Course: Art History I

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Course title Art History I
Course code KHI/PBG20
Organizational form of instruction Lecture
Level of course Bachelor
Year of study not specified
Semester Winter
Number of ECTS credits 2
Language of instruction Czech
Status of course Compulsory
Form of instruction Face-to-face
Work placements This is not an internship
Recommended optional programme components None
Lecturer(s)
  • Pátek Jakub, Mgr. Ph.D.
Course content
Subject circles of the individual lectures: 1. Prehistoric art 2. Culture and art of the Near East - Mesopotamia and Egypt 3. Ancient Greece 4. Roman culture and Roman empire I 5. Roman culture and Roman empire II 6. Early Christianity and its culture expressions 7. Europe of the early Middle Ages 8. Great Moravian Empire and pre-Romanesque art in Bohemia and Moravia 9. Europe after 1000 10. Romanesque culture in Bohemia and Moravia 11. The age of cathedrals 12. Gothic in Bohemia I 13. Gothic in Bohemia II 14. End of the gothic period

Learning activities and teaching methods
unspecified, unspecified
Learning outcomes
The aim of the course is to provide students of history with a basic overview of cultural and artistic development from prehistoric times to the end of the Middle Ages. The course is designed as a contextual extension of the knowledge that students acquire in basic theoretical courses, measured predominantly in political, religious, and economic history. The course emphasizes primarily the visual arts and architekture, but issues of spritual cutlure, literature, theater, music, etc. are also represented. The lectures of the course are conceived in direct continuity with the content of lectures on the history of prehistory, antiquity and the Czech and general Middle Ages. The knowledge acquired in the course is applied not only in the student?s own research work, but also in some areas of the SZZ.
The graduates from the course demonstrate basal knowledge of cultural and historical development during the period from prehistory to the gothic period. They can synoptically characterize the cultural development in the significant areas and historical epochs. They also manifest knowledge of selected works of art and architecture within the above-mentioned time frame, the ability to identify these works and correctly classify them from both the aspect of the period of their style and dating. The graduates can employ the acquired knowledge depending on their professional orientation. The pedagogically-focused ones apply them in the framework of teaching history and disciplines of social sciences. The graduates of historical fields apply them in the framework of their research and publication activities. On a general level, all graduates manifest their cultural literacy by the acquired knowledge.
Prerequisites
Graduation from the course does not require previous graduation from any particular discipline.

Assessment methods and criteria
unspecified
Attendance (maximum 3 absences allowed) and successful completion of the written credit test.
Recommended literature
  • Gombrich, E. H. Příběh umění. Argo, 2006.
  • Huyghe, R. a kol. Umění pravěku a starověku, Umění a lidstvo - Larousse. Praha, 1967.
  • Chadraba, R. a kol. Dějiny českého výtvarného uměníI II/1a II/2. Academia, Praha, 1984.
  • CHATELET, A. - GROSLIER, B. Světové dějiny umění, Larousse 1. a 2. vydání. Praha, 2004.
  • Petráň, J. (ed.). Dějiny hmotné kultury I (1-2). SPN, 1985.
  • Spunar, P. Kultura českého středověku, Praha. 1987.
  • TOMAN, Rolf (ed.). Gotika. Architektura, sochařství, malířství. Praha: Slovart, 2005. ISBN 978-80-7209-771-5.
  • TOMAN, Rolf. Románské umění: architektura, sochařství, malířství. Praha: Slovart, 2006. ISBN 80-7209-765-2.
  • Tyllner, L. a kol. Velké dějiny zemí koruny české - Lidová kultura. Praha, 2014.


Study plans that include the course
Faculty Study plan (Version) Category of Branch/Specialization Recommended year of study Recommended semester