ART 210 Women In Art
Investigates the roles and status of women in art, with particular emphasis on the United States from 1930 to the present. Includes the representation of women in art; women's access to education, training, and exhibition opportunities; and public exposure as artists, collectors, organizers, and activists. While the focus will be on art and artists of the United States, these topics will be framed historically and examined within a global context.
Prerequisite
Prerequisite: WR 115 Introduction to College Writing with a C or better
Offered
Offered Winter Spring only
Notes
Lower Division Transfer (LDT) Course
General Education Requirements
AS Difference, Power & Discrimination, AAOT Arts & Letters
Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
Analyze how women and gender are represented in visual culture. Explain gender as historically and socially constructed. Describe the experiences and contributions of women in the arts of the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries. Explain how difference is socially constructed. Using historical and contemporary examples, describe how perceived differences, combined with unequal distribution of power across economic, social, and political institutions, result in discrimination. Analyze ways in which the interactions of social categories, such as race, ethnicity, social class, gender, religion, sexual orientation, disability, and age, are related to difference, power, and discrimination in the United States. Interpret and engage in the Arts & Letters, making use of the creative process to enrich the quality of life. Critically analyze values and ethics within a range of human experience and expression to engage more fully in local and global issues.