The Venice Programme: Undergraduate Study
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Art in Northern Italy 1100-1600The course examines the art and architecture of Venice in the light of its unique physical, political and cultural situation. The city's links with the Byzantine empire, its status as a maritime republic and its distinctive political situation fostered a culture different from those of other Italian cities and which can be studied as a discrete entity. The relationship between art and its various contexts will be studied in detail using the physical evidence of the city and its past. The influence of Venice on art in the terraferma will also be examined through, for example, study trips to Padua, Verona, Vicenza and the villas of the
Sample Syllabus (subject to change):The political background of Venice
The Doge's Palace Ravenna, Torcello and the Byzantine Heritage San Marco and the surrounding area The Gothic and the Mendicant orders in Venice Domestic architecture The Scuole and their decoration Ducal tombs Secular painting Venice and antiquity Art and the terraferma Workload:Taught in Venice
Assessment:1 x 3000 word-essay (20%) and 2 x 3 hour exams (1 essay paper; 1 image paper; each 40%)
Introductory Reading List:P.F. Brown, The Renaissance in Venice, London, 1997
D. Chambers, The Imperial Age of Venice, London, 1970 J. White, Art and Architecture in Italy 1250-1400 (Pelican History of Art), Harmondsworth 1966, 3rd edn. 1993 N. Huse & W. Wolters, Art of Renaissance Venice, architecture, sculpture and painting, Chicago, 1990 D. Howard, The Architectural History of Venice, London, 1980 P. Humfrey, Painting in Renaissance Venice, London, 1995 |
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