Course Catalog - 2009-2010

     

HART 101 - INTRO TO HIST OF WESTERN ART I

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF WESTERN ART I: ANTIQUITY TO GOTHIC
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A survey of painting, sculpture, and architecture from the Paleolithic period through the 15th century. Cross-list: CLAS 102, MDST 111.
 

HART 102 - INTRO HIST OF WESTERN ART II

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF WESTERN ART II: RENAISSANCE TO PRESENT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A survey of painting, sculpture, and architecture from the Renaissance through the 20th century.
 

HART 103 - INTRO TO THE HIST OF ASIAN ART

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF ASIAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Survey of Asian art from the Neolithic period to the present.
 

HART 104 - CASE STU IN ANCNT & MED ARCH

Long Title: CASE STUDIES IN ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL ARCHITECTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course offers an introduction to the history of Western art and architecture through weekly case studies of some of the most important public and private buildings in antiquity and the Middle Ages: from the Parthenon to a Roman house, Caernarvon Castle to Chartres Cathedral. Topics explored throughout the course include the construction of imperial authority, ritual and the formation of space, and the relationship between structure and design. Cross-list: ARCH 104, CLAS 104, MDST 104.
 

HART 105 - KEY MONUMENTS & ARTISTS

Long Title: KEY MONUMENTS AND ARTISTS OF WESTERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An in-depth look at important moments in the history of European and American art, from the Renaissance to the 20th century. Rather than being a comprehensive survey, the course will focus on a limited number of works by leading artists in the fields of painting, sculpture, and architecture.
 

HART 106 - IMAGES OF WAR AND PEACE

Long Title: IMAGES OF WAR AND PEACE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Restrictions:
Must be enrolled in one of the following Class(es):
Freshman
Description: In conjunction with an exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts, this course will examine images of war and peace in Renaissance and Baroque Europe. It will explore images of battles, the hero, peace, and the miseries of war, and how the past affects ideas about war and peace today. Cross listed with FSEM 106. This course is limited to first-year students only, any others will be removed from this course.
 

HART 118 - RUSSIAN REVOLUTION CULTURE

Long Title: CULTURE OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Following the 1917 Revolution, Soviet society initiated radical experiments not only in political and governmental structures but in all aspects of culture and everyday life. This class will examine these developments focusing on avant-garde experiments in cinema, literature and the visual arts, as well as philosophical and political debates around the meaning of revolution itself. This course is limited to first-year students only, any other students will be removed from this course. Cross-list: FSEM 118.
 

HART 119 - FILM NOIR

Long Title: FILM NOIR
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Restrictions:
Must be enrolled in one of the following Class(es):
Freshman
Description: Comprising some of the greatest Hollywood productions of the 1940s and 50s, film noir is characterized by its despairing moods, violent protagonists, femmes fatales and intricate criminal plots. This class will examine the formal and narrative conventions of film noir and explore its cultural and political contexts. Students will be introduced to different modes of filmic and cultural analysis. Films will include "The Maltese Falcon," "Double Indemnity," and "Scarlet Street," among others. This course is limited to first year students only, any others will be removed from this course. Cross-list: FSEM 119.
 

HART 128 - INTRO TO AFRICAN ART HISTORY

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO AFRICAN ART HISTORY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This is an introductory course on African art from the 15th to 20th centuries, ranging from a study of archaeological objects to sculpture and masks from the colonial period and beyond. The course will meet at the Menil Collection: numbering close to 1000 objects, the de Menils' collection includes a range of masks and sculptures from West and Central Africa that allow for a first hand introduction to various cultures on the continent.
 

HART 180 - PASS THE POPCORN

Long Title: PASS THE POPCORN: 14 FILMS YOU SHOULD SEE BEFORE YOU GRADUATE FROM RICE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Featuring the important, but less familiar works of American and European directors from the 1930s - 1960s. This class represents an ideal mixture of modernist auteur cinema and shameless viewing pleasure.
 

HART 207 - FOURTEEN ARTWORKS AT THE MFAH

Long Title: FOURTEEN ARTWORKS AT THE MFAH
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course is designed to provide students with no previous background in art history with an introduction to the discipline through the "in situ" study of 14 works from the permanent collection of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Some of the topics to be addressed include British aristocratic portraiture, French Impressionist painting, the aesthetic dialogues of Matisse and Picasso, the abstracted sculptures of Brancusi and Calder, and the site-specific installation of Turrell's light tunnel.
 

HART 208 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN MUSEUM STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1 TO 3
Description: Special topics and new courses, not necessarily to be repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 209 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN MUSEUM STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 3
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history at the introductory level. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 210 - CASE STUDIES IN ROMAN ART

Long Title: CASE STUDIES IN ROMAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course offers students with little or no background an introduction to Roman art through weekly case studies of some of the most important public and private works. Subjects to be addressed include patronage, visuality, narrative, and style within the changing contexts of republic and empire. Cross-list: CLAS 214.
 

HART 211 - INTRO TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO ASIAN CIVILIZATIONS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A team-taught interdisciplinary course focusing on certain major philosophical, religious and artistic traditions of pre-modern Asia, with an emphasis on the historical processes by which ideas, people, products, technologies and skills circulated within and beyond state boundaries. Cross-list: ASIA 211, HIST 206.
 

HART 215 - ROME: CITY AND EMPIRE

Long Title: ROME: CITY AND EMPIRE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An introduction to the history and topography of Rome from its origins to its collapse in Western Europe ca. 500 AD. Emphasis on the development of the city of Rome as the center of an evolving empire, seen through its monuments, buildings, art, and literature. Cross-list: CLAS 202, HIST 262.
 

HART 219 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY: ANCIENT ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 4
Description: Special topics, independent study, and new courses in ancient art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 220 - ISTANBUL: IMPERIAL CITY

Long Title: ISTANBUL: LIFE OF AN IMPERIAL CITY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An introduction to the Ottoman capital and its monuments (15th century - 19th century). Major themes include the Byzantine legacy; imperial patronage; expressions of dynastic legitimacy, power and religion; ceremonial and imperial canon; the European influence; city's representations; leisure and public life. Cross-list: ARCH 220, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 520.
 

HART 221 - ISLAM WORLD ART/ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO THE ARTS AND ARCHITECTUE OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course is an introduction to the arts and architecture of the Islamic world from the beginning of Islam (7th century) to the rise of the "great empires" (Ottomans, Safavids and Mughals) in the course of the 16th century. Key-monuments from a large geographic area stretching from Spain to India will be analyzed alongside ceramics, metalwork, ivories, and the arts of the book. Cross-list: ARCH 221.
 

HART 228 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN CHRISTIAN, BYZANTINE AND ISLAMIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics, independent study, and new courses in early Christian, Byzantine, and Islamic art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 229 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN CHRISTIAN, BYZANTINE, AND ISLAMIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics, independent study, and new courses in early Christian, Byzantine, and Islamic art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 238 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN MEDIEVAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics, independent study, and new courses in Medieval art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 239 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN MEDIEVAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 240 - LATE MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE

Long Title: ART IN CONTEXT: LATE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will be concerned with the art, architecture, and history of the late Middle Ages and Renaissance. We will employ historical texts, literature, and illustrations of works of art, showing how historical documents and sources can illuminate the cultural context of art and architecture. Cross-list: HUMA 108, MDST 108.
 

HART 248 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 249 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 258 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 259 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 268 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN AMERICAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 269 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN AMERICAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 278 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN NON-WESTERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics and new courses in non-Western art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 279 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN NON-WESTERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in non-Western art. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 280 - HISTORY & AESTHETICS OF FILM

Long Title: HISTORY AND AESTHETICS OF FILM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Introduction to the art and aesthetics of film as an artifact produced within certain social contexts. Includes style, narration, mise-en-scene, editing, sound, and ideology in classical Hollywood cinema, as well as in independent, alternative, nonfiction, and Third World cinemas. Cross-list: ARTS 280, FILM 280.
 

HART 284 - NONFICTION FILM

Long Title: NONFICTION FILM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Introduction to the history and aesthetics of nonfiction film as both a social artifact and as a work of art. Includes discussions of actualities, the city film, the social documentary, surrealist cinema, propaganda, ethnography, the essay film, and the contemporary nonfiction film from around the world. Cross-listed with FILM 284. Cross-list: FILM 284.
 

HART 285 - INTRODUCTION TO FILM

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO FILM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: This writing-intensive course will teach students to view films analytically and write film criticism. Each week, students will view a film, read some criticism of that film, and write their own view of the film. Screenings will be taken from important movements in world cinema history. Cross-list: ENGL 275, FILM 273.
 

