Lecture: 4 hours per week
Lecture (4 hours per week) with audio-visual support (recordings, slides, films, videos and DVDs).
Field trips to art galleries and performing arts events.
- Introduction
- Terminology: The Elements of the Arts
- Historical Background
- Tribal Arts
- Classical Greece and Rome
- The Middle Ages
- The Renaissance
- Humanism: Revival of Greek Ideas
- Italy: Painting, Sculpture, Music
- The Arts of Northern Europe
- The Printing Press and Its Effects
- The Baroque Age
- The Rise of Opera and Ballet
- Drama: French Classicism and English Restoration
- Baroque Art and Architecture
- Bach and Handel
- The Enlightenment
- Aesthetics and Classicism
- Rococo Style
- Classical Style
- Mozart and Haydn
- The Romantics Age
- Revolutions and Ideas: Rousseau, Goethe, Beethoven
- Colour and Emotion in Painting and Music
- Grand Opera and Theatre
- The Bourgeois Audience
- From Realism to Modernism
- Realism
- Impressionism
- Stravinsky and Diaghilev
- Cinema
- Modernism
- Painting and Sculpture
- African and Primitive Influences
- Expressionism in Music, Art and Dance
- Women Artists
- From a Modern to a Postmodern World
- Postmodernism
- Painting and Sculpture
- Contemporary Performing Arts
- Mixed Media, Improvisation and Interdisciplinary Arts
Upon completion of the course, the successful student will:
- Become familiar with the general framework of the development of the fine and performing arts from the Renaissance to the present day.
- Develop a knowledge for each of the style periods of:
- Formal characteristics of the style in the most prominent arts of the period;
- The aesthetic intent of the arts of the period, and
- Political, social and economic factors influencing the period’s style.
- Develop a critical awareness of the role of the arts in society.
Assessment will be based on course objectives and will be carried out in accordance with the ÌÇÐÄvlog´«Ã½Evaluation Policy. Instructors may use a student's record of attendance as part of the student's graded performance. This will be clearly defined in the course outline.
An example grading scheme is as follows:
Weekly Assignments | 40% |
In-Class Written Work | 20% |
Creative Research Project | 20% |
Final Exam | 20% |
100% |
A list of recommended textbooks and materials is provided on the Instructor’s Course Outline, which is available to students at the beginning of each semester.
Sporre, Dennis. The Creative Impulse: An Introduction to the Arts. (or similar text)
Students will be expected to pay for entrance fees to local galleries and for tickets to performing arts events.
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