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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; No prerequisites This course is an introductory overview of the history of design in furniture, interiors, and architecture from the ancient world through 1820. Lectures, readings, and field trips focus on the development of major forms, period styles, and ornament from ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome through the Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, and Neoclassical eras.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Prerequisite: 101 The second half of the introductory survey, this course focuses on the history of Western furniture, interiors, and architecture in the 19th and 20th centuries. Styles examined include 19th century revival styles, Arts and Crafts, Art Deco, European and American Modernism, and the International Style.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Prerequisites: 102, 160 The sources of modern architecture and design are explored from the 18th century designers Adam, Soane, and Ledoux through the 19th century and the work of the eclectic architects. The course examines how architects used stylistic elements of the past and adapted them to solve modern design problems. Each revival style is traced to the original era to explore the meaning of the adaptations.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Prerequisites: 102, 160 The second part of the overview of modern architecture, this course focuses on the period 1890 to the present in Europe and America. Styles and movements covered include the American Beaux Arts, the Chicago School, Art Nouveau, Vienna Secession, Futurism, Expressionism, Art Moderne, the Modern Movement, and Post-Modernism.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisite: 102 This two-week study tour will visit significant sites looking at both historical and contemporary installations. Emphasis is on historical and stylistic analysis. Students will do preparatory readings, keep a journal/sketchbook, and produce a final paper. Locations have included Spain, Scandinavia, London, Rome, Paris, Istanbul and their environs.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisite: 102 or equivalent Illustrated lectures and first-hand observation will provide students with an understanding of how period styles have been interpreted in the decorative arts and have evolved from the Renaissance through the beginning of the 19th century. Course material focuses on objects in ceramic, metal, and glass; lamps and lighting fixtures; and furniture, and will demonstrate the importance of these objects in reflecting the forms and ornaments of each particular style. All students meet with the instructor for the first session at NYSID; the remaining classes are held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisite: 102 or equivalent This course examines the origins of design in America in the 18th century, tracing its development from a dominant English aesthetic to the beginnings, after 1776, of an individual national style. It will address the social and cultural context of objects and interiors as well as their visual characteristics. Objects will be examined in terms of craftsmanship and quality of manufacture. The course will address issues of materials and form as well as concepts of revival, reproduction, and restoration. All students meet with instructor for the first session at NYSID; the remaining classes are held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisites: 111, 112 Through a series of lectures and walking tours, this course examines how Beaux Arts architects created both public and private environments in America. Lectures focus on the golden era of American domestic design pioneered by Richard Morris Hunt in the 1870s and '80s, developed in the interiors of Stanford White and Elsie de Wolfe, and showcased in American mansions like Vizcaya and Beauport. Students will visit both private and public interiors and explore a variety of Beaux Arts building types, including the row house and the department store.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisites: 111, 112 This course will examine the major design movements of the 20th century and the designers and architects who shaped the development of the contemporary modern aesthetic. Beginning with Art Nouveau and the Arts and Crafts movement, it will examine such critical influences as the Wiener Werkstatte, the Bauhaus, Midcentury Modernism, Postmodernism, Minimalism, and the global design of the recent avant-garde.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture credits 2; Elective; Prerequisite: 102 or equivalent This course focuses on French and English design. Furniture styles from shops founded in the reign of Louis XIV and 18th century products of rare quality and detail still influence design style today. A focus on two centers-London and Paris-helps students gain insight into fashionable design of the period and its enduring influence in the 19th and 20th centuries. All students meet with the instructor for the first session at NYSID; remaining classes are held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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