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FNE1912

The romantic legacy

2 points * Two lecture hours per week plus guided field work * Second semester * Caulfield

Objectives On successful completion of this subject the student should be able to express aesthetic intuitions confidently; using analysis and argument, gain skills in linking visual observation to cultural values; and to represent knowledge of the historical, ideological and spiritual discourses in art and design as integral to the effective representation of intuitive ideas.

Synopsis Ideally following `Art design and culture' this subject follows the history and theory of art and design from the industrial revolution to the present time. Examining the paradigm of western progress, the subject identifies various critiques of modernity and modernism. Reactions in art and design to technological change are compared to spiritual or ideological developments, particularly (i) the romantic rejection of the rationalist enlightenment, (ii) the modernist rejection of the authority of ornament and narrative and (iii) the postmodern rejection of modernist assumptions.

Assessment One assignment (1500 words): 30% * One assignment (2500 words): 50% * One test: 20%

Recommended texts

Chipp H Theories of modern art U California P, 1968 or later edn

Honour H Romanticism Pelican, 1981 or later edn

Nelson R Cultural hypochondria in the age of industrial design Monash U, Dept Industrial Design, 1992

Nelson R Inspections Monash U, Peninsula School of Art, 1995

Wolfe T From Bauhaus to our house Abacus, 1987 or later edn


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Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3168
Copyright © Monash University 1996 - All Rights Reserved - Caution
Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996