HART 286 - CLASSICAL & CONTEMPORARY FILM

Long Title: CLASSICAL AND CONTEMPORARY FILM THEORY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A course focusing on contexts such as movies and ads, familiar plots and conventions define their significance. Focus is on the period of 1950 to 2000, when results of a formerly secret technology dramatically ended World War II and became a central concern of American cultural and political life. Cross-list: ENGL 286.
Course URL: http://www.english.rice.edu
 

HART 288 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics and new course in film and media studies, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 289 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in film and media studies. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 298 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ART THEORY AND CRITICISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 299 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN ART THEORY AND CRITICISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 300 - MUSEUM INTERN

Long Title: MUSEUM INTERN
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The aim of this course is to provide select students a practicum in museum work accompanied by an introduction to a history of museums, including the varieties of museums, their role in society and significant issues in museums today. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 301 - MUSEUM INTERN PROGRAM II

Long Title: MUSEUM INTERN PROGRAM II
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: The aim of this course is to provide select students a practicum in museum work accompanied by an introduction to a history of museums, including the varieties of museums, their role in society and significant issues in museums today. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 305 - ART IN EUROPE, 1900-1945

Long Title: AVANT GARDE AND AFTER: ART IN EUROPE, 1900-1945
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class surveys European art from roughly 1900-1945, paying particular attention to the social contexts in which this work emerged and the interpretive strategies that have been used to understand it. Among the topics to be considered are Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, Dada, and Surrealism, as well as the reaction against these by emergent authoritarian regimes of the 1930s. GR/UG equivalent: HART 505. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 505. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 305 if student has credit for HART 505.
 

HART 306 - THEATER OF THE WORLD

Long Title: THE THEATER OF THE WORLD: ART, ARCHITECTURE, & URBANISM IN RENAISSANCE ROME
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines the visual culture of Renaissance Rome through the prism of the papacy and urban experience. We will study architecture, urban schemes, fresco cycles, altarpieces, illuminated manuscripts, sculptures, spectacles, and processions, including some of the most famous artistic projects produced in the period: the papal apartments frescoed by Raphael, Michelangelo's work in the Sistine Chapel, and the building of the new St. Peter's.
 

HART 307 - VESUVIUS' BURIED CITIES

Long Title: VESUVIUS' BURIED CITIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Designed to coincide with the MFAH exhibition, "Pompeii: Tales from an Eruption," this course examines the ancient cities buried by Vesuvius in A.D. 79. It addresses the art and architecture within its social and urban contexts and considers methodological and ethical issue related to excavation and preservation of these sites. Cross-list: CLAS 310.
 

HART 311 - ANCIENT NEAR EAST

Long Title: ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An in-depth examination of the art and archaeology of ancient Mesopotamia, Syria, Anatolia and Persia. Beginning in The Neolithic period, we will examine the development of Near Eastern art and architecture through the study of ancient sites and their associated material culture. GR/UG Equivalent: HART 511. Cross-list: ANTH 331.
 

HART 312 - GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: GREEK ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A chronological survey of sculpture, painting, and architecture of Greece, and the Aegean Islands and Western Asia Minor from the Bronze Age through the Hellenistic period (3300-31 BC). Analysis of style, content, and purpose within the cultural and historical contexts. Cross-list: CLAS 312.
 

HART 313 - THE HELLENISTIC AGE

Long Title: THE HELLENISTIC AGE: ALEXANDER TO AUGUSTUS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: We examine the art, architecture, and cultural history of the Hellenistic Age, from Alexander the Great (d. 323 BC) until the death of Cleopatra (31 BC). During this period a brilliant Greek-based culture developed from the Mediterranean to the Indus Valley, transforming Greeks, Persians, Jews, Romans and many others. GR/UG equivalent: HART 513 Cross-list: CLAS 313, HIST 303, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 513.
 

HART 315 - ROMAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: ROMAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A chronological survey of Roman sculpture, painting, and architecture from its Etruscan beginnings to the late Empire. Art and architecture of Rome and the provinces considered within their larger social, political, and urban contexts. Particular attention given to patronage, the relation between Roman and Greek art, and Rome's position as an artistic center. Cross-list: CLAS 315.
 

HART 317 - CONSTANTINOPLE / ISTANBUL

Long Title: CONSTANTINOPLE / ISTANBUL
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An exploration of the architectural and urban culture of the Ottoman imperial capital, Istanbul / Constantinople, from its conquest in 1453 until the empire's demise in the 1920s. Topics include: artistic and imperial legacies; patronage; political and religious symbolism; artistic canon and identity. Not open to students who have taken HART 220 or HART 520. Cross-list: ARCH 361, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 517. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 317 if student has credit for HART 517.
 

HART 318 - SPECIAL TOPICS IN ANCIENT ART

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ANCIENT ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will introduce you to the major monuments of Rome, Pompeii, and Herculaneum. We will focus not only on the history and functions of these monuments in antiquity but also on how their meaning and representation has changed and evolved in the post-classical world. May 2010. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: CLAS 321. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 319 - IND STDY ANCIENT ART

Long Title:
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN ANCIENT ART ***** Independent study, reading, or special research in ancient art history.
 

HART 321 - VIS CULTURAL ISLAMIC WORLD I

Long Title: VISUAL CULTURE OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD I
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An introduction to the arts of architecture of the Islamic world from the rise of Islam to the Mongol invasions. Explores the development of a visual tradition through its continuities, regional variations, exchanges, and intertextualities. Examines key religious and secular institutions and art forms through their aesthetic and historical contexts. Cross-list: ARCH 331.
 

HART 322 - VIS CULTURE ISLAMIC WORLD II

Long Title: VISUAL CULTURE OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD II
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An introduction to the architecture, ceramics, textiles, and arts of the book of the Islamic world, from Egypt to India and Central Asia, beginning in the wake of the Mongol conquests and ending with the demise of the Ottoman empire. Focusing on court patronage and production, the course examines key buildings and objects through their aesthetic, cultural, religious, and political contexts. Methodological concerns of the field are addressed through an exploration of such themes as iconoclasm, word and image, and cross-cultural influences. Cross-list: ARCH 332.
 

HART 323 - 10 MONUMENTS OF ISLAMIC WRLD

Long Title: TEN MONUMENTS OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar examines ten key religious and secular buildings of the Islamic world, including some of the most celebrated monuments such as the Taj Mahal, in India, and the Alhambra Palace, in Spain. It covers a wide geographical area that stretches from modern Turkey, Egypt, and Syria, to Iran and India. Each session will alternate lecture and discussion and will focus on one building, exploring it in depth in relation to its aesthetic, cultural, religious, and political contexts. We will examine the formation of a visual vocabulary, its continuities and variations, the complex layers of meanings embedded in these monuments, and will consider questions of patronage, imperial ideology, and cross-cultural encounters and influences. Cross-list: ARCH 328.
 

HART 324 - THE PEN AND THE BRUSH

Long Title: THE PEN AND THE BRUSH: THE ARTS OF THE BOOK IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces the arts of the book in the Islamic world, from the earliest manifestations to printing. We will analyze Korans, scientific and pseudo-scientific manuscripts, illustrated literary texts, anthologies of poetry, albums, and consider techniques, materials, book formats, and schools of production. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 524.
 

HART 325 - WHAT IS ISLAMIC ART?

Long Title: WHAT IS ISLAMIC ART ?
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar is a critical examination of key themes and issues in Islamic art. Based on readings that focus on specific examples of artistic and architectural production of major landmarks from the 7th to the 18th centuries our discussions will evolve around such questions as: What is Islamic about Islamic art? How and where did art, religion, and politics intersect? To what extent were art and architecture informed by religious principles, practices, and rituals? Can we speak of a distinctive visual language across the Muslim world? We will also explore the role of myth in the construction of cultural heritage, the development of writing the art form of calligraphy, and questions of patronage and imperial ideology. We will revisit long-held assumptions about the nature of Islamic art as iconoclastic and aniconistic, and about the nature and aspect of artistic exchange between the Muslim world and the Latin Christian West, Byzantium, and China. Cross-list: ARCH 325.
 

HART 327 - ART & EMPIRE: OTTOMAN WRLD

Long Title: ART AND EMPIRE: THE OTTOMAN WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course looks at the art and architecture of the Ottoman empire, the longest surviving Muslim empire, from its inception in 1453 until its demise in the 1920s. Based on in-depth studies of religious and secular monuments, objects, and paintings, it examines the roots of Ottoman visual culture, the formation of a canonic style, relations with eastern and western artistic traditions, issues of power and identity in art, systems of patronage, concepts of westernization and Ottoman modernism.
 

