ARTH 4101

ARTH 4101

Course information provided by the 2025-2026 Catalog.

Works of art have always engendered political, social, and cultural meanings. This seminar presents an introduction to the methods used by art historians and the objects and ideas that constitute the historiography of their discipline. If art history was once understood as the study of the development of style in European art, over the past century its practitioners have attempted to embrace a global perspective and to address issues of class, ethnicity, nationality, sexual orientation, and gender. Readings will focus on historically situating methods and the implications of their cross-cultural application. They will be discussed in the framework of institutions, apparatuses and practices that have shaped the field, identifying how these have contributed to systemic mechanisms of hegemony and exclusion. Papers will encourage students to put methods into practice, realizing in the process that subject matter is not an isolated choice to which methods are applied, but something that profoundly affects the approach that the researcher brings to the writing and conceptualizing and doing of art history.


Distribution Requirements (CA-AG, LA-AG), (ALC-AS)

Last 4 terms offered (None)

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Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: ARTH 6101VISST 4101

  • 3 Credits GradeNoAud

  •  3308 ARTH 4101   SEM 101

    • W
    • Aug 25 - Dec 8, 2025
    • McGowan, K

  • Instruction Mode: In Person