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PREREQUISITE:
Art 2201 or permission of the instructor
REQUIRED TEXTS:
·
Henry
Luttikhuizen & Dorothy Verkerk.
Snyder's Medieval Art 2nd edition. Upper Saddle River NJ:
Prentice Hall, 2006. (only the
chapters shown in schedule)
·
Maimon, Elaine P., and Janice H. Peritz. .A Writer’s Resource: A
Handbook for Writing and Research. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2003.
(This is the standard reference manual for writing at UWG, and should be
your resource for questions about writing and citation.)
Available in the
bookstore (http://www.bookstore.westga.edu/).
Assigned readings on the
attached schedule. Additional sources will be given as handouts, placed
on the website, on Library reserve, or on CourseDen. Material
presented in class and in PPT videos presupposes that you have completed
reading and writing assignments. You should expect to re-read and study
texts again, perhaps several times. Text readings supplement lecture and
WebCT material.
CourseDen
(formerly
WebCT Vista): (requires access to the internet with current,
fully Java-enabled browser) We will use CourseDen for the lecture
sessions (as PowerPoint (PPT) videos and for everything else except
the face-to-face classes (dates above). It is advisable to
work with a DSL or other fast connection. Use a computer lab on campus
only if it has sound (and bring your own ear phones), as all the
online Power Point presentations have audio tracks. If you have a
dial-up connection, you are likely to encounter difficulties since
there are lots of large image files associated with both lectures and
tests and they are apt to load very slowly (or not at all) on s poor
connection. To access CourseDen go to:
http://WebCT.westga.edu/
and follow the links to CourseDen and go the left option: CourseDen -
Login. IMPORTANT: the alternative way to log into Vista, if UWG web is
down, is through the address: http://westga.view.usg.edu.
We will have instructions on use of CourseDen by Christy or Alicia of
the UWG Distance Learning Center and / CourseDen staff. You must use
the CourseDen site to communicate with me by private e-mail and submit
all of your assignments through the CourseDen site. If you have
difficulties with CourseDen connections, you should contact the
Distance Hotline at http://view.usg.edu
1-877-708-2910 (24 hour/7days a
week help is available there). Other resources in the UWG Distance
Learning Center: e-mail Technical support for CourseDen: distance@westga.edu
(replies within 24
hours weekdays) or call the Helpdesk 678-839-6248 during their office
hours (MF 9-5)
COURSE
DESCRIPTION:
This
course will have as its primary focus the artistic expression of
Christian Europe and the Near East during the period c. 700 – 1400 CE,
with secondary emphasis on selected secular works from these regions.
We will investigate influences upon art and architecture that derive
from the cultures of Late Antiquity, from the migratory peoples, and
from Byzantine and Islamic sources over time. Since the aesthetic of
this period evolved as a primarily religious expression within the
context of the growth and evolution of the Church, in both eastern and
western regions, we will give most of our attention to cathedral, parish
and monastic realms, and to influences of ecclesiastical and political
patronage. Special emphasis is given to the cults of the saints and the
Virgin Mary and related pilgrimage art. At the same time, certain
secular values were given expression as well, especially in the context
of courtly life. The later medieval centuries saw the emergence of
chivalric strains in literature and art, romantic notions of knighthood
and love, which strongly influenced religious expression, as well, with
perhaps its primary evidence in the pervasive cult of the Virgin Mary,
whose depiction evolved as an elegant and lovely queenly maiden/matron.
We will also explore certain select secular goods and courtly arts of
the era, including those which were created for the Latin Kingdom of
Jerusalem, where castles and churches were built by the Crusaders, and
furnished with lavish goods from various cultures.
COURSE
OBJECTIVES:
Through lectures, discussion, film, and writing assignments, we will
explore the visual arts of the Middle Ages
within
their art historical context – as expressions of complex and changing
social structures. We will examine art and architecture in terms of
stages of early Christian, Byzantine, Islamic, and Crusader medieval
culture, considering their contexts of creation and use, as far as
possible. More specifically, we will examine painting, architecture,
sculpture and metalwork, in terms of style, media, technique, and
features of evolution. This requires mastery of basic vocabulary of
form and ability to verbalize spatial and artistic concepts, as achieved
in your preliminary courses in the discipline of art history. Your
comprehension and capabilities will be demonstrated through four exams,
a staged term project, article responses, and class discussions. You
will become familiar with art and architecture of the early Christian
and Byzantine periods, of the Middle Ages in general, including Islam
and Crusader Kingdoms, and with the aspect you choose for your term
project, in a more specific way.
This course facilitates progress towards
Art Department goals of familiarity of students with works and
intentions, techniques and methods, of major artists/designers and
movements of the past and present; and helps students to develop visual
sensitivity and the conceptualization means of artists, including
technical processes, and a deeper understanding of cultural issues
within works art, as well as the shared human ideas and goals in art
across the centuries.
