History of Art
A podcast by Oxford University
58 Episodio
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Slade Lectures 2009: Week 4: The Caricatural: Visual Humour and Subversive Style
Pubblicato: 18/02/2013 -
Slade Lectures 2009: Week 3: Naturalism: Flexibility or Failure of Style?
Pubblicato: 18/02/2013 -
Slade Lectures 2009: Week 2: Naturalism at the Service of the Republic
Pubblicato: 18/02/2013 -
Slade Lectures 2009: Week 1: Defining the Dominant Naturalism
Pubblicato: 18/02/2013 -
Not Vital: Art is Global
Pubblicato: 13/12/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 8: Walking distance from the studio: cities, maps, and myths
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 7: Transnational Surrealism: Tropiques and the role of the little magazine
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 6: Monuments and ruins: Surrealism and archaeology in the New World
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 5: Poetry, politics, and sexuality: Surrealism in Latin America
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 4: The experimental demonstration of critical paranoia: Salvador Dalí's The Tragic Myth of Millet's Angelus
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 3: Beyond art: 'the enemy within', Georges Bataille and Documents
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 2: Beyond painting: collage, objects, installations
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Slade Lectures 2010: Week 1: Automatism and chance: Surrealist strategies and their legacies in contemporary art and film
Pubblicato: 18/04/2011 -
Core Course: Modernism and Mass Culture
Pubblicato: 11/03/2011 -
Core Course: Women as Patrons of the Arts in Early Modern Europe
Pubblicato: 11/03/2011 -
Core Course: Painting as visual and material culture in Ming China
Pubblicato: 11/03/2011 -
Research Seminar: Michelangelo: A Life on Paper
Pubblicato: 26/11/2010 -
Putting China in its Place in the History of Art
Pubblicato: 02/12/2008
History of Art at the University of Oxford draws on a long and deep tradition of teaching and studying the subject. The core academic staff of the History of Art Department work on subjects from medieval European architecture to modern Chinese art. Over fifty associated academic staff (e.g. in Anthropology, Classics, History, Oriental Studies, and the Ruskin School of Drawing) include teachers and researchers across the full global and historical range of art and visual culture. This offers students exciting possibilities to take courses and receive supervision on a very wide range of topics, and to develop their own interests in art history.