2007-2008 University of Guelph Undergraduate Calendar

XII. Course Descriptions

Art History

School of Fine Art and Music

Students with a special interest in particular courses in Art History should consult the School concerning prerequisites.

ARTH*1220 The Visual Arts Today F (3-0) [0.50]
An introduction to contemporary visual culture, its current controversies and its historical roots. The avant-grade movements of the modern period and the impact of new technologies and media will be examined within a rich historical context. Topics will include international exhibitions, selling art, art and popular culture, censorship, and the relation between words and images.
ARTH*1510 Art Historical Studies I F (3-0) [0.50]
This course considers the visual arts in the Western tradition from prehistory through the Middle Ages. Emphasis will be placed on historical and critical analysis of key monuments and on the prerequisite technologies, as well as on various ways of looking at the visual past and present.
ARTH*1520 Art Historical Studies II W (3-0) [0.50]
A consideration of the visual arts in the Western tradition. Emphasis will be placed on historical and critical analysis of key monuments and on the prerequisite technologies, as well as on various ways of looking at the visual past and present. Focus will be on the visual arts from the Renaissance to today.
ARTH*2050 Modern Latin American Art F (3-0) [0.50]
An exploration of Latin American art in the context of cultural, social and political experience, with emphasis on the work of the painter Frida Kahlo, the Mexican muralists, performance artists Guillermo Gomez-Pena and Coco Fusco, and other important contemporary artists who have represented identity, culture, and political experience as complex and multifaceted because they have lived between nations and cultures.
ARTH*2060 Aboriginal Arts in the Americas W (3-0) [0.50]
An introduction to the aboriginal cultures of North, South, and Central America with special emphasis on the pre-contact period. The interdisciplinary approach will take into account recent debates about methodology, ethnocentricity, and aboriginal viewpoints.
ARTH*2070 Art of the USA F (3-0) [0.50]
In art, the 20th century has been referred to as "The American Century." Artists in the USA have a tradition of creating new visual languages, of using new ideas and technologies, and of representing the vanguard. Where did these ideas originate, and how has the USA determined our notions of what art is? This survey course focuses on modern American artists, on the evolution and growth of modern visual culture, and on how technologies and societies impact on artistic taste.
ARTH*2120 Introduction to Museology W (3-0) [0.50]
The course will examine the history of collections, traditions of cultural representation and display, constructions of authenticity, trade and exchange.
ARTH*2150 Art and Archaeology of Greece F (3-0) [0.50]
A survey of Ancient Greek Art and Archaeology, with stress on form and function plus stylistic trends and aesthetic values. The course will illuminate the cultural, social, and political life in Ancient Greece. (Also listed as CLAS*2150).
Equate(s): CLAS*2150
ARTH*2280 Modern Architecture W (3-0) [0.50]
An investigation of architectural theory and practice within the social and spatial complexities of national and international life.
ARTH*2290 History of Photographic Media W (3-0) [0.50]
An introduction to the history of photography through to its application in contemporary visual arts.
ARTH*2480 Introduction to Art Theory and Criticism F (3-0) [0.50]
This course provides an overview of some of the most significant methodological approaches and critical practices used by art historians to write about visual culture. Traditional methods of art historical analysis include connoisseurship, iconography, and formalism. With these we will be exploring newer interpretative models and multidisciplinary approaches such as structuralism, semiotics, post-structuralism, and psychoanalytic theory as well as political theories such as feminism and socio-cultural theory.
Prerequisite(s): (2 of ARTH*1220, ARTH*1510, ARTH*1520), (1 of SART*1050, SART*1060)
ARTH*2490 History of Canadian Art F (3-0) [0.50]
An overview of the visual arts in Canada from the earliest times to the present, with emphasis on the diverse contributions made by the First Nations, by French and British colonization, and by subsequent settlers from a great variety of different cultural origins.
ARTH*2540 Medieval Art F (3-0) [0.50]
This course considers visual arts during a period when the Christian church built a new synthesis out of the legacies of the late Roman Empire and its "barbarian invaders".
ARTH*2550 The Italian Renaissance F (3-0) [0.50]
An investigation of the myths and realities of the Renaissance in the visual arts. The artists to be studied will include Giotto, Duccio, Ghiberti, Donatello, Alberti, the Bellini, Verrocchio and Michelangelo. Their careers will be placed against the theoretical beginnings of art writing and the intricate relationships of the emerging city-states of Siena, Florence, Milan, and the republic of Venice.
