Sarah Lawrence College

Undergraduate Academics

Art History

The art history curriculum at Sarah Lawrence College covers a broad territory historically, culturally, and methodologically. Students interested in art theory, social art history, or material culture have considerable flexibility in designing a program of study and in choosing conference projects that link artistic, literary, historical, social, philosophical, and other interests. Courses often include field trips to major museums, auction houses, and art galleries in New York City and the broader regional area, as well as to relevant screenings, performances, and architectural sites. Many students have extended their classroom work in art history through internships at museums and galleries, at nonprofit arts organizations, or with studio artists; through their own studio projects; or through advanced-level senior thesis work.

Sarah Lawrence students have gone on to graduate programs in art history at Columbia, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Bard, Williams, Yale, University of Chicago, Oxford University, and University of London, among others. Many of their classmates have pursued museum and curatorial work at organizations such as the Guggenheim Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and The Art Institute of Chicago; others have entered the art business by working at auction houses such as Sotheby’s or by starting their own galleries; and still others have entered professions such as nonprofit arts management and advocacy, media production, and publishing.

Art History 2025-2026 Courses

  • First-Year Studies—Year | 10 credits

    ARTH 1017

    This yearlong seminar offers an introduction to histories of modern and contemporary art through two distinct themes: place and space. In fall, we will explore the place of the Hudson Valley through the category of Hudson River School landscape painting, asking how Euro-American artists portrayed ideologies of imperialism, settler-colonialism, and Western expansionism through the genre of landscape. We will also explore how Indigenous and Black artists have defined place, land, and embodiment as counter-histories to the dominant white, Western norm. Along the way, we will ask broader questions, such as: What can art tell us about humans’ relationships to land and environment? How does art shape our understanding of climate crisis and the Anthropocene or how humans have indelibly altered the earth? In spring, we will explore the category of sculpture in relationship to the body, light, and touch; the pedestal, the space of the museum, the monument, and the public sphere; commodities and everyday objects; and photography, video, and film. Our aim will be to explore how sculptures and installations shape how we perceive objects, sites, and spaces in the world. We will also research the Sarah Lawrence College archives to write about public sculptures, both past and present, on campus. This course will introduce students to the skills of close reading, visual analytical writing, and archival and library research. Assignments may include visual analysis essays, reading responses, peer reviews, and collaborative digital humanities projects. Conference projects will entail writing a long-form research paper or presenting your research in an alternate format, such as a podcast or online exhibition. Biweekly in fall, students will alternate between individual conferences with the instructor and small-group activities that will include field trips to area museums, introductions to campus resources, and research sessions. Biweekly in spring, students will meet with the instructor for individual conferences.

    Faculty

  • Open, Lecture—Fall | 5 credits

    ARTH 2022

    This course will explore the powerful architecture, sculpture, and painting styles that lie at the heart of the creation of Europe and the idea of the West. We will use a number of strategies to explore how expressive narrative painting and sculpture and new monumental architectural styles were engaged in the formation of a common European identity and uncover, as well, the artistic vestiges of diverse groups and cultures that challenge that uniform vision. These are arts that chronicle deep social struggles between classes, intense devotion through pilgrimage, the rise of cities and universities, and movements that could both advocate genocide and nurture enormous creativity in styles both flamboyant and austere, growing from places as diverse as castles and rural monasteries to Gothic cathedrals. The course will explore those aspects of expressive visual language that link works of art to social history, the history of ideas, and political ideology.

