<SOURCE TABLE="FineArts:Arts::v3.69">
<SUBJECT ID="111-101" CODEUSED="111-101">
<TITLE>WESTERN ART B: IMAGE AND IDENTITY </TITLE>
<NOTE>No student may receive credit for both this subject and 111-101 Introduction to Art History, Part B: The European Tradition, 16th to 19th Centuries or 111-101 From High Renaissance to Advent of Modernism: Moments of Cultural Change.
<POINTS>12.5 1st year
<COORDINATOR>Dr. Christopher Marshall.
<PREREQUISITES>111-100, 111-103, or 111-105.
<SEMESTER>Second semester
<CONTACT>Three hours of lectures, tutorials or workshops a week
<OBJECTIVES>In addition to the above, students completing this subject should:
<ul>
<li>be aware of the varying methodologies employed to interpret art, from iconography and formal analysis to feminism and psychoanalysis
<li>have a broad understanding of the styles, techniques and content of the art of the Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, Neo-Classical and Romantic periods
</ul>
<CONTENT>An introductory study of Western art from 1500-1850. The subject will explore the range of possibilities available for interpreting art from how it is made, to what it communicates, and how it relates to its site and social context.
<ASSESSMENT>Exercises and/or essays and/or visual test totalling not more than 4,000 words.
<PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
<ATEXT>Murray P and L The Penguin Dictionary of Art and Artists Penguin 1989
</PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>