ARTH*2580 Late Modern Art: 1900-1950 F (3-0) [0.50]
A study of the historical avant-gardes in the social and political contexts of the period 1900-1950.
ARTH*2600 Early Modern Art to 1900 W (3-0) [0.50]
A study of visual culture as it was transformed by the revolutions - industrial, political, and colonial - of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. (Offered in even-numbered years.)
ARTH*2950 Baroque Art W (3-0) [0.50]
The visual arts in an age of religious crisis and the growth of great trading empires.
ARTH*3010 Contemporary Canadian Art W (3-0) [0.50]
The wide range of contemporary Canadian visual arts, from painting to new technological media, from 'high' culture to punk, will be examined in the context of specifically Canadian social and historical conditions during the modern and post-modern periods. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3050 Pre-Columbian Art F (3-0) [0.50]
This course investigates the history and artistic traditions of pre-contact America with special focus on selected cultural areas. The course will bring together such perspectives as archaeology, art history and ethnography.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3060 Public Art W (3-0) [0.50]
This course investigates what constitutes the "public" and the "private" domain in the arenas of art and visual culture. Provocative iconography, matters of race, nationality, sexuality, language, and identity in artistic practice, issues of censorship, controversial shows and exhibitions, the ethics of propriety and impropriety will be considered. Artists such as Linda Montano, Andres Serrano, Keith Haring, Annie Sprinkle, Robert Mapplethorpe and others will be discussed.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3100 Perspectives: Structure & Space in Western Art F (3-0) [0.50]
This course investigates the visual arts in Europe with special emphasis on issues of illusionism, mimesis, and the representation of space. (Offered in even-numbered years.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3150 Space: Roman Art and Urbanism W (3-0) [0.50]
Roman art and urbanism from the Early Republic to the end of the imperial period. The course will survey the developments of Roman art with an emphasis in architecture, sculpture and painting. It will illuminate the development of the urban space in the context of cultural, social and political life. (Also listed as CLAS*3150). (Offered in even-numbered years.)
Equate(s): CLAS*3150
Restriction(s): ARTH*3530, ARTH*4500
ARTH*3200 Colour: Practice & Meanings in Western Art W (3-0) [0.50]
This course explores the role colour has played in the work of selected artists and periods.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3210 Critical Issues in Art History F (3-0) [0.50]
This course investigates art and its histories. Art writing, art history, and art historical methodology will be examined through the work of key art historians, cultural critics, and philosophers such as Clement Greenberg, Rosalind Krauss, Griselda Pollock, and Jacques Derrida for example. Critical issues such as intention and reception, authorship, creativity and originality will be discussed. (Offered in odd-numbered years.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3220 Nationalism and Identity in Art F (3-0) [0.50]
This course considers issues of identity formation and representation as they intersect with the agendas and interests of the nation state. The course looks at questions of power and exclusion, theories of representation and notions of centre/periphery, cultural hybridity and border-crossing in the age of globalization. It will examine the representation of identity in cultural institutions (including museums, and international art events) in cultural policy, and in cultural forms (fine art and popular culture, journals and periodicals).
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*3310 Image: Pictures & Their Power W (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines the role that images play in conveying religious, political and aesthetic messages, and how these powerfully reveal themselves in forms of iconophobia and iconophilia.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
Equate(s): ARTH*3540
ARTH*3320 Lives: Aspects of Western Art W (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines how the theory and practice of art history has often been informed by biography and other constructions of stereotypes and social practices concerning the ‘Artist’, the artist’s audiences, and the various contexts that inform artists’ lives, real and imagined. (Offered in even-numbered years.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
Equate(s): ARTH*3550
ARTH*3330 Display: Visual Culture in Western Europe W (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines the politics of visual representation in various contexts and how it shapes the meaning of artworks. An interpretation of culture through liturgical display, museums, cabinets of curiosities, tourist art, World's Fairs and shopping mall will be considered.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
Equate(s): ARTH*3570
