Homepage

Society Visit to historians at the University of Northampton, 17 May

On Wednesday 17 May, members of the Society’s Council and staff visited historians at the University of Northampton. Visits are an opportunity to meet with historians, researchers and students, and to discuss priorities, interests and concerns relating to research, teaching and the profession.

We are very grateful to all those at Northampton who made this Visit possible, especially to Dr Tim Reinke-Williams and Professor Roey Sweet (Leicester) for her guest lecture, on eighteenth-century British travellers to Spain, which concluded the Visit.

Further Society Visits to UK history departments will take place through the year, to the universities of Kent, Canterbury Christ Church, the Highlands and Islands, and Hertfordshire.

Guest lecturers taking part in forthcoming Visits are Will Pettigrew (Lancaster), Lucy Noakes (Essex), Elaine Farrell (Queen’s Belfast) and Leanne McCormick (Ulster). Details of all these RHS sponsored lectures will be added to our Events Programme in the coming months, and all are welcome to attend in-person or online.

 

 

Ukrainian historian Serhii Plokhy and the Russo-Ukrainian War

The Royal Historical Society was honoured to host the distinguished historian of Ukraine, Professor Serhii Plokhy, at an event held on Tuesday 16 May.

The event took place on publication day of Professor Plokhy’s new book, The Russo-Ukrainian War, about which he spoke, in conversation with Professor Sir Richard J. Evans. At the event Serhii and Sir Richard discussed the long history of the war, the motivations for the Russian invasion in February 2022, the distinctive character of Ukrainian civil society, and possible futures for Russia and Ukraine.

Serhii Plokhy is Mykhailo S. Hrushevs’kyi Professor of Ukrainian History and Director of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University. He is one of the most widely known historians working today and the author of numerous studies on the history of Ukraine, modern warfare and the Cold War.

His books include Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy (2018), which won the Baillie Gifford and Pushkin House Book Prizes; The Gates of Europe. A History of Ukraine (2015); and Lost Kingdom. A History of Russian Nationalism from Ivan the Great to Vladimir Putin (2017). Professor Plokhy’s extensive work on the history nuclear power and arms include Nuclear Folly. A New History of the Cuban Missile Crisis (2021) and Atoms and Ashes. From Bikini Atoll to Fukushima (2022).

Wednesday’s event was jointly organised with the Ukrainian Institute London to whom the Society is very grateful for this opportunity. A video of the conversation between Serhii and Sir Richard will be made available shortly.

 

 

RHS Visit to historians at Edge Hill University, 10 May

On Wednesday 10 May, members of the Society’s Council and staff visited historians at Edge Hill University, Ormskirk. RHS Visits are an opportunity to meet faculty members, graduate teaching assistants, researchers and students, and to learn more about a department’s profile and work. Visits are also provide time to discuss colleague’s priorities and concerns, about the discipline and profession, and how the Society can best provide support.

We are very grateful to all those at Edge Hill who made this Visit possible, especially to Professor Alyson Brown and also to Dr Bob Nicholson for his lecture on public history as part of the day. Bob’s lecture provided insight into the creation of his new BBC Sounds Podcast, Killing Victoria, which is now available.

The Society’s next Visit (17 May) is to the history department at the University of Northampton, where the RHS sponsored lecture will be given, at 5pm, by Professor Rosemary Sweet (Leicester) on the subject of ‘British encounters with Spain’s Muslim past, c.1760-1820’.

Further Society Visits to UK history departments will take place through the year. Details of the RHS sponsored lectures at each Visit will be added to our Events Programme in the coming months.

 

‘History and Archives in Practice’ – first conference in new annual series held on 29 March

On 29 March, the Society held its first day-conference in its new series, History and Archives in Practice (#HAP23). Co-organised with The National Archives and Institute of Historical Research, the conference brought together historians and archivists to discuss collaborative working, with reference to current projects.

This year’s HAP conference, with a capacity audience, heard from 14 projects involving 17 archive centres and universities across the UK. Full details of the day and these projects are available here.

