This module focuses on processes of transmission, using eight pairs of culturally complex artworks as case-studies. Transmission is widely defined to encompass the history of ideas, motifs, materials, people and objects, including changes in the function and reception of individual works over time.
Module will run
Occurrence
Teaching period
A
Spring Term 2021-22
Module aims
This module focuses on processes of transmission, using eight pairs of culturally complex artworks as case-studies. Transmission is widely defined to encompass the history of ideas, motifs, materials, people and objects, including changes in the function and reception of individual works over time. While the emphasis is on European art and architecture, a significant number of case-studies were made elsewhere or have histories that reach across other parts of the globe. The module will introduce some of the major publications and debates around those objects, and also reflect on the extent to which these publications are tied to the time and place of the scholars creating them. While the case-studies are organized chronologically, covering the sixth to the twenty-first centuries, the module will challenge period divisions and linearity, and will also critically engage with concepts relevant to the study of transmission, such as global history, networks, ‘appropriation’, ‘reception’, ‘influence’, and provenance.
Module learning outcomes
A sense of historical perspective, acquired through a study of case studies
An ability to explore links between works of art and architecture across space and time
An in-depth understanding of selected objects and their cultural complexity
A critical understanding of key concepts regarding processes of transmission
Feedback on summative assessment within 20 working days.
Indicative reading
Michael Baxandall, Patterns of Intention: On the Historical Explanation of Pictures, New Haven 1985
James Elkins, Is art history global? New York, 2007
Isabelle Graw, High Price. Art Between the Market and Celebrity Culture. Cologne 2008
A. Nagel, Medieval Modern. Art out of Time, London 2012
Avinoam Shalem, ‘Dangerous claims: on the “othering” of Islamic art history and how it operates within global art history’, in: Kritische Berichte: Zeitschrift für Kunst- und Kulturwissenschaften 40.2 (2012), pp. 69-86
G. Feigenbaum and I. Reist (eds), Provenance. An Alternative History of Art, Los Angeles, 2012
Maxine Berg (ed.), Writing the History of the Global. Challenges for the 21st Century, Oxford, 2013, pp. 1-18
Diana Newall (ed.), Art and its global histories: a Reader, Manchester 2017