Caution
Copyright © Monash University 1996
ISBN 1320-6222
Authorised by Academic Registrar, April 1996
Throughout the course of studies, students will be expected to:
+ consider visual material critically and investigatively, rather than with a merely appreciative approach;
+ understand the specific character and developmental histories of visual languages;
+ apply theoretical, critical and historical methods of analysis to the visual arts;
+ demonstrate knowledge of a range of aspects of visual culture, from the established forms of painting, sculpture and graphic arts to the decorative arts, photography, advertising, media, fashion and the various manifestations of architecture and urban planning and design.
Sequential organisation of art history and theory courses enables students to develop an understanding and knowledge of the visual arts and their critical and historical interpretation. At first year level, students will undertake preliminary analysis of relatively local and familiar visual examples, followed by an introductory study of aspects of the Western tradition in art and architecture. After completion of these introductory courses, students will be equipped with the fundamental critical and analytical skills needed to proceed to more advanced study of the visual arts.
Second and third-year courses involve more specialised study of a variety of thematic and historical areas, including Australian art and architecture, twentieth-century European and American art and architecture, photography, and aspects of medieval, Renaissance and baroque art and architecture. This intense study will equip students with conceptual schema enabling more sophisticated analysis of the visual arts, including intersections with class, gender, ideology etc.
Students continuing at fourth-year level should expect to intensify their understanding of theoretical issues, while at the same time deepening a specialisation through advanced courses and the completion of a research thesis on a chosen topic.
Postgraduate courses allow for further specialisation, either by completion of a research MA or PhD, or through an MA in Australian Art in which various aspects of Australian visual culture may be studied at an advanced level. An MA in Museum Studies and Cultural Policy, taught jointly by the departments of Visual Arts and Australian Studies, provides students with expertise appropriate to professional activity in art galleries and museums.
For details of postgraduate courses, please refer to the Arts graduate handbook for 1996.
Courses marked with an asterisk are offered in 1996; others are offered in 1997 or beyond.
+ VSA1010 Contemporary visual culture*
+ VSA1020 Transformations of the visual*
+ VSA2110/3110 European art, 1900-1940*
+ VSA2130/3130 American and European postwar art*
+ VSA2150/3150 The other side of the avant-garde: twentieth- century women's art history
+ VSA2230/3230 Australian art*
+ VSA2250/3250 Current architecture
+ VSA2270/3270 Australian architecture*
+ VSA2310/3310 Modern architecture and urbanism, 1907-1968*
+ VSA2410/3410 History and theory of photography, part 1
+ VSA2430/3420 History and theory of photography, part 2*
+ VSA2510/3510 Sixteenth-century studies
+ VSA2530/3530 Baroque art*
+ VSA2550/3550 Italian medieval art*
+ VSA2610/3610 French medieval art
+ VSA3010/4010 Making art history*
+ VSA3570 Into the nineties
+ VSA4019 Reading the art museum*
+ VSA4021 Beyond the museum
+ VSA4030 Theory of art history and criticism*
+ VSA4034 Nineteenth-century Australian art
+ VSA4054 Twentieth-century Australian modernism
+ VSA4060 Readings in Australian art*
+ VSA4074 Australian postmodernism*
+ VSA4080 Readings in Italian Renaissance art
+ VSA4084 The culture and imagery of cities*