March Research Seminar
Date: 26 March 2025
Time: 3:00pm (in the UK)
[10:00am in US CT; 11:00am in US ET - please note the daylight savings time difference in March]
Venue: Online via Zoom

THEME
Umberto Eco, summarising the influence of Neoplatonism on medieval art, writes: “God is … identified with the splendour of a sort of luminous current that permeates the entire universe” (On Beauty: A History of a Western Idea [2004], p. 102.) In her presentation, Tina Beattie (Professor Emerita of Catholic Studies) will argue that it is impossible to interpret medieval Marian art without understanding the profound symbolic relationship between theological ideas and representations of light. Focusing on the Annunciation, she will explore the meanings encoded in representations of light and darkness. How did such complex symbolic meanings reflect not only philosophical and theological ideas but also popular piety and devotions, bearing in mind that for most people in the Middle Ages, including women, theological education was primarily by way of preaching and images? Professor Beattie will argue that the modern academic severance between art history and theology impoverishes both. She will appeal for a rediscovery of scholarship as a quest for wisdom that dares to venture beyond its own disciplinary boundaries, to seek understanding wherever it is to be found.
GUEST SPEAKER
Tina Beattie left her post as Professor of Catholic Studies at the University of Roehampton in London in 2020, to work independently as a researcher and writer. In addition to her academic research, public speaking and writing on issues of theology, feminism and art, her media contributions include BBC Radio 4’s Thought for the Day, BBC Radio Ulster and The Tablet, and she has published two novels. She has recently taken up a role as co-Director of the Sophia Institute, a project based in Namibia and directed by Sr Dr Anne Arabome, offering theological education, leadership skills and pastoral formation to women religious in sub-Saharan Africa.
REGISTER
If you would like to receive the free Zoom link, please send an email to Catherine O'Brien at info@marianstudies.ac.uk
*Robert Campin, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons