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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Survey of the major works of art and architecture produced since the Renaissance, their major themes, the artists, and the critical issues that affected the cultures in which they were created.
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3.00 Credits
Survey of visual culture in India and Southeast Asia, China, Japan and Korea, the Americas, the Pacific, and Africa. Lectures, readings, and discussions will focus on relationships among works of art, religious belief systems, political conventions, and cultural practices.
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3.00 Credits
Major works of art and architecture produced in the ancient Greek world from the ninth through first century B.C. in their social and political context. Attention given to the relationship of art to other forms of cultural expression such as philosophy, religion, literature, and drama. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
Art and architecture of the medieval period from the transformation of the Roman Empire into a Christian state at the beginning of the fourth century to the late Gothic period around AD 1400. Cultural contexts in which art and architecture were produced in Europe and the Greek East. Examine architecture, sculpture, manuscripts, metalwork, stained glass, and other media. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
Art and architecture within the context of fourteenth through sixteenth century western Europe, marked by the rise of art theory and criticism and new concepts of the artist's role in society. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
Developments in European and American art from 1890 to World War II, covering major movements including Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, Expressionism, Russian Constructivism, and Abstract Expressionism. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
Art and architecture of the ancient Romans, from the Etruscans through the fourth century AD in their religious, political, and social context. Special attention given to focused study of specific periods, such as the age of Augustus, or physical contexts, such as Pompeii. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
European and American art from 1860 to 1900 will be examined through historical, political, social, philosophical, and literary perspectives. Impressionism, Post- Impressionism, Symbolism, and the "Art for Art's Sake" movement will be studiethrough the works of artists such as Monet, Renoir, Van Gogh, Rodin, and Whistler. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for nonmajors.
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3.00 Credits
Major movements since World War II, including abstract expressionism, neo-dada, pop, photorealism, minimalism, conceptual art, earth works, new realism, neoexpressionism, performance, and post-modernism. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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3.00 Credits
European and American art from 1780 to 1860 will be examined through historical, political, social, philosophical, and literary perspectives. Neoclassicism, Romanticism, the Hudson River School, and Realism will be studied through the works of artists such as David, Goya, Turner, Cole, and Courbet. Prerequisites: ARH 100 and 101 required for majors and recommended for non-majors.
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