Professor Susie Nash

Deborah Loeb Brice Professor of Renaissance Art

I have taught at the 91制片厂 since 1993 specializing in the聽 art of northern Europe in the late medieval and renaissance period. I work on a wide range of聽 panel painting,听 sculpture, textiles, metalwork and illuminated manuscripts from across northern Europe, including Spain. I am particularly interested in the work of art as a physical object, considering its materials, making, condition, conservation history, afterlife and reception, combining evidence from primary sources with the first hand examination of the work itself. Current research projects are focused around the Valois courts of France in the late 14th and early fifteenth century, and include a book ‘Making Lists’ about the Valois brothers Charles V, Louis of Anjou, Jean de Berry and Philip the Bold and their inventories; a study of the Libretto of Louis of Anjou and its biography; the de Limbourgs and their interest in Italian painting; and ongoing work on the monuments at the Chartreuse de Champmol in Dijon, particularly the tombs of the dukes of Burgundy there. I am also working on a book on the Seilern Triptych in the 91制片厂 Collection and on paintings on parchment created as independent objects.


PhD Supervision

Current

  • Jessica Gasson, Woven Complexity: Understanding the textiles represented at the Burgundian Court, c.1420-c.1470 (CHASE funded)
  • The Iconography of the 鈥榁irgin聽 with Fifteen Symbols鈥 (CHASE funded)
  • ,听Croix d鈥橭r at the Valois Courts 鈥 an examination of the presence, perception, and function of metalwork crosses during the reigns of Charles V and Charles VI of France (1360 to 1422). (CHASE funded)
  • Leylim Erenel, Ad usum anglie: English Books of Hours made in Bruges and Ghent 1470-1500

Recently completed

  • , Jan Borreman and Sculptural Practice in the Burgundian Netherlands c. 1479-1520
  • , Female Patroange to the Carthusian Order in the Burgundian Netherlands and Spain in the Fifteenth Century. (CHASE funded)
  • , Patronage, Function and Reception of Altarpieces in Fifteenth-Century Avignon
  • , Patronage of a Prelate: Artistic Provisions for the Religious Foundations of Cardinal Jean Rolin (1408-1483), 2019
  • , Spiritual Provision and Temporal Affirmation: Tombs of the Chevaliers de la Toison d鈥橭r from Philip the Good to Philip the Fair, 2017
  • , Commemorating the Family in Late Medieval Flanders, 2017
  • , Cantebury Cathedral鈥檚 Choir Tapestry: Patronage, Production, History and Display, 2016
  • Anna Koopstra, Inventing Realities, Picturing Salvation: Making, Meaning And Patronage Of The Paintings Of Jean Bellegambe (c.1470-1535/36), 2016
  • , The Chapel of Contador Salda帽a at Santa Clara de Tordesillas: New proposals about the chapel and its role in the fashioning of identity by an early fifteenth-century court converso, 2015
  • Susan L. Green 鈥極 Radix Jesse鈥: The iconography of the Tree of Jesse in Northern Europe in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries,听 2014
  • Samantha Darell, Late Medieval Mother-of Pearl Carvings: Making and Meaning. An Examination of a Material in Context from the Late 14th to the Late 15th Century in France, England and Italy.聽 2013
  • Mayumi Ikeda, The Fust Master: Illuminator of the First Mainz Presses 2010
  • Melena Hope, Painted Chapels and Oratories in the Households of Fifteenth Century France, 2009
  • Douglas Brine, Piety and Purgatory, Wall mounted memorials from the Southern Netherlands, 2006

Research interests

  • Late medieval art of all media in Northern Europe and Spain c.聽1350-1500
  • Materials, their supply, trade, cost, properties and meaning (recently, in particular the materials of tombs, notably black Dinant marble and alabaster)
  • Imagery, agency, and the making of meaning in religious works
  • Sculpture and Sculptural polychromy
  • lnventories at the Courts of France c.聽1360-1422聽(see below, Leverhulme Fellowship)
  • Technical art history
  • The visual historiography of Art History

Leverhulme Senior research Fellow 2016-2018. 鈥楳aking Lists, Inventories and Objects at the Courts of France鈥

