Professor Amy B. Werbel
Saint Ed’s 133
Office: 802-654-2271
Cell: 802-355-3568
e-mail:
office hours: t.b.a.
Syllabus
Art 252ABSurvey of the History of Art II: Renaissance to Modern
Spring, 2013
Section A (Honors): Tuesday, Thursday 11:30-1:05
Section B: Tuesday, Thursday 1:15-2:50
SE 104
Students in Art 252 learn to analyze art, and to see, think, write and speak critically about painting, sculpture, and empowered objects from the fifteenth through twentieth centuries in Europe, America, and West Africa. Throughout the course, we analyze art through changing thematic lenses. Stylistic elements, the role of art in society, and the judgment of what is good, are persistent themes.
Required text for this course is Art History vol. II, fourth edition, by Marilyn Stokstad. Other requiredreadings are posted in “doc sharing” on eCollege.
Jan. 15Introduction: Art and History
Unit 1: Subject Matter and Iconography: Artists as Storytellers
Daily Response Papers for this unit should reflect on the ways artists tell stories with images. What types of stories do the artists in this unit tell, why, and what methods do they use to enhance interpretive significance?
Jan. 17Early Renaissance Painting in Burgundy and Flanders
Reading: Stokstad, XXIX-XXXVI, 560-568, 571-580; excerpt from: Linda Seidel, Jan van Eyck’s Arnolfini Portrait (Cambridge University Press, 1993): 19-58 (on eCollege).
Jan. 22Early Renaissance Painting and Sculpture in Italy
Reading: Stokstad, 593-595, 601-615, 620, 625-9; Andrew Butterfield, “Art and Innovation in Ghiberti’s Gates of Paradise, in The Gates of Paradise (Yale University Press, 2007), 16-41 (on eCollege).
Unit 2: Educational Purposes: Images as Teachers
Daily Response Papers for this unit should reflect on art’s instructional role in society. How, and what, do images teach individuals in these societies?
Jan. 24High Renaissance Painting and Sculpture in Italy
Reading: Stokstad, 631-645, 654-664, 666-668; excerpt from Rona Goffen, “Titian’s Sacred and Profane Love and Marriage,” in The Expanding Discourse (HarperCollins, 1992): 111-121 (on eCollege).
Jan. 29Renaissance Art in Germany, the Netherlands, and England
Reading: Stokstad676-689, 696-706;Mitchell B. Merback, ”Torture and Teaching: The Reception of Lucas Cranach the Elder’s Martyrdom of the Twelve Apostles in the Protestant Era,” Art Journal (Spring, 1998): 14-23.
Unit 3: Gender and Sexuality
Daily Response Papers in this unit should discuss the ways that art reflects attitudes towards gender and sexuality operative in their cultural context.
Jan. 31Baroque Painting and Sculpture in Italy and Spain
Reading: Stokstad, 710-712, 715-716, 718-734.
Watch:
Feb. 5Baroque Painting in Flanders and Holland
Reading: Stokstad, 735-755.
Watch:
Feb. 7Susanna for Girls and Guys
Reading: Mary Garrard, “Susanna” in Artemisia Gentileschi(Princeton University Press, 1989): 182-209 (on eCollege); Eric Jan Sluijter, “Susanna and the Elders,” in Rembrandt and the Female Nude (Amsterdam University Press, 2006): 113-139 (on eCollege).
Feb. 12Worldcat, JStor, and RefworksInstruction – Library
Feb. 14 Artstor, Scanning, Photoshop, and PowerPoint instruction - Library
Feb. 19Section A: Research Presentations (Group A)
Section B: Exam #1 (Paper Writers – No class)
Unit 4: Art and Political Order
Daily Response Papers in this unit should address the role art plays in creating and preserving political power and social order.
Feb. 21Rococo andNeoclassicism
Reading: Stokstad, 902-904, 906-910, 920-930, 932-938.
Watch:
Feb.26Romanticism
Reading: Stokstad, 938-941, 943-956; Todd Porterfield and Susan L. Siegfried, excerpt from: “Staging Empire: Napoleon, Ingres, and David” (Pennsylvania State University Press), 3-22 (on eCollege).
