Art History, Curating and Visual Studies. Module Descriptions 2018/19

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Art History, Curating and Visual Studies Module Descriptions 2018/19 Level I (i.e. 2 nd Yr.) Modules Please be aware that all modules are subject to availability. Where a module s assessment happens in a different semester or term, and you are unsure if you will be here, please contact the Art History, Curating and Visual Studies department at ahcvsadministrator@contacts.bham.ac.uk to see if they are happy for you to take this module. For many of these modules, some experience of studying History may be required, and you should remember this when choosing your modules. If there is another module that you need to have studied before taking this, it will be stated in the module description (pre-requisite). Please note that at the time this document has been prepared (March 2018) the following information is provisional, and there may be minor changes between now and the beginning of 2018/19 academic year.

Art, Architecture and Design in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna MODULE CODE 24000 ASSESSMENT METHOD one 4000-word essay; reassessment: one 4000- word essay one one-hour lecture per week plus one twohour seminar per week - Lecture: Monday 10-11 SEMESTER 1 This module will examine art, architecture and design produced in fin-de-siècle Vienna. It will focus on Secessionist artists such as Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and Koloman Moser, and will explore their work in relation to a series of social, cultural, psychological and literary issues using the work of writers such as Arthur Schnitzler and Stefan Zweig, and the sexologists Richard Krafft-Ebing and Otto Weininger. It will provide a deeper understanding of modern Vienna with regards to the changing conditions of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at beginning of the twentieth century. The impact of design projects by Adolf Loos, Otto Wagner and the Wiener Werkstätte will also be investigated in the context of modernist architecture and design, and with particular reference to the notion of Gesamtkunstwerk. It will critically engage with the concept of fin-de-siècle and ask how this phenomenon may, or may not have, influenced an intense period of artistic production in Vienna and the rest of Europe. Although the course will primarily focus on art, architecture and design, it will also incorporate extracts and discussions on film, music and theatre where relevant.

Post-War: Art in Britain After the Second World War MODULE CODE 30805 ASSESSMENT METHOD 4000 word essay TBC SEMESTER 1 This module explores art in Britain in the period after the Second World War. It traces art s relationship to post-war reconstruction, from artists who engaged explicitly and publicly with the experience of war and the spirit of reconstruction to those who developed more private or personal responses in this period. It considers how art can help us to understand the temporally unstable experience of reconstruction, making visible the multiplicity and highly contested nature of this extended period of British history; it also asks what role art might have served for those caught up in post-war reconstruction. It explores how artists engaged with questions of politics, national identity, gender, sexuality, and migration in this period. Artists include Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, Richard Hamilton, Pauline Boty, Eduardo Paolozzi, Oscar Kokoschka, Victor Pasmore, Anwar Jalal Shemza, Frank Bowling, David Hockney, Prunella Clough, and Bridget Riley.

Renaissance Art in Italy and the Netherlands MODULE CODE 24004 ASSESSMENT METHOD one 4000-word essay; reassessment: one 4000- word essay one one-hour lecture per week plus one twohour seminar per week - Lecture: Tuedsay 1-2 SEMESTER 1 This module examines Renaissance art in Italy and the Netherlands over the period c. 1400-60. It will look at developments especially in Florence by Italian founders of the Renaissance, Donatello, Ghiberti and Masaccio, as well as considering comparable innovations that occurred at the same time in the Netherlands in the works of their Northern contemporaries Van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden, and it will compare their achievements. In addition to analysing many individual works in detail, the module will also be exploring the specific connections between Northern and Italian art, as well as the varying conceptions of nature and realism, and of Renaissance and revival; it will consider too the ranges of styles on offer and the most characteristic forms of art works, such as altarpieces and portraits, as well as their differing religious and secular functions and the differing systems of patronage which led to their creation.

Reading Art History MODULE CODE 30832 CREDIT VALUE 10 ASSESSMENT METHOD 2000 word essay TBC SEMESTER 1 This module examines the way that art historians support their work by drawing on concepts and theoretical methods to shape and support their arguments and interpretations. Its aim is to further develop students understanding of the concepts and theoretical approaches employed by art historians, and first introduced at Level C. Students will undertake comparative analysis of two or more contrasting interpretations of a particular work of art or topic, and focus on identifying the key concepts or theories they rely on, as well as considering the respective merits of their approaches. The analysis will also consider how the theoretical approach shapes the kind of evidence that is used to support the interpretation being advanced.

