Art History II
Keywords |
Classification |
Keyword |
OFICIAL |
Art Sciences |
Instance: 2010/2011 - 2S
Cycles of Study/Courses
Teaching language
Portuguese
Objectives
This course is intended to provide students of various courses of FBAUP a common area of reflection on art, as part of cultural systems that have been changing over time and which differ in the various civilizations that originated them. Thus, the course’s program will be structured around major themes, which can raise the confrontation and dialogue among students with very different experiences and motivations. The course covers the historical period of the early Renaissance, which gave rise to wonderful artistic productions that played a key role in the development of Western consciousness. The approach will be both historical and thematic, aiming to give students the analytical tools fundamental to the study and appreciation of Renaissance art, both in its original socio-historical context, and on their importance and universal significance.
The aim is to stimulate interest in reading of contemporary texts, studies and essays, and develop the capacity to understand the images, providing students with tools to observe and interpret the art object. The confrontation with artworks, themes and issues essential to the history of art will enable each student to weave its own basis for reflection.
Based on major artworks, and other lesser-known examples of the history of Western art, we will attempt to provide students with a common critical language, giving special emphasis to the historical and cultural context and to formal analysis, so as to allow the understanding of some contemporary artistic practices.
The acquisition of a technical vocabulary, of concepts and basic knowledge essential to the study of art history is considered of prime importance, as well as the development of critical thinking and of visual perception skills to analyze the artwork as an artistic aesthetic and historical object.
Program
1. The art of the early Renaissance: the Quattrocento.
1.1. Introduction: art, culture and politics in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Renaissance Italy.
1.2. "Art" in the Italian Renaissance. The various uses of a work of art: religion, magic, politics and aesthetic fruition. Art, artists and patrons: the phenomena of taste and the aesthetic choices.
1.3. The "doing" of art in Renaissance Europe: the organization of the arts. The development of the individuality of the artist: the idea of progress, competition and emulation, the new social status of the artist.
1.4. The challenge of nature and the recovery of classical antiquity. Humanism. Renaissance and globalization.
1.5. The rebirth of realism in Italy in the late Middle Ages: Giotto and the new pictorial language.
1.6. Portrait and the advent of the "Renaissance Man". The Renaissance in Northern Europe: the new bourgeois class and Flemish realism.
1.7. The Italian painting of the Quattrocento: between the sacred and the profane.
1.8. The sculpture and the new needs of representation.
1.9. Sacred space: the architecture of worship places. The art of governing: art and urbanism in the Italian cities.
Mandatory literature
Ames-Lewis, Frances; Concepts of Beauty in Renaissance Art, Ashgate Publishing, 1998
Ames-Lewis Frances;
The^intellectual life of the Early Renaissance artist. ISBN: 0-300-08304-1 45.50
Baxandall, Michael; Painting and Experience in Fifteenth Century Italy, Oxford Paperbacks, 1988
Black, C. F., Greengrass, Mark, et al.; História do Renascimento, Círculo de Leitores, 1996
Bloom, Lisa; With other eyes - Looking at Race and Gender in Visual Culture, University of Minnesota Press, 1999
Borzello, Frances; A World of Our Own – Women as Artists, Thames and Hudson, 2000
Brown, Alison; The Renaissance, Longman, 1988
Burckhardt Jacob;
A^civilização do renascimento italiano
Burke, Peter; The Italian Renaissance – Culture and Society in Italy, Princeton University Press, 1986
Chadwick, Whitney; Women, Art and Society, Thames and Hudson, 2007
Davies, Glyn e Kennedy, Kirstin; Medieval and Renaissance Art: People and Possessions, Victoria & Albert Publishing, 2009
Delumeau Jean;
La^civilisation de la renaissance
Frontisi, Claude; Historia visual del arte, Larousse, 2005
Goldthwaite, Richard A.; Wealth and the Demand for Art in Italy, 1300-1600, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995
Gombrich E. H.;
A história da arte
Gowing, Sir Lawrence; Facts on File Encyclopedia of Art, Facts on File Inc., 2005
Gowing, Sir Lawrence; A History of Art, Grange Books, 1999
Hale J.R. 300;
Enciclopedia de renacimiento italiano. ISBN: 84-206-5219-9