 

 

Sessions focused on (among other topics) widening participation, research ethics, working with volunteers, public engagement and digital preservation, as well handling and demonstration sessions placing collections at the heart of the event.

Recordings of the panels will be released shortly.


Extra panel session for our video presenters, 27 April 2023

 

 

An additional 5 projects have created short videos of their work, and we’ll be continuing the conversation with the presenters of these videos, online, at 12.45pm on Thursday 27 April to which all are welcome.


Taking part in HAP24

From 2024, we’re taking History and Archives in Practice around the UK.

If your archive / university is interested in partnering with the RHS, TNA and IHR for HAP24 next March, please contact us.

 

Society launches new ‘Funded Book Workshops’ for Mid-Career Historians

From March 2023, the Royal Historical Society is pleased to announce a new programme of Funded Book Workshops. Awards will support historians, currently working on a second or third major research project, and which will lead to publication of a monograph. The Book Workshops will enable an author to bring together fellow scholars to discuss and develop the manuscript of a scholarly monograph.

Each award will provide up to £2000 to an author to host a day-long book workshop to consider a project and monograph text in detail. Funds may be spent to invite up to six scholars (based in the UK or European Union) to attend the workshop, and is intended to cover travel, hospitality and overnight accommodation where required.


More on the Funded Book Workshop, eligibility, and how to submit an application. The closing date for this first round of applications is Monday 12 June 2023.


The programme seeks to address a lack of intellectual support that many historians face in mid career. This lack of support is often in contrast to that provided when studying for a PhD, and writing first articles or monograph derived from a doctorate.

RHS Book Workshops will enable recipients to bring together scholars of their choosing to discuss and debate a second or third major research project which will result in a monograph, currently at the draft manuscript stage.

Workshops will provide a constructive environment in which work-in-progress is developed to become a richer book on publication. In this way, the initiative extends — to those later in their careers — the Society’s existing New Historical Perspectives scheme of author workshops for early career historians.


Please note: Recipients of Book Workshop Awards must be current members of the Royal Historical Society.


 

Windrush (1948-2023): Society creates listing of events marking 75th anniversary

22 June 2023 marks the 75th anniversary of the arrival of HMT Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks in Essex. The ship brought to Britain just over 800 passengers who had left the West Indies, the great majority of whom sought to settle and begin new lives in the UK.

The Windrush anniversary is being widely marked in 2023 with events, exhibitions, broadcasts and the Windrush 75 digital network which is recording national events.

Many of these events will consider the histories of the Caribbean, the voyage, the Windrush generations, post-war migration and British multi-culturalism in the later 20th and 21st century.

To capture some of these activities (large and small, national and community-focused), the Royal Historical Society is creating an online listing of anniversary events with a historical dimension.

We now invite you to send us details of events and activities you’re planning, taking part in, or know about. We’ll list and share them regularly to provide an online space for people interested in celebrating the 75th anniversary through history.


We welcome details of a range of events and activities (in-person and online), with a history focus. These might include:

  • academic events, such as lectures, conferences or seminars
  • exhibitions on the history of Windrush
  • broadcasts, including podcast episodes or series
  • blogs on the history of Windrush
  • public and community history projects
  • social media channels and hashtags
  • history festivals relating to Windrush and its legacies
  • short courses, workshops and training in the history of Windrush

In addition, we welcome your recommendations for further reading (books, academic articles and historical fiction) about the history of the Windrush voyage, Windrush generations, and ethnic diversity in post-war and later 20th-century Britain.

This section of the listing will help those new to this subject learn more in this anniversary year.

We look forward to receiving your proposals, for events and reading, and we’ll then collate and communicate an ongoing listing through 2023.


HEADER AND TEXT IMAGES: Windrush mural, St Paul’s, Bristol, UK, public domain.

 

RHS Research Funding – new programmes launched, with funding options now available for historians at all career stages

Allocation of research funding is central to the Society’s work of supporting historians and historical research.

In 2022 the Society awarded £125,000 in funding to historians through open competitions and in one-off programmes, generously assisted by partner organisations and donors.

From February 2023, the Society launches its new range of funding programmes for historians, within and outside Higher Education, and at all career stages.

Further details of our new Research Funding programmes for 2023 are available here.

Funding is now available in the following three categories:

  • Postgraduate Research Funding – a range of scholarships, fellowships and grants for those studying for a History Masters degree or PhD
  • Early Career Research Funding – a range of grants for historians within 3 years of completing a doctorate in History
  • Open Research Funding – grant options for historians further on from PhD completion, or in mid / later career employed in Higher Education or in other sectors aligned to history

In addition, the Society also offers the following annual programmes in 2023:

  • Workshop Grants – enabling groups of historians, at any career stage, to come together to discuss projects in detail: introduced in 2022 and running for its second year in 2023
  • Jinty Nelson Teaching Grants – a new scheme to facilitate innovative and creative teaching practice: to be launched in Spring/Summer 2023

Applicants for Royal Historical Society funding must be members of the Society, with several exceptions at Postgraduate level. To find out how to become a Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member or Postgraduate Member, please see our Join Us page.

For more on the Society’s funding opportunities in 2023, please visit the Research Funding area of our website. Here you’ll find details of each grant programme arranged according to career stage; which programmes are currently accepting applications; closing dates; and how to apply for a specific grant.


HEADER IMAGE: Bowl with a scholar, anon, c.1575-99, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, public domain.

TEXT IMAGE:  The Ladies Bill of Fare, or, a Copious Collection of Beaux, 1795, plate, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain.

 

Society elects 157 new Fellows, Associate Fellows, Members and Postgraduate Members

At its latest meeting on 3 February 2023, the RHS Council elected 44 Fellows, 32 Associate Fellows, 40 Members and 41 Postgraduate Members, a total of 157 people newly associated with the Society. We welcome them all.

The majority of the new Fellows hold academic appointments at universities, specialising in a very wide range of fields; but also include museum curators, librarians, heads of learned societies, teachers heritage consultants, and independent researchers and writers. The Society is an international community of historians and our latest intake includes Fellows from seven countries: Australia, Canada, Ireland, Norway, Portugal, the UK and United States.

Our latest intake includes a number of historians working outside History departments, in cognate disciplines in higher education (on this occasion, Art History, Library and Literary Studies, Musicology, Philosophy and Theology): a reminder that the Fellowship is open to all whose research provides a scholarly contribution to historical knowledge.

The new Associate Fellows include not only early career historians in higher education but also historians with professional and private research interests drawn from journalism, conservation, libraries and archives, public and community history and the diplomatic service.

The new Members have a similarly wide range of historical interests, and include individuals employed in universities, and as civil servants, teachers, librarians and lawyers – together with independent and community historians. Our new Postgraduate Members are studying for higher degrees in History, or related subjects, at 27 different universities in the UK, Canada, Italy and the United States. All those newly elected to the Fellowship and Membership bring a valuable range of expertise and experience to the Society.

February 2023 sees the admission of our seventh set of Associate Fellows and Postgraduate Members — two membership categories introduced in late 2021. These changes to membership (about which you can read more here) enable more historians to join the fellowship, and facilitate more focused support for RHS members at the start of their careers.

New Fellows and Members are elected at regular intervals through the year. The current application round is open and runs to Monday 10 April 2023, with the next closing date after this being Monday 5 June 2023. Further details on RHS Fellowship and Membership categories (Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member and Postgraduate Member); benefits of membership; deadlines for applications throughout 2023; and how to apply, are available here.

 

New Fellows, elected February 2023

  • Paul Campbell
  • Ian Campbell
  • Debbie Challis
  • Peter Collinge
  • Roxana Coman
  • Joseph Cronin
  • Anthony Crowley
  • Ben Dew
  • Elena Draghici-Vasilescu
  • Jane Draycott
  • Noelle Dückmann Gallagher
  • Jonathan Durrant
  • Laura Eastlake
  • Rob Ellis
  • Stefan Fisher-Høyrem
  • Darren Freebury-Jones
  • Jane Freeland
  • Alison Garden
  • Jamie Gianoutsos
  • Benjamin Guyer
  • Trevor Herbert
  • Laurence Johnson
  • Jennifer Keating
  • Rachel Kiddey
  • Kevin Killeen
  • Liam Lewis
  • David Magalhães
  • Ewen Misha
  • Teresa O’Doherty
  • Elodie Paillard
  • Hugh Pattenden
  • David Reagles
  • Alexander Rose
  • Pamela Scully
  • Neil Tarrant
  • Misha Teramura
  • Alun Thomas
  • Gyorgy Toth
  • Colin Trodd
  • Mark Vickers
  • Tim Welch
  • Philip Wood
  • Eve Worth
  • David Worthington

New Associate Fellows, elected February 2023

  • Tayo Agunbiade
  • Iram Ahmad
  • Artemis Alexiou
  • Krysten Blackstone
  • Nicoletta Bruno
  • Eddie Chaloner
  • Danielle Claybrook
  • Paul Crawford
  • Christian Cuthbert
  • Clayton Davis
  • Scott de Groot
  • Nicolo Ferrari
  • Iker Itoiz Ciaurriz
  • Terry Kilburn
  • Michael Leek
  • Peter Lythe
  • William Mitchell
  • Benjamin Morris
  • Steve Ngo
  • Daniel O’Brien
  • Patrick O’Connor
  • David Olvera Ayes
  • Patrick B. Poland
  • Casey Raeside
  • Rose Roberto
  • Elisabeth Salje
  • Petros  Spanou
  • Harry Spillane
  • Elin Tomos
  • Ben Walsh
  • Nicola Williams
  • Lauren Young

New Members, elected February 2023

  • Ernesto Juan Anaya
  • Loraine Banner
  • Gaverne Bennett
  • Eleanor Braithwaite
  • Jocelyn Cash
  • Felix Cheah
  • Oliver Clark
  • Colin Coates
  • Michela Cocolin
  • Patrick Daigneault
  • Mark Diamond
  • Lindsay Ditkofsky
  • Jennifer Ehrlich
  • Eghosa Ekhator
  • Jack Fairweather
  • Mercy Fowler
  • Tracey Gaitt
  • Kyle Glover
  • Tadhg Goodison
  • Michael Hardman
  • David Harvey
  • Jens Hepper
  • Samantha Hook
  • Rongqi Li
  • Nicolaus Martin
  • Shelley Murphy
  • Martin Pitts
  • Edward Pryke
  • Carol Quentin-Hicks
  • David Rodenko
  • John Sharman
  • Manish Shrivastava
  • Kelly Smith
  • Ines Sousa
  • Isarum Sriyingyong
  • Andrés Urbano
  • Susan Ward
  • Nick Wood
  • Jiarui Wu
  • ChitShing Wu

New Postgraduate Members, elected February 2023

  • Chloe Atkinson
  • Phillip Baranick
  • Sam Brady
  • Emily Chambers
  • Yi-Ying Chao
  • Thomas Collins
  • Helen Corlett
  • David Cowan
  • Calum Cunningham
  • Shaun Cushley
  • Raja Venkata Krishna Dandamudi
  • Camilla de Koning
  • Lewis Driver
  • Howard Francis
  • Lavinia Gambini
  • Dionysios Giatras
  • Hannah Gibbons
  • Jasper Heeks
  • Nausheen Hoosein
  • Rebecca Irvine
  • Nigel Jenkins
  • Scott Keir
  • Graham Kerr
  • Emma Marshall
  • Kay Rawson
  • Autumn Reinhardt-Simpson
  • Rosaria Sgueglia
  • Pritam Singh
  • David Spruce
  • Jois Stansfield
  • Ben Stemper
  • Lily Tekseng
  • Sara Tenneson
  • Tiéphaine Thomason
  • Katharine Waldron
  • Nathan Websdale
  • Rowan Whitcomb
  • Eleanor Whitehead
  • Tadeusz Wojtych
  • Tsz Ho Wong
  • Emma Wordsworth

HEADER IMAGE: Wine Drinking in a Spring Garden, c.1430, Attributed to Iran, possibly Tabriz, opaque watercolor and gold on undyed silk, Metropolitan Museum of art, New York, public domain

 

Are you New to Teaching? Eight video presentations offer advice to build your skills

 

The Royal Historical Society and HistoryUK are pleased to offer 8 new videos from specialist historians, providing guides to teaching History in UK Higher Education.

The presentations are designed for those new or starting out in teaching. Subjects covered include: creating and presenting a History lecture; working online; teaching with small and large seminar groups; being innovative and creative in your teaching; developing new modules; and providing constructive assessment.

More on the full series and subjects covered >


The new guides also feature on the Society’s Teaching Portal, an online repository of 70+ guides, for History teachers and students in Higher Education.

Areas covered by the Portal include teaching practice, innovative modules, online resources for research, and guides to career development post-PhD.


 

Society elects 308 new Fellows, Associate Fellows, Members and Postgraduate Members

At its latest meeting on 2 December 2022, the RHS Council elected 102 Fellows, 49 Associate Fellows, 64 Members and 93 Postgraduate Members, a total of 308 people newly associated with the Society. We welcome them all.

The majority of the new Fellows hold academic appointments at universities, specialising in a very wide range of fields; but also include curators, teachers, broadcasters, film-makers, heritage consultants, independent researchers and writers. The Society is an international community of historians and our latest intake includes Fellows from 12 countries: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Israel, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Singapore, the UK and United States.

Our latest intake includes a number of historians working outside History departments, in cognate disciplines in higher education: a reminder that the Fellowship is open to all whose research provides a scholarly contribution to historical knowledge.

The new Associate Fellows include not only early career historians in higher education but also historians with professional and private research interests drawn from broadcasting, archives, museums and teaching.

The new Members have a similarly wide range of historical interests, and include individuals employed in universities, and as archaeologists, archivists, civil servants, conservators and surveyors, lawyers and members of the judiciary, and teachers – together with independent and community historians. Our new Postgraduate Members are studying for higher degrees in History, or related subjects, at 38 different universities in the UK, India and the United States. All those newly elected to the Fellowship and Membership bring a valuable range of expertise and experience to the Society.

December 2022 sees the admission of our sixth set of Associate Fellows and Postgraduate Members — two new membership categories introduced in late 2021. These changes to membership (about which you can read more here) enable more historians to join the fellowship, and facilitate more focused support for RHS members at the start of their careers.

New Fellows and Members are elected at regular intervals through the year. The current application round is open and runs to Friday 13 January 2023, with the next closing date being Monday 10 April 2023. Further details on RHS Fellowship and Membership categories (Fellow, Associate Fellow, Member and Postgraduate Member); benefits of membership (including new benefits added from August 2022); deadlines for applications throughout 2023; and how to apply, are available here.

 

