MODERN ART
- Academic year
- 2024/2025 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- MODERN ART
- Course code
- EM3A13 (AF:512394 AR:288230)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6 out of 12 of MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY ART
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- L-ART/02
- Period
- 3rd Term
- Course year
- 1
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Lectures will deal with history of Fashion, Jewellery, Furniture and its principles, production, spreading and consumption of objects and Works of Art – Paintings, Sculptures, etc. – also with references to written sources. The goal is to learn how to interpret the artistic language in its historical context, and to understand its transformation – and possible deformation – due to the changes of taste and political and social structures.
The criteria and methodological tools, which you will learn to use, can be fruitfully applied to other national and international contexts in the subsequent centuries, as well. The course’s historical setting (the Renaissance) is particularly relevant to the recent lively debate on its impact on and persistence in our contemporary cultural and entrepreneurial context (Entrepreneurial Renaissance).
Expected learning outcomes
Critical “reading” of the works of art, in order to investigate, interpret and decipher the material culture of the Renaissance, seen as a mirror of a social and cultural system and its complex structure. The aim is to provide the critical tools for better understanding the role of the artwork as a response to a cultural need.
Skills
State-of-the-art critical vocabulary that will allow you to develop complex argumentations, as well as analyses, and assess different contexts, figures and artworks (philology of the visual sign, iconography, inferential criticism and cultural studies).
Competences
Capacity to identify and define contexts and periods for the management of permanent and temporary exhibitions; connecting the outstanding elements of an art-historical tradition to the current evolution of a territory by combining humanities, economics and management; establishing original connections between the “modernity” of the Renaissance and contemporary challenges.
Pre-requirements
Contents
Referral texts
Stephen J. Campbell, Michael Cole, Italian Renaissance Art, pp.174-199; 202-231
For each class all readings (short essays and articles, c. 15-20 pages, in PDF) will be uploaded on Moodle.
Further readings:
Before each class a short related reading will be uploaded on Moodle
The list follows:
1) E. Welch, Art and Society in Italy 1350-1500, Oxford 1997, pp. 103-129
2) Campbell, Stephen John, Mantegna’s Camera Picta: Visuality and Pathos, in “Art history”, 37.2014, 2, pp. 314-332
3) C. Paolini, Il cassone, un arredo nella casa del Rinascimento, in Virtù d’amore.Pittura nuziale nel Quattrocento fiorentino, catalogo della mostra a cura di Caudio Paolini, Daniela Parenti, Ludovica Sebregondi, Firenze 2010, pp. 51-59
4) Leah R. Clark, Collecting, exchange, and sociability in the Renaissance studiolo, in “Journal of the History of Collections”,vol. 25 no. 2 (2013) pp. 171–184
5) Claudia Kryza-Gersch, The Production of Multiple Small Bronzes in the Italian Renaissance- When, Where and Why (I), in “Ricche Minere”, 1, 2014, pp. 21-40
6) Stephen Scher, The currency of fame: Portrait medals of the Renaissance, New York Frick Coll, 1994. Introduction
7) Patricia Lee Rubin, Understanding Renaissance Portraiture, in The Renaissance Portrait from Donatello to Bellini, catalogo della mostra a cura di Keith Christiansen e Stefan Weppelman, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2011, pp. 2-25.
8) Timothy McCall, Brilliant bodies: Material culture and the Adornment of Men in North Italy’s Quattrocento Courts, in “I Tatti Studies”, vol. 16, nn. 1-2, 2013, pp. 445-490.
9) Evelyn Welch, Art on the edge: hair and hands in Renaissance Italy, in “Renaissance Studies”, Vol. 23 No. 3, 2008, pp. 241-268
Or
Emanuele Lugli, The Hair is Full of Snares. Botticelli’s and Boccaccio’s Wayward Erotic Gaze, in “Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorisches Institutes in Florenz”, 2, 2019, pp. 203-233
10) Tawny Sherrill, Fleas, fur and fashion: "zibellini" as luxury accessories of the Renaissance, in “Medieval clothing and textiles”, 2. 2006, pp. 121-150
11) Rosamund Mack, Bazaar to Piazza. Islamic trade and Italian art, 1300-1600, Berkeley and Los Angeles 2002, pp. 149-170
Assessment methods
The 12-credits exam in Modern and Contemporary Art consists of two parts, each of 6 credits. The second part (Contemporary Art) is taught by professor Matteo Bertelè. The student earns 12 credits by passing both partial tests, taken in the order in which he prefers. The final grade comes from the average of the two partial grades. Both partial exam tests must be passed within the same academic year, under penalty of forfeiture of the partial credits accrued.