19 and 26, 2026

It has been said that the first ever art historian was an artist.  It is true that, in 16th C. Florence, Italian painter and architect Vasari did not limit himself to writing the Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects of the Italian Renaissance; he also authored the Libro de’Disegni, knowledgably and descriptively incorporating masterful drawings in the demonstrative device. Time passed, and in the Royal Academies it was yet again the artists themselves who most often addressed the art of the past and wrote about it.  Equally, painters, among them Velasquez, assembled collections the likes of which we can see today at the Prado. But it was always more about defining the rules, not about making history. What happened, then, in the 20th C., when art proper became the subject matter of a historical narrative? And when the space-time scale of this narrative was stretched out, until it encompassed the world and time as we’ve known it since prehistory? What happened when the material facts of history became easier to reproduce — and thus impossible to constrain — within the boundaries of everlasting categories?

Beginning with historical avant-gardes and until now, artists have essentially responded by appropriating new disciplines as they expand, both in terms of space and time. They take over the new discipline’s images and words, its visual devices, its material and rhetorical technologies, its habitus, mediums and discourse. Above all, artists, by increasingly blurring the differences between their works and their practices of history, do not seek to recover that which historians have deprived them of, or to consolidate their autonomy; rather they attempt to increase and intensify their own resources. Artists think their means in connection with their techniques of knowledge and with their political ideas.

These four conferences will combine a transhistorical theoretical approach with specific case studies. We will attempt to rethink the relationship between art and the history of art after 1945, as well as that of Modernism and Postmodernism. We will ponder upon the institutional devices that make up the history of art. We will strive to understand the conflicting uses of the past as well as the new historicities fashioned after World War II. Addressing these issues will help us find the answers to the following questions: could it be that the critical work of history of art might also tell us that we have been too quick to bury formalism? Could it be that the artist, as historian of art, will effectively be able to help us understand that form, medium and ideological criticism are, in truth, inseparable?

Sponsored by:
Fundación Notariado
Sign up
The registration period for the lecture programme of XIV Cátedra (14th Chair of the Prado Museum) is from September 14th to October 25th 2026. Registration must be made through the online form available on the MNP website during the indicated period. Applications will be dealt with on a first-come, first-served basis. A certificate of attendance will be awarded at the end of the course (after confirming attendance at the four lectures)
Schedule
The times shown in the programme correspond to Spanish mainland time
Recipients
University students, researchers, professionals and the general public
Organization
Museo Nacional del Prado
In- person and online attendance
Participants can register online for both the conferences and the colloquium. They can be attended live via Zoom. However, the seminar sessions will be held on-site only
Contact
centro.estudios@museodelprado.es
Language
French. Simultaneous interpretation into Spanish available

Program

2026

Nov
5
18.30 hThe Artist as an Art Historian: From the Norm to Global

This first conference concentrates on some key moments in the evolution of the discourse on the past of art, from the Renaissance to World War II. The aim of this quick journey spanning Vasari, the Royal Academies, artists, and art historians of the 19th C. and the first years of Modernism, is to grasp the new singularity of the figure of the artist as an art historian that surfaces after 1945 and to propose a new charting of cases.

Nov
12
18.30 hThe Post-Historians of Art

Unlike the theory upholding “the end of art,” Post-History is built to last.

In terms of art, Post-History totally blurs boundaries between art and history. What kind of discursive and visual appropriation techniques do Modernist painter Ad Reinhart and Postmodernist Appropriationists Sherrie Levine and Louise Lawler use?  What do these uses tell us about the historicities taking shape in a world where everything is constantly present?

Nov
19
18.30 hThe Inventors of the Art of the Past

Modernism, far from being a tabula rasa, has engaged complex and dense relations with the past of art — sometimes a haven, other times the cradle of utopia and novelty. In taking over the field of the history of art, artists added additional reflexivity to their relationship with the past. What did Asger Jorn do with the “humanist discipline” that was the history of art? And Frank Stella, how did he deal with his cardinal stylistic categories — such as the Baroque? Finally, how did Sigmar Polke turn the entire history of art into the subject matter of his art?

Nov
26
18.30 hThe Museographers

In the 17th C., Cassiano dal Pozzo’s paper museums, David Tenier’s Teatrum Pictorium, and other collections put together by artists on behalf of different kings and countries represented the two poles within which the relationships of artists with the museum is made. The museum may be a fixed location or a cognitive model, a movable piece; it may be a closed space or an entity multiplied on a global scale, a medium in its own right, or an imperceptible object of interrogation: in any case, the museum will be the final issue we will take up, analyzing practices engaged in, among others by Lina Bo Bardi and Marcel Broodthaers, Art & Language, Andrea Fraser, Fred Wilson and Juan Muñoz.

Activity

Maria Stavrinaki

Maria Stavrinaki
Maria Stavrinaki 

As of 2023, Maria Stavrinaki is professor of History of Contemporary Art at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, after years of teaching at the Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University in France. Professor Stavrinaki has also researched and taught, among others, at the Free University of Berlin, at the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study, at the Clark Art Institute, and at Columbia University’s Italian Academy. Her research activities have focused primarily on the historical Avant-Gardes and modernity at large: she analyzes the interrelationships between artistic practices, conceptions of time and history, epistemologies, and political ideologies. She has published, among others, the following works: DadaPresentism.AnEssayonArt andHistory (Stanford University Press, 2016), Contraindreà la liberté. Carl Einstein, lesavant gardes,l’histoire (2018, Mamco), Saisis par lapréhistoire.Enquêtesurl’artet le temps desModernes (Presses du Réel, 1919, translated into English as Transfixed by Prehistory. An Inquiry into Art and Time, Zone Books, 2022, and into Spanish as Atrapados por la prehistoria, soon to be published by Sans Soleil Ediciones). Professor Stavrinaki has codirected two major exhibitions: Préhistoire. Une énigme moderne (Centre Pompidou, Paris, 2019) and L´âge atomique. Les artistes à l’épreuve de l’histoire (MAM, Paris, 2024).

Up