Horizon Europe (2021 - 2027)

Between Canon and Coincidence: using data-driven approaches to understand Art Worlds: BECACO

Last update: Dec 4, 2024 Last update: Dec 4, 2024

Details

Locations:Netherlands
Start Date:Jan 1, 2024
End Date:Dec 31, 2028
Contract value: EUR 1,498,695
Sectors:Information & Communication Technology, Research
Information & Communication Technology, Research
Categories:Grants
Date posted:Dec 4, 2024

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC)

Topic(s): ERC-2023-STG - ERC STARTING GRANTS

Call for proposal: ERC-2023-STG

Funding Scheme: HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC Grants

Grant agreement ID: 101117234 

Objective:
The BECACO project applies a novel multidisciplinary framework to studying the provenance of ethnographic and archaeological collections. Moving away from the current focus in provenance research on single objects, collectors, or institutions, the aim of the project is to reconceptualize provenance as the large-scale study of the socio-politico-historical conjunctures that led to the translocation of cultural material. To do so, it introduces the concept of Art World Patterns, an expansion and reframing of the idea of Art Worlds (Becker 2008[1982]). These patterns will be identified through an innovative combination of various data- driven methodologies. By applying quantitative analyses, network analysis, and data mining on a large corpus of provenance data, the project will explore the promises and limitations of different data-driven approaches in the context of large-scale ethnographic/archaeological provenance research. Through this process, the project will devise new models for provenance research in ethnographic and archaeological museums. These conceptual and methodological advances will be mobilized through the study of Indigenous Latin American material from 12 museums in 9 countries. The project will create a ground-breaking diachronic, international, and cross-institutional understanding of the collecting of Indigenous Latin American material in Europe. In doing so, the BECACO team will reconstruct how – through the formation of collections – the Indigenous Latin American Art World as it existed in Europe between 1850-2000 constructed a discourse of art, aesthetics, and academic research that shaped how Indigenous Latin America is represented and understood in Europe until today.

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