Emeritus Senior Lecturer
- About
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- Email Address
- j.gash@abdn.ac.uk
- School/Department
- School of Divinity, History, Philosophy & Art History
Biography
John Gash is Senior Lecturer in History of Art and one-time Head of the Department of History of Art. He holds a B.A. and M.A. in History from the University of Oxford, and an M.A. in History of Art from the Courtauld Institute, University of London. He is a specialist in Baroque art with a particular interest in the paintings of Caravaggio and his followers. He has written two books on Caravaggio and many articles and book chapters on Caravaggio and his followers, most recently being involved in a sequence of lectures and conferences on these artists in the National Gallery, London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, and the Musée du Louvre.
- Research
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Research Overview
Core Member of Centre for Early Modern Studies
John Gash is a specialist in Baroque art. He has written widely on aspects of seventeenth and eighteenth- century painting and sculpture in Italy, Malta, France, the Netherlands and Britain. Having published two books and many articles and book chapters on Caravaggio and his Followers, he is currently engaged on a book on Carvaggio's followers, entitled Caravaggesque Problems. A regular contributor of articles and exhibition and book reviews to such scholarly journals as The Burlington Magazine, his latest contribution to the latter is the forthcoming, jointly-authored article on a painting in the collection of Aberdeen University by the eighteenth-century Venetian view-painter, Antonio Canaletto. Gash's involvement in the study of Caravaggism has also led recently to his participation in a sequence of lectures and conferences at the National Gallery, London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, and the Musée du Louvre. In recent years he has also sought to disseminate information and ideas about these artists through television and radio talks and appearances, on the likes of BBC 2, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio Scotland, RTE, Ireland, and ATM and Net TV, Malta, as well as being lead contributor to a film about one of his most influential Caravaggesque discoveries, the Christ displaying his Wounds in the Perth Museum and Art Gallery, Scotland.
Current Research
I am working on a series of articles, book chapters, and book and exhibition reviews on Caravaggio and his followers, with a view to eventually producing a book entitled Caravaggesque Problems, dealing primarily with complex issues of attribution and authorial identity. The next in the sequence will be an article on the early-seventeenth-century Liégeois, Gérard Douffet.
Collaborations
The forthcoming article entitled "Canaletto and his Father in Aberdeen University" for The Burlington Magazine is co-authored with Canaletto specialist, Charles Beddington.
- Teaching
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Teaching Responsibilities
HA 1004, HA 5029, ME 33HT Introduction to Art History
HA 1508 Modern Art
HA2009 Cathedrals to Caravaggio
HA 2509 Making Masterpieces. Six Works in Context [CONVENOR]HA3079 Critical Perspectives in History of Art
HA 3080,HA4080 Caravaggio and his Followers [CONVENOR]
HA 3098, HA4098 Seventeenth-Century Netherlandish Art [CONVENOR]
HA 4302 The Carracci and their School [CONVENOR]HA4588 History of Art Dissertation [CONVENOR]
HA5033 Connoisseurship [CONVENOR]
HC 3031 and HC 3801 Icons 1 & 2
HA3088 and HA408A Fieldwork i & 2
- Publications
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Page 5 of 5 Results 41 to 47 of 47
Caravaggio/non Caravaggio
Contributions to Specialist Publications: Reviews of Books, Films and ArticlesThe Caravaggesque Toothpuller
Others and Outcasts in Early Modern Europe: Picturing the social margins. Nichols, T. (ed.). Ashgate, pp. 133-155, 23 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: ChaptersCaravaggio and Europe
The Burlington Magazine, vol. 148, pp. 56-57Contributions to Journals: ArticlesMario Minniti: Caravaggio's artistic inheritance at Syracuse
The Burlington Magazine, vol. 146, pp. 639-640Contributions to Journals: ArticlesCaravaggio
Chaucer Press, London. 128 pagesBooks and Reports: BooksThe age of Caravaggism - Art in Toulouse and Languedoc from 1590 to 1650
Apollo, vol. 157, pp. 52-54Contributions to Journals: ArticlesNicolas Tournier
Apollo, vol. 155, no. 480, pp. 49-50Contributions to Journals: Articles