New Fellows, elected December 2022

  • Robin Adams
  • Christin Anderson
  • Robert Mervyn Andrews
  • Anthi Andronikou
  • David Annal
  • Gordon Barrett
  • Paul Bartrop
  • Catherine Bateson
  • Michel Beaulieu
  • Gurminder Bhambra
  • Lindy Brady
  • Ben Bronnert Walker
  • Carys Brown
  • Rhona Brown
  • Anthony Bruce
  • Sara Caputo
  • Jack Meng-Tat Chia
  • Rachel Chin
  • Stephanie Mooers Christelow
  • David Clayton
  • Guillaume Coatalen
  • Marcus Colla
  • Mary Cunningham
  • Gavin Daly
  • Shomik Dasgupta
  • Theodor Dunkelgrün
  • Charles Emmerson
  • Christina Faraday
  • James Fenwick
  • Larrie Ferreiro
  • Richard Finn
  • James Fisher
  • Gabriela Frei
  • Yan Gao
  • John Goodwin
  • Daniel Gosling
  • Andrew James William Gow
  • Martin Halliwell
  • Jessica Hammett
  • Iain Hay
  • Sacha Hepburn
  • Christian Hogsbjerg
  • Aya Homei
  • Hetta Howes
  • Gavin Hughes
  • Peter Jordan
  • Isidoros Katsos
  • Siobhan Keenan
  • Elisabeth Kehoe
  • Ariane Knüsel
  • Umit Kurt
  • Robert Lambert
  • Adrian Leonard
  • Henrietta Lidchi
  • Kate Loveman
  • Deborah Madden
  • Brandon Marsh
  • Simone Marshall
  • Zareer Masani
  • Gordon McKelvie
  • Bronagh McShane
  • Athanasius McVay
  • William Melville
  • Matthew Metcalfe
  • Ian Milligan
  • Stephen Mullen
  • Souvik Naha
  • Thomas Neuhaus
  • Brooke Newman
  • Helen O’Shea
  • Marina Perez de Arcos
  • Andrew Pickering
  • Toby Purser
  • Karen Racine
  • Charles Read
  • Steven Reid
  • Jennifer Richards
  • Huw Richards
  • Euan Roger
  • Anat Rosenberg
  • Hannah Ryley
  • Sophie Scott-Brown
  • Mary Shannon
  • Patricio Simonetto
  • Jonathan Singerton
  • Frederick Smith
  • Michael Spence
  • Howard Spencer
  • Foteini Spingou
  • Anastasia Stouraiti
  • Jennifer Summers
  • Drew Thomas
  • Sharon Thompson
  • Graham Twelftree
  • Vikram Visana
  • John Wall
  • Ryland Wallace
  • Emily Ward
  • Emma Whipday
  • Benedict Wiedemann
  • Roger Willoughby
  • Matthew Wilson
  • Esther Wright
  • Peter Yeandle

New Associate Fellows, elected December 2022

  • Zaib un Nisa Aziz
  • Philip Ball
  • Johan Bergstrom-Allen
  • Sushant Bharti
  • Amie Bolissian Mcrae
  • Kirsty Bolton
  • Lyndsie Bourgon
  • Caitlin Burge
  • John Condren
  • David Crowther
  • Josephine Cummins
  • Fraser Dallachy
  • Helen Esfandiary
  • Nick Evans
  • Aida Fernandez Prieto
  • Joshua Fitzgerald
  • Beth Gaskell
  • Tim Glasby
  • Nikolaos Gourof
  • Jamie Graves
  • Kieran Hazzard
  • Melanie Hollis
  • Stephanie Howard-Smith
  • Sandra Hynes
  • Emmeline Ledgerwood
  • Bruce Lindsay
  • Sophie Mann
  • Kate Marlow
  • Sean McDonagh
  • Moritz Mihatsch
  • Sarah-Louise Miller
  • Julie Miller
  • Szilvia Musasizi
  • David Pendleton
  • Rebecca Pollack
  • Yitong Qiu
  • Wilfred Rhoden
  • Darrell Rivers
  • Olha Romanova
  • Raphael Schäfer
  • Alireza Shams Lahijani
  • Julia Skinner
  • Ariane Smart
  • Callum Smith
  • Joseph Stanley
  • Tabitha Stanmore
  • Robert Tansey
  • Marilla Walker
  • Amy Wilson

