Paradise found: Romanesque tombs in Western Europe, c. 1000- c. 1150
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<p>The platform and log in details will be sent to all registered attendees at least 48 hours before the event. Please note that registration closes 30 minutes before the event start time.Important: If you have previously ever opted out of Eventbrite emails you will not receive the log in details for this event after registering. Please email researchforum@courtauld.ac.uk if you do not receive a confirmation email. Please check your junk folder before emailing us just in case it is in there.Although the study of mediaeval tomb sculpture has been a fairly active field in the past decades, it has nearly exclusively focused on the much richer (at least in numbers) Gothic era. Most forays in the Romanesque have been driven by a teleological drive to find the supposed precursors of the Gothic monuments.This lecture will aim to shed a different light on Romanesque tombs which bear witness to a period of intense experimentation and exploration, reflecting both a new desire for visibility and a very fluid and ever changing theological conception of the afterlife.Dr Xavier Dectot started his career at the Musée de Cluny in Paris, where he spent ten years as curator of Sculptures, before moving on to become the founding director of the Louvre Lens, a branch museum of the Louvre in Northern France, then keeper and Art and Design at National Museums Scotland and, currently, director of the future Orientalist Museum in Doha, Qatar. An honorary reader at the University of St Andrews, he is the author of numerous articles and books, amongst which are Pierres tombales médiévales, sculptures de l’au-delà (Remparts, 2006) and Les Tombeaux des familles royales de la péninsule ibérique au Moyen Âge (Brepols, 2009).</p>