|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course provides a critical study of the major trends and sources of early twentieth-century art. In addition to examining the major artists and art movements of the first half of the century, the course considers changes in art's relationship to society, the rise of avant-garde movements in Europe and elsewhere, and the evolution of abstract art both before and after World War I. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, or Liberal Arts Elective, or Humanities Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course provides an overview of major artists and critical issues from World War II to the present. Writings by both critics and artists introduce students to a range of issues. The course examines changes in the definition of art during this period and the questions that recent Postmodern art practices have raised about the concept of Modernism as it was defined in relation to Abstract Expressionism. Required for all students concentrating in fine arts, painting, photography, sculpture, and printmaking. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art Since 1945 Requirement (all Fine Art or Graphic Design Students) or Art History Elective (Illustration Students) or Liberal Arts Elective, or Humanities Elective.
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course is a survey of painting, sculpture, photography and the decorative arts of the United States, from the Colonial Period to 1945. American art will be seen against the evolving social and political background that marks the growth of a nation. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, or Liberal Arts Elective, or Humanities Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits Designed to use area art collections, this course surveys major artistic styles in the last half of the 19th century. While the focus is European art, related styles in North America are included. Starting with the Realism of Courbet and Eakins, students trace artistic developments through Impressionism, in France and abroad, to the roots of Modernism in the art of the Post-Impressionist. The role of photography and the impact of non-Western art on the evolution of Modernism also receive consideration. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, Humanities Elective or Liberal Arts Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course surveys the major artistic styles of the first half of the 19th century in Europe and North America. Starting with the Neoclassicism of David, this course then examines Romanticism in Europe, from Friedrich to Delacroix, and in America, from Cole to Homer. Students consider the effects of encounters between the Old World and the New in America, and the clash of tradition and innovation in 19th-century Europe. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, or Liberal Arts Elective, or Humanities Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course is a general survey of art from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, with in-depth study of several cultures. It combines art historical and anthropological approaches. Students study mask making, body decoration, dance, ritual performance, fabric design, and material culture as well as architecture, painting and sculpture. Visits to area museums form an integral part of the course. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, Humanities Elective or Liberal Arts Elective; Art Education Diversity Requirement
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits Since the invention of photography in 1839, the various photo/optical media have dramatically transformed the ways we know the world. In particular, our notions of what is art have been profoundly altered by the camera. This course examines the characteristics of photographed experience primarily from the historical perspective, but also from the cultural, the critical, and the technological perspectives, for a broad understanding of the medium's past and present. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: History of Photography Requirement (Photography Students); Art History Elective, Humanities Elective or Liberal Arts Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course examines the history of art in the landscape from prehistoric earth works to contemporary environmental art. It is a multi- and cross-disciplinary investigation that includes sculpture, architecture, archeology and agricultural practices. It includes garden design and philosophy focusing on European, Islamic, Chinese and Japanese gardens. Funerary monuments, shrines and outdoor mortuary complexes are included, as are portable shelters and other temporary (and permanent) structures from Africa and North America. The course questions the understanding of nature and of place that has informed the construction of landscapes and a changing definition of art. Visits to local sites and an exhibition of outdoor contemporary sculpture are part of the course. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, Humanities Elective or Liberal Arts Elective
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This course is administered by the director of the Italy Program. This course provides an introduction to the art and architecture of the Etruscans. This class format is a combination of slide lectures and walking tours of extant art and monuments. Day trips to the town of Tarquinia, known for its archeological museum and its painted Etruscan tombs, and to the renowned Etruscan burial grounds of Cerveteri provides students with firsthand knowledge of the art and ritual practices of the fascinating culture. In Rome, walking tours of selected monuments and of the Etruscan collection of the Villa Giulia, demonstrate the impact on the Romans of Etruscan art and life. Prerequisites: Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, Humanities Elective or Liberal Arts Elective.
-
3.00 Credits
3 credits This class is an overview of Buddhist art (sculpture, architecture and painting) from its birth in South Asia through its spread to South East Asia, Central Asia and East Asia. To bring the art to life, we take a field trip to the MFA, Boston - once home to leading South Asian scholar and curator Ananda K. Coomaraswamy-or, to the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem. Prerequisites: English Composition I and II, Art History I and II Fulfills: Art History Elective, Liberal Arts Elective or Humanities Elective; Art Education Non-Western Requirement.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|