New Members, elected December 2022

  • Matthew Abel
  • Mubashir Ak
  • Inara Andre
  • Emma Ash
  • Reka Bajus
  • Susan Ballard
  • Ursula Petula Barzey
  • Tony Biebuyck
  • Oliver Bircham
  • Julie Boden
  • Elaine Bodtmann
  • John Bridgeman
  • Alberto Casado Gómez
  • Fiona Cosson
  • Jim Cowie
  • Joseph Davies
  • Salvatore DiStefano
  • Adam Down
  • Jasper Elwes
  • Gary Fellman
  • Jonas Frey
  • Sushant Ghildyal
  • Rebecca Gorman
  • Julie Goucher
  • Ruth Graham
  • Michael Griffiths
  • David Griggs
  • Andrew Hammond
  • Maxine Harcourt-Kelly
  • David Harris
  • Sara Hashmi
  • Kathrine Hopson
  • Charlotte Hosford
  • Haining Hu
  • Sajjad Kantrikar
  • Jo Levitt
  • Roger Mann
  • Jane McChrystal
  • Jessica Morris
  • Deborah Morrison
  • Patrick Mulvenna
  • Daniel  Patrick
  • Jan Luca Probeck
  • Jeffrey Prosser
  • Sankaralingam Rathina Kumar
  • Joseph Reilly
  • Paul Rodriguez
  • Offir Rokach
  • Simon  Sardeson-Coe
  • Christian Schmeiduch
  • Iqbal Shaukat
  • Benedict Skipper
  • Manda Tamosauskaite
  • Lori Thomas
  • Adam Thomas-Fennelly
  • Jesse Ujagbor
  • Lard van den Berg
  • Serge Van Den Broucke
  • Suganya Vishnu
  • Paul Walton
  • James Whitaker
  • Ian Whitehurst
  • Samuel Wigley
  • Tsz Ho Wong

New Postgraduate Members, elected December 2022

  • Carrissa Anderson
  • Mehmet Akif Aydemir
  • Richard Balas
  • Thomas Banbury
  • Eduardo Benítez-Inglott y Ballesteros
  • Maia Blumberg
  • Matthew Bowen
  • Jake Bransgrove
  • Dominic Bridge
  • Theodora Broyd
  • Elizabeth Burrell
  • Jaime Caballero
  • William Campbell
  • Theodore Christodoulidis
  • Minji Chun
  • Kathryn Comper
  • Holly Cooper
  • Dylan Coulter
  • Darold Cuba
  • Edward Day
  • Elena Doran
  • Spencer Drake
  • Hollie Eaton
  • Nathan Eckersley
  • Teuku Reza Fadeli
  • Helen Flatley
  • Edward Ford
  • Andrew Frow-Jones
  • Amilia Gillies
  • Kimberly Glassman
  • Megan Graham
  • David Grant
  • Lucy Harrison
  • Sarah Hinds
  • Mark Hitchins
  • Fran Holmes
  • Matthew Hurst
  • Rebecca Jaffri
  • Paul Kelly
  • Eva Kemenade
  • Lou Khalfaoui
  • Ian Lacey
  • Harikesh Ladwa
  • Mary-Jannet Leith
  • Michael Lipiner
  • Jessica Lloyd
  • Carrie Long
  • Amy Longmuir
  • Arisa Loomba
  • Deanna Lyn Cook
  • Cameron Maclean
  • Daniel Mazhindu
  • Phoebe McDonnell
  • Catherine Meredith
  • Katherine Milliken
  • James Moffatt
  • Anna Molnar
  • Ben Morris
  • Brett Morritt
  • Victoria Myhand
  • Shankar Nair
  • Ellis Naylor
  • Yacine Ndao
  • Joshua Newmark
  • Tanner Ogle
  • Megan Palmer
  • Odile Liliana Panetta
  • Thomas Parkinson
  • Jen Pearce
  • Aneirin Pendragon
  • Rowan Powell
  • Carl Julius Reim
  • Clément Renault
  • Pilar Requejo de Lamo
  • Joseph Rix
  • Bonnie Robinson
  • Alana Rogers
  • Brian Roper
  • Andrew Sage
  • Samapan Saha
  • Alba Sanz Alvarez
  • Luke Stephenson
  • Kieran Stigant
  • Eleanor Strangways
  • Jonathan Tickle
  • Christopher Toole
  • Rebecca Tyson
  • Alexandra Ward
  • Alexandra Watson Jones
  • Mark Wilson
  • Alex Worsfold
  • Morag Wright
  • Guangxia Xu

 

HEADER IMAGE: Peasant Couples Dancing, 1580–1600, Johann Theodor de Bry, Netherlandish, after Sebald Beham Germany, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, public domain.