HART 328 - CITIES IN MUSLIM MEDITERRANEAN

Long Title: CITIES IN MUSLIM MEDITERRANEAN
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar examines the architectural and urban culture of the Ottoman Empire in the early modern and modern periods, and in different contexts including the imperial capital Istanbul and the port cities of Izmir and Salonica. We will begin by investigating questions of cultural legacy and appropriation; building patronage and urban development; court and urban life; in an attempt to address modernity outside European context. Cross-list: ARCH 373.
 

HART 329 - STREETS AND URBAN LIFE

Long Title: STREETS AND URBAN LIFE: PARIS TO ISTANBUL
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This exploration of the street as a focus of urban life in 18th and 19th century. We will look at ways streets functioned as spaces of livelihood, sociability and transgression in cities such as London, Paris, Istanbul, Amsterdam and Cairo. Cross-list: ARCH 329, HIST 329.
 

HART 330 - EARLY MEDIEVAL ART

Long Title: EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Early Medieval Art from the 5th Century to the Romanesque period. This course begins with a study of the art and architecture of the Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Lombards, Celts, Anglo-Saxons, Franks, and Merovingians, and the transformation of the Roman World through new Germanic, Barbarian, and Christian forces. The second part of the course considers the cultural Renaissance of the Carolingian and Ottonian Periods under rulers such as Charlemagne and Otto III. The last third of the course focuses on themes of pilgrimage, relics, crusades and the emergence of new monumental tradition in art and architecture during the Romanesque Period. Cross-list: MDST 330, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 530. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 330 if student has credit for HART 530.
 

HART 331 - GOTHIC ART

Long Title: GOTHIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Examination of the full array of sacred art and architecture produced in the early and high gothic periods in northern Europe. Includes cathedral architecture, sculpture, stained glass, manuscripts, and metalwork studies in relationship to the expansion of royal and Episcopal power. Cross-list: MDST 331, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 531. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 331 if student has credit for HART 531.
 

HART 332 - ART OF THE COURTS

Long Title: ART OF THE COURTS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Examination of art and architecture produced in the late gothic period within three distinct settings--the court, the city, and the church. Includes private, public, and religious life as expressed in the objects, architecture, and decoration of the castle and palace, the house, the city hall and hospital, and the chapel and parish church. Cross-list: MDST 332, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 532. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 332 if student has credit for HART 532.
 

HART 335 - ARTISTIC ENCOUNTERS

Long Title: ARTISTIC ENCOUNTERS AROUND THE MEDITERRANEAN
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will examine the artistic encounters that occurred around the Mediterranean basin through specific objects and buildings, each week focusing on one or a coherent group of objects. We will explore how the circulation of aesthetic trends, forms, and techniques that occurred via trade, conquest, warfare, power relations, artists' patronage and gift exchange resulted in mutual processes of artistic transmissions between different cultures and across Muslim-Christian boundaries.
 

HART 336 - CINEMA AND THE CITY

Long Title: CINEMA AND THE CITY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class explores representations of the city in 20th century European and American cinema, considering such diverse films as Dziga Vertov's "Man with the Movie Camera," Jules Dassin's "The Naked City," Fritz Lang's "M," and Tom Tykwer's "Run Lola Run." Central concerns will include the city as cinematic protagonist, parallels between urban and cinematic space, and the intertwined histories of both film and urban design over the last century. Cross-list: FILM 336.
 

HART 337 - HISTORY OF RUSSIAN CINEMA

Long Title: HISTORY OF RUSSIAN CINEMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class surveys the history of Russian/Soviet cinema from the beginning of the 20th century to the present. We will examine films as part of the broader political and social history of this period, paying particular attention to such issues as aesthetics and politics, entertainment and propaganda, history and memory, and gender and sexuality. Cross-list: FILM 337.
 

HART 338 - LANDMARKS IN ISRAELI ART

Long Title: LANDMARKS IN ISRAELI ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines the main artistic movements of israel (1948-88.) It explores how traditional Jewish symbols are transformed by political events and Zionist dogmas. Zionist thinking expanded familiar biblical legends and myths creating modern ones for the emerging Israeli culture. Art was also influenced by Greco-Roman mythology and Christian symbolism. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 538.
 

HART 339 - STILL LIFE PAINTING

Long Title: STILL LIFE PAINTING, 17TH - 20TH CENTURY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Still life paintings show objects, arranged on a table or shelf, in such a way as to reflect human experience. This course examines still life painting from the Dutch Golden Age through nineteenth-century Europe and America to innovative works produced by such twentieth-century movements as Dada, surrealism, and pop art. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 539. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 339 if student has credit for HART 539.
 

HART 340 - NORTHERN RENAISSANCE ART

Long Title: NORTHERN RENAISSANCE ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of art in northern Europe from Jan van Eyck to Peter Bruegel. Cross-list: MDST 340.
 

HART 341 - EARLY RENAISSANCE ART IN ITALY

Long Title: EARLY RENAISSANCE ART IN ITALY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of Italian art and architecture from Giotto to Botticelli, with emphasis on painting and sculpture in the 15th century.
 

HART 342 - HIGH RENAISSN&MANNERISM ITALY

Long Title: THE HIGH RENAISSANCE AND MANNERISM IN ITALY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of the High Renaissance, with emphasis on its leading masters (e.g., Leonardo, Raphael, Bramante, Michelangelo, and Titian). Includes a study of mannerism, the stylish art produced after the first quarter of the 16th century.
 

HART 343 - MASTERS OF THE BAROQUE ERA

Long Title: MASTERS OF THE BAROQUE ERA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of the works of the greatest painters and sculptors in Europe during the Baroque period. Includes Rembrandt, Rubens, Caravaggio, Poussin, Claude, and Velazquez.
 

HART 344 - BAROQUE ART & ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: BAROQUE ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY, SPAIN AND THE NEW WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course surveys the visual culture of Southern Europe and the Americas during the seventeenth century. We will study the work of major artists - including Caravaggio, Bernini, Borromini, Murillo, and Velazquez - as well as the introduction and adaptation of European artistic models in Central and South America. Cross-list: ARCH 379, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 544.
 

HART 345 - ARCHITECTURE & THE CITY I

Long Title: ARCHITECTURE AND THE CITY I
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course provides a chronological survey of European architecture, urbanism, and landscape design from the Renaissance to the nineteenth century. Through focused attention to selected buildings, plans, designs, and theories, the course considers key works and their relationships to differing aesthetic, cultural, and political contexts. Cross-list: ARCH 345.
 

HART 349 - TRENDS IN CONTEMPORARY ART

Long Title: TRENDS IN CONTEMPORARY ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will map the terrain of contemporary art as it has developed in the wake of political and theoretical engagements of the 1990's. For many critics, Contemporary Art practice has given way to the worst aspects of spectacular culture losing sight of the political, theoretical, and artistic rigor that characterized the historical and neo-avant-garde.
 

HART 350 - FASCISM & RETURNS TO ORDER

Long Title: FASCISM, TOTALITARIANISM AND RETURNS TO ORDER
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This introductory seminar will examine the response by artists, architects, critics, and filmmakers to fascism, protofascism, and totalitarianism in Europe from 1905 to 1945. Particular attention will be paid to the differing ways in which authoritarianism becomes manifest in the specific cultural and historical conditions of France, Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union, and Spain, and the ways in which antimodernist artistic production in turn responds to this specificity.
 

HART 351 - NINETEENTH CENTURY ART

Long Title: NINETEENTH CENTURY ART IN EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of the major developments in painting and sculpture from late 18th century neoclassicism and romanticism through realism, impressionism, and post-impressionism. Include architecture, photography, and decorative arts.
 

HART 352 - 20TH CENTURY ART IN EUROPE

Long Title: TWENTIETH CENTURY ART IN EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of major developments in painting and sculpture from the 1880s to the 1940s. Includes impressionism and post-impressionism, expressionism, cubism, abstraction. Dada, and surrealism, with a brief consideration of architecture and photography.
 

HART 353 - ART & ARCH IN AGE OF REVOLTNS

Long Title: ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN THE AGE OF REVOLUTIONS (1725-1875)
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will consider the key artistic and architectural movements and styles in Europe from Rocco to Impressionism. We will also look at major theoretical development in those years in art, architecture, and city planning. Finally, we will take into account momentous political developments, especially revolution, and the threat of revolution, which affected and were in turn affected by, cultural production.
 

HART 354 - AGE OF ROMANTICISM IN EUROPE

Long Title: AGE OF ROMANTICISM IN EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will consider the emergence and flourishing of Romanticism in the visual arts in Europe. We will consider artists from France, Germany and Britain, including Eugene Delacroix, J.M.W. Turner, John Constable and Caspar David Friedrich. We will combine study of paintings with readings of contemporaneous philosophers and writers, including Hegel and Byron.
 