Unit 5: Artist’s Biographies: The Intersections of Life and Art
Daily Response Papers in this unit should reflect on the ways that artist’s personal life stories and points-of-view contribute to artistic innovation.
Feb.28Early Photography and Realism
Reading: Stokstad, 961, 967-983.
Watch:
March 5Impressionism
Reading: Stokstad, 984-991; Griselda Pollock, “Mary Cassatt: Painter of Women and Children,” 280-301 (on eCollege).
March 7Post-Impressionism and Symbolism
Reading: Stokstad, 991-1003; Debora Silverman, excerpt from: Van Gogh and Gaugin: The Search for Sacred Art (Farar, Straus, and Giroux, 2000) on eCollege.
March 12 and 14 – No class. Break.
Unit 6: Art for Personal and Social Empowerment: The West-African Tradition
Daily Response Papers for this unit should discuss the ways that creating and consuming art can help individuals and societies gain empowerment.
March 19West African Art Overview
Reading: Stokstad, 879-901. BabatundeLawal, “African Art and the Social Order,” excerpt from The Gèlèdé Spectacle: Art, Gender, and Social Harmony in an African Culture (University of Washington Press, 1996): 3-18 (on eCollege).
March 21African Art in the Diaspora
Reading: Suzanne Preston-Blier, “Vodun Art, Social History and the Slave Trade,” 23-54 (on eCollege).
March 26The Harlem Renaissance
Reading: Stokstad, 1061, 1964-5; Richard J. Powell, “The Aaron Douglas Effect,” in Aaron Douglas, Modernist (Yale University Press): 53-73.
March 28Section A: Research Presentations (Group B)
Assignment: Paper writers come to my office hours this week with ideas for research paper topics
Section B: Exam #2/ (Paper Writers– no class)
Unit 7: Art for the Modern Age
Daily Response Papers for this unit should discuss the elements of “modernity” in art of the early 20th century.
April 2Cubism and Dada
Reading: Stokstad, 1016-1043
Assignment: Section B paper writers and all Section A students submit topic and bibliography for your final presentations.
April 4Surrealism throughAbstract Expressionism
Reading: Stokstad, 1056-1081; Stephen Polcari, Abstract Expressionism and the Modern Experience, (on eCollege).
April 9Assemblage, Pop, and Conceptual
Reading: Stokstad, 1082-1103.
Watch:
Unit 8: Conclusion. The Future of Art
DRPs for this unit should address the current and future status of art, and reflect on the role that art does (and should) play in society.
April 11Post-Modernism
Reading: Stokstad, 1106-1122, 1125-1135
April16Section A:Field Trip
Section B: Exam #3 (Paper writers no class -- meet with me this week)
April 18Art in the 21st Century
Watch:
April 23Art in the 21st Century
Watch:
April 25Final Research Presentations
April 30Final Research Presentations
Final Exam t.b.a. Final Papers Due on the same day as the exam.
Section A (Honors). Grading Percentages:
(10) pop quizzes: 10 points
(13) 2-page daily response papers: 52 points
(1) 10-minute research presentation: 10 points
(1) 20-minute research presentation: 18 points
Class Participation: 10 points
Section B. Grading Percentages:
Exam Takers:Paper Writers and Presenters:
Exam I: 20 pts.(15) 2-page daily response papers: 60 points
Exam II: 20 pts.(1) 15-minute research presentation: 30 points
Exam III: 20 pts.Class Participation: 10 points
Final Exam: 30 pts.
Class Participation: 10 points
Attendance and Class Participation:
You are permitted two unexcused absences from class. Further absences will be penalized by a two-point reduction in your final grade per extra absence. If you know you need to be absent, please call or e-mail me in advance, so that we can confer about missed work.
Pop Quizzes
In Section A, there will be 10 pop quizzes given at unannounced times and dates. Pop quizzes will consist of 4-5 simple multiple choice or true/false questions that demonstrate whether you have done the reading. Each pop quiz is worth one point.
