History of Art: Renaissance to Modern - ART 102 at Danville Community College
https://courses.vccs.edu/colleges/dcc/courses/ART102-HistoryofArtRenaissancetoModern
Effective: 2022-03-31
Course Description
Surveys the history and interpretation of architecture, painting and sculpture from the Renaissance through the modern era. This is a Passport and UCGS transfer course.
Lecture 3 hours. Total 3 hours per week.
3 credits
The course outline below was developed as part of a statewide standardization process.
General Course Purpose
Art 102 presents art from the Renaissance through the modern era. Students will develop a basic knowledge of historical art movements and their characteristics. They will critically evaluate the role of social, cultural, and global connections through art historical analysis.
Course Objectives
- Communication
- Utilize a formal vocabulary to describe art
- Recognize and describe the media and techniques used to create the works of art, as well as the technologies used in architecture
- Cultural and Social Understanding
- Identify major artist and/or works of art
- Distinguish art historical periods/movements and recognize their characteristics
- Critical Thinking
- Critically evaluate works of art and the ways in which these monuments function within their historical, cultural, and religious contexts
- 15th Century - European Art (Early Renaissance)
- Identify the characteristics of Northern Renaissance painting.
- Recognize the artistic and architectural characteristics of the Early Renaissance in Italy.
- Examine the principles of linear perspective.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
- 16th Century - European Art (Renaissance, Mannerism)
- Summarize the characteristics of High Renaissance art in Italy.
- Distinguish the artistic traits of Mannerism.
- Describe the distinctive trends in the sixteenth-century art of the Netherlands, Germany, and Spain.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
- 17th Century - European Art (Baroque)
- Explore the characteristics of the Baroque art and architecture in Italy.
- Characterize the "Golden Age" of painting in Spain.
- Recognize the new artistic developments in Flemish art.
- Discuss the distinctive styles and subjects preferred in the Protestant regions.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
- 18th & early 19th Century European & American Art (Rococo, Neoclassicism, Romanticism)
- Explain how the Rococo art and architecture was a reflection of life among the aristocracy in eighteenth-century France.
- Explore Neoclassicism's connection to Enlightenment thought and Classical art.
- Identify aspects of Romanticism in landscape painting.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
- Mid- to late 19th Century European & American Art (Photography, Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Architecture)
- Discuss the historical context that led to the emergence of photography as a new art form.
- Examine the social and political concerns presented in Realism.
- Summarize the origins, artistic characteristics, and content of Impressionism.
- Distinguish the various artistic styles of Post-Impressionism.
- Describe the impact of historicism and new industrial materials in late nineteenth-century architecture.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
- Early to Mid-20th Century Modern European & American Art (Fauvism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, Expressionism, Bauhaus, Harlem Renaissance, Mexican artists)
- Trace the spread of Modernism across Europe in the early twentieth century.
- Characterize the arrival of Modernism in the United States.
- Summarize the new developments in Modern art and architecture in Europe between World Wars I and II.
- Identify global artworks that inspired, or were influenced by, the art produced during the periods/movements presented. Correlations may be drawn from themes, subject, and/or technique.
Major Topics to be Included
- 15th Century - European Art
- 16th Century - European Art
- 17th Century - European Art
- 18th & early 19th Century European & American Art
- Mid- to late 19th Century European & American Art
- Early to Mid-20th Century Modern European & American Art