We will examine
the art and architecture in terms of cultural, social, and economic
influences, examining works in their contexts, as they appeared at
various moments, from about the seventh century to the dawn of the
Renaissance, for which the seeds are clearly sown in the Gothic era. More specifically, we will examine:
drawing & painting
of murals, manuscripts, and panels;
architecture & architectural decoration; sculpture, especially in
relationship to architectural contexts; and lavish metalwork --
all in
terms of style, media, technique, and of the ways in which they evolved.
We will investigate the nature of art as a visual language and the ways
in which medieval works reflect distinctive ideas about the era and its
concerns and its many preoccupations, as well as the climate for artistic creation which
changes over the long period still viewed as much more monolithic and
unified than it actually was. Course requirements presume mastery of the basic vocabulary of
form and will call upon your ability to verbalize spatial and artistic
concepts, demonstrated through the various assignments.
DEPARTMENTAL
GOALS:
In addition to
meeting objectives specific to the art of the United States, this course
will also address the long-range Departmental goals for Art and Art
History by:
-
~Expanding
knowledge of art history and promoting thorough understanding of the
fundamentals of visual art
-
~Helping
students become accomplished in a variety of visual disciplines which
might include, but are not limited to, those of art historians,
artists, art educators, museum curators, and related professions
-
~Having students
learn to make aesthetic judgments concerning their own works of art,
as well as those of others
-
~Giving students
a clear understanding of how their work fits into the historical and
cultural context of Western and non-Western societies
-
~Helping
students develop a sensitivity to life in its many forms while
possessing the ability to think and to create independently
-
~Clarifying the
theory, criticism, and philosophy inherent in great works of art
Writing Across The Curriculum:
Please note that this course has a "W" designation, which means it is a
Writing Across the Curriculum course. WAC accepts as a guiding principle
the idea that writing is valuable tool for learning and communication.
Therefore, the writing components of this course are designed to help
you to learn the material and to communicate what you have learned. As a
WAC course, it demands a variety of writing
assignments which are intended to stimulate "writing to learn" (WTL) as
well as "writing to communicate" (WTC). Your writing skills will be
assessed as part of the evaluation of any written assignments. These
include exams, article reviews, online discussions, the annotated
bibliography/project thesis statement, and the term project.
COURSE
REQUIREMENTS AND GRADING:
You are responsible for all assigned readings, for material presented in
lectures, for assigned writings, and for term papers. Requirements and
guidelines for term projects will be provided. Use of online lecture
videos, levels of participation in discussions, and other use of WebCT
features are electronically tracked by the system, and this is used as a
measure of engagement and effort in determining the grades. Grades will
be calculated as follows:
|
Syllabus
Quiz |
1 point |
|
Exam 1 |
11 points |
|
Exam 2 |
12 points |
|
Exam 3 |
12 points |
|
Final Exam |
16 points |
|
Annotated
Bibliography |
10 points |
|
Term Project |
15 points |
|
Writing
Assignments (4) |
12 points |
|
Online
Discussions (4) |
12
points |
|
TOTAL |
101 points |
|
Extra credit
opportunities
will be
included on scheduled exams
And will be
limited to those occasions. |
SCHEDULE & READING ASSIGNMENTS:
See separate calendar sheets
ONLINE
DISCUSSION (WTL/WRC):
There will be discussion topics posted and a discussion room open for
your participation. You will receive up to 3 points for each discussion
topic, with a total of 12 points possible for this activity. Variations
in the credit points for discussion contributions are explained in the
Discussion Board instruction on CourseDen. For this activity, you
will not accumulate extra credit, but your apparent engagement and
enthusiasm will result in favorable consideration if you are on the
verge of a higher grade when the final tally is made. Remember that
this is a WAC class in your discussions postings, and pay careful
attention to your writing.
ARTICLE REVIEWS
(WTL/WTC):
You will also write 4 reviews of articles on electronic reserve through
the UWG library website. They will be submitted electronically through
WebCT. This requires that
you use MSWord for
word-processing. (If you do not have this, it is available free to
students through SITS).
http://www.westga.edu/~sits/index.php.
You must be careful of document format, as well. If you use MicroSoft
Vista, you must save documents in 97-2003 format before submission through
the CourseDen site (extensions will be .doc, NOT .docx)
Full
Article Review directions will be posted on class website. This fulfills
part of your WAC requirement.
SYLLABUS QUIZ:
You are required
to take a quiz over the contents of the syllabus and to make 95% on it.
You may re-take it as many times as you like, until you
do make the perfect score. Until this is accomplished, you will
not be able to take any of the exams.
