Art & Art History
Member of the Division of Humanities
Chair(s):
Jenny Anger - Art History
Matthew Kluber - Studio Art
Faculty:
Jeremy Chen
Andrew Kaufman
Fredo Rivera
Eiren Shea
Lesley Wright
The Department of Art and Art History provides curricular opportunities for the development of technical skills, aesthetic judgment, and historical understanding. Participation in both studio art and art history courses stimulates critical thinking and refines creative potential in the visual arts. The Grinnell College Art Collection of approximately 6,000 original works of art and the changing exhibitions of the Grinnell College Museum of Art and the Print and Drawing Study Room supplement formal course study.
Students elect either a studio art or an art history major, with opportunities for advanced work in 300- and 400-level courses. Students electing an art history major must consult with the department about appropriate foreign language study. Majors are expected to enrich their concentration through selected courses offered by other departments. For example, appropriate courses in film, history, literature, philosophy, and religious studies, or syntheses of these materials in humanities courses contribute to the art history major. Furthermore, computer science, cultural studies, history, film, G.W.S.S., creative writing, and the sciences, especially chemistry, contribute to the study of studio art.
Students are encouraged to consider the advantages of a semester abroad in an approved program. Off-campus programs in this country also are available to majors with adequate preparation for advanced study. Students interested in museum work can take the museum studies course (ARH 160 ) and/or the exhibition seminar (ARH 360 ). There are opportunities for academic internships at the Grinnell College Museum of Art, Axelle Fine Arts (Brooklyn, N.Y.), and others as arranged. Competitive summer internships at national museums and institutions are open to qualifying students with considerable preparation in either discipline. A competitive scholarship in studio art allows for a ninth semester of portfolio preparation for graduate study.