Harbison, Craig; The Mirror of the Artist – Northern Renaissance Art in its Historical Context, Prentice Hall, 1996
Hartt Frederick;
Art. ISBN: 0-8109-1884-6
Hockney, David; Secret Knowledge - Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters, Studio, 2006
Honour Hugh;
Historia mundial del arte. ISBN: 84-460-2092-0
Huyghe René;
A arte e a alma
Johnson Geraldine A.;
Renaissance Art. ISBN: 0-19-280354-9
Johnson, P.; The Renaissance, 2000
Kemp, Martin; História da Arte no Ocidente, Verbo, 2006
Kemp Martin;
Behind the picture. ISBN: 0-300-07195-7
Kemp Martin 340;
The Oxford history of western art. ISBN: 0-19-860012-7
King Margaret L.;
The^renaissance in Europe. ISBN: 1-85669-374-0 26.00
Kristeller, Paul Oskar; Renaissance Thought and the Arts, Princeton University Press, 1990
Lucie-Smith Edward;
L. érotisme dans l.art occidental
Nieto Alcaide Victor;
El Renacimiento. ISBN: 84-7090-108-7
Olson, Roberta J. M.; The Biography of the Object in Late Medieval and Renaissance Italy, Blackwell Publishers, 2006
Harbison Craig;
Jan Van Eyck. ISBN: 0-948462-79-5
Omalley, M.; The Business of Art: Contracts and the Commissioning Process in Renaissance Italy, Yale University Press, 2005
Richardson, Carol M.; Franklin, Michael W.; Woods, Kim ; Renaissance Art Reconsidered – An Anthology of Primary Sources, Blackwell Publishing, 2006
Onians John;
Atlas mundial del arte. ISBN: 84-9801-040-3
Rogoff, Irit; Terra Infirma - Geography's Visual Culture, Routledge, 2000
Smith, Jeffrey Chipps; The Northern Renaissance, Phaidon Press, 2004
Steer John;
Atlas de l.art occidental. ISBN: 2-850-88-132-5
Stokstad Marilyn;
Art history. ISBN: 0-8109-1960-5
Tinagli, Paola; Women in Italian Renaissance Art - Gender, Representation, Identity, Manchester University Press, 1997
Vasari Giorgio;
Las vidas de los más excelentes arquitectos, pintores y escultores italianos desde Cimabue a nuestr. ISBN: 84-309-3218-6
Vigarello, Georges; Historia del cuerpo, vol. I, Del Renacimiento al Siglo de las Luces, Taurus, 2005
Welch Evelyn;
Art in Renaissance. ISBN: 0-19-284279-X
Welch Evelyn;
Art and society in Italy. ISBN: 0-19-284203-X
Welch, Evelyn; Shopping in the Renaissance: Consumer Cultures in Italy, 1400-1600, Yale University Press, 2005
Woods, K. W.; Making Renaissance Art: Renaissance Art Reconsidered, Yale University Press, 2006
Woods, K. W.; Viewing Renaissance Art, Yale University Press, 2007
Teaching methods and learning activities
Lessons consist in the presentation of the different themes, accompanied by audiovisual material, according to the specificity of the Course in question.
Students must systematically attend classes and read the available literature provided on each summary, which complements and builds upon information provided. The readings and individual research are considered a fundamental part of the learning process.
keywords
Humanities > Arts > Visual arts
Humanities > History > Art History
Evaluation Type
Evaluation with final exam
Assessment Components
Description |
Type |
Time (hours) |
Weight (%) |
End date |
Attendance (estimated) |
Participação presencial |
21,00 |
|
|
|
Total: |
- |
0,00 |
|
Eligibility for exams
Enforcement of attendance by students will be checked in all classes through an attendance record, which is intended for statistical purposes and internal control. Given the actual operation of this Course (a huge number of students enrolled and only one teacher, which makes close monitoring of attendance and exclusion of non-compliant students almost impossible), attendance, although very important, is not a pre-requirement for evaluation.
Nevertheless, the presence of students in classes is essential, since the completion of the final exam requires the knowledge of the contents taught and discussed weekly.
Calculation formula of final grade
The final classification matches the classification obtained in the final exam. This one consists solely of a written test.
The completion of the exam presupposes deep knowledge of the syllabus taught in the different classes, as well as of the bibliography indicated as mandatory.
The assessment criteria of the exams are:
Conceptual and scientific rigor, appropriateness of the answer in relation to the question asked; specific knowledge demonstrated.
Examinations or Special Assignments
Special assignments or exams are not allowed.
Special assessment (TE, DA, ...)
Final exam
Classification improvement
The improvement of the final grade shall be exclusively by final exam, as recorded in RREA.
Observations
Attention to students: Mondays from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., by previous appointment, given the high number of students.