Between 2016 and 2018 I was聽 the recipient of a major research fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust, working on聽 a聽 book provisionally entitled 鈥楳aking Lists: Inventories and Objects at the Courts of France鈥. At its heart it is a study of visual culture of the courts of France in the late 14th and early 15th centuries, but seen through the lens of a particular form of 聽written artifact, the detailed inventories of the kings of France and the princes of the blood: these include Charles V (d. 1380), his brothers Jean de Berry (d. 1416), Philip the Bold (d. 1404), and Louis of Anjou (d. 1384), and Charles V鈥檚 son, Charles VI (d. 1422). These men (and it was mostly, if not exclusively, men) amassed vast collections of thousands of precious objects, termed collectively 鈥榡oyaux鈥, which encompassed metalwork, precious jewels, chapel goods and textiles, robes, hats, tapestries, paintings, manuscripts, relics, dog collars, astrolabes, sundials, cameos, and a host of other 鈥榗hoses estranges鈥 like giants鈥 teeth and ostrich eggs. Most have since been lost, and much was dispersed and melted down even within their lifetimes, but recorded in a series of extraordinary, often loquacious, inventories 鈥 far more of them than I had thought at the start (I have discovered several previously unknown ones). 聽聽My research has focused not simply on 飞丑补迟听was described in these inventories 鈥 as fascinating as that is 鈥 but on聽how聽it was described 鈥 in practical and linguistic terms. These inventories were often made聽ad vivam聽and in one case at least, that of Louis of Anjou, 聽dictated by the prince himself. Louis鈥檚 inventory聽 includes nearly 4,000 items and has individual descriptions of its finest objects extending to more than 40 folios: it is thus an unparalleled, and untapped, example of late-medieval ekphrastic description 鈥 and of the patron鈥檚 voice. These are fascinating as things in their own right, remarkably varied in their form and function: most are bound codices, but some are rolls; some are on paper, some on parchment; many teem with marginal notes recording absence and presence, damage and repair; others have clear, wide margins, with not a trace of later annotations, beautiful script, and illuminated frontispieces.I have tried in this project to piece together how they were made, by whom and why (never as obvious as it might seem). But聽 I have also pondered how they were used over time, and how their significance shifted and developed: it seems to me that they often became repositories of cultural memory and ancestral power, symbols of French patrimony, long lost, but eloquent, nevertheless.

Some of the results of this research can be heard in my聽


Recent publications

Forthcoming

  • ‘No Sorrow like unto my Sorrow’ Philip the Bold, the Great Cross at the Chartreuse de Champmol and the Battle of Nicopolis’, The Burlington Magazine, July 2024
  • ‘The de Limbourg Brothers and Simone Martini’s Orsini Polyptych’ in exh. cat. forthcoming on Sienese Painting at the National Gallery and the Met, NY, 2024-25

Books and edited books

  • Late Medieval Panel Paintings. Materials, Methods Meanings聽II (Paul Holberton 2015); editor
  • Late Medieval Panel Paintings. Materials, Methods, and Meaning聽I (London, Paul Holberton, 2011); author and editor
  • Trade in Artists鈥 Materials. Markets and Commerce in Europe to 1700, co- editor with Jo Kirby and Joanna Cannon (London, Archetype publications, 2010).
  • Northern Renaissance Art聽( Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2008).
  • 鈥楴o Equal in Any Land鈥. Andr茅 Beauneveu, Artist to the Courts of France and Flanders. (London, Paul Holberton Publishing in association with Musea Bruggee/Groeningemuseum, 2007).
  • Between France and Flanders: Manuscript Illumination in Amiens in the Fifteenth Century.聽The British Library Studies in medieval Culture (London, British Library and Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 1999)
  • Robert Campin, New Directions in Scholarship聽co-editor with Susan Foister(1996)

Essays, articles and reviews

  • 鈥業nventory as Royal Object. Charles V and the Enumeration of Kingship鈥,听The Medieval Book as Object, Harlaxton Medieval Studies, ed. J. Luxford, Donnington 2021
  • 鈥楾he Two Tombs of Philip the Bold鈥櫬Journal of the Warburg and 91制片厂 Institutes, 2019, pp. 1-112.
  • The Myth of Luis Alincbrot: Relocating the聽Triptych with聽 Scenes from the Life of Christ聽in the Prado鈥,听Bolet铆n del museo del Prado, vol. xxxii no 50,听 2014, pp. 70-95. With translation in Spanish.
  • 鈥楲es retables de Jacques de Baerze et Melchior Broederlam: Documentation, fabrication et signification鈥, in聽Les retables de Champmol et leur restauration聽(Dijon, Musee des Beaux Arts, 2014); also published in English
  • 鈥楨rwin Panofsky鈥檚 Early Netherlandish Painting鈥 in聽The Books that Shaped Art History聽ed. R. Schone and J. P. Stonard, (London, Thames and Hudson, 2013), pp. pp. 88-101
  • Pour couleurs et autres choses pris de lui鈥he supply, cost, acquisition and employment of painters materials at the Burgundian court c. 1375-1415鈥 in聽Trade in Artists Materials聽(see above).
  • 鈥樷楾he Lord鈥檚 Crucifix of Costly Workmanship鈥: Colour, Collaboration and the Making of Meaning on the Well of Moses鈥 in聽Circumlitio. The Polychromy of Antique and Late Medieval Sculpture, ed. V. Brinkmann, O. Primavesi and M. Hollein (Frankfurt am Main, 2010), pp. 356-381
  • 鈥楥laus Sluter鈥檚 鈥榃ell of Moses鈥 for the Chartreuse de Champmol Reconsidered鈥. Part I聽The Burlington Magazine, December 2005, pp. 798-809; Part II聽The Burlington Magazine, July 2006, pp. 456-69; Part III鈥,听The Burlington Magazine, November 2008, pp. 724-741
  • 鈥楾丑别听Parement de Narbonne, Context and Technique鈥, in C. Villers, ed.,听The Fabric of Images, European Paintings on Fabric Supports,听1300-1500, (London, Archetype Press, 2000

Other current/ongoing professional activities

  • Trustee of the Caroline Villers fellowship
  • Member of the International Advisory Board for the Department of Conservation and Technology
  • External Examiner for PhDs at universities in the UK, Europe, Canada and the US.

Citations