AKADEMIFORELESNINGEN I HUMANIORA OG SAMFUNNSVITENSKAP

People in Scandinavian Viking-Age Art: Makers, Patrons, Consumers, and Subjects

By invite only
Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi, Drammensveien 78, Oslo

Praktisk informasjon

Møtet blir filmet og senere lagt ut på Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademis YouTube-kanal.

Introduction to the Academy lecture by Professor Kristin Bliksrud Aavitsland, Vice President of The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and chair of The Humanities and Social Sciences Division.

Lecture by Professor Nancy L. Wicker, Distinguished Professor of Art History at The University of Mississippi, Ole Miss. She will give a talk about "People in Scandinavian Viking-Age Art: Makers, Patrons, Consumers, and Subjects."

Animal-style art of the Viking Age has been described as one of Scandinavia’s greatest contributions to world art history. Study of this art traditionally has focused on animal ornamentation, but images of humans and anthropomorphic deities recently have received recognition.

Praktisk informasjon

Møtet blir filmet og senere lagt ut på Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademis YouTube-kanal.

In my talk, I will examine artisans who made the art, patrons who sponsored it, and people who viewed and used (consumed) the products. In addition, I will consider figurative art and what we can learn from it about roles of humans in Viking society. Occasionally, contemporaneous runic inscriptions and later medieval written sources additionally inform us about the personal agency of artists, patrons, and users of the products, filling in gaps in what we know about personhood and individuals. I demonstrate what a holistic study of archaeological, art historical, and literary sources can reveal about craft workers, workshops, and finished products depicting animals and people.

Bilde
Foredragsholder 23. mars 2026
Nancy L. Wicker

Nancy L. Wicker is Distinguished Professor of Art History at The University of Mississippi and was awarded the Hensley Family Senior Professor Research Award there. She received the Ph.D. in interdisciplinary Ancient Studies from the University of Minnesota, combining studies of art history, archaeology, and Germanic philology. Before coming to Mississippi, Dr. Wicker was Professor of art history at Minnesota State University, Mankato, where she served as Director of Scandinavian Studies.*

She is the first woman elected to foreign membership in the Philosophical-historical Section of the Royal Society of Humanities at Uppsala, Sweden. She also is the first American elected to the International Sachsen Symposium, which focuses on early medieval archaeology of northern Europe.

Fellowships has supported her research, including from the American Council of Learned Societies, the American-Scandinavian Foundation, the Institute for Research in the Humanities, the National Humanities Center, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Samuel H. Kress Foundation.

Dr. Wicker is co-director of the collaborative digital humanities Project Andvari, which endeavors to create an iconographic thesaurus of early medieval art of northern Europe. The project has been funded by a Samuel H. Kress Foundation Digital Art History Grant and grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She has co-edited three books on gender and archaeology, collaborating with European colleagues.

She has served on governing boards of The Medieval Academy of America, the International Center of Medieval Art, the working party Archaeology of Gender in Europe, the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study, and the International Symposium on Runes and Runic Inscriptions.

In her work, she focuses on artisans who made art, patrons who sponsored the works, men and women who used the objects, alongside human subjects that were depicted. Thus, she highlights the people of the Viking Age.