Art History
Welcome
[edit | edit source]Welcome to Intro to Art History with Ms. Davis. This course will have a project-based focus with the following topics serving as approaches to the subject: Food and Shelter; Deities and Places of Worship; Mortality and Immortality; Power, Politics, and Glory; The Body; Race, Gender, Clan, and Class.
You will be partnered with one or two other students for the term, and you will work together to do research, to update your section of the wiki with news of your discoveries, and present your ideas to the class.
Resources
[edit | edit source]resource | description |
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ARTstor | "Over 300,000 digital images documenting traditions across many times and cultures and embracing, among others, architecture, sculpture, photography, decorative arts, and design." |
GroveArt | "Articles on the visual arts from prehistory to the present day including illustrations with web links to museums and other art resources." |
Electronic Databases | A full list of electronic databases available to Westminster students. |
ArtsJournal | Daily arts news from more than 100 newspapers, magazines and e-publications. |
Iconoclass | A vast online collection of paintings, drawings, and photographs maintained by the Netherlands Institute for Art History. |
Fiber Arts Resources | Sculpture | Surface Design | Fiber Arts | Contemporary Crafts | Craft Council | Weave Spin Dye | Fiber Scene | Women and Their Work | American Craft | 62 Group | Fiber Art Center | Various websites related to fiber arts |
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Museum Websites
[edit | edit source]- The Museum Of Modern Art, New York
- Isamu Noguchi Garden Museum
- The Andy Warhol Museum
- The Philadelphia Museum of Art
- The Salvador Dali Museum
- Musee Matisse de Nice
- The Van Gogh Museum
- Tretyakov Gallery
- The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
- The Art Institute of Chicago
- The Tate Modern
- KunstMuseum Basel
- Kunsthistoriches Museum Wien
- Le Louvre
- Le Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon
- Le Musee D'Orsay
- The National Gallery of Art
- Museo del Prado
- The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
- The Cleveland Museum of Art
- http://www.high.org/
- http://www.mcachicago.org/
- The National Museum of Wildlife Art
- Museum of Arts and Design
- Pinakothek München
- uffizi Firenze
Podcast Links
[edit | edit source]- Southern Arts Federation This site lists fifteen separate podcasts featuring interviews with artists from varying fields.
- WTMD Artists Interviews A collection of interviews featuring musicians from various musical genres.
- Libsyn A directory for thousands of different podcasts covering every conceivable topic.
Reflections
[edit | edit source]- Alison and Alek - Religion
- Connor and Rawson - Power and Authority
- Sona and Anna - Race, Class, and Gender
- Kristen and Elizabeth - Mortality and Immortality
- Yeshwanth and Emma - Power, Politics, and Glory
- Connor
- Emma
- Sona
- Yeshwanth
- Anna
- Alison
- Elizabeth
- Rawson
- Alek
- Kristen
- Ms. Davis
- Mr. Bishop
- Ms. Barker
Introduction to Art Podcasts
[edit | edit source]Self-evaluation rubric for assignments
[edit | edit source]Transparency in thinking (30%) This would be seen in your presentation, in the way you talk about how you arrived at your idea and how you went about conducting research. This would also be evident in your reflections, the kind of thinking you are expressing as you move along in developing your idea and locating information. It also occurs when you are an observer and participate by asking questions or making comments about your peers’ efforts.
- What did you do well in revealing your thinking?
- What could you have done to make your thinking more transparent?
Ideation and Communication (20%)
- How did you form your idea/ concept/ thesis?
- What questions drove your idea?
- What methods (brainstorming, mapping) did you use to form your idea?
- What’s the back-story on your idea?
- Does the quality of your concept expand the viewer/audience thinking?
- What did you do well in defining your idea?
- What would you add, subtract or change?
- How did you decide on the presentation format for communicating your idea?
- How well did you communicate your idea to the viewer/reader/audience?
- What were the means for communicating your idea?
- Did the audience’s questions provoke additional discussion?
- What did you do well in communicating your idea to your audience?
- If you could do this again what would you change?
Historical Context and Citations (30%)
- Did your work include historical context for the works of art your selected?
- Did you provide background information to the audience that would expand their knowledge of the work and your reasons for selecting the work?
- How well did you contextualize the work/s of art?
- What would you do differently the next time?
- What were your sources for information and images?
- Was the quality of your sources primarily from academic scholarship and databases?
- Do your citations reveal the depth of your thinking?
- What was the quality of your sources?
- What would you do differently the next time?
Grammar and Spelling (10%)
- Did you use spell check and then proof read your work before submitting it?
Following guidelines of project (10%)
- Did you respond fully to the guidelines of the project?
INTRO to ART HISTORY
Project 1 Museum Plans New Acquisition
Self-evaluation Rubric
NAME__________________________________________GRADE_________DATE__________
Use a 1-5 scale with 1 being the least successful and 5 being the most successful.
CRITERIA SELF-EVALUATION PEER/TEACHER EVALUATION Transparency in thinking (30%)
What did you do well in revealing your thinking?
What could you have done to make your thinking more transparent?
Ideation and Communication (20%)
What did you do well in defining your idea?
What would you add, subtract or change?
Historical Context and Citations (30%)
How well did you contextualize the work/s of art?
What would you do differently the next time?
What was the quality of your sources?
What would you do differently the next time?
Grammar and Spelling (10%)
Following guidelines of project (10%)
Assignments
[edit | edit source]- 20 August 2007
- 22 August 2007
- 28 August 2007 (Art Review)
- 30 August 2007
- 19 September 2007
- 5 October 2007
- 30 November 2007 (Museum Project)