CCOG for ART 101 archive revision 201403
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- Effective Term:
- Summer 2014 through Summer 2015
- Course Number:
- ART 101
- Course Title:
- Understanding Architecture
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture Hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab Hours:
- 0
- Lab Hours:
- 0
Course Description
Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon successful completion students should be able to:
? recognize functional, structural, and aesthetic qualities in architecture and read visual and experiential elements, architectural and cultural
styles, and symbols
? view the urban world "dynamically," that is, to appreciate and communicate simultaneously individual viewer response, the uniqueness of a
work of architecture, its origins and precedent, its potential as an inspiration and influence on later architecture, and its relationship to a particular
cultural moment
? decipher architecture through understanding of historical, social, cultural, economic, and political contexts
? generalize course content to other art not covered in the course so that he/she can understand and value the architecture of the urban world in allencompassing global ways
Integrative Learning
Students completing an associate degree at Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ will be able to reflect on one’s work or competencies to make connections between course content and lived experience.
Outcome Assessment Strategies
The student will:
- comprehend, apply, analyze and evaluate reading assignments
- identify artwork and architecture, and relate facts and ideas about these works of art in exam format
- research, plan, compose, edit and revise short papers
- keep journals assessing learning development in and out of the classroom
- participate in class field trips
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
Course Content:
Themes, Concepts, and Issues:
Theoretical
- theory and criticism in the history of the urban world
- pattern-based thinking and historical process
- various interpretations of art
- art and gender
- creativity and the impulse to make art and architecture
Stylistic and Interpretive
- visual literacy
- architectural media and technique
- "seeing and knowing"
- iconography
- the formal principles and elements of architecture
Social and Cultural
- other peoples and their histories, values, and culture
- the urban world and economics
- the urban world and the social fabric
- the urban world and religion
- the urban world and politics
- art and gender
- relationship of culture and style
- urban world and cultural transmission
- historical impact of art
- the influence of architecture on one°s own culture
- the influence of architecture on relations with other cultures
- urban world and the architect
- the impulse to make the urban world
- the Gestalt of art
- the role of the architect in society
- biography
- geography and its influence on architecture and culture
- artifact recovery, analysis, restoration, and incorporation into a larger historical fabric
Competencies and Skills:
The successful student should be able to:
- work creatively with art historical data, using it to develop principles of art history
- recognize and appraise patterns in historical phenomena
- assess the ways in which an object from the urban world is affected by our own vantage point
- recognize and discriminate among various styles of architecture
- trace the development of art from one period to another
- analyze formally works of architecture and appreciate the interrelationship of various elements
- determine symbolism in architecture
- employ iconographical nomenclature
- express the relationship of the urban world and culture
- analyze the "meaning" of the elements of the urban world through understanding of historical, social, and political context
- use specific terminology to describe the urban world
- transfer to a four year college and continue a course of study in the field of art history, fine art, anthropology, and history in general
Prerequisite Knowledge and Skills:
- oral and written command of college level English