Fall 2025 Art History GR6413 section 001

The Real Picasso

Call Number 12365
Day & Time
Location
W 2:10pm-4:00pm
807 Schermerhorn Hall [SCH]
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Rosalind Krauss
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

Picasso’s work is the great kaleidoscope through which 20th-century art passes: from its beginnings in Cubism through which the world is given as though through cut crystal; to the commercial forms of collage; to the presage of surrealist anguish; and, finally, to an untoward neo-classicism. The result of this restless exploration is the invention of multiple formal languages, which need to be deciphered in spite of the perverse literature on the subject which insists on transposing this into the art-historical language of iconography. The literature is rich with the analytic struggles between the great Picasso scholars: William Rubin, Leo Steinberg, and Picasso’s biographer, John Russel. The skirmishes over the “iconography” of cubism extends to the interpretation of the work’s relation to “primitivism.” This controversy has given rise to yet a new vector on Picasso’s work: structuralism and semiotics.

Web Site Vergil
Department Art History and Archaeology
Enrollment 0 students (30 max) as of 9:06PM Thursday, April 10, 2025
Subject Art History
Number GR6413
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Open To Architecture, Schools of the Arts, GSAS, SIPA, Journalism
Section key 20253AHIS6413G001