HART 355 - DAVID: REVOLUTION

Long Title: JACQUES-LOUIS DAVID: REVOLUTION
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class will consider the painting of Jacques-Louis David with particular reference to the ideas of revolution. This seminar will combine close reading and looking, using primary and secondary readings to explore issues of classicism, politics, eroticism, and aesthetics in the work of this central figure in art history.
 

HART 356 - ART IN THE VANGUARD

Long Title: ART IN THE VANGUARD: VISUAL CULTURE AND RADICAL POLITICS, 1800-2005
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will consider the relationship between visual culture, history and radical politics, looking closely at art as a means of political and ideological resistance and persuasion. Ranging from the 19th to the 21st century, we will consider various strategies of creating politically radical art, looking at the work of Daumier, Courbet, John Heartfield and others. We will also look at the impact of Marxism on art historians, critics and philosophers, including Benjamin, Adorno and Althusser. Finally, we will examine divergent governmental views of art, including the Nazi conception of "Degenerate Art", the fate of modern art in the Soviet Union and the influence of anti-communism on the visual culture of the United States.
 

HART 357 - CONSTABLE AND TURNER

Long Title: CONSTABLE AND TURNER
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will explore critical issues surrounding the careers of John Constable and J.M.W. Turner, arguably the greatest landscape painters of the early 19th century. We will look at both similarities and differences in the work of these two rivals, while considering their work in the context of great historical change in England.
 

HART 358 - IMPRESSIONISM/POST-IMP

Long Title: IMPRESSIONISM AND POST-IMPRESSIONISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class will explore painting in France from approximately 1865 to 1900. Mixing lectures and classroom discussion, we will focus on individual artists including Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt, Georges Seurat, Vincent van Gogh, and Paul Czanne. We will also consider and discuss a set of critical issues surrounding these painters, including the politics of gender and class within the changing urban setting of Paris.
 

HART 359 - FAUVISM TO EXPRESSIONISM

Long Title: ISSUES IN EARLY MODERNISM: FAUVISM TO EXPRESSIONISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore painting, sculpture, and architecture in Europe, 1900-1925. We will consider mainstream European formalist modernism in movements like Fauvism and Cubism, considering critical issues around masters including Matisse, Picasso and Mondrain, as well as the continuing figurative tradition in the work of artists like Kirchner and Beckmann.
 

HART 360 - AMER ARCH & DECOR ARTS 1900

Long Title: AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE AND DECORATIVE ARTS BEFORE 1900
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Major topics will include the furniture styles of early America, the architecture of colonial cities, the life, thought, and architectural ideas of Thomas Jefferson, urban design and building projects in Washington, D.C., and other U.S. cities, and domestic life and interior design in 19th century America. Cross-list: ARCH 360.
 

HART 361 - PRE-RAPHAELITE PAINTING

Long Title: TRUTH TO NATURE: AMERICAN AND ENGLISH PRE-RAPHAELITE PAINTING
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: 'The Pre-Raphaelites' were 19th century English painters who strived for 'Truth to Nature,' i.e., mimetic renderings of nature and Man, a concept prescribed by aesthete John Ruskin. The latter's writings have reached the United States; American artists have created their own version of Pre-Raphaelitism, adapting it to mythical concepts of American as the new 'Promised Land.' Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 561.
 

HART 362 - LATE MODERN ART: 1945-PRESENT

Long Title: LATE MODERN ART: 1945 - PRESENT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces the major developments, key figures and significant works of late Modernism. Covering a period from roughly 1945-Present, we will trace modernism's unfolding in the avant-garde practices of the 2nd half of the 20th century. Beginning with the shift from Paris to New York as the cultural center of the avant-garde, the rise of Abstract Expressionism & its divided legacies. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 562. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 362 if student has credit for HART 562.
 

HART 363 - HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY

Long Title: HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Roland Barthes described the emergence of photography in the early nineteenth century as an "anthropological revolution in man's history," a "truly unprecedented type of consciousness." This lecture class aims to examine this proposition by examining the history of photography in the nineteenth century as it develops within a number of specific thematics, from the medium's conception in the late 18th century through to debates in the 20th century about photography's relationship to artistic and social issues. The structure of the class will allow for individual sessions to combine a formal, illustrated presentation with some detailed discussion of particular images and texts. Taken as a whole, the class will look at photography as a cultural phenomenon as much as an art form, critically studying the various discursive arenas that this new medium helped to foster and redefine. Credit cannot be received for both HART 263 and HART 363.
 

HART 364 - STU IN AMER ART:COL ERA-ARMONY

Long Title: STUDIES IN AMERICAN ART FROM THE COLONIAL ERA TO THE ARMORY SHOW
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine a range of topics in U.S. art from the colonial era to circa 1910. Some themes to be addressed include representations of landscapes and their relation to American culture nationalism; social realism vs. modernist abstract images; and representations of gendered subjectivity in American visual culture.
 

HART 365 - GENDR & HIST OF PHOTOGRAPHY

Long Title: GENDER, SUBJECTIVITY, AND THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine a range of subjects within the history, theory, and criticism of photography, including the relationship between commodification, eroticism, and the objectification of the body; and the intersecting issues of mechanical reproduction, authorship, and authenticity in modern and postmodern discourses. Cross-list: SWGS 365.
 

HART 366 - AMERICAN ART 1920S-1960S

Long Title: STUDIES IN AMERICAN ART FROM THE 1920S TO THE 1960S
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine a range of topics in American and European art from the 1920s to the 1960s. Our subjects will include the machine aesthetic, cultural nationalism, social realist and regionalist practice, the New York School, and Pop art. Intense methodological reading will accompany visual analysis.
 

HART 367 - STUDIES IN MODERN ART

Long Title: STUDIES IN MODERN ART FROM THE 1960S TO THE PRESENT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine a range of topics in American and European art from the 1960s to the present. Our subjects will include Pop art, body and performance art, deconstruction, postmodernism, minimalism, and art in the digital age.
 

HART 368 - SUBJECTIVITY IN MOD/POST- ART

Long Title: SUBJECTIVITY IN MODERN/POSTMODERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines the intellectual history of subjectivity and its various representations in modernist and postmodernist aesthetics. In particular, we will consider the intersection of subjectivity and desire by examining the ongoing project of human self-creation through aesthetics, ornament, framing devices, technological apparatuses, and other supplementary objects of desire. Cross-list: SWGS 348.
 

HART 369 - SEM:BEAUTY & FRAG IN MOD ART

Long Title: SEMINAR ON BEAUTY AND FRAGMENTATION IN MODERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine literal and symbolic representation of the human body in modern American and European art. Topics addressed will include conceptions on beauty vs. subjective fragmentation; the performative nature of social identity; and art history's long-standing preoccupation with the sensuous equivalency of flesh and paint. Cross-list: SWGS 369, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 569. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 369 if student has credit for HART 569.
 

HART 371 - CHINESE PAINTING

Long Title: CHINESE PAINTING
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines Chinese painting from ancient times to the early twentieth century. Issues of examination include themes, styles, and functions of Chinese painting; the interrelationship between paintings and the intended viewers; regionalism; images and words; foreign elements in Chinese painting. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all these readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional every two or three weeks to discuss interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate Students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in additional to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. GR/UG equivalent: HART 571. Cross-list: ASIA 371.
 

HART 372 - CHINESE ART AND VISUAL CULTURE

Long Title: CHINESE ART AND VISUAL CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course, we will study how various artistic styles developed in historical, social, and cultural contexts from the ancient period to the present day. Through the careful examination of architecture, calligraphy, painting, sculpture, ceramics, bronze, and film, students will gain a deeper understanding of Chinese art and visual culture. Cross-list: ASIA 372, MDST 373, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 572. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 372 if student has credit for HART 572.
 

HART 373 - METHODOLOGY SEMINAR

Long Title: METHODOLOGY SEMINAR: WORD AND IMAGE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Art history is the craft of putting images into words. This course explores the question of how words and images intersect in the visual arts. Readings of some key texts on the subject will be followed by a series of case studies concerning specific artistic genres and issues. Topics include: narrative in painting; the frame and the caption; character and face in portraiture; the word as image in calligraphy; and sound and image in film. Through its readings and cases, the course will provide students a focused introduction to art historical theories and methods.
 

HART 374 - ART & RELIGION IN CHINA

Long Title: ART & RELIGION IN CHINA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This introductory course examines the complex relationship between art and religion in China (4th - 19th centuries). Through an analysis of painting, sculpture, cave temples, steles, manuscripts, talismans, illustrated prints, and primary sources, we will explore the visual, religious and cultural dimensions of Buddhism and Daoism, and the fluid nature of Chinese culture. Cross-list: ASIA 374, RELI 374.
 

