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Welcome
The art history faculty at American University believes that training
in the study of art history consists of a balance between a sound
disciplinary foundation and innovative methodological approaches.
Our mission at AU is to help students develop the skills to analyze
and comprehend the formal, expressive, and symbolic qualities of
visual images; hone conceptual skills to enable the integration
of visual analysis with historical knowledge and contexts; demonstrate
familiarity with major monuments and artists of the western cultural
tradition and their relationship to other world cultures; achieve
the ability to think critically and to question accepted beliefs
and scholarly arguments, particularly with respect to issues of
social difference; and finally to speak and write coherently and
persuasively about images and related primary and secondary analytical
texts — see the Art History Program Slideshow (pdf).
In addition, students have the opportunity to work directly with
artworks studied in their courses, since the University is in close
proximity to Washington's world-renowned
art collections, representing the areas of specialized study in
our program (Renaissance and Baroque, Modern, and Contemporary.)
These include institutions such as the National Gallery of Art,
Hirshhorn Museum, Phillips Collection, Smithsonian American Art
Museum, National Museum of Women in the Arts, and many other
significant museums and collections, including AU
Museum exhibitions
and the Department’s own Watkins
Collection.
Other distinctive features of American University’s Art History
program include small classes with individual attention and support
by faculty mentors, a close-knit and supportive student cohort,
internship opportunities in major museums, local galleries, and
government agencies, together with special strengths in visual resources.
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