Daily Response Papers
Daily Response papersgive you the opportunity to synthesize course information in short, thematic essays. You should use quotes from the readings, and discuss examples of art we have talked about, to provide “evidence” for your answer to the question for the unit paper. These are due in the correct eCollegedropboxbefore class on the day listed. Late daily response papers are not accepted for credit. These papers should be approximately 600 words. You should use in-text citations to course materials, e.g. (Stokstad, 754). No bibliography is necessary. Titles of Works of Art should be italicized or underlined. Use the following grading rubric to guide your preparation for this assignment:
DRP Component / CommentsCONTENT & CRITICAL THINKING
- Is the unit question and daily material addressed fully?
- Are art historical terminology and concepts understood and discussed correctly?
- Does the paper use quotes from the reading, and discussion of appropriate works of art that demonstrate comprehension of assigned course materials?
ORGANIZATION & STRUCTURE
- Is the essay focused?
- Is the flow of information logical?
- Paragraphs: Are they organized in a deliberate and helpful way?
- Paragraphs: Are they fully developed and appropriate in length?
- Transitions: Do they help the reader move from thought to thought?
LANGUAGE CONTROL
- Style: Is it controlled and easy to read?
- Style: Is it appropriate to the assignment and a general academic audience?
- Language: Are Standard Written English guidelines followed for:
- sentencestructure
- grammar
- word choice/usage
- punctuation
- quotations/citations
- spelling
GRADE:
10-minute Presentations:
These are 10-minute presentations of a book chapter or article that adds dimension and depth to one of the artists or themes we study during the first three units. Reference librarians will teach students use of tools to assist in learning how to find appropriate sources and present images to the class. You are REQUIRED to clear your choice with me before proceeding
15- or 20-minute Research Presentation
The final research presentation is an opportunity for students to applyextended research, analysis, and interpretation to one work of art on the important works list. Students are expected to formulate an original thesis about the meaning and significance of this work, and to support it well with trustworthy sources. A minimum of sevenacademicpeer-reviewed, modern sources must be used in preparing your presentation.
Students must bring their presentationsto class on a USBdrive.
Use the following grading rubric to guide your preparation for this assignment:
PRESENTATION COMPONENT / COMMENTSORGANIZATION:
- Provides overview at outset
- Provides necessary context for material in introduction – acknowledges prior audience understanding and/or need for background information
- presents information in a logical order
- sums up important points in a conclusion
CONTENT:
- Student articulates a critical argument about the work discussed
- General information is provided as necessary, but the presentation also “goes deep” on important points and artwork
- Student demonstrates mastery of content throughclear discussion of trustworthy scholarly sources and artwork that is appropriate to the topic
- Each work of art shown has a caption underneath, listing artist, title, and date
- The student makes clear reference to sources used, and presents a bibliography in MLA style as the final slide of the presentation.
PRESENTATION:
- The presentation is fully-prepared and well rehearsed, with smooth transitions
- Speech is audible and clear, with moderate pace and good volume
- The student looks out at the audience frequently, and directs attention to important elements of art work displayed
- PowerPoint frames are clear and helpful, with little text, no typos, and appropriate stylistic choices
- Time is well used and appropriate to the assignment
GRADE:
Exams
Each of the three 90-minute exams requires that test-takers demonstrate their understanding of themes and “important” works of art presented in class and readings. Each exam will include a variety of types of questions, including multiple choice and short essays. The 120-minute final exam is comprehensive, and includes these types of questions, plus analysis of “unknown works” for which you are asked to identify the style and approximate date of works based on general principles.
Each exam has its own important works list, which you may bring to class, covered with as many notes as you can fit. Although you may look at the important works list during exams (no other materials are allowed), please be aware that these tests will contain many questions. If you aren’t already VERY familiar with course materials, you will not have time to complete the exam.
Art 252 – Spring, 2011 - Important Works List - Exam #1
Note - * indicates that the work is in a reading on eCollege, not in the Stokstad textbook.
