Art History 721 - 19th Century Paintng & Sculptr
Spring
2017
01
3.00
Gulru Cakmak
W 1:25PM 3:45PM
UMass Amherst
20542
In this course we will explore imitation, repetition, and appropriation in nineteenth-century art. The doctrine of imitation - the desire to imitate and surpass classical art - guided generations of European artists from the Renaissance until the end of the eighteenth century. Our seminar will focus on a radical transformation in definition of artistic originality that was at the heart of ambitious French art in the nineteenth century, one which produced complex blends of academic models of imitation with modernist forms of repetition (such as the notion of a series). The course will explore repetition and imitation as strategies of originality through a close study of works in a variety of media by some of the major figures of French art from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century, including David, Ingres, Delacroix, Gerome, Manet, Monet, Pissarro, Cezanne, Rodin, and Picasso. The variety of styles covered by these artists - including orientalism, romanticism, neo-classicism, academic art, and modernism - will enable us to discover the commonalities, rather than differences, among them. Our study will culminate at a brief look at contemporary forms of repetition, parody, and appropriation in order to highlight the enduring influence of nineteenth-century artistic practices on the present.
Open to Graduate students only.