Congratulations to Cecily Hughes, fourth-year PhD candidate in medieval art, who traversed Scandinavia over the past few months to present at two international conferences and conduct dissertation research. In Reykjavik, Iceland, Cecily attended the 31st Congress of Nordic Historians where she delivered her paper “A Place to Shine: Darkness and Light in a Medieval Swedish Sacrament Niche.” Crossing the Baltic Sea to Helsinki, Finland, Cecily discussed “The Measure of a Saint: Size, Movement, and Meaning in St. Olaf Pilgrim Badges,” at the 14th triennial NORDIK Conference of Art History in the Nordic Countries. On the Swedish island of Gotland, Cecily visited twenty-two medieval churches, documenting their vivid wall paintings, art objects, and architecture. Following in the footsteps of the eleventh-century Norwegian king, St. Olaf, Cecily made her way to Trondheim to see one of the northern-most medieval cathedrals in Europe. Sailing south to Bergen, she examined outstanding altar frontals, tabernacle shrines, and sculptures at the University Museum. Study days in Stockholm, Uppsala, Copenhagen and Roskilde saw her consulting national collections and church treasuries in mainland Sweden and Denmark. What a voyage!
