Arts of the Baroque
This foundation course studies Europe and its colonies during the 17th century,
an era of internal conflicts, external expansion, and national consolidation
that proved a boom time for the arts. In Catholic areas, the Church still spent
lavishly, allowing artists to become the protégés of popes, kings, and princes.
Elsewhere, a surging market economy helped a rising bourgeoisie establish its
position through luxury consumption. Taking a purposefully broad view, the
course surveys developments in painting, sculpture, architecture, garden
design, urbanism, interior decoration, furniture, metalwork, and textiles,
testing the thesis that baroque artists achieved a new synthesis or unity by
fusing media previously practiced and experienced separately. After developing
key visual and interpretive tools, the class examines artistic innovations in
Rome and their repercussions from Spain to southern Germany. The focus then
shifts to Louis XIV’s France, culminating in the vast palace and gardens of
Versailles. The third area of study is the northern and southern Netherlands,
major producers, consumers, and traders of the arts. Here, period paintings are
important documents of domestic life, and students will study how to interpret
them. 3 credits.