2024-2025 Binghamton University Academic Guide
Art History Department
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Return to: Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
The curriculum in art history acquaints students with the visual and built culture of humankind through the ages: with works of art and architecture as individual organizations of shape, space, surface and color, and as cultural artifacts with a history and function within their societies linked to other forms of cultural production. The curriculum shares with the department of art and design a concern with understanding the making of art and architecture, and the concern of other humanities departments with the variety of ways in which art and architecture have become a focus for discourse in the past and in the present. Students may enroll in one or more of the introductions to art history and architecture or to the broader field of visual culture. They may also take more specialized historical courses in the art and architecture of a particular era, or of a particular geographical area, or topical courses on particular problems in the field.
The curriculum places the study of art and architecture within the broadest possible context, and in order to be well prepared, students are encouraged to take courses linked to their work and majors in other disciplines. The department encourages and advises students toward interdisciplinary studies and sponsors conferences and symposia to strengthen such links to other fields.
Binghamton’s programs in the history of art and architecture prepare students not only for advanced graduate work in art and architectural history, but also for a broad range of professions and vocations in a variety of related fields. In the past, students completing degrees in the program have enrolled in history of art and architecture graduate programs in most major universities across the country (including, of course, Binghamton’s own very distinctive graduate program) and around the world. But many others have chosen to enter fields closely related to art history, such as curatorial practice, museum administration, museum education, art conservation or visual resources management, or to work in commercial galleries, auction houses, archives and libraries. Students with a concentration in architectural and urban studies have pursued graduate degrees and careers in architecture, urban planning, historic preservation and other related fields.
The department offers a major (with two possible tracks) and a minor in Art History. The department also offers graduate degrees in art history, detailed below.
Graduate Programs
For four decades, Binghamton University has pioneered new approaches to art history. The graduate program in the history and theory of art and architecture was among the first graduate degree programs in the United States to offer opportunities for advanced study and research in a department with a particular commitment to new theoretical perspectives and to interdisciplinary, cross-cultural and global approaches to the history of art, architecture and visual culture. The success of the department has been aided by a campus with strong interdisciplinary programs in cultural history, theory and global studies, and by University strengths in history, sociology, anthropology, cinema, Middle East and North Africa Studies and critical theory.
The program aims to foster innovative teaching and research, and to develop scholars, teachers, museum curators, and heritage and planning professionals capable of interpreting the role of art, architecture, visual culture and cultural production in the broadest sense. Because of its programmatic links with other interdisciplinary research centers and graduate programs within the University, the program in the history and theory of art and architecture also offers a unique opportunity to graduate students wishing to undertake innovative studies of a cross-disciplinary nature, with a stress on the development of critical theoretical and historical perspectives in relation to the visual arts, photography, architecture, planning and the wider built environment at local, national and global levels.
The program caters effectively to a broad range of students from diverse national backgrounds who wish to pursue careers in research, education, museum and gallery practice and publishing, as well as in related areas in cultural policy, urban design, planning and conservation. Essential to our integrated program is the active working relationship between faculty and students in an intellectual environment in which students are offered a unique opportunity to engage in advanced studies and research in theory and criticism, the social history of art, feminist interpretations of art, the history and theory of photography, architectural history, the study of museums and art world institutions, media studies and digital art history from early modern to modern and contemporary.
In addition to organizing the department’s cross-disciplinary lectures, workshops and symposia, faculty and students are actively involved in the teaching and conference activities of other interdisciplinary centers and programs, including the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Faculty also play prominent roles in campus-wide transdisciplinary initiatives, such as the Material and Visual Worlds Transdisciplinary Area of Excellence (TAE).
Programs
Return to: Harpur College of Arts and Sciences
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