HART 375 - LATIN AMERICAN ART

Long Title: LATIN AMERICAN ART: INDEPENDENCE TO THE PRESENT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course studies the work of leading visual artists working in Latin America during the 19th and 20th centuries. The range and diversity of Latin American art will be emphasized and work in a variety of media will be explored, including mural painting, easel painting, architecture, prints, sculpture, photography, film, installations, and conceptual art. The work will be discussed in terms of contextual historical, political, social, and cultural developments.
 

HART 377 - JEWS AND ART

Long Title: JEWS AND ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore art made for Jews and by Jews, as well as depictions of Jews by themselves and others. It will examine how art negotiated the internal politics of Jewish communities, and how Jews reacted to their minority status and constructed Jewish identity and memory through their art. Cross-listed with RELI 377. Cross-list: RELI 377, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 577. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 377 if student has credit for HART 577.
 

HART 378 - THE AGE OF REMBRANDT

Long Title: THE AGE OF REMBRANDT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine Dutch and Flemish seventeenth-century art, including major masters, such as Rembrandt, Rubens, and Vermeer, and major developments, such as the rise of still life, genre, and landscape painting. It will also explore women artists, Delft tiles, doll's houses, and multicultural aspects of art production.
 

HART 380 - SURVEY OF AMER FILM & CULTURE

Long Title: SURVEY OF AMERICAN FILM AND CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 4
Description: A course that explores the history of cinema in the U.S. from its origins to the present day. Cross-list: ENGL 373, FILM 373.
Course URL: http://www.english.rice.edu
 

HART 381 - COLLAGE AND ITS HISTORIES

Long Title: COLLAGE AND ITS HISTORIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class will explore the centrality of collage to the development of the 20th century art and film. Beginning with the seminal achievements of Picasso and Braque, we will examine works across geographical and medium boundaries, including Dada photomontage, early avant-garde film, 1960s happenings, and the reformulation of collage aesthetics in 1980s postmodernism. Cross-list: ANTH 318, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 581. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 381 if student has credit for HART 581.
 

HART 382 - MODALITIES OF CINEMA

Long Title: MODALITIES OF CINEMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course we will survey the range of organizing principles in cinema - the differing and combative ways cinema arranges its images and sounds. We will look at classicism, modernism, postmodernism and many other modes. The films will range from early silent pictures, to experimental shorts, to commercial blockbusters. Cross-list: FILM 382.
 

HART 383 - GLOBAL CINEMA

Long Title: GLOBAL CINEMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: This course introduces students to cinema as a global enterprise. It explores the relationship between nations, identities, races, concepts, and genres. It inquires into the question of globalization as it relates to the motion picture audience, corporations, and the commerce of ideas. Cross-list: FILM 383.
 

HART 385 - EUROPEAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS

Long Title: EUROPEAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Filmmaking has celebrated its first hundred years. Women's contributions were significant and deserve to widen the film canon for all filmgoers. This course will concentrate on films by European women directors, taking into account historical pioneering, cultural identities, aesthetics particularities, gender commitment, subject orientations and post-feminist attempts. Importance will also be given to the contexts and conditions of women's film production. All films subtitled in English. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 321, HUMA 321, SWGS 358.
 

HART 387 - CULTURAL STUDIES

Long Title: CULTURAL STUDIES: GLOBAL MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3 OR 4
Description: Examines the relationship between globalization and mass- mediated images and sounds. Looks at global distribution of Hollywood entertainment from early twentieth century onward; reception of Hollywood cinema and television in different national contexts; production of alternative/oppositional film and television by indigenous populations. Case studies of Hollywood, Bollywood, and Hong Kong. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 388 - POST-WAR EUROPEAN CINEMA

Long Title: FLIM MELODRAMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: This class surveys major developments in European cinema fromt he late 1940s to the late 1960s. Our study will include such movements as Italian Neorealism, German Rubble Films, French New Wave, and Soviet cinema in the Thaw. Particular attention will be paid to such issues as cinema and post-war reconstruction, memory and nation, and body and space. Crosslisted with FILM 388. Cross-list: FILM 388.
 

HART 389 - FILM MELODRAMA

Long Title: FILM MELODRAMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Melodrama - the genre of tears, sensationalism and excess - has long been the focus of critical debates. Initially dismissed as mere escapism, melodrama films have begun to generate nuanced studies about their engagement with issues of gender, sexuality, class, and race. This seminar examines aesthetic, socio-political, and psychological dimensions of film melodrama, including historical works by Vidor, Sirk, Godard, and Fassbinder, as well as more recent projects by Haynes and Almodovar. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 389 if student has credit for HART 589.
 

HART 390 - THEORIES OF VISUAL ARTS

Long Title: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE VISUAL ARTS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of overlapping themes central in the history of art, using texts from Plato to post-modernism. Includes the use of biography, style, connoisseurship, quality, the social basis of art, theories of change in the arts, psychology, iconography, and the modernist canon and post-modern challenges to that canon, as well as race, gender, class, authorship, and audience.
 

HART 391 - FEMINIST VISUAL CULTURE

Long Title: PRODUCING FEMINIST KNOWLEDGE: METHODOLOGY AND VISUAL CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course we will examine various methodologies used by feminist scholars in the Social Sciences and the Humanities. Particular attention will be devoted to the practical application of feminist methodologies in visual culture and the history of art, as well as to interdisciplinary feminist inquiries in science, ethnography, and epistemology. Cross-list: SWGS 391.
 

HART 392 - CONCEPTUAL ART & ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: CONCEPTUAL ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The first part of the course will examine the conceptual art practices that began in the 1960s, including Bochner, Kosuth, art and language, LeWitt, Hacke, Kelly, and Smithson. The second part of the course will focus on the question of what constitutes a conceptual architecture by interrogating a series of potential practices including: Super Studio, Anchiram, Eisenman, Libesking, Shinohara, Hejduf, Tschumi, and others. Cross-list: ARCH 384, Equivalency: HART 492.
 

HART 393 - AESTHETICS & HERMENEUTICS

Long Title: AESTHETICS AND HERMENEUTICS: MODERN ART, MYSTICAL EXPERIENCE, AND TEXTUAL INTERPRETATION
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Sacred texts and the visual arts have contributed immeasurably to shaping individual and collective conceptions of the spiritual in modern and postmodern culture. This course will examine a range of aesthetic and hermeneutic traditions, including mystical texts, modernist artworks and related museum exhibitions, in order to consider the ways in which the experiences of reading, writing, and viewing can serve as powerful acts of self-creation. Cross-list: RELI 362.
 

HART 394 - SACRED ARTS SECULAR MODERNISM

Long Title: THE SACRED ARTS OF SECULAR MODERNISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines various representations of spirituality and the sacred in modernist & post modernist aesthetics, and their corresponding expressions in historical and contemporary museum practices. Special emphasis will be placed on the outstanding collections of the adjacent museum district, the Menil Collection and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Cross-list: RELI 394.
 

HART 395 - SPECIAL PROBLEMS-ART HISTORY

Long Title: SPECIAL PROBLEMS IN ART HISTORY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics in art history. Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 396 - REPRESENTATION,HEALING,BODY

Long Title: REPRESENTATION, HEALING, AND THE BODY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course we will examine literal and symbolic representations of the human body in order to explore the relations between the visuality of medicine, corporeality, subjectivity, and healing. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 397 - THE ART OF METHODOLOGY

Long Title: THINKING THROUGH THE IMAGE: THE ART OF METHODOLOGY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar examines a range of methodological strategies that underpin the writing of modern and post modern art history. Some of the interpretive approaches to be examined include formalism, modernism, existentialism, post-modernism, feminism, Marxism, post colonialism, post- structuralism and deconstruction.
 

HART 400 - BAYOU BEND INTERNSHIP

Long Title: BAYOU BEND INTERNSHIP I
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Internship at Bayou Bend, the American Decorative Arts Center of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Must be a Jameson Fellowship recipient to enroll. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 401 - BAYOU BEND UG INTERNSHIP II

Long Title: BAYOU BEND UNDERGRADUATE INTERNSHIP II
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Internship at Bayou Bend and The American Decorative Arts Center of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Must be a Jameson Fellowship recipient to enroll.
 

HART 402 - HONORS THESIS

Long Title: HONORS THESIS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Honors thesis project in art history. Students must receive permission of the department faculty prior to enrolling. For additional information, please see Honors Program in the Rice University General Announcements. Department Permission Required.
 

