Houston Community College TLE OER Certified course for ARTS 1303.
- Subject:
- Art History
- Creative and Applied Arts
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Author:
- June Woest
- Date Added:
- 10/05/2022
Houston Community College TLE OER Certified course for ARTS 1303.
History of Art Survey course covering from prehistoric art to the Italian Renaissance. Cover image Lascaux Cave_France
Houston Community College TLE OER Certified Course for ARTS 1304.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art. Learn why Willem de Kooning added raw egg to his paint.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art. Learn the properties of enamel paint and why artists use it.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art.
Created by The Museum of Modern Art.
Migration is central to human experience, and art history reflects that.
Empathy is a term we hear a lot, but what does it mean and how does it work? Looking back through art history, we find many moments when art has allowed us to share in the feelings of others, from Maya Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial, to representations of the Buddhist deity Jizō Bosatsu, along with the Röttgen Pietà, Guáman Poma's First New Chronicle and Good Government, the ink drawings of Chittaprosad and Zainul Abedin, the work of Ghana Think Tank, and more.
This book is a cloned version of Introduction To Art by Muffet Jones, published using Pressbooks under a CC BY (Attribution) license. It may differ from the original.
Artemision Zeus or Poseidon, c. 460 B.C.E., bronze, 2.09 m high, Early Classical (Severe Style), recovered from a shipwreck off Cape Artemision, Greece in 1928 (National Archaeological Museum, Athens). Speakers: Dr. Beth Harris and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Steven Zucker and Beth Harris.
Francisco de Goya, Third of May, 1808, 1814, oil on canvas, 266 x 345.1 cm (Museo del Prado. Madrid). Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Tiffany and Company’s famous Bryant Vase was meticulously crafted by highly skilled artisans—among them, Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Eugene J. Soligny—who worked the silver for more than a year. Curator Ellenor Alcorn describes how Tiffany then used the fascinating nineteenth-century process of electrotyping to create presentation copies. View this work on metmuseum.org. Created by The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Learn how tapestries were made in the time of Louis XIV and are still made today. Explore the process of tapestry weaving at the Gobelins Manufactory in Paris, where historical techniques dating to the time of Louis XIV are used to make contemporary works of art. Video chapters: Introduction - 0:04 Designing a Tapestry - 1:08 Colorful Threads - 2:17 Preparing a Loom - 4:36 Weaving - 6:15 This video was produced in conjunction with the exhibition "Woven Gold: Tapestries of Louis XIV," on view at the Getty Center, December 15, 2016–May 1, 2016. http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/french_tapestries/.
This is an Arts 1303 - Art History I survey course designed based on Smarthistory.org, an OER art history textbook. Sources include Smarthistory as well as online materials produced by art museums including videos and art-historical essays. This is a Texas Core Course in Creative Arts. Developed by Texas A&M University-Kingsville and Texas A&M University-Commerce. This resource will continuously be updated throughout 2022.This course was developed for Texas art history instructors to replace expensive commonly used textbooks with OER content adaptable for use with various learning manage systems.*Unless otherwise noted all entries are licensed Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
This is an Arts 1304 History of Art II course that compiles online OER resources primarily from Smarthistory.org, an OER art history textbook, and other online materials produced by art museums including videos and art historical essays. Developed by Texas A&M University-Kingsville and Texas A&M University-Commerce, this is a Texas Core Course in Creative Arts designed to replace expensive commonly used textbooks with OER content adaptable for Texas art history instructors using various learning manage systems.*Unless otherwise noted all entries are licensed under Creative Commons-Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Ashurbanipal Hunting Lions, gypsum hall relief from the North Palace, Ninevah, c. 645-635 B.C.E., excavated by H. Rassam beginning in 1853 (British Museum). Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker & Dr. Beth Harris