Unit information: Histories, Theories, and Critical Interpretations of Art in 2011/12

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Unit name Histories, Theories, and Critical Interpretations of Art
Unit code HARTM0013
Credit points 40
Level of study M/7
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 4 (weeks 1-24)
Unit director Dr. Haut
Open unit status Not open
Pre-requisites

None

Co-requisites

None

School/department Department of History of Art (Historical Studies)
Faculty Faculty of Arts

Description including Unit Aims

History of Art has its own history as a discipline: it has grown over several centuries to comprise a whole series of approaches with different aims, assumptions, and methods. Thus unit explores how History of Art has become the discipline it is nowadays by tracing its development from its 'origins' in the eighteenth-century. The unit also covers the main areas on which the discipline has focussed and their related methods: the notion of the artist, ideas about taste and beauty, and theories of the relation between art and history at large. It especially addresses the question of meaning in art, and how different theories of meaning - social history of art, semiotics, psychoanalysis, feminisms, philosophical aesthetics, and visual culture may be some of these - present competing pictures of how and what works of art mean.

Aims:

The unit aims to provide an introduction to the various strategies for viewing works of art and for their interpretation. The development of art history as a discipline (its historiography) will provide a strong strand in this examination. Current interpretational models will be examined closely but the possibly enduring values of older patterns of investigation will also be considered.

Intended Learning Outcomes

Students will learn to think critically about the discipline of History of Art, to recognise that art-historical narratives and practices are themselves historically conditioned and subject to change, and to reflect on their own processes of research and learning. By bringing the whole cohort together every week, the unit will help to orientate students socially and academically, and to equip those who may be new to the discipline with sufficient knowledge and confidence.

Teaching Information

10 x 1.5 hour fortnightly lectures across 20 weeks.

Attendance at 10 x 1.5 hour departmental research seminars.

Assessment Information

  • 66% 5000-word essay
  • 34% reflective log

Reading and References

  • N. BRYSON et al. (eds.) Visual Culture: Images and Interpretations
  • D. CARRIER Principles of Art History Writing
  • E. FERNIE Art History and its Methods: A Critical Anthology
  • J. HARRIS The New Art History: a critical introduction
  • R. NELSON/R.SHIFF (eds.) Critical Terms for Art History
  • D. PREZIOSI (ed.) The Art of Art History