2 classes matched your search criteria.
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Spring 2025
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Fall 2024
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Spring 2024
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Fall 2023
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Spring 2023
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Fall 2022
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Spring 2022
ARTS 1001H is also offered in Fall 2021
Spring 2023 | ARTS 1001H Section 001: Honors Introduction to Contemporary Art and Theory (54011)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Lecture
- Instructor Consent:
- No Special Consent Required
- Instruction Mode:
- Completely Online
- Class Attributes:
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Honors
- Meets With:
ARTS 1001 Section 001
- Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
Off Campus
Virtual Rooms ONLINEONLY
- Enrollment Status:
Closed (18 of 15 seats filled)
- Also Offered:
- Course Catalog Description:
- This course introduces you to contemporary perspectives on art through the lens of race, power, and justice. How has art allowed marginalized people to protest oppression, express joy and defiance, and serve as a cultural space for healing? In what ways does the symbolic, open-ended language of art allow artists to imagine otherwise, conjure different futures, and connect to ancestral pasts that co-mingle with present lived experiences? Course readings center BIPOC voices and focus on issues of representation, cultural appropriation, and decolonization. We look at the emergence of 'fine art,' a cultural category steeped in race, power, and the politics of exclusion; the history of the Black art movement and its commitment to political purpose in art; the challenges that arise from the insistence that the political align with the aesthetic. The course explores Indigenous organizing and resurgence as well as the politics of opacity and refusal. We will study socially engaged art forms, Afro- and indigenous futurisms, creative practices that explode distinctions between "traditional" and "modern," art and craft, and engage with art as a field of cultural expression deeply involved in imagining and demanding social justice. prereq: Honors student
- Class Notes:
- Instructors provide materials and assignments that students access online at any time or within a given time frame (such as one week), rather than instructors and students meeting together as a class on a regular schedule. Exams are also all online.
- Class Description:
- Student may contact the instructor or department for information.
- Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/54011/1233
Spring 2023 | ARTS 1001H Section 002: Honors Introduction to Contemporary Art and Theory (54019)
- Instructor(s)
- Class Component:
- Discussion
- Class Attributes:
UMNTC Liberal Education Requirement
Honors
- Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
Off Campus
Virtual Rooms ONLINEONLY
- Auto Enrolls With:
- Section 001
- Enrollment Status:
Closed (18 of 15 seats filled)
- Course Catalog Description:
- This course introduces you to contemporary perspectives on art through the lens of race, power, and justice. How has art allowed marginalized people to protest oppression, express joy and defiance, and serve as a cultural space for healing? In what ways does the symbolic, open-ended language of art allow artists to imagine otherwise, conjure different futures, and connect to ancestral pasts that co-mingle with present lived experiences? Course readings center BIPOC voices and focus on issues of representation, cultural appropriation, and decolonization. We look at the emergence of 'fine art,' a cultural category steeped in race, power, and the politics of exclusion; the history of the Black art movement and its commitment to political purpose in art; the challenges that arise from the insistence that the political align with the aesthetic. The course explores Indigenous organizing and resurgence as well as the politics of opacity and refusal. We will study socially engaged art forms, Afro- and indigenous futurisms, creative practices that explode distinctions between "traditional" and "modern," art and craft, and engage with art as a field of cultural expression deeply involved in imagining and demanding social justice. prereq: Honors student
- Class Notes:
- Instructors provide materials and assignments that students access online at any time or within a given time frame (such as one week), rather than instructors and students meeting together as a class on a regular schedule. Exams are also all online.
- Class Description:
- Student may contact the instructor or department for information.
- Textbooks:
- https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/54019/1233
ClassInfo Links - Spring 2023 Art Classes