Spring 2025 Art History BC2355 section 001

APOCALYPSE

Call Number 00006
Day & Time
Location
MW 4:10pm-5:25pm
To be announced
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Gregory Bryda
Type LECTURE
Course Description

This lecture course explores how art and architecture responded to changing attitudes toward death, the afterlife, and the end of the world over the course of the European Middle Ages, from early Christian Rome to the dawn of the Protestant Reformation in Germany. Medieval illustrations of the Book of Revelation in New York collections will play a central role in discussions of plague, rapture, and “eschatology”—or concerns over the fate of the soul at the end of time. We will analyze the visual culture associated with ordinary people preparing for their own death and the deaths of loved ones, saints and Biblical figures whose triumph in death served as exemplars for the living, and institutional and individual anxieties over humankind’s destiny on Judgment Day. Artworks under consideration will encompass various media and contexts, including monumental architecture and architectural relief sculpture, tomb sculpture, wall painting, manuscript painting, reliquaries, and altarpieces. The course satisfies the major requirement's historical period of 400-1400. Note course requires 1 hour weekly TA discussion sections to be arranged.

Web Site Vergil
Department Art History @Barnard
Enrollment 60 students (60 max) as of 3:05PM Thursday, January 2, 2025
Status Full
Subject Art History
Number BC2355
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note 1 hour weekly discussion section required (to be arranged)
Section key 20251AHIS2355X001