    Faculty

  • Open, Small Lecture—Fall | 5 credits

    ARTH 2047

    The context of the 17th-century Dutch Republic presents a distinct case for a global approach to art history, poised for the exchange of images, objects, and knowledge through the Dutch East India Company (VOC), the West India Company (WIC), the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, and as both a young republic and a colonial empire. In this course, we will look at paintings, prints, drawings, maps, sculpture, and decorative art, investigating efforts by Dutch artists to visualize global encounters and distant places, Dutch interests in collecting and displaying rarities, and various types of artistic exchange and influence. We will consider connections not only between the Dutch Republic and its territories in current-day Indonesia, Brazil, and South Africa but also those established through trade and diplomacy elsewhere, including cross-border with the southern Netherlands, with other European cultures, with Asia, and with the Americas. Rejecting methods of world history or of comparative history across cultures, as well as the fallacies of Eurocentrism and center-versus-periphery, this course will employ the lens of global integration. We will consider processes and mechanisms of early-modern globalization, including imperialism, enslavement, colonization, evangelization, trade, consumption, collecting, and the diffusion of prints. This course will involve visits to area museums to study 17th-century objects in person.

    Faculty

  • Open, Small Lecture—Fall | 5 credits

    ARTH 2037

    Focusing on Europe and its intersections with the Americas, Africa, and the Caribbean, this course will explore how artists in the long 19th century responded to the economic, political, and social upheavals of modernity and imperialism. We will look to artists depicting plantation economies, sanitizing the slave trade, and abolitionists forging a new visual rhetoric to depict bodily freedom and personhood. We will consider how artists reveled in capitalist spectacle, leisure, and entertainment, including through the nascent medium of photography. We will also grapple with how realism and materialism became tools to voice politics amidst revolution and nationalism, social inequality, and the rise of the bourgeoisie. Readings and lectures will introduce the movements of neoclassicism, romanticism, realism, impressionism, aestheticism, and neo-impressionism— and dig deeper to take up questions of collective and individual; center and periphery; gender, race, class, and sexuality; and land, landscape, and industry. This lecture-seminar hybrid will also entail field trips to area museums.

    Faculty

  • Intermediate, Seminar—Fall | 5 credits

    ARTH 3408

    Prerequisite: a prior art history course or a topic related to critical theory

    This seminar in art theory and curatorial practice will explore ecological aesthetics in the era of anthropogenic climate change. The course’s guiding question will be: What forms might an aesthetic experience of nature take when it no longer privileges the human observer but, rather, cultivates an equality and reciprocity between all forms of life? Possible answers will be drawn from recent work in critical theory, Black studies, Indigenous studies, queer theory, continental philosophy, and science and technology studies. Case studies on the work of selected contemporary artists will complement the theoretical frameworks under consideration. The course’s topics will include: post-Enlightenment aesthetics of nature, biopower, vitalism, post- and antihumanisms, plant philosophies, bacteria and fungi studies, and deep time. The course will also incorporate a curatorial practicum that will allow students to participate in the production of an on-campus exhibition exploring ecological themes. In addition to exercises on exhibition writing, model making, and art installation, we will meet with artworld professionals working at museums in the New York area.

    Faculty

  • Open, Seminar—Year | 10 credits

    ARTH 3114

    Although the Romans come to mind most immediately as the people who absorbed and passed on the achievements of Greek civilization to the Western world, the transmission of Greek culture to Western posterity was a far more complex process initially involving various other peoples across the Italian peninsula. In fall, beginning with the Italian peninsula itself, the course will focus on how the early Greeks colonized southern Italy and Sicily. We will examine how their culture then affected a range of native Italian peoples such as the Etruscans, Osci, Latins, and the early Romans, who eventually emerged as the dominant political force in Italy and then across the Mediterranean and southern Europe. We will consider how the process of Hellenization enabled the Romans to assume the management of the Greek world in military, political, and material cultural or artistic terms. In spring, now emphasizing the art of the Roman Empire, the course will explore the outcome of this development between the first and third centuries, as Rome came to dominate the entire Mediterranean basin along with much of Europe and western Asia. The course will apply a varied approach, concentrating largely on art in various media, especially architecture, while also incorporating literary and historical data to achieve a larger cultural perspective.

