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Art History Requirements












Art History








Chair: Adrian Randolph (Acting)

Professors A. Cohen, J. M. Jordan, J. Kenseth, A. W. B. Randolph; Associate Professors M. K. Coffey, K. A. Corrigan, A. F. Hockley, A. Rosenthal; Senior Lecturers J. L. Carroll, M. E. Heck, S. E. Kangas; Adjunct Assistant Professor K. O’Rourke.

Consult the Department Administrator, Betsy Alexander, for further information.

REQUIREMENTS FOR THE MAJOR

Twelve courses as follows:

Prerequisite: Two courses from Art History 1, 2, or 4.

Requirements: Ten courses consisting of the following: one Studio Art course; six Art History courses, each from a different area (Ancient; Medieval; Renaissance; Baroque, Rococo and Neoclassical; Modern; Asian); two sem-inars in Art History (one numbered 80 through 84, and either Art History 85 or 86, which will serve as the Major Culminating Experience); and one other Art History course numbered 10 or higher. (Classical Studies 20, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26 may be substituted for this other course.) N.B.: Art History 1, 2, and 4 may serve only as major prerequisite courses.

Students planning an Art History major must first consult with one of the Department’s designated faculty advisors, complete a Major Worksheet (available outside the Department office), and meet with the Department Administrator before cards are signed by the advisor. A copy of the signed major card and the Major Worksheet must be filed with the Art History Department.

MODIFIED MAJOR

The courses making up a modified major should constitute an intellectually coherent whole.

Students wishing to declare a modified major must consult with one of the Department’s designated faculty advisors, meet with the Department Administrator, then submit a short description of the proposed modification and a completed Modified Major Worksheet (available outside the Department office). If the proposal is approved by the departmental faculty, a copy of the signed major card, worksheet, and rationale statement must be filed with the Department of Art History.

Art History Modified

Prerequisite: Two courses from Art History 1, 2, or 4.

Requirements: Seven Art History courses: four that meet the departmental distribution requirement described under “Requirements for the Major” (i.e., four out of six categories); one of either Art History 85 or 86 (constituting the Major Culminating Experience); and two other Art History courses numbered 10 or higher, one of which must be a seminar (Art History 80–84) or an Honors Thesis course (Art History 90–91). N.B.: Art History 1, 2, and 4 may serve only as major prerequisite courses. Four courses, selected in consultation with the Art History adviser, will be taken in the secondary (modifying) department(s), with whatever prerequisites they require.

Another Major Modified with Art History

Prerequisite: One course: Art History 1, 2, or 4.

Requirements: Four Art History courses selected in consultation with the adviser in the primary department.

REQUIREMENTS FOR THE MINOR

Six courses as follows:

Prerequisite: One or two of Art History 1, 2, or 4.

Requirements: Four Art History courses, which must meet the departmental distribution requirement described under “Requirements for the Major” (i.e., four out of six categories). If only one prerequisite is taken, any additional Art History course may be taken as the sixth course. An Art History seminar (Art History 80-84) is not required, but is strongly encouraged. N.B.: Art History 1, 2, and 4 may serve only as prerequisite courses.

Students planning an Art History minor must first consult with one of the Department’s designated faculty advisors, complete a Minor Worksheet (available outside the Department office), and meet with the Department Administrator before cards are signed by the advisor. A copy of the signed minor card and the Minor Worksheet must be filed with the Art History Department.

ADVANCED PLACEMENT

The Department does not award course credit to students who have taken the high school Advanced Placement course in Art History. However, an Art History major or minor who has achieved a grade of 5 in this course may substitute appropriate mid-level Art History courses for the introductory survey courses (Art History 1, 2, or 4) required by the major or minor. These courses must be chosen in consultation with a faculty advisor.

TRANSFER CREDIT

Transfer credits will be granted only to majors, modified majors, and minors in the Art History Department. Majors are limited to two transfer credits, only one of which can fulfill a departmental distributive requirement. Modified majors and minors are limited to one transfer credit, which cannot fulfill a departmental distributive requirement. A student requesting transfer credit must first consult with the Registrar’s office, then apply to the Chair of the Department before undertaking the proposed course of study. Only applications filed in advance will be accepted. Applications should include information about the course to be taken (including, when possible, a syllabus). Only courses offered at four-year degree-granting institutions (or their equivalents) will be considered for transfer credit. Prior approval is provisional, with final authorization contingent upon review of the syllabus and the work produced by the applicant.

HONORS PROGRAM

To be eligible for the Honors Program, a student must have achieved by the end of the junior year a 3.2 general College average and a 3.4 average in all Art History courses. A candidate for admission to the Honors Program must, in either the spring preceding or in the fall of the senior year, consult with a potential faculty adviser and submit a written and in-person presentation to the whole Art History faculty of the proposed Honors project. Admission or non-admission to the Honors Program will subsequently be determined by a vote of the faculty. The Program will consist of an advanced project of study under Art History 90-91 (only one of which may be counted as part of the major, under “other”), taken during two consecutive terms in the senior year.

Students are strongly encouraged to initiate discussion with an appropriate faculty adviser as early as possible in the junior year.

The Art History Department oversees funds intended to underwrite research for honors projects in the Department. For information see the Department Administrator.

FOREIGN STUDY PROGRAM

In order that students may have an opportunity to study art history in direct contact with original works of art, the Department conducts a Foreign Study Program during the spring term. Based in Rome, one of Europe’s richest artistic centers, with a continuous evolution from antiquity to the present, the program examines the monuments of the city, their creators, their patrons, and their various audiences.

This program is open to all students. There are two prerequisites:

Italian 1 (or its equivalent) and one of the following courses: Art History 1, 21, 22, 25, 30, 31. While in Rome, students are enrolled in Art History 10 and 11 (both of which may be counted toward the major and/or minor, but only one of which fulfills a departmental distributive), and Art History 12, which is the equivalent of Italian 2.. Interested students should contact Professors Cohen, Corrigan, Kenseth, Randolph or Rosenthal as early as possible in their academic careers.