HART 403 - HONORS THESIS

Long Title: HONORS THESIS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Honors thesis project in art history. Students must receive permission of the department faculty prior to enrolling. For additional information, please see Honors Program in the Rice University General Announcements. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 404 - SENIOR THESIS

Long Title: SENIOR THESIS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Senior Thesis project in art history. Students must receive permission of the department faculty prior to enrolling. Department Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 405 - INDEPENDENT STUDIES - UG

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDIES - UNDERGRADUATE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 4
Description:  Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 408 - SPECIAL TOPICS MUSEUM STUDIES

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN MUSEUM STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Special topics and new courses in art history, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 409 - INDEPENDENT STUDIES

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN MUSEUM STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 415 - ART AND EMPIRE: ATHENS & ROME

Long Title: ART AND EMPIRE: ATHENS & ROME
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Seminar that examines the art and architecture of two of antiquity's greatest empires: Athens and Rome. Issues to be addressed include the formation of these cities as imperial capitals, the representation of the conquered, and the roles of Pericles and Augustus in forming imperial ideology. Cross-list: CLAS 415.
 

HART 416 - ORIGINALITY IN CLASSICAL ART

Long Title: THE QUEST FOR ORIGINALITY IN CLASSICAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Seminar examines how modern interests in originality and related desires for original artworks have shaped classical art history. Course considers differences between ancient and modern notions of originality; the degenerative view of Roman art based on the copying of Greek originals; how the modern quest to reconstruct lost originals has impacted the way we see antiquity today. Cross-list: CLAS 416.
 

HART 417 - BURIED CITIES

Long Title: BURIED CITIES: THE ART AND ARCHITECTURE OF AKROTIRI, POMPEII, AND HERCULANEUM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An examination of classical antiquity's best preserved cities thanks to volcanic eruptions: the Bronze Age site of Akrotiri and the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum. Art and architecture will be examined within their larger social and urban contexts. Methodological and ethical issues surrounding the excavation and preservation of these sites will also be considered. Cross-list: CLAS 417.
 

HART 418 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ANCIENT ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 419 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN ANCIENT ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special work in ancient art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 420 - EUROPE & THE ISLAMIC WORLD

Long Title: ARTISTIC ENCOUNTERS: EUROPE AND THE ISLAMIC WORLD IN THE EARLY MODERN AND MODERN PERIODS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar aims to assess the mutual impact of the visual cultures of Europe and the Islamic world through history. Focusing on 15th-19th-century material including architecture, painting, photography, textiles, and sartorial fashion, it examines channels of interaction, forms of influence, and modes of representation in aesthetic, cultural, philosophical, and political terms, and in light of concurrent theoretical debates.
 

HART 427 - MEDITERRANEAN URBAN CULTURE

Long Title: URBAN CULTURE IN THE MUSLIM MEDITERRANEAN
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar explores the rich visual culture associated with Medieval pilgrimage between the fourth and fifteenth centuries. The experience of pilgrimage was shaped by symbols, images, and places encountered along the routes to sites of sacred significance, especially the roads to Jerusalem, Rome, Santiago, and Canterbury. We will examine the theological, practical, visual, and experiential aspects of pilgrimage in Western Europe and the Holy Land as understood through visual culture and contemporary texts. Cross-list: ARCH 477, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 527.
 

HART 428 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN EARLY CHRISTIAN, BYZANTINE, AND ISLAMIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 429 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN EARLY CHRISTIAN, BYZANTINE, AND ISLAMIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 431 - ARCH OF GOTHIC CATHEDRAL

Long Title: ARCHITECTURE OF THE GOTHIC CATHEDRAL FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will focus on one of the most important contributions to the history of western architecture-- the Gothic cathedral. The course will approach the material from a number of different perspectives--the formal and technical development of Gothic architecture; the Medieval architect and the design of Gothic buildings, the social, economic, and political history of "big church" building in the Middle Ages; Gothic architecture as experience and metaphor; and the afterlife of the Gothic cathedral from Vasari to the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. Cross-list: MDST 431.
 

HART 433 - THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY

Long Title: THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY AND THE ANGLO-NORMAN WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course focuses on the most important secular work from the middle ages - a 230 foot long embroidery depicting the Battle of Hastings. This is a team-taught course that will examine both visual narrative of the tapestry and literary narrative in works such as the "Chanson de Roland," and the "Lais" and "Fables of Marie de France." Cross-list: FREN 433, MDST 433, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 533. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 433 if student has credit for HART 533.
 

HART 435 - MULTICULTURAL EUROPE

Long Title: MULTICULTURAL EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The art of Europe was never the product of a single culture working in isolation. This seminar will explore the multicultural aspects of medieval and early modern Europe by focusing on the visual culture of groups who defined themselves or are today defined by nationality, race, or religion. Cross-list: HIST 443, MDST 435, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 535. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 435 if student has credit for HART 535.
 

HART 436 - MULTICULTURAL EUROPE

Long Title: MULTICULTURAL EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The art of Europe was never the product of a single culture working in isolation. This seminar will explore the multicultural aspects of medieval and early modern Europe by focusing on the visual culture of groups who defined themselves or are today defined by nationality, race, or religion. Cross-list: MDST 437.
 

HART 438 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN MEDIEVAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in Medieval art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 440 - JAN VAN EYCK

Long Title: JAN VAN EYCK: PROBLEMS OF INTERPRETATION
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Seminar and in-depth research on the art and historiography of the early Netherlandish painter Jan Van Eyck. Cross-list: MDST 440.
 

HART 441 - BOSCH & BRUEGEL

Long Title: BOSCH AND BRUEGEL: A SEMINAR ON THE REPRESENTATION OF THE SACRED AND PROFANE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The obscene, the grotesque, the humorous, and the bizarre were frequently depicted alongside sacred religious scenes, in the margins of Medieval manuscripts, beneath the seats of church canons, or in the periphery of Gothic cathedral facade sculpture. This fantastic world, along with the personifications of the Seven Deadly Sins, were often imagined as the "other" in representations of race, class, and gender. By the sixteenth century, these images had migrated into the center of paintings, especially in the work of Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder. This course will examine the juxtapositions and complex meanings of sacred and profane imagery within the context of late Medieval and post reformation religious and social life. Cross-list: MDST 451.
 

HART 444 - LEONARDO AND MICHELANGELO

Long Title: LEONARDO AND MICHELANGELO
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will offer a look at two of the greatest and most influential artists of all time. Students in this seminar will study the paintings, drawings, sculpture, and architecture of Leonardo and Michelangelo, as well as the philosophical and religious ideas found in their notebooks, letters, poetry, and other writings. There are no prerequisites for the course.
 

HART 447 - MULTICULTURAL EUROPE

Long Title: MULTICULTURAL EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The art of Europe was never the product of a single culture working in isolation. Rather it was enriched by the art of diverse native groups, immigrants, colonial subjects, and trading partners. This seminar will explore the multicultural aspects of Renaissance and Baroque art.
 

HART 448 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics and new courses in Renaissance and Baroque art, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 449 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in Renaissance and Baroque art. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 450 - EARLY MODERN ART

Long Title: EARLY MODERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces the major developments, key figures and works of early modernism, a trajectory whose beginnings are now generally located in the late-nineteenth century. Covering a period from roughly 1900 - 1945, we will trace Modernism's unfolding in the avant-garde practices of the first three decades of the 20th century, as well as the first anti-modernist critiques, ending with Modernism's eventual destruction in the authoritarian politics of the 1930s, World War II, and the Holocaust.
 

HART 451 - MODELS OF ABSTRACTION

Long Title: MODELS OF ABSTRACTION
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): HART 351
Description: This course will examine a range of different models of abstract painting and sculpture as they appear throughout the twentieth century. Looking closely at the historical contexts that gave rise to abstraction particular attention will be paid to how apparently similar forms of abstraction can denote very different kinds of meaning.
 

HART 452 - MANET(S) AND MODERNISM(S)

Long Title: MANET(S) AND MODERNISM(S)
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar considers the pivotal figure of Edouard Manet. Combining a study of paintings from throughout his career, with close readings of primary sources, we will assess the key aspects of his style and subject matter. We will also consider art historical to his work and relationship to modernity.
 

HART 453 - CUBISM AND THE PROBLEM OF FORM

Long Title: CUBISM AND THE PROBLEM OF FORM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will examine the cultural, social, and artistic context that led to the development of Cubism. Particular attention will be paid to the problem of form and color in the period from 1907 to 1914, as well as the reception of Cubism during the post-world war I "return to order". In addition to the work of Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, the work of the so-called "Salon Cubists" will be examined (Albert Gleizes, Jean Metzinger, Andre Lhote, Henri Le Fauconnier, et al.) along with the work of Henri Matisse, Fernand Leger, Marcel Duchamp, Robert Delaunay, Le Corbusier and Amadee Ozenfant.
 