    Faculty

  • Open, Seminar—Year | 10 credits

    ARTH 3606

    The popular imagination has come to see the Vikings of the early medieval period as primarily raiders and pirates who exploited their maritime and warlike skills to cut a swath of terror across northwestern Europe between the late eighth and 11th centuries. Yet, this is only part of a far more complex picture, whose beginnings went back to ancient times and whose effects lasted into the early modern period. Scandinavian peoples were also skilled craftsmen, merchants, politicians, mercenaries, and explorers who established vast trade networks and settlements reaching deep into Russia, to the Islamic world, and westward to Britain, Ireland, Iceland, and beyond. The course will approach these issues by establishing a larger, unified global perspective on Scandinavian culture and history, beginning with Scandinavian interaction with the Roman world and its formative role in the larger development of European early medieval culture. We will examine how this development would culminate in the Viking Age and how, over time, Vikings would become important players in the Byzantine world and founders of the medieval Russian State, while also developing a “Norman” military culture that came to dominate England and the central Mediterranean. In time, the Viking settlement of Iceland became a springboard for further colonization in Greenland and the initial European “exploration” of the North American continent. Back in Europe, Viking culture would lay the foundations of the medieval and early modern states of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. The course will take a broad, synthetic approach, treating art or material culture within a larger economic, political, and historical perspective.

    Faculty

  • Open, Seminar—Year | 10 credits

    ARTH 3040

    The visual arts and architecture constitute a central part of human expression and experience, both growing from and influencing our lives in profound ways that we might not consciously acknowledge. We will explore intersections between the visual arts and cultural, political, and social history with the goal of using art-history methods and theories to deal critically with works of art. This course is not a survey; rather, it will include a limited number of artists and works of art and architecture, which students will learn about in depth through formal analysis, readings, discussion, research, and debate. We will endeavor to understand each work from the point of view of its creators and patrons and by following its changing reception by audiences throughout time, including the ways in which those changes evoke political and social meanings. To accomplish this, we will need to understand some of the languages of art. The course, then, is also a course in visual literacy: the craft of reading and interpreting visual images on their own terms. We will also discuss a number of issues of contemporary concern; for instance, the destruction of art, free speech and respect of religion, the art market, and the museum.

    Faculty

  • Open, Lecture—Spring | 5 credits

    ARTH 2244

    Note: Closed to students who have taken Paris: A History Through Art, Architecture, and Urban Planning (ARTH 3244) or Art in the Age of Empire: 1790–1900 (ARTH 2037). Students who have taken Art and History (ARTH 3040) should consult with the instructor.

    In this course, we will trace the history of Paris from its foundation until World War II, using the arts that both defined and emanated from this remarkable city. We will use works of art, architecture, and urban design as documents of history, of social and cultural values, and of the history of ideas. Student projects will chart these relationships graphically and construct a visual history of Paris from Roman Lutetia to the Paris of Josephine Baker and Picasso.

    Faculty

  • Open, Seminar—Spring | 5 credits

    ARTH 3604

    We are told, in one of the earliest accounts of the life and work of the Netherlandish artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c.1525-1569), that his prints and paintings elicited laughter. From pictures of carnival celebrations and children’s games to peasant weddings and riotous hellscapes, the comic artist makes his viewers, both in the late 16th century and today, question whether any of it should be taken seriously. This course will explore the humor element in the work of Bruegel and many others in early modern Europe, examining the possible beginnings of a recognition of the artistic value of comedy and the contributions of these artists to the culture of laughter. Following art historians, as well as cultural historians who have theorized about the emergence of new comic techniques and the impulse to produce pictures in a “comic mode,” we will explore innovative creative practices and the social contexts of humor throughout Europe—from Bruegel in the Netherlands to Annibale Carracci in Italy to Albrecht Dürer in Germany to Jacques Callot in France and beyond. Topics of discussion will include early modern medical perspectives on laughter, shifting notions about humor in relation to civility and decorum, the functions of tragicomedy, the secularization of the image, and the dual roles of entertainment and didacticism in art. This course will involve visits to area museums to study paintings and prints in person.

    Faculty

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