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Dreaming America: masterpieces of North American Painting COURSE CLOSED Cert of Attendance

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Course Code: ace-sc0117

Course Title: Dreaming America: masterpieces of North American Painting COURSE CLOSED

College: Adult Continuing Education

Dreaming America: masterpieces of North American Painting COURSE CLOSED

Duration: Ten weeks, Wednesday 10:30am-12:30pm, Commencing on 27 September 2017, ending on 29 November

Teaching Mode: Part-Time

Seminars

Qualifications: Cert of Attendance

NFQ Level: N/A

Costs: €230

Entry Requirements: Applicants must be over 18 years of age by course commencement

Closing Date: Monday 18 September 2017

Overview

Venue:  City Library, Grand Parade, Cork 

In “Dreaming America” we will closely read ten masterpieces of American painting to uncover how Americans have imagined themselves as a distinctive nation over time. This series tracks recurring themes across generations as American artists who used their skills to advance the interests of the social groups to which they either belonged or wished to belong. Topics include: throwing off colonial domination; exploring the wilderness; justifying or opposing slavery; embracing or rejecting capitalism; contending against inequality and injustice; fighting or resisting wars of expansion

Course Details

Each week we will focus on an American masterpiece; we discuss its historical context and consider how the work has been received. These are the paintings that form the series:
Week 01. Emanuel Leutze, “Washington Crossing the Delaware” (1851, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York);
Week 02. John Rose, “The Old Plantation” (1785, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, Virginia);
Week 03. Thomas Cole, “View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts (The Oxbow)” (1836, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York);
Week 04. Winslow Homer, “The Veteran in a New Field” (1865, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York);
Week 05. Thomas Eakins, “The Gross Clinic” (1875, Philadelphia Museum of Art);
Week 06. Edward Hopper, “Nighthawks” (1942, Art Institute of Chicago);
Week 07. Jasper Johns, “Three Flags” (1958, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York);
Week 08. Andy Warhol, “Nine Jackies” (1964, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York);
Week 09. Vincent Desiderio, “Pantocrator” (2002, Newington-Cropsey Center, New
Week 10. Shepard Fairey, “Barack Obama/Hope” (2008, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.).

Detailed Entry Requirements

Applicants must be over 18 years of age by course commencement

Course Practicalities

This interdisciplinary course spans eight broad, sometimes overlapping, historical periods in American culture, roughly defined as follows: 1. Early Colonial Period (ca. 1560-1760); 2. Late Colonial Period & Early Republic (ca. 1760-1820); 3. The Hudson River School (ca. 1830-1875); 4. Still-Life and Genre Painting in Antebellum America (ca. 1820-1865); 5. The Civil War, the West (ca. 1865-1900); 6. Empire-Building, Progressivism, and WWI (ca. 1890-1920); 7. Depression to Cold War (1930-1991); 8. Contemporary America.

Assessment

Short courses are non-assessed

Who Teaches This Course

James G. R. Cronin, Adult Continuing Education, University College Cork

Further Contact Information

Regina Sexton, Short Course Co-ordinator,  E:   r.sexton@ucc.ie

Marian O'Keeffe, Short Course administrator,  E:  marian.okeeffe@ucc.ie

T: 00353 21 4904700

Apply Online

To register and pay please click the ‘apply now’ button

 

Students may also apply by completing the application form below and returning same with a cheque, postal order or bank draft made payable to UCC. Please return to Adult Education at The Laurels, Western Road, Cork by Monday 18 September 2017. Payment may also be made by calling to Adult Education during normal office hours.

 

Contact us

E: Regina Sexton

P: 021 4904700
W: Website

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