Matinée

Jasmin Mersmann:
Dealing with the Devil, Promoting the Virgin: The Case of Christoph Haizmann

Copy after Christoph Haizmann, Devil Restituting the Pact, in Trophaeum Mariano Cellense, 1714–1729, Vienna, ÖNB, Cod. 14086

Not many people have seen the devil with their own eyes, and even fewer have painted him afterward. One of the rare individuals who did was the artist Christoph Haizmann, who was exorcised in Mariazell in 1677 and 1678 after confessing to having made a pact with the devil. The active force behind his deliverance was the miracle-working statue now known as Magna Mater Austriae. Haizmann’s case, however, is not unique. In fact, the more demons were expelled, the more they seemed to proliferate: possession became contagious, spreading through broadsheets, treatises, and ex-voto offerings. Paradoxically, it was the devil who became one of the major guarantors of the efficacy of contested images and sacramentals. The talk reflects on the authenticity of reenactments and the possibility of reconstructing what might be called the historical imaginary.

Jasmin Mersmann is a professor of Art History of the Early Modern Period at FU Berlin. Until 2023, she was a professor at the University of the Arts in Linz, and prior to that, a research associate at Humboldt University. Visiting professorships and postdoctoral fellowships have taken her to Villa I Tatti, the Italian Academy at Columbia University, Université Paris 1, the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, IKKM in Weimar, and IFK in Vienna. After studying in Freiburg, Paris, and Berlin, she completed her doctoral thesis on Lodovico Cigoli and Forms of Truth around 1600 at Humboldt University. She is currently completing a book on encounters with demons in Early Modern Europe and working on a research project on various techniques for improving nature.

 

 

 

11 March 2025, 11:00am

This event will take place at Palazzo Grifoni Budini Gattai.

Please register in advance to participate online via Zoom

 

 

 

 

 

Notice

This event will be documented photographically and/or recorded on video. Please let us know if you do not agree with the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz using images in which you might be recognizable for event documentation and public relation purposes (e.g. social media).

Newsletter

Our Newsletter provides you with free information on events, tenders, exhibitions and recent publications from the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz.

If you would like to receive our newsletter, please enter your name and e-mail address:

*required field

Notes on the content of the newsletter and transit procedures

This letter is sent via MailChimp, where your e-mail address and name will be saved for sending the newsletter.

Once you have completed the form, you will receive a "Double-Opt-In-E-Mail," in which you are asked to confirm your registration. You can cancel your subscription to the Newsletter at any time ("Opt-out"). You will find an unsubscribe link in every Newsletter and in the Double-Opt-in-E-Mail.

You will receive detailed information about transit procedures and your withdrawal options in our privacy policy.