ARTH*3340 The Art Object & Material Culture F (3-0) [0.50]
This course considers selected topics in the visual arts in Italy, Spain and France, with attention to questions of the political, social, economic, gendered, and aesthetic meanings of works of art. (Offered in odd-numbered years.) (First offering Fall 2009.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
Equate(s): ARTH*3640
ARTH*3460 English Art, 1750 to Present F (3-0) [0.50]
In conjunction with the London Semester, this course will survey the visual arts in England from the mid-18th century to the present. Visits to galleries, museums, libraries, studios, and other cultural institutions will supplement lectures and stress the experience of actual works of art.
Prerequisite(s): Admission to London Semester
ARTH*3520 Idea: Art Since 1950 F (3-0) [0.50]
An analysis of the visual arts of painting, sculpture, photographic media and non-traditional media World War II to the present. Selected artists of North America and Western Europe will be considered, as well as the institutions of the art world.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits.
ARTH*3640 Objects: Baroque Art and Rococo Art F (3-0) [0.50]
Selected topics investigating the visual arts in Italy, Spain, and France. These may include the study of key practitioners, the development of a complex artistic theory that reflects patterns of local and national discourse and instruction in the arts, the emergence of female artists. Key artists are Caravaggio, Bernini, Artemisia Gentileschi, Borromini, Velazquez et al. (Offered in odd-numbered years.) (Last offering Fall 2007.)
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits
ARTH*3780 Gender and Art W (3-0) [0.50]
This course considers how the practice and reception of the visual arts intersect with constructs of gender in contemporary and historical contexts.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits including 2.00 credits in Art History.
ARTH*4050 Seminar in the Americas I W (3-0) [0.50]
Selected topics in the visual arts of the Americas with special emphasis on Pre-Columbian, Latin American, or Aboriginal arts.
Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 14.00 credits including 1 of ARTH*2050, ARTH*2060, ARTH*3050, ARTH*3220
ARTH*4060 Seminar in the Americas II F (3-0) [0.50]
Selected topics in the visual arts of the Americas with special emphasis on the arts in Canada and the USA.
Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 14.00 credits including 1 of ARTH*2070, ARTH*2490, ARTH*3010, ARTH*3060, ARTH*3220
Restriction(s): ARTH*4250
ARTH*4150 Seminar in Western Art I W (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines selected topics in the area of Western Art.
Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 14.00 credits including (ARTH*2540 or ARTH*3540).
ARTH*4160 Seminar in Western Art II F (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines selected topics in the area of Western Art.
Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 14.00 credits including 1 of ARTH*2550, ARTH*2950, ARTH*3100, ARTH*3550, ARTH*3640
ARTH*4550 Questions in Criticism W (3-0) [0.50]
This course examines selected topics in the area of Art Theory, Critical Methodology and Museology.
Prerequisite(s): A minimum of 14.00 credits including (ARTH*2480 or ARTH*3210).
ARTH*4600 Individual Study - Art History S,F,W (3-0) [0.50]
Each student establishes, in consultation with the faculty member chosen, the content of this special study within the area of expertise of that instructor.
Restriction(s): This course is available with the approval of the Director for students who have completed their 5th semester and for whom there is no suitable course available.
ARTH*4620 Museum Studies W (3-0) [0.50]
This seminar course will be offered in conjunction with the staff and facilities of the Macdonald Stewart Art Centre and will deal with historical matters relating to the role of the art museum in western life and the critical day-to-day management of a contemporary one. Students will participate, when possible, in the preparation of a current or forthcoming exhibition in the Centre.
Prerequisite(s): 10.00 credits
ARTH*4850 Honours Thesis I S,F,W (0-9) [0.50]
Under the guidance of a faculty member over two semesters (ARTH*4850 in the first semester and ARTH*4860 in the second semester), the honours student will research and complete a major independent project in art history or criticism for final approval by a faculty member. Recommended for all honours students.
Restriction(s): Registration in semester 7 or 8 and a cumulative average of 70% in Studio and Art History courses. Instructor consent and approval of the Director required.
ARTH*4860 Honours Thesis II S,F,W (0-9) [0.50]
Under the guidance of a faculty member over two semesters (ARTH*4850 in the first semester and ARTH*4860 in the second semester), the honours student will research and complete a major independent project in art history or criticism for final approval by a faculty member. Recommended for all honours students.
Prerequisite(s): ARTH*4850
Restriction(s): Instructor consent and approval of the Director required.