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  • 3.00 Credits

    Women and Art provides an introduction to the multiple, diverse relationships of women and western and non-western art and architecture spanning the periods from prehistory through our own time. Women and Art will focus on women as the subject of art, the creator, the patron, collector and the receiver of art and architecture as a gift or in memoriam as well as more contemporary roles such as art critic, dealer and teacher. Concurrently, this course will also examine the ways in which the art historical canon previously excluded and marginalized women and their roles in art and architecture and investigate the more recent, dramatic shifts in scholarship that have resulted in a more inclusive stance. Beall-Fofana/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course deals with the landscape as subject matter in painting. Through studio work, class trips to paint on location and work outside of class, students will develop a body of work focusing on landscape. Using oil paint, students will be directed in more advanced painting theory and techniques related to the unique challenges presented by the landscape. Questions of the composition, color, light, and issues of deep and flat space will be explored in reference to contemporary and historical examples of landscape painters. Prerequisite: ART 111. Studio Fee: $60. Rye, Staff/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    Each of these numbers designates a specific level of specialized study on a relevant topic that has been designed by the student in conjunction with a faculty member of art history or studio art. Permission of Chair required. Staff/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    This upper level, field-based course is designed for juniors and seniors to explore and develop professional opportunities and apply concepts and skills learned in their coursework in art history and/or studio art. Permission of Chair required. Staff/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course will begin to deal with the issue of personal expression in drawing. It will include a reevaluation of the elements of drawing from that point of view. Working problems will take into consideration the individual's inclinations as he/ she begins to formulate his/her own rationale for making art. Specific artists will be studied with a focus on the nature of the expression in their work. Studio supplies fee: $20. Prerequisite: ART 101 and ART 201, or permission of the instructor. Flanagan, Read, Staff/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course explores advanced problems in painting. Students will be directed in a more in-depth examination of the extensive possibilities of the oil painting medium. Both abstract and figurative approaches will be explored. Emphasis is on thematic self-direction and group critiques. The focus of the course shifts annually to reflect the perspective of the faculty teaching it. Prerequisite: ART 111 and ART 211, or permission of the instructor. Studio supplies fee: $60. Flanagan, Staff/ Three credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course serves as a culminating experience for students who are majors or minors in art history. Using some of the foundational texts of art history, we will investigate the different methodologies employed in the discipline. The format for the class combines short introductory lectures by the professor with detailed discussion of assigned readings. During the semester, students will undertake a project that involves matching a work or group of works with a specific methodological approach or approaches. As part of the project, students will learn how to write, critique and edit an abstract; they will produce an annotated bibliography; and they will give a formal oral presentation of their work that incorporates visual media. Beall-Fofana, Norris/ Three Credits
  • 3.00 Credits

    Advanced project in Studio Art as a culmination of a program of study for the Major or Minor in Studio Art. This project is completed by an exhibition of student work mounted in the spring. Studio supplies fee: $60. Permission of the chairperson required. Flanagan, Staff/ Three credits
  • 4.00 Credits

    A course for non-science majors that focuses on selected functional systems of the body, the organs that compose them, and the interactions among them. Special attention will be given to disease processes. In these systems laboratory work (one three-hour session per week) will include studies of physiological concepts at the cellular and systems levels. This course is especially designed for students majoring in Social and Rehabilitation Services or Psychology, or students seeking background for courses in Anthropology and other social sciences. Lab Fee: $300.00. (Fall, Spring) Staff/ Four credits
  • 4.00 Credits

    A study of the ingestion, digestion, absorption, distribution, and utilization of foodstuffs by a higher organism, such as man. Attention will be paid to the role of enzymes, vitamins, and the synthesis of essential macromolecules in the nutrition process, as well as the anatomy of the digestive tract. Laboratories will include two computerized dietary assessment exercises. The ?rst, early in the semester, will give a complete analysis of the nutritional intake of each student and will allow the student to plan a strategy to improve his/her diet. The second assessment, later in the semester, will check out how well the strategy has worked. These exercises will be of special interest to athletes and others concerned with nutrition. Three lectures and one laboratory per week. Lab Fee: $300.00. Mahon/ Four credits
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