ARTH-A 476 PRINT AND THE ORIGINS OF THE MODERN MEDIUM (3 CR.)
Examines the cultural and political impacts of print in Europe and the Americas from 1375-2000. Discussion of various types of printmaking and how they reshaped social interaction, reconfigured text and image relationships, transformed the values assigned to visual expression, and created the concept of a "medium."
1 classes found
Fall 2024
Component | Credits | Class | Status | Time | Day | Facility | Instructor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LEC | 3 | 30725 | Open | 11:30 a.m.–12:45 p.m. | TR | WY 115 | Rothstein B |
Regular Academic Session / In Person
LEC 30725: Total Seats: 20 / Available: 2 / Waitlisted: 0
Lecture (LEC)
- COLL (CASE) S&H Breadth of Inq
- Above class open to undergraduates only
- Above class meets with ARTH-A576
- COLL (CASE) S&H Breadth of Inquiry credit
This course is a study of technology itself as continuous disruption in Europe and the Americas from the Fourteenth Century to the present. It takes as its focus the cultural work of what the scholar William Ivins once called the "exactly repeatable pictorial statement." In addition to discussing various technologies, we will address how that process of repetition- primarily visual, but also textual- participates in the constitution of society, informs conceptions of artistry, and shapes the values we assign to visual expression.