Early Renaissance Painting in Burgundy and Flanders
Detail of page with Thamyris, from Bocaccio’sDe Claris Mulieribus, 1402
Paul, Herman and Jean Limbourg, January, The Duke of Berry at Table, from the Tres Riches Heures, 1411-16
Workshop of the Master of Flémalle, The Mérode Altarpiece, c. 1425-30s
Jan van Eyck, Double Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfiniand his Wife, 1434
Jan and Hubert van Eyck, Ghent Altarpiece (closed and open), 1432
Rogier van der Weyden, Deposition, c. 1435-1438
Rogier van der Weyden, Portrait of a Lady, c. 1455
Rogier van der Weyden, Last Judgment Altarpiece (open), after 1443
Early Renaissance Painting and Sculpture in Italy
* Lorenzo Ghiberti, Gates of Paradise, full view, “Jacob and Esau,” and “Adam and Eve”panels 1425-1452
Donatello, David, c. 1446-1460(?)
Donatello, EquestrianMonumentof Erasmo de Narni, 1443-53
Perugino, The Delivery of the Keys to Saint Peter, and SchematicDrawingShowing the Orthogonals and Vanishing Point, 1481.
Masaccio, Trinity with the Virgin, Saint John the Evangelist, and Donors, c. 1425-27/8
Andrea Mantegna, Frescoes in the Camera Picta, Ducal Palace, Mantua, 1465-74
Fra Angelico, Annunciation, c. 1438-1445
Andrea del Castagno, Last Supper, Resurrection, Crucifixion, and Entombment, 1447
Andrea Mantegna, Two Views of the Camera Picta, Ducal Palace, Mantua, 1465-1474
SandroBoticelli, The Birth of Venus, c. 1484-86
Giovanni Bellini, St. Francis in Ecstasy, c. 1470s
High Renaissance Painting and Sculpture in Italy
Leonardo, The Last Supper, 1495-98
Leonardo, Mona Lisa, c. 1503-1506
Leonardo, Vitruvian Man, c. 1490
Michelangelo, Pietá, c. 1500
Michelangelo, David, 1501-4
Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel Ceiling, interior, ceiling top to bottom, Creation of Adam (all 1508-12), and Last Judgment, 1536-1541
Raphael, Stanza dellaSegnatura and School of Athens, 1510-11
Raphael, Leo X with Cardinals, c. 1517
Titian, Venus of Urbino, c. 1538
Titian, The Pastoral Concert, c. 1510
Titian, The Pesaro Madonna, 1519-1526
Titian, Isabella d’Este, 1534-1536
Bronzino, Portrait of a Young Man, c. 1540-1545
SofonisbaAnguissola, Self-Portrait, c. 1552
* Titian, Sacred and Profane Love, 1514
High Renaissance Art in Germany, the Netherlands, and England
Albrecht Dürer, Self-Portrait, 1500
Matthias Grünewald, Isenheim Altarpiece, closed and open, c. 1510-15
Albrecht Dürer, Adam and Eve, 1504
Lucas Cranach theElder, Nymphofthe Spring, c. 1537
Albecht Altdorfer, DanubeLandscape, c. 1525
Hieronymus Bosch, Garden ofEarthlyDelights, c. 1505-1515
Caterina van Hemessen, Self-Portrait, 1548
Pieter Breughel the Elder, Return of the Hunters, 1565
Hans Holbein the Younger, The French Ambassadonrs, 1533
* Lucas Cranach the Elder, Martyrdom of Saint James the Lesser, c. 1512 (woodcut)
Baroque Painting and Sculpture in Italy and Spain
Gianlorenzo Bernini, Saint Teresa of Ávila in Ecstasy, 1645-52
Gianlorenzo Bernini, David, 1623
Annibale Carracci, Ceiling of Gallery, Palazzo Farnese, Rome, 1597-1601
Caravaggio, Bacchus, 1595-1596
Caravaggio, The Calling of Saint Matthew, 1599-1601
Artemisia Gentileschi, Susanna and the Elders, 1610
Artemisia Gentileschi, Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting, 1630
Giovanni Battista Gaulli, The Triumph of the Name of Jesus and the Fall of the Damned, 1672-1685
Francisco de Zurbarán, Saint Serapion, 1628
Diego Velasquez, Las Meninas, 1656
*Artemisia Gentileschi, Judith and Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes, 1625
Baroque Painting in Flanders and Holland
Peter Paul Rubens, Henry IV Receiving the Portrait of Marie deMedici, c. 1621-25
Frans Hals, Catherina Hooft and Her Nurse, c. 1620
Frans Hals, Officers of the Harlem Militia Company of St. Adrian, c. 1627
Judith Leyster, Self-Portrait, 1635
Rembrandt, The Company ofCaptain Frans Banning Cocq, 1642
Rembrandt, Three Crosses (first state), 1653
Rembrandt, Self-Portrait, 1658
Jan Vermeer, View of Delft, c. 1662
Jan Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance, 1664
Gerard TerBorch, The Suitor’s Visit, c. 1658
Jacob van Ruisdael, View of Haarlem from the Dunes at Overveen, c. 1670
Rachel Ruysch, Flower Still Life, after 1700
*Rembrandt, Bathsheba at her Bath, 1654
*Rembrandt, Susanna and The Elders, 1636
Art 252 – Spring, 2010 - Important Works List - Exam #2
Note - * indicates that the work is in reading on eCollege, not in Stokstad textbook.