American Art in the 1960s MODULE CODE 26758 ASSESSMENT METHOD one 4000-word essay; reassessment: one 4000- word essay one one-hour lecture per week plus one twohour seminar per week - Lecture: Monday 4-5 SEMESTER 2 This module consists of an analysis of art practices in America in the 1960s. It examines a range of practices, ranging from the post-painterly abstraction to pop art, minimalism and post-minimalism, conceptual art, performance art and land art. Covering a crucial decade in art, where traditional modernist definitions of art were overturned, the module considers not only art practices and their socio-political contexts, but also the critical aesthetic and philosophical debates that accompanied them.

Making Culture: New Ways of Reading Things MODULE CODE 30802 ASSESSMENT METHOD 2000 word journal: Coursework (50%) 2000 word portfolio: Coursework (50%) TBC SEMESTER 2 This module will explore material culture from a variety of perspectives. It will draw on the university s extensive range of museums, collections and archives and the expertise of the arts and science academics and heritage professionals. Through object-based learning in its broadest sense the module will enable students to engage critically with the material world. It will focus on issues around the collection, interpretation and display of material culture; current debates about ownership, ethics and public engagement; and the impact of new digital technologies.

Power, Society, Politics: Religious Art in Northern Europe, c.1400-1600 MODULE CODE 24247 ASSESSMENT METHOD one 4000-word essay; reassessment: one 4000- word essay one one-hour lecture per week plus one two-hour seminar per week - Lecture: Monday 10-11 SEMESTER 2 This module explores the different social and political functions of religious art produced in Northern Europe (France, Germany, Low Countries) from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It will focus in particular on how artists and patrons responded to the changing religious climate at this time, and how religious works of art like altarpieces, reliquaries, and manuscripts were used as means of constructing of power, politics and social identity in times of instability. Case studies will analyse themes such as: the power and performative nature of images; religious allegory and secular rulers; religion and social identity; and Northern responses to the Council of Trent and the Counter Reformation. Students will be encouraged to draw on the University s collections. By spanning the shift between the late medieval and early modern periods, students will also be encouraged to examine and problematise broader questions pertaining to the study of periods and categories such as medieval and Renaissance, North and South, and public and private.

Engaging with Art History MODULE CODE 30801 CREDIT VALUE 10 ASSESSMENT METHOD one one-hour lecture per week plus one twohour seminar per week Public engagement resource: Coursework (50%) 1000 word reflection : Coursework (50%) SEMESTER 2 This module will introduce students to different ways of interpreting, communicating and engaging with art history. Its aim is to develop students transferable skills, in particular to practise and develop their communication (written and oral) of works of art to non-specialist audiences, such as gallery-goers and primary school children. It also aims to promote public engagement as part of the degree programme, as students will produce resources for engaging the public with art history as part of their assessment. It requires students to think about the kinds of information that is conveyed in different public resources, such as blogs, audio guides, and gallery labels and how these relate to the history of museums, collecting and interpreting works of art. As such the module will include sessions on the history of interpretation as well as on the use of different media. This is primarily a skills-based module; where group or individual tasks are required, students will be encouraged to apply content from other modules that they are taking.

Impressionism and After: An Introduction to Art and Society in Late Nineteenth Century France MODULE CODE 26713 ASSESSMENT METHOD Essay TBC SEMESTER 2 This module will consider images, techniques and practices by leading innovative artists of the period such as Cassatt, Morisot, Manet, Degas, Seurat, Gauguin, Van Gogh and Cezanne. It will analyse key critical categories (including Impressionism, Neo-Impressionism and Symbolism) and key genres (including landscape painting, the painting of modern life, the nude) whilst linking art and the making of art to a broader visual and institutional culture. Finally, by analysing representation in relation to the key themes of gender, class and ethnicity the module will locate artistic practice within the socio-political terrain of the period.