IartNET | The Lives and Afterlives of Teaching Collections: Art Academies as Laboratories of Cultural Heritage
29th–30th May 2026
INTERNATIONAL COLLOQUIUM
The Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera presents the international colloquium, The Lives and Afterlives of Teaching Collections: Art Academies as Laboratories of Cultural Heritage, brings together historians, conservators, and artists to reflect on the material, institutional, and intellectual legacies of academic teaching collections.
From their establishment, and especially during the eighteenth and From their establishment, and particularly during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, European art academies assembled extensive collections of paintings, sculptures, photographs, books, plaster casts, drawings, prints, and a wide range of instruments. Conceived as institutions for the training of artists and artisans, they developed complex pedagogical ecosystems in which making, copying, and observing were profoundly intertwined. In many cases, these holdings were closely connected to – or even constituted the nucleus of – newly founded museums of decorative and industrial arts, transforming the academy itself into a laboratory where teaching, research, and exhibition converged.
Over the course of the twentieth century, however, many of these collections suffered neglect, dispersal, or even destruction, particularly following modernist and neo-avant-garde critiques of academic tradition. Once central pedagogical and research devices and powerful instruments of cultural and ideological transmission, they gradually became marginal both within artistic practice and within art-historical scholarship.
The colloquium reconsiders academic teaching collections not as obsolete remnants, but as critical witnesses to the evolving relationships between pedagogy, heritage, and cultural identity. Established within the universalist paradigms of the Western canon, these collections now invite renewed interpretation through contemporary historiographic perspectives. Viewed in this light, they reveal complex material and epistemic histories shaped by fragmentation, displacement, reinterpretation, and institutional transformation.
Adopting a comparative and transnational perspective, the colloquium examines shared dynamics and local specificities across central European contexts, with particular attention to the gendered, colonial, and national frameworks that shaped the production, circulation, and interpretation of didactic models and copies. It also addresses the intertwined lives and afterlives of teaching materials, tracing their transformation from tools of artistic formation into cultural artefacts and heritage assets. At the same time, it considers how study collections illuminate broader questions of absence, power, and representation, while emerging fields of inquiry open new perspectives on these materials, situating them within contemporary cultural debates.
A central focus will be the historical moments through which these collections were produced, transformed, or damaged. Events, conservation histories, and institutional trajectories mark each collection as a distinct material sedimentation of time, while processes of loss and destabilisation provide a crucial interpretive lens through which their meanings and uses can be reconsidered.
By fostering dialogue among historians, conservators, and artists, The Lives and Afterlives of Teaching Collections: Art Academies as Laboratories of Cultural Heritage seeks to reactivate the legacy of art academies as living laboratories of knowledge and creativity. The colloquium will examine how these collections may be studied, preserved, and reimagined today—linking historical pedagogies with contemporary artistic practices while opening new perspectives for research, documentation, and critical reflection within higher arts education.
The initiative is part of the PNRR project INTAFAM IartNET – an international platform for artistic research and cultural heritage at Italian higher arts education institutions funded by the European Union – NextGenerationEU, Mission 4, led by the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera and coordinated by Nicoletta Leonardi.
For information: iartnet.ricerca@fadbrera.edu.it
IartNET | The Lives and Afterlives of Teaching Collections: Art Academies as Laboratories of Cultural Heritage
Friday, 29 May 2026, 10AM – 6.30PM
Istituto Lombardo, Sala delle Adunanze
Saturday, 30 May 2026, 10:00AM – 15:00PM
Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, Sala Napoleonica