PNTDR-3600-1: Media History 1: Dead Painters
Fall 2020
- Subject: Painting and Drawing
- Type: Seminar
- Delivery Mode: Online
- Level: Undergraduate
- Course Dates: September 02, 2020 — December 15, 2020
- Meetings: Thu 4:00-07:00PM
- Instructor: Caty Telfair
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 10/18
Description:
Media History 1: Dead Painters 1945 to 1985 Post/Modern Issues In 1839, according to legend, Parisian painter Paul Delaroche first saw a Daguerreotype. He is said to have exclaimed, "From today, painting is dead!" Painting has since died-or been declared dead-many times. Is painting a zombie? A phoenix? Surveying European and American painting in the period from 1945 to 1985, this course will consider the following questions: How do we understand this important oscillation in the history of modern and postmodern art? How did painting respond, not only to the challenges of photography, film, and mass-market print culture, but to the rise of global commodity culture, the trauma of world war and genocide, struggles for civil rights, and the emergence of twentieth-century feminism? How has painting coped with art movements such as Minimalism and Conceptualism, by which it was aggressively marginalized? Examining primary and secondary source-texts, this reading-intensive, discussion-based class will ground students in key aspects of modernist and postmodernist thinking, and prepare them for Media History 2: Living Painters, or Contemporary Issues in Painting, 1985-2013.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
Visit Workday to view this information.