HART 454 - THE ETHNOGRAPHER AS ARTIST

Long Title: THE ARTIST AS ETHNOGRAPHER - THE ETHNOGRAPHER AS ARTIST
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine the intersections between the historical avant-garde, contemporary art, and anthropology. Developing on the so-called "ethnographic turn" within contemporary art - what Hal Foster has famously termed "the artist as ethnographer" - we will look at the way that this tendency within artistic production has doubled back onto the field of anthropology, leading to what could be called "the ethnographer as artist." Particular attention will be paid to the role of the art museum and international art exhibitions. Cross-list: ANTH 454.
 

HART 455 - FIVE MODERN PAINTERS,1860-1914

Long Title: FIVE MODERN PAINTERS,1860-1914:MANET, CEZANNE, PICASSO, MATISSE, DELAUNAY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class will look closely at five key episodes in early modernist painting: the distinct contributions of Edouard Manet, Paul Cezanne, Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Robert Delaunay. Examining a range of methodological approaches and primary source material, the class will pay particular attention to the ways in which altered notions of visual experience impacted advanced painting. Over the course of the semester we will attempt to understand how each of these five artists responded, each in their own way, to the changes wrought by modernity and modernism. Cross-list: ARCH 485.
 

HART 456 - COPLEY, SARGENT, & THE MUSEUM

Long Title: COPLEY, SARGENT, AND THE MUSEUM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Drawing from the collections and resources of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, this course is designed to achieve two goals: (1) to provide an overview of the art and career of two American painters: the eighteenth-century colonial painter John Singleton Copley, and the late nineteenth-century expatriate painter, John Singer Sargent, focusing on the close examination of works of art on view at the MFAH, and (2) to introduce students to the history and culture of the art museum in the United States by using the MFAH as a laboratory for study.
 

HART 457 - VIDEO AND EXPANDED CINEMA

Long Title: VIDEO AND EXPANDED CINEMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar explores the emergence of video and "expanded cinema" as a primary field of artistic practice over the course of the 1960s and 1970s. We will examine seminal works by artists including Andy Warhol, Dan Graham, and Robert Whitman as well as the shifting aesthetic, political, and media landscapes in which this work emerged. Cross-list: FILM 455, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 557. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 457 if student has credit for HART 557.
 

HART 458 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics and new courses in 19th and 20th century art. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 459 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in modern Art History. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 460 - MASS CULTURE

Long Title: MASS CULTURE & THE AVANT-GARDE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar will explore the close relationship between mass culture and avant-garde art from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. In particular, we will examine how artists have both borrowed from and reacted against mass cultural forms--from comic books to television--as a means to renew their practice. Artists to be considered include Gustave Courbet, Pablo Picasso, Kurt Schwitters, Andy Warhol, Cindy Sherman and others.
 

HART 468 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN AMERICAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 469 - INDEPENDENT STUDY AMERICAN ART

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN AMERICAN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in American art. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 478 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN NON-WESTERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 479 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN NON-WESTERN ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in non-Western art. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 480 - SEMINAR ON FILM AUTHORSHIP

Long Title: SEMINAR ON FILM AUTHORSHIP: THE NEW HOLLYWOOD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: This seminar covers the concept of authorship in Hollywood cinema since 1968. Filmmakers include Francis Ford Coppola, David Lynch, The Coen Brothers, and Charlie Kaufman. Cross-list: ARTS 435, FILM 435.
 

HART 483 - DOCUM & ETHNOGRAPH FILM

Long Title: SEMINAR ON DOCUMENTARY AND ETHNOGRAPHIC FILM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Overview of the history of documentary and ethnographic cinema from a worldwide perspective. Includes both canonical and alternative films and film movements with emphasis on the shifting and overlapping boundaries of fiction and nonfiction genres. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 683.
 

HART 485 - GENDER AND HOLLYWOOD 1950'S

Long Title: GENDER AND HOLLYWOOD CINEMA IN THE 1950'S
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course examines representations of gendered subjectivity in Hollywood cinema during the 1950s. Some of the topics to be addressed include the uneasy relationship between normative domesticity and heterosexual masculinity, issues of voyeurism, and eroticism, and the ongoing conflict between liberated individualism and social conformity in corporate culture and bourgeois society. Cross-list: SWGS 485.
 

HART 486 - STUDIES IN FILM

Long Title: STUDIES IN FILM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Topics will vary from year to year.
 

HART 488 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Special topics and new courses in film and media studies, not necessarily repeated. May be used in awarding transfer credit. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 489 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in film and media studies. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 490 - CULTURAL BOUNDARIES

Long Title: CULTURAL BOUNDARIES ETHNIC MYTHS, AND THE SEARCH FOR A NATIONAL STYLE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will introduce the issue of art and identity as it was presented in the cultural debates taking place in europe in the 19th and 20th centuries.
 

HART 492 - CONCEPTUAL ART & ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: CONCEPTUAL ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The first part of the course will examine the conceptual art practices that began in the 1960s, including Bochner, Kosuth, art and language, LeWitt, Haacke, Kelly, and Smithson. The second part of the course will focus on the question of what constitutes a conceptual architecture by interrogating a series of potential practices including: Super Studio, Anchigram, Eisenman, Libeskind, Shinohara, Hejduf, Tschumi, and others. Equivalency: HART 392.
 

HART 498 - SPECIAL TOPICS

Long Title: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ART THEORY AND CRITICISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 499 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN ART THEORY AND CRITICISM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in art history, theory, themes, and criticism. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 500 - INTERNSHIP PROGRAM I

Long Title: INTERNSHIP PROGRAM I
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 15
Description: Graduate level course that will provide select students a practicum in museum work accompanied by an introduction to a history of museums, including varieties of museums, their role in society, and significant issues in museums today. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 501 - INTERNSHIP PROGRAM II

Long Title: INTERNSHIP PROGRAM II
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 6
Description: Graduate level course that will provide select students a practicum in museum work accompanied by an introduction to a history of museums, including the varieties of museums, their role in society, and significant issues in museums today. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 504 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Research
Credit Hours: 1 TO 4
Restrictions:
Must be enrolled in one of the following Level(s):
Graduate
Must be enrolled in one of the following Class(es):
Graduate
Description: Graduate independent study, reading and research on variable topics. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HART 505 - ART IN EUROPE, 1900-1945

Long Title: AVANT GARDE AND AFTER: ART IN EUROPE, 1900-1945
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class surveys European art from roughly 1900-1945, paying particular attention to the social contexts in which this work emerged and the interpretive strategies that have been used to understand it. Among the topics to be considered are Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, Dada, and Surrealism, as well as the reaction against these by emergent authoritarian regimes of the 1930s. Graduate students will be assigned additional readings. We will meet an additional two to three times to discuss the readings. In addition, a research paper will be due at the end of the semester. GR/UG equivalent: HART 305. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 305. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 505 if student has credit for HART 305.
 

HART 506 - ARCHITECTURE AND THE CITY II

Long Title: ARCHITECTURE AND THE CITY II (ENLIGHTENMENT THROUGH POSTMODERNITY)
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description:
 

HART 513 - THE HELLENISTIC AGE

Long Title: THE HELLENISTIC AGE: ALEXANDER TO AUGUSTUS
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: We examine the art, architecture, and cultural history of the Hellenistic Age, from Alexander the Great (d. 323 BC) until the death of Cleopatra (31 BC). During this period a brilliant Greek-based culture developed from the Mediterranean to the Indus Valley, transforming Greeks, Persians, Jews, Romans and many others. Graduate students will be assigned additional readings and a research paper will be due at the end of the semester. GR/UG equivalent: HART 313. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 313.
 

HART 517 - CONSTANTINOPLE / ISTANBUL

Long Title: CONSTANTINOPLE / ISTANBUL
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An exploration of the architectural and urban culture of the Ottoman imperial capital, Istanbul / Constantinople, from its conquest in 1453 until the empire's demise in the 1920s. Topics include: artistic and imperial legacies; patronage; political and religious symbolism; artistic canon and identity. Not open to students who have taken HART 220 or HART 520. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. In addition to all the requirements of the class they will be required to write a 20pp research paper. This requirement will consist of three parts: an annotated bibliography to hand in after the mid-semester break; a class presentation in the last two weeks of the term; submission of their paper at the end of the term. Cross-list: ARCH 661, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 317. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 517 if student has credit for HART 317.
 

HART 520 - ISTANBUL: IMPERIAL CITY

Long Title: ISTANBUL - LIFE OF AN IMPERIAL CITY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Graduate Equivalent of HART 220. Additional requirements will include 3 - 7 to 8 page papers. These will include limited research, based on bibliography. The 3 papers will be in lieu of the 1 hours midterm and 1 hour final tests required for the 200 class. Cross-list: ARCH 520, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 220.
 

