Image Making as Knowledge Production: Earth, Heavens, and Body
Conference
- Public event without registration
- Start: Jun 25, 2026 09:00 AM (Local Time Germany)
- End: Jun 27, 2026 08:30 PM
- Speaker: Conference
- Location: Villino Stroganoff, Via Gregoriana 22, 00187 Rome and online
- Contact: katja.hackstein@biblhertz.it
Each day will start with a presentation by image-makers, to reflect on current visual practices of the context of teaching and learning, and research. The main part of the day will contain historical case studies. And each day will be closed by natural scientists reflecting on the role of image-making as doing science.
This interdisciplinary dialogue between current-day practices and the study of historical practices in art and science have been a driving force behind the research of the Research Group Visualizing Science in Media Revolutions. With its broad temporal and thematic scope, the focus on image-making practices as both a highly skilled and highly creative process has become central to understanding how people gained and communicated knowledge.
Please follow the event also online
through our VIMEO CHANNEL:
26.06.26 https://vimeo.com/event/5909500
27.06.26 https://vimeo.com/event/5909503
PROGRAM
Day 1, 25 June: Earth
9:00 Welcome and Introduction
Giulia Simonini (BHMPI)
Elisa Spataro (Sapienza Università di Roma)
Sietske Fransen (BHMPI / Radboud University), The Act of Drawing as Tool for Observation
9:30–10:30 Image-maker presentation with discussion
Chair: Sietske Fransen
Maddalena Scimemi (Università Roma Tre) and Carlotta Torricelli (Università Roma Tre), Space for the hand: Exercises in seeing by Architecture students
Coffee
11:00–13:00 Session 1
Chair: Fabrizio Baldassarri (Sapienza Università
di Roma)
1. Leendert van der Miesen (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), “Merely out of
curiosity”: The Natural History Drawings of Jan Brandes (1743–1808)
2. Giulia Simonini (BHMPI), Drawing Beetles and Butterflies: Iridescence in Early Modernity
3. Laura Valterio (Kunsthistorisches
Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut), Breeders as Surrogate Mothers:
Animal Care and Reproductive Labour in Early Modern Representations of
Sericulture
Lunch (for participants only)
14:00–15:30 Session 2
Chair: Antonia Belli (BHMPI / University College London)
4. Alexandre Claude (BHMPI / European University Institute), Making
Authoritative Images: Francesco Stelluti, the Lincei, and the Discovery of
Petrified Wood
5. Gilles Monney (Independent scholar, Bern), Cold Histories in a Melting
World: Alpine Glaciers between Knowledge-Making and Vanishing Imaginaries
Coffee
16:00–17:30 Session 3
Chair: Elisa Spataro
6. Luca Tonetti (Università di Padova), Nidus or Uterus? Visualizing Galls and Insect Generation in Malpighi’s Work
7. Jessie Wei-Hsuan Chen (Huygens / KNAW, Amsterdam), Fertile Earth: Representations
of Garden Ground in Seventeenth-Century Botanical Illustrations
Coffee
18:00–19:30 Scientist presentation with discussion
Chair: Eric Jorink (Huygens / KNAW, Amsterdam)
Pierfilippo Cerretti (Sapienza Università di Roma) & Maurizio Mei (Sapienza
Università di Roma), When Images become Data: Exploring Hidden Biodiversity
Day 2, 26 June: Heavens
9:00-9:30 Guided tour of the accompanying exhibition in the Sala del
disegno, Bibliotheca Hertziana (for participants only)
9:30–10:30 Image-maker presentation with discussion
Chair: Elisa Spataro
Silvia Spezzano (Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Garching
bei München), Imaging Molecules in Interstellar Space
Coffee
11:00–13:00 Session 4
Chair: Eelco Nagelsmit (Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam / BHMPI)
1. Stefan Zieme (CNRS – Observatoire de Paris / PSL), The Diagrams of
the First Appendix of Naṣīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī’s (1201-74) Taḥrīr al-Majisṭī
2. Eric Jorink (Huygens / KNAW, Amsterdam), Christiaan Huygens and the
Mystery of Saturn’s Ring: Observation, Visual Thinking, and Peer Review
3. Antoine Gallay (Université de Lausanne), Making the Incommensurable
Tangible: Visualizing the Solar System in Christiaan Huygens’s Cosmotheoros
(1698)
Lunch (for participants only)
14:00–15:30 Session 5
Chair: Lena Heinlein-Müller (Goethe Universität,
Frankfurt am Main)
4. Odile Lehnen (Durham University / The Royal Society), A Seat at the
Table: Collaborative Observation in the Herschel Household
5. Marvin Bolt (Independent Scholar, USA), In Defense of the Inhabited Sun:
Visualizing William Herschel’s Strange Idea
Coffee break
16:00–17:30 Session 6
Chair: Sietske Fransen
6. Nina Caviezel (BHMPI / Universität Basel), From Dust to Data: Cleaning as
a Visualizing Practice in Astronomy
7. Charlotte Bigg (CNRS, Centre Alexandre Koyré, Paris), Blurry
Skies
17:30–18:00 Guided tour of the accompanying exhibition in the Sala del disegno, Bibliotheca Hertziana (for participants only)
18:00–19:00 Dinner in Villino (for participants only)
19:00–20:30 Scientist presentation with discussion
Chair: Tanja Michalsky (BHMPI)
Peter Galison (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA), Image Knowledge: Filming
Black Holes
Day 3, 27 June: Body
9:30–10:30 Image-maker presentation with discussion
Chair: Giulia Simonini
Gemma Anderson-Tempini (Artist, UK), Body-Mapping the Mycobiome
Coffee
11:00–13:00 Session 7
Chair: Silvia Marchiori (British School at Rome)
1. Briana Brightly (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA), Drawing the Buddha,
Drawing the Body: Image-Making as Method in Tibetan Anatomy
2. Daniel Santiago Sáenz (Columbia University, New York), American Bodies as
Exempla in New Spain and New France: Visual Methods, Pedagogical Paradigms
3. Francesca S. Croce (Universität Wien), Staging Anatomy: Image-Making and
Imperial Display in the Josephinum, Vienna
Lunch (for participants only)
14:00–16:00 Session 8
Chair: Elisa Spataro
4. Fabrizio Bigotti (Center for the Study of Medicine and the Body in the
Renaissance, Pisa / University of Exeter), Harmonious Configurations:
Geometrical Reasoning in Renaissance Anatomy and Beyond
5. Noemi Di Tommaso (Università degli Studi di Milano), When the Eye Draws:
Autograph Images and Experimental Knowledge in Francesco Redi (1627–1697)
6. Jennifer Marine (Menil Drawing Institute, Houston, TX / University of
Virginia), Guided by Ghostly Hands: Process, Production, and Evidence in
Spirit Drawing and Photography
Coffee
16:30–18:00 Scientist presentation with discussion
Chair: Sietske Fransen
Erin Schuman (Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt am Main), Seeing
is believing: how images changed our understanding of the inner workings of the
neuron
18:00-18:30
Concluding Words
Sietske Fransen
Scientific Organization: Research Group "Visualizing Science in Media Revolutions", Sietske Fransen
(Bibliotheca Hertziana), Giulia Simonini (Bibliotheca Hertziana), Elisa Spataro
(Sapienza Università di Roma)