FRS 002 — Sec. 014 — (2
units) — CRN 73058 — T 7:10-9:00pm — 210 Art
Masters and Masterpieces of Art
Instructor: Seymour Howard, Department of Art, College of Letters and
Science
Description: Introduction to and investigation into the elements
of art and the social-political, historic, cultural, biographic, and technical
contexts of well-known art masterworks and their makers — e.g., Phidias,
Michelangelo, Mu’Chi, Rembrandt, Frank Lloyd Wright, Picasso, Duchamp, et.al.
Format: Course will consist of class time, possible field trip;
individual outside preparation of talk and paper. Guided, Socratic discussion
with slides and art objects; local gallery viewing; oral and written presentations
based on class participation and outside research drawn from Prints Collection
and Library reserve. Grading: Classroom participation
(1/3); oral presentation and a short written paper (of 4 pages) on the who, what,
when, where, how, and “why” of a specific masterwork by a great world
master of art (2/3).
About the Instructor: Professor Howard is an art historian and
artist dealing with Humanistic studies and art media in painting, sculpture, architecture,
graphics, and film; researcher and publisher of scholarly books and papers as
well as maker and exhibitor of art works for over five decades; recipient of the
first Magnar Ronning Student Teaching Award in the Humanities at UC Davis.