Opendata, web and dolomites

COPAST SIGNED

The Colours of the Past in Victorian England

Total Cost €

0

EC-Contrib. €

0

Partnership

0

Views

0

 COPAST project word cloud

Explore the words cloud of the COPAST project. It provides you a very rough idea of what is the project "COPAST" about.

revolution    materiality    emulate    dyes    industry    supposedly    coal    chemical    greek    works    antiquity    shed    middle    context    colours    charged    light    mainly    stripped    gothic    dyeing    imperatives    victorian    copast    entitled    organic    colour    ideological    she    literature    tar    painters    medieval    science    crafts    arts    avant    polychromy    century    chromatic    retrieve    aniline    texts    england    culture    william    morris    pigments    literary    economic    textile    garde    expanding    devised    committed    ribeyrol    circle    revivals    politically    point    contrast    unsettled    recipe    half    turning    terminology    1837    ancient    dr    artists    hellenic    synthetic    had    industrialized    modern    poets    close    material    artistic    radically    discoveries    books    pigment    hues    scientific    age    certain    innovative    ideologically    writers    1901    reception    history    symbolic    19th    ages   

Project "COPAST" data sheet

The following table provides information about the project.

Coordinator
THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD 

Organization address
address: WELLINGTON SQUARE UNIVERSITY OFFICES
city: OXFORD
postcode: OX1 2JD
website: www.ox.ac.uk

contact info
title: n.a.
name: n.a.
surname: n.a.
function: n.a.
email: n.a.
telephone: n.a.
fax: n.a.

 Coordinator Country United Kingdom [UK]
 Total cost 195˙454 €
 EC max contribution 195˙454 € (100%)
 Programme 1. H2020-EU.1.3.2. (Nurturing excellence by means of cross-border and cross-sector mobility)
 Code Call H2020-MSCA-IF-2014
 Funding Scheme MSCA-IF-EF-ST
 Starting year 2016
 Duration (year-month-day) from 2016-03-01   to  2018-02-28

 Partnership

Take a look of project's partnership.

# participants  country  role  EC contrib. [€] 
1    THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD UK (OXFORD) coordinator 195˙454.00

Map

 Project objective

This project entitled “The Colours of the Past in Victorian England” (COPAST) aims to analyse the reception of the chromatic material culture of Antiquity and the Middle Ages in the works of writers and painters from William Morris’s close circle. These politically-committed poets and artists looked towards the ideologically-charged colours of Hellenic and medieval arts and crafts, in order to retrieve and emulate supposedly more meaningful hues and dyeing processes which they believed modern science and economic imperatives had stripped of their symbolic and artistic value. The Victorian age (1837-1901) was indeed a turning point in terms of scientific discoveries of new chemical colours, including coal-tar based synthetic dyes. Dr. Ribeyrol will investigate ideological approaches to ancient polychromy in the context of the Greek and Gothic Revivals which affected industrialized England in the second half of the 19th century. Using close analysis of art works, literary texts and pigment recipe books, she will contrast these ancient hues with the new chemical aniline dyes which were mainly devised for the expanding textile industry. This innovative focus on chromatic materiality in the field of Victorian art history and literature will enable her to shed light on the artistic impact of this colour revolution which radically unsettled the way certain avant-garde Victorian writers and artists related to chromatic terminology and used traditional, organic pigments.

 Publications

year authors and title journal last update
List of publications.
2018 Charlotte Ribeyrol
‘Do we all see colour in the same way ?’
published pages: , ISSN: , DOI:
OXPLORE 2019-06-17
2016 Charlotte Ribeyrol and Philippe Walter
“ ‘A magic web with colours gay’: W.H. Hunt’s chromatic nostalgia’
published pages: pp.19-46, ISSN: , DOI:
The Colours of the Past in Victorian England 2019-06-17
2018 Charlotte Ribeyrol
John Singer Sargent and the fin de siècle Culture of Mauve
published pages: 1-21, ISSN: 1471-4787, DOI: 10.1080/14714787.2018.1447992
Visual Culture in Britain 3 issues a year 2019-06-17
2017 Charlotte Ribeyrol
‘From Galatea to Tanagra: Victorian translations of the controversial colours of Greek sculpture’
published pages: pp.175-190, ISSN: , DOI:
Hellenomania 2019-06-17
2017 Charlotte Ribeyrol
‘Hellenic utopias: Walter Pater and Pausanias’
published pages: pp.201-218, ISSN: , DOI:
Pater the Classicist: Classical Scholarship, Reception, and Aestheticism 2019-06-17
2016 Charlotte Ribeyrol
Review of Sara Lyons’s Algernon Swinburne and Walter Pater: Victorian Aestheticism, Doubt and Secularisation
published pages: , ISSN: , DOI:
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens 2019-06-17

Are you the coordinator (or a participant) of this project? Plaese send me more information about the "COPAST" project.

For instance: the website url (it has not provided by EU-opendata yet), the logo, a more detailed description of the project (in plain text as a rtf file or a word file), some pictures (as picture files, not embedded into any word file), twitter account, linkedin page, etc.

Send me an  email (fabio@fabiodisconzi.com) and I put them in your project's page as son as possible.

Thanks. And then put a link of this page into your project's website.

The information about "COPAST" are provided by the European Opendata Portal: CORDIS opendata.

More projects from the same programme (H2020-EU.1.3.2.)

DNANanoProbes (2019)

Design of light-harvesting DNA-nanoprobes with ratiometric signal amplification for fluorescence imaging of live cells.

Read More  

IRF4 Degradation (2019)

Using a novel protein degradation approach to uncover IRF4-regulated genes in plasma cells

Read More  

signalling dynamics (2020)

Bridging biophysics and cell biology: The role of G protein-coupled receptor conformations in signalling

Read More