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Academic Catalog 2025-26

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Your search for courses · during 2025-26 · tagged with ARTH Post-1800 · returned 7 results

  • ARTH 102 Introduction to Art History II 6 credits

    An introduction to the art and architecture of various geographical areas around the world from the fifteenth century through the present. The course will provide foundational skills (tools of analysis and interpretation) as well as general, historical understanding. It will focus on a select number of major developments in a range of media and cultures, emphasizing the way that works of art function both as aesthetic and material objects and as cultural artifacts and forces. Issues include, for example, humanist and Reformation redefinitions of art in the Italian and Northern Renaissance, realism, modernity and tradition, the tension between self-expression and the art market, and the use of art for political purposes.

    • Spring 2026
    • IS, International Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis CX, Cultural/Literature
    • ARTH Post-1800 ARTH Pre-1800 ARTS ARTH Prior to 1900 CL: 100 level MARS Core Course MARS Supporting EUST Transnational Support
    • ARTH  102.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Vanessa Reubendale 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 104 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • ARTH 205 Invisible From Space: Representing Ecosystems 6 credits

    Since NASA's "Whole Earth" photographs emerged in the late 1960s, people have struggled with humanity's place in the cosmos and our interconnection with all life on our "blue marble." How can we comprehend the whole while valuing each component of this complex system? In the U.S., Romantic landscapes and frontier imagery continue influencing perception despite tensions with vast scales of space, time, data, history, and non-human perspectives. These challenges of seeing our planet and ourselves have inspired diverse creative responses across photography, new media, mapping, alternative archiving, theater, music, data visualization, and other interdisciplinary approaches.

    • Fall 2025
    • LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture
    • ARTH  205.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:David Bailey 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 161 10:10am-11:55am
  • ARTH 207 Cultivating the Future: “Growing” Together 6 credits

    Artists have long explored the dual themes of plant cultivation and knowledge cultivation. What explains this connection between horticulture and pedagogy in art? This course examines these interconnections, beginning with early modernist art circles and following their influence on developments like Black Mountain College and Joseph Beuys's Free International University. We then explore contemporary artists who employ permaculture gardens, traditional ecological knowledge, ecofeminist principles, guerrilla plantings, and foraging as tools to foster new social, political, and spiritual understandings. Through these practices, artists cultivate not just plants but future-oriented ways of knowing and being in the world.

    • Fall 2025
    • LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture
    • ARTH  207.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:David Bailey 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 161 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • ARTH 218 History of Performance and Body Art 6 credits

    Is it theater? Is it dance? Is it music? Is it even art? Mocked in popular culture and censured by government officials, performance art has long been the art world’s most troublesome medium. This course provides an historical survey of performance and body art, beginning with the Futurists in early twentieth-century Italy and continuing throught the debates around publicly-funded work in mid-1990s United States. Over the course of the term, we will engage with concepts that are key to the study of performance, such as ephemerality, liveness, authenticity, and viscerality.      

    • Winter 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies No Exploration
    • ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CL: 200 level
    • ARTH  218.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Vanessa Reubendale 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THBoliou 161 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • ARTH 240 Art Since 1945 6 credits

    Art from abstract expressionism to the present, with particular focus on issues such as the modernist artist-hero; the emergence of alternative or non-traditional media; the influence of the women’s movement and the gay/lesbian liberation movement on contemporary art; and postmodern theory and practice.

    • Spring 2026
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): One Art History (ARTH) course with a grade of C- better.

    • AMST America in the World AMST Space and Place ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CAMS Extra Departmental CL: 200 level GWSS Elective AMST Production Consumption of Culture EUST Transnational Support
    • ARTH  240.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Vanessa Reubendale 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 161 10:10am-11:55am
  • ARTH 245 Modern Architecture 6 credits

    This course will trace major trends in western architecture from the dawn of the Industrial Revolution to the dawn of the Cold War, concentrating especially on the decades from the 1870s through 1950s. We will discuss technological developments and stylistic issues in different cultural and political contexts, such as Chicago after the Great Fire and Berlin after the Great War. We will consider critiques of modern material culture, from the Arts & Crafts movement to Soviet Constructivism, analyze styles from Art Nouveau to Art Deco, and consider new building typologies such as train stations, department stores, and skyscraping office buildings.

    • Winter 2026
    • LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • AMST Space and Place ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CL: 200 level FFST History and Art History EUST Transnational Support
    • ARTH  245.01 Winter 2026

    • Faculty:Baird Jarman 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WBoliou 161 9:50am-11:00am
    • FBoliou 161 9:40am-10:40am
  • ARTH 266 Arts of the Japanese Tea Ceremony 6 credits

    This course will examine the history and aesthetics of the tea ceremony in Japan (chanoyu). It will focus on the types of objects produced for use in the Japanese tea ceremony from the fifteenth century through the present. Themes to be explored include: the relationship of social status and politics to the development of chanoyu; the religious dimensions of the tea ceremony; gender roles of tea practitioners; nationalist appropriation of the tea ceremony and its relationship to the mingei movement in the twentieth century; and the international promotion of the Japanese tea ceremony post-WWII. Requires concurrent registration in ARTS 236.

    Extra Time Required

    Requires concurrent registration in ARTS 236.

    Waitlist Information: If you would like to waitlist for a ARTS 236 section, you will need to UNCHECK the box for ARTH 266 section, prior to completing the waitlist process. If you are offered a seat in ARTS 236, you will be able to register for ARTH 266 at the same time.

    • Fall 2025
    • IS, International Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • ARTS 236: Ceramics: Vessels for Tea
    • ARTH Non Western ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Prior to 1900 ASST Disciplinary ASST East Asia CL: 200 level EAST Supporting ASST Literary Artistic Analysis
    • ARTH  266.01 Fall 2025

    • Faculty:Kathleen Ryor 🏫 👤
    • Size:14
    • M, WBoliou 161 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FBoliou 161 12:00pm-1:00pm
    • Extra Time Required,

      Requires concurrent registration in ARTS 236

      Four seats held for Art and Art History majors until the day after rising junior priority registration.

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2025–26 Academic Catalog

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Registrar: Theresa Rodriguez
Email: registrar@carleton.edu
Phone: 507-222-4094
Academic Catalog 2025-26 pages maintained by Maria Reverman
This page was last updated on 10 September 2025
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