Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Late Antique Art and Artifact Seminar
Term
2024A
Syllabus URL
Subject area
AAMW
Section number only
401
Section ID
AAMW5252401
Course number integer
5252
Meeting times
T 1:45 PM-4:44 PM
Meeting location
WILL 217
Level
graduate
Instructors
Ann L Kuttner
Description
What is 'Late Antiquity'? In 312 when Roman emperor Constantine inaugurated a Christian empire, 'Roman' culture was centuries old. The period ca. 200-650 CE saw profound transformations that launched Medieval, Byzantine and Islamic traditions. In this epoch of upheaval destruction was frequent but partial: Rome long survived, Constantine's 'new Rome,' Constantinople flourished, and around the Empire both proto-global visual culture and local forms prospered. Roman cultural models authorized both innovation and passion for tradition: we critique art-historical models for Late Antique 'decline', analyse habits of material reuse and curation, and look at new Christian and Jewish roles for Roman things as well as polytheist visual survival. Foreign allies and enemies interacted with Greco-Roman Late Antiquity; we visit them too, as in the early Islamic palaces. Media discussed include not just 'monumental' painting, mosaic, sculpture, but also silver, ceramic, ivory, figural textile, glass, painted books, jewelry, coins and more. We look too at Late Antique texts on art, objects, space and viewership. This seminar is open to graduate and undergraduate students.
Course number only
5252
Cross listings
ARTH5252401, CLST7405401
Use local description
No