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ARHI 43341: Seminar in Italian Drawings
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
This seminar is devoted to the study of Italian Renaissance and Baroque drawings in The Snite Museum of Art. The course will introduce the student to the world of special collections where particular care is given to the conservation of works on paper, and where instruction is given in the appropriate ways to study drawings. We will examine papers of different colors, trace the origin and manufacture of paper by means of watermarks, and recognize different types of inks and chalks in order to appreciate the role which the physical object plays in understanding it as an historical and aesthetic work of art. Discussion will also center on the purpose and types of drawings. In fact, the acknowledgment of drawing as fundamental to the creative process, and appreciation of its status as an independent aesthetic endeavor, have their origins in the Italian Renaissance. By the 17th century, drawings of all types had come to be fully appreciated and collected by artists and connoisseurs alike. Each student will be required to research one or two drawings in the Snite collection, and the seminar will conclude with an exhibition (with accompanying catalogue) in The Snite Museum.
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ARHI 43351: Seminar: Rome in the Age of Bernini
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Permission required. Seminar on specific subjects in Baroque art.
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ARHI 43351 - Seminar: Rome in the Age of Bernini
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ARHI 43404: Seminar: Narratives of Modern Art
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Permission required. Seminar on specific subjects in 19th-century and 20th-century art.
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ARHI 43404 - Seminar: Narratives of Modern Art
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ARHI 43405: Seminar: Topics in Modern Art
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
This is a topics course on special areas of modern art. The specific areas of study vary from section to section and from semester to semester.
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ARHI 43405 - Seminar: Topics in Modern Art
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ARHI 43416: Seminar: Topics in American Art
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Topic courses on special areas of American art.
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ARHI 43416 - Seminar: Topics in American Art
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ARHI 43420: Memorial Mania: History, Memory, and Contemporary American Culture
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Focusing on the great variety - and great numbers - of memorials erected in recent decades, this seminar explores how cultural memory is created and what it has come to mean in terms of national identity in modern and contemporary America. The definition of "memorial" is purposely broad: from statues and monuments to parks, public squares, cemeteries, public ceremonies, and moments of silence. Memorials can be permanent or temporary - such as roadside shrines. Understandings of "memory" are also broad, ranging from subjects of local and civic memory to those of national and/or collective memory, and including popular interests in autobiography, memoirs, and family genealogy. Understandings of "America" are similarly wide-ranging, often conflicted, and always in flux. Recognizing the broad definitions of the key terms "memorial," "memory," and "America," this seminar considers the following: What does memory mean in America today, and in American memorial culture? What is driving the urgency to "memorialize" and in fact who and what is being remembered? Who and what are memorable in American history, and in terms of American national identity? Potential subjects are vast and include war memorials, Holocaust memorials, presidential commemoration, memorials erected at sites of tragedy and trauma (Oklahoma City, World Trade Center, Columbine), ritualistic memorial practices (such as pilgrimage and gift-giving), issues of public response, different styles of memorials and monuments (figurative v. abstract memorials), and the role of the National Park Service, the nation's primary "keeper" of historical and cultural memory. Course readings will include selections by contemporary historians, art historians, and theorists engaged in issues of memory, history, and material/visual culture, as well as films.
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ARHI 43480: Seminar: Topics in Contemporary Art
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Topic courses on special areas of Contemporary Art.
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ARHI 43480 - Seminar: Topics in Contemporary Art
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ARHI 43512: Seminar: Museums and Collecting
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
This seminar will focus on the history of collecting and the origins and nature of the modern museum. In the course of our discussions we will address a number of issues including why do people collect, who is the museum's audience, what role does authenticity play in the philosophy of collecting and display, are museums bound by rules of public decorum, what impact has the Internet had on art museums and their audiences, and what are the museum's rights and obligations in matters of cultural patrimony.
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ARHI 43523: The Meaning of Things
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
"The Meaning of Things:" asks how objects as diverse as a ND class ring, a pair of jeans, a Lava Lamp or an iPod acquire meaning and value. This seminar will introduce students to a range of practices relating to consumption in American history. We will investigate the gendered aspects of production, marketing, buying and using goods as these impact not only on gender, but also on the construction of a range of identities. This will lay the foundation for students to write substantive individual research papers on a "thing" of their choice.
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ARHI 43576: Theories of Art
3.00 Credits
University of Notre Dame
Required of all art history majors. This seminar is a survey of the historiography of art history with special attention paid to the various types of methodology that have been applied to the analysis of art. Special attention is given to 19th-century and 20th-century art historical methods, including connoisseurship, biography, iconology, psychoanalysis, semiotic, and feminist approaches.
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