EXAMS:
Each exam will be in essay format (WTC). Only the Final Exam is
cumulative, but you are expected to accrue and retain skills, concepts,
and terms throughout the semester, and to consider the concepts examined
throughout the course for any works that appear. Exams might include
(but may not be limited to) image identifications and analysis or
comparison of known or unknown works, themed essays. It is expected that
you will make intelligent observations of your own, based upon
thoughtful consideration of works seen in class, texts, and lecture
material. Please note that the information for your exams should derive
ONLY from your text, the PPTs, and your own thought. Credit for your
answers will be based upon your synthesis of those sources. Do not go
surfing the web for exam answers. Web information that appears on any
exam will result in the grade of 0 (zero) for that exam.
No Makeup
Exams Will Be Given.
TERM PROJECT:
You are required to complete a term project – an individual research
project on a topic or issue related to medieval art or architecture. We will discuss the
possibilities for this project and give it further definition. You must
follow certain guidelines and specifications, but you will have some
latitude in choice, subject to approval. Work submitted for another
course will not be acceptable. Among the possible choices of theme will
be that work of art in relationship to other works, or to a cultural or
social issue, and the paper/research will revolve around a specific work
or type of work or theme. It is my hope that you will find a topic for
which you have enthusiasm, and that you will pursue it with energy and
pleasure. Detailed directions and requirements will be posted.
ANYONE WHO FAILS TO SUBMIT EITHER THE ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY/ THESIS
STATEMENT, OR THE
TERM PROJECT WILL FAIL THE COURSE. Plagiarism will also result in
failure of the course, and will be reported to the Vice President of
Academic Affairs.
ONLINE HONESTY:
There
will be a temptation in the online format to copy data verbatim from
your texts, the PowerPoint videos, or from online sources. This will
not be tolerated. What is expected from each student is a personal
synthesis of the material presented in texts and online videos. You
will demonstrate the careful consideration of those sources through
writing that reflects the information presented there, but shows both
your attention to those and your own thought. Any direct copying from
any source without proper citation is plagiarism and will result in a
ZERO (0) for the assignment.
Any use of material from outside the text or the PPT videos needs
citation (e.g. information you learned in other classes or on your own).
Do not add in such data without a footnote stating the source, or it will
be considered plagiarism and, thus, will earn a "0" (zero) for the whole
assignment.
ACADEMIC
HONESTY:
(see http://www.westga.edu/~vpaa/handrev/207) The University has adopted
a policy for promoting high ideals and the greatest possible learning
for each individual. Improper academic conduct on the part of the
student shall be interpreted to mean obtaining and use of information
during examination by means other than those permitted by instructor,
including supplying such to other students. Also improper is plagiarism,
i.e., purchase and use of ghost-written papers and reports, or
incorporating into a report, term theme, research paper, or project,
ideas and data obtained from another person without credit to the person
from whom such information was obtained. Further, inclusion of
published or unpublished writings of another person without noting
sources according to scholarly procedures acceptable for the discipline
of art history shall be considered plagiarism. The definition of
academic misconduct applies equally to improper use of electronic
sources of information and opinion. At West Georgia, the student is
urged to seek truth and beauty in and for themselves, as well as skills
needed for a productive life. Academic honesty is essential in
preserving one's own integrity, that of the institution, and in gaining
a true education. The West Georgia student pledges not to lie, cheat,
or steal in the pursuit of his or her studies and is encouraged to
report those who do.
In the philosophical
and practical realms, lack of such intellectual honesty is foolhardy. You
are denying yourself the opportunities for accruing valuable personal
knowledge that can serve your creative and intellectual life. At the same
time, you endanger your own reputation and career here at UWG and possibly
beyond (if you are expelled).
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STUDENTS WITH
DISABILITIES:
UWG adheres to requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If
you need accommodation, contact Disability Student Services at
678-839-6428.
If, at any
point, you have questions or problems, be sure to contact me.
I will be
happy to consult with you on taking notes, preparing for exams
Come to my
office during office hours, or set an appointment,
or contact
me by e-mail
Any communication by e-mail
must be through the CourseDen e-mail system
ATTENDANCE AND
CLASS PARTICIPATION: Despite the online format and its apparent
freedom in scheduling, you are still expected to “attend” class by
engaging with the online lectures and to participate in discussions.
You are responsible for awareness of any changes of assignment or course
schedule announced through the home page or by e-mail. (check
your CourseDen e-mail EVERY DAY, more often if you have sent me a
question) As thorough lecture notes and visual familiarity with
images shown are essential to the successful completion of the course,
you must pay careful attention to the online lectures. Power Point files
will be posted for you to download to your computer and print if you
like, for taking notes and for study.
The
CourseDen
system keeps track of every “visit” that you make there, of all
discussion readings and contributions, of the times of your assignment
submissions, and of your inquiries to the help desk. Examination of
these records helps me to assess your participation in the online venue.
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