Neoclassicism and Eighteenth Century Art of the Americas
John Singleton Copley, Thomas Mifflin and Sarah Morris, 1773
Jean-Honoré Fragonard, The Swing, 1766
Angelica Kauffmann, Cornelia Pointing to her Children as Her Treasures, 1785
Benjamin West, The Death of General Wolfe, 1770
John Henry Fuseli, The Nightmare, 1781
John Singleton Copley, Watson and the Shark, 1778
Marie-Louise ÉlisabethVigée Lebrun, Portrait of Marie Antoinette with Her
Children, 1787
Jaques Louis-David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784-1785
Jaques-Louis David, The Death of Marat, 1793
Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson, Portrait of Jean-Baptiste Belley, 1797
AdéläideLabille-Guiard, Self-Portrait with Two Pupils, 1785
Jean-Antoine Houdon, George Washington, 1788-1792
*Charles Willson Peale, Staircase Group, 1795
Romanticism
Francisco Goya, The Sleep of Reasons Produces Monsters, 1796-8
Francisco Goya, Third of May. 1808, 1814-5
Antoine-Jean Gros, Napoleon in the Plague House at Jaffa, 1804
ThéodoreGéricault, The Raft of the “Medusa,” 1818-1819
Eugéne Delacroix, Liberty Leading the People: July 28, 1830, 1830
Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, Large Odalisque, 1814
Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, Portrait of Madame Desiré Raoul-Rochette,
1830
*Jean-Auguste Dominique Ingres, Napoleon I on his Throne, 1806
*Jacques-Louis David, Le Sacre, 1808
Realism and Early Photography
Louis-Jaques-Mandé Daguerre, The Artist’s Studio, 1837, daguerrotype
Timothy O’Sullivan, The Home of the Rebel Sharpshooter: Battle Field at Gettysburg, 1863
Julia Margaret Cameron, Portrait of Thomas Carlyle, 1867
Gustave Courbet, The Stone Breakers, 1849
Gustave Courbet, A Burial at Ornans, 1849
Jean-François Millet, The Gleaners, 1857
Frederick Church, Heart of the Andes, 1859
Rosa Bonheur, The Horse Fair, 1853-5
ÉdouardManet, The Luncheon on the Grass, 1863
ÉdouardManet, Olympia, 1863
Thomas Eakins, The Gross Clinic, 1875
Edmonia Lewis, Forever Free, 1867
Impressionism
Claude Monet, Impression: Sunrise, 1872
Pierre-August Renoir, Moulin de la Galette, 1876
Mary Cassatt, Mother and Child, c. 1890
Edgar Degas, The Rehearsal on Stage, c. 1874
GustaveCaillebotte, Paris Street, Rainy Day, 1877
*Mary Cassatt, Reading “Le Figaro”, c. 1878
Post-Impressionism and Symbolism
Georges Seurat, A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte, 1884-86