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Requirements

Art History

Art History Major

The art history major consists of ten courses.

Required Courses
Select one introductory ARTH course (numbered 1100–1999).1
Select one of the following:1
One ARTH course numbered 1100-1999
One ARTH first year writing seminar (1000-1049)
One Visual Arts (VART) course
Select one course in African, Asian, or Ancient American Art History numbered 2000-2969.1
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2650
Culture and Crisis in Modern and Contemporary Japanese Art
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2655
From Empire to Nation-State: Modern Chinese Art
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2660
From Mao to Now: Contemporary Chinese Art
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2710
Cosmographies and Ecologies in Chinese Art
Select one course from Ancient and Medieval European Art History numbered 2000-2969:1
ARTH 2090/ARCH 1101
Greek Archaeology
ARTH 2100/ARCH 1102
Roman Archaeology
ARTH 2130 Art of Three Faiths: Christian, Jewish, and Islamic Art and Architecture, Third to Twelfth Centuries
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2310
The Gothic World
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2315
Illuminated Manuscripts and Early Printed Books
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2325
Northern European Art of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries
Select one course from Renaissance and Baroque European Art History numbered 2000-2969:1
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2230
The Arts of Venice
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2400
The Medici's Italy: Art, Politics, and Religion, 1300-1600
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2405
Monstrosity and Elegance: Mannerism in European Court Art, 1500-1600.
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2415
Art in the Age of Velazquez, Rembrandt, and Caravaggio
Select one course from Modern and Contemporary European and American Art History numbered 2000-2969:1
ARTH 2410 Sugar, Tobacco, Rice, and Rum: Art and Identity in Atlantic World, 1620–1812
ARTH 2420 Realism and Its Discontents: European Art, 1839-1900
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2755
American Art from the Civil War to 1945
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2765
Shoot, Snap, Instagram: A History of Photography in America
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2770
The Art of Making and Meaning
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2865
Modern Art
´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2870
Contemporary Art
Select two additional ARTH courses numbered 2000 or higher.2
Select two advanced ARTH seminars (numbered 3000–3999).2

Art History Minor

Required Courses
Select one introductory ARTH course (numbered 1100-1999).1
Select two intermediate ARTH courses (numbered 2000–2999).2
Select one advanced ARTH course (numbered 3000–3999).1
Select one additional ARTH course at any level. a1
a

A first year writing seminar in ARTH or an independent study may be used to satisfy this requirement.

Courses that count toward the major and minor must be taken for regular letter grades (not Credit/D/Fail), and students must earn grades of C- or better in these courses.

Seminars in Art History

The seminars are intended to utilize the scholarly interests of members of the department and provide an opportunity for advanced work for selected students who have successfully completed enough of the regular courses to possess a sufficient background. The department does not expect to give all, or in some cases any, seminars each semester. As the seminars are varied, a given topic may be offered only once, or its form changed considerably from time to time.


Interdisciplinary Majors

Art history participates in interdisciplinary programs in art history and archaeology, and in art history and visual arts. Art history majors may pursue a coordinate major with digital and computational studies, environmental studies, or education. See the .

Additional Information and Department Policies

Art History

  • Students who received a minimum score of four on the Art History Advanced Placement exam may replace one introductory art history course (numbered 1100–1999) with any upper-level course for the art history major and art history minor. In order to receive credit for Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate work, students must have their scores officially reported to the Office of the Registrar by the end of their sophomore year at ³Õºº¾ãÀÖ²¿.
  • Majors and minors in art history may double-count one course with another major or minor as long as the course is cross-listed with art history. 
  • Art history majors are also encouraged to take courses in foreign languages and literature, history, philosophy, religion, and the other arts.
  • A maximum of two courses for one semester of study from another college or university may count toward the major in art history with departmental approval of that transfer credit. If a student studies away for a full academic year, three courses from another college or university may count toward their art history major with departmental approval.
  • Only one course for one semester of study from another college or university may count toward a student’s art history minor with departmental approval.

Information for Incoming Students: Art History

Art history offers ways to understand our world and our histories through the visual arts. We look at the ways people have expressed their ideas, responded to their experiences, and created the world they lived in through paintings, sculptures, buildings, furniture, jewelry, stained glass, and much more. By teaching you how to look closely, art history provides you with new ways to think about the images and objects around you.

Art history is offering two first-year writing seminars this fall:  ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý1028 Art and Race from the Crusades to ColonizationÌý²¹²Ô»å ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý1038 Living in a Material World: Thinking and Writing with Art and Architecture. First-year students are also welcome to join all our 1000- and 2000- level courses. The 1000-level courses for this fall are ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý1305 Making Medieval ArtÌý²¹²Ô»å ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý1605 Introduction to Art History: The Body in East Asian Art. The 2000-level courses allow students to dive more deeply into specific topics and periods, but there is no expectation that students have any previous experience with art history: ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2315 Illuminated Manuscripts and Early Printed Books, ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2650 Culture and Crisis in Modern and Contemporary Japanese Art, ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2755 American Art from the Civil War to 1945, and ´¡¸é°Õ±áÌý2860 Women, Gender, And Sexuality in Western European and American Art, 1500 to Present.


This is an excerpt from the official ³Õºº¾ãÀÖ²¿ College Catalogue and Academic Handbook.