HART 524 - THE PEN AND THE BRUSH

Long Title: THE PEN AND THE BRUSH: THE ARTS OF THE BOOK IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces the arts of the book in the Islamic world, from the earliest manifestations to printing. We will analyze Korans, scientific and pseudo-scientific manuscripts, illustrated literary texts, anthologies of poetry, albums, and consider techniques, materials, book formats, and schools of production. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 324.
 

HART 527 - MEDITERRANEAN URBAN CULTURE

Long Title: MEDITERRANEAN URBAN CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar examines processes of change in the dynamics of urban life in cities of the former Ottoman empire including Instanbul, Cairo, Salonica, Damascus and Aleppo between the 18th and 19th centuries. Weekly discussions will be based on readings of primary and secondary sources that explore issues of public behavior, sociability, delinquency, poverty, prostitution, immigration, marginality, and forms and discourses of governance and social control such as morality, public security and social order. Additional course work required for graduate students. In addition to all the requirements of the class, Graduate Students will be required to write a 20pp research paper. This requirement will consist of three parts: an annotated bibliography to hand in after the mid-semester break; a class presentation in the last two weeks of the term; submission of their paper at the end of the term. Cross-list: ARCH 677, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 427.
 

HART 530 - EARLY MEDIEVAL ART

Long Title: EARLY MEDIEVAL ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all these readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional every two or three weeks to discuss interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate Students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 330. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 530 if student has credit for HART 330.
 

HART 531 - GOTHIC ART

Long Title: GOTHIC ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all these readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional every two or three weeks to discuss interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate Students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 331. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 531 if student has credit for HART 331.
 

HART 532 - LATE GOTHIC ART

Long Title: LATE GOTHIC ART 1250-1400 "ART OF THE COURTS"
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all these readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional every two or three weeks to discuss interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate Students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 332. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 532 if student has credit for HART 332.
 

HART 533 - THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY

Long Title: THE BAYEUX TAPESTRY AND THE ANGLO-NORMAN WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course focuses on the most important secular work from the middle ages - a 230 foot long embroidery depicting the Battle of Hastings. This is a team-taught course that will examine both visual narrative of the tapestry and literary narrative in works such as the "Chanson de Roland," and the "Lais" and "Fables of Marie de France." All graduates will meet on a regular basis outside of the weekly class to discuss readings; must keep an annotated bibliography of all additional readings; will be assigned to lead a discussion on topic of their research; and must complete a substantial research paper. Cross-list: FREN 533, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 433. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 533 if student has credit for HART 433.
 

HART 535 - MULTICULTURAL EUROPE

Long Title: MULTICULTURAL EUROPE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The art of Europe was never the product of a single culture working in isolation. This seminar will explore the multicultural aspects of medieval and early modern Europe by focusing on the visual culture of groups who defined themselves or are today defined by nationality, race, or religion. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 435. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 535 if student has credit for HART 435.
 

HART 538 - LANDMARKS IN ISRAELI ART

Long Title: LANDMARKS IN ISRAELI ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three times per semester to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 338.
 

HART 539 - STILL LIFE PAINTING

Long Title: STILL LIFE PAINTING, 17TH - 20TH CENTURY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. they will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three times per semester to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 339. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 539 if student has credit for HART 339.
 

HART 544 - BAROQUE ART & ARCHITECTURE

Long Title: BAROQUE ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY, SPAIN AND THE NEW WORLD
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course surveys the visual culture of Southern Europe and the Americas during the seventeenth century. We will study the work of major artists - including Caravaggio, Bernini, Borromini, Murillo, and Velazquez - as well as the introduction and adaptation of European artistic models in Central and South America. Graduate students will be rquired to write a mock grant proposal, which suggests a project to be researched, situates the project in the historigraphy on Baroque art (with bibliography), and outlines a proposed schedule. In addition to completing all the requirements of the course, they will be expected to complete additional readings and a substantial research paper at the end of the semester. Cross-list: ARCH 679, Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 344.
 

HART 556 - COPLEY, SARGENT, & THE MUSEUM

Long Title: COPLEY, SARGENT, AND THE MUSEUM
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Drawing from the collections and resources of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, this course is designed to achieve two goals: (1) to provide an overview of the art and career of two American painters: the eighteenth-century colonial painter John Singleton Copley, and the late nineteenth-century expatriate painter, John Singer Sargent, focusing on the close examination of works of art on view at the MFAH, and (2) to introduce students to the history and culture of the art museum in the United States by using the MFAH as a laboratory for study. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester.
 

HART 557 - VIDEO AND EXPANDED CINEMA

Long Title: VIDEO AND EXPANDED CINEMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar explores the emergence of video and "expanded cinema" as a primary field of artistic practice over the course of the 1960s and 1970s. We will examine seminal works by artists including Andy Warhol, Dan Graham, and Robert Whitman as well as the shifting aesthetic, political, and media landscapes in which this work emerged. For each lecture, Graduate students will be assigned readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 457. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 557 if student has credit for HART 457.
 

HART 561 - PRE-RAPHAELITE PAINTING

Long Title: TRUTH TO NATURE: AMERICAN AND ENGLISH PRE-RAPHAELITE PAINTING
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: 'The Pre-Raphaelites' were 19th century English painters who strived for 'Truth to Nature,' i.e., mimetic renderings of nature and Man, a concept prescribed by aesthete John Ruskin. The latter's writings have reached the United States; American artists have created their own version of Pre-Raphaelitism, adapting it to mythical concepts of American as the new 'Promised Land.' For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 361.
 

HART 562 - LATE MODERN ART: 1945-PRESENT

Long Title: LATE MODERN ART: 1945 - PRESENT
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course introduces the major developments, key figures and significant works of late Modernism. Covering a period from roughly 1945-Present, we will trace modernism's unfolding in the avant-garde practices of the 2nd half of the 20th century. Beginning with the shift from Paris to New York as the cultural center of the avant-garde, the rise of Abstract Expressionism & its divided legacies. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 362. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 562 if student has credit for HART 362.
 

HART 572 - CHINESE ART AND VISUAL CULTURE

Long Title: CHINESE ART AND VISUAL CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: In this course, we will study how various artistic styles developed in historical, social and cultural contexts from the ancient period to the present day. Through the careful examination of architecture, calligraphy, painting, sculpture, ceramics, bronze, and film, students will gain a deeper understanding of Chinese art and visual culture. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three times to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be explected to complete all requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due a the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 372. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 572 if student has credit for HART 372.
 

HART 577 - JEWS AND ART

Long Title: JEWS AND ART
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 377. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 577 if student has credit for HART 377.
 

HART 581 - COLLAGE AND ITS HISTORIES

Long Title: COLALGE AND ITS HISTORIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This class will explore the centrality of collage to the development of the 20th century art and film. Beginning with the seminal achievements of Picasso and Braque, we will examine works across geographical and medium boundaries, including Dada photomontage, early avant-garde film, 1960s happenings, and the reformulation of collage aesthetics in 1980s postmodernism. For each lecture, Graduate students will be assigned additional readings. They will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three weeks to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Graduate/Undergraduate Equivalency: HART 381. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 581 if student has credit for HART 381.
 

HART 589 - FILM MELODRAMA

Long Title: FILM MELODRAMA
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 4
Description: Melodrama - the genre of tears, sensationalism and excess - has long been the focus of critical debates. Initially dismissed as mere escapism, melodrama films have begun to generate nuanced studies about their engagement with issues of gender, sexuality, class, and race. This seminar examines aesthetic, socio-political, and psychological dimensions of film melodrama, including historical works by Vidor, Sirk, Godard, and Fassbinder, as well as more recent projects by Haynes and Almodovar. For each lecture, Graduate Students will be assigned addtional readings. Tehy will write an annotated bibliography of all the readings to be turned in at the end of the semester. We will meet for an additional two or three times to discuss the interpretive and methodological problems and ideas associated with the readings. Graduate students will be expected to complete all the requirements of the class in addition to writing a substantial research paper due at the end of the semester. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HART 589 if student has credit for HART 389.
 

HART 590 - METHODS OF ART HISTORY

Long Title: METHODS OF ART HISTORY
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This seminar surveys approaches the study of art and visual culture from art history's origins as a discipline to the present day. We will study a range of works of art and interrogate many of the essential terms of art historical study. Frequent guest lectures will be featured. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HART 594 - THE CITY IN LITERATURE

Long Title: STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE AND CULTURE
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: A variable topics course. Please consult the English department website for additional course information. Recent topics have included Global English; Globalization and its Discontents; and Critical Regionalisms. Crosslisted with ENGL 594. Cross-list: ENGL 594. Repeatable for Credit.
Course URL: http://www.english.rice.edu
 

HART 689 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY IN FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES
Department: Art History
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 15
Description: Independent study, reading, or special research in film & media studies on the graduate level. Repeatable for Credit.