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Arts & Culture

Art History Seminar Immerses Students in Art Collections at SU; Eight+One Magazine Highlights their Research

Monday, December 3, 2018, By Renée Gearhart Levy
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College of Arts and SciencesStudents

During spring semester 2018, Romita Ray charged the students of her Art and Architecture at SU seminar to select an artwork or architectural drawing in the art collections at SU for intensive study.

head shot

Romita Ray

The seminar provides an immersive experience with objects in the SUArt Galleries, Light Work, and the Special Collections Research Center—examining them and learning to conduct archival research about them, says Ray, associate professor of art history and chair of the Department of Art and Music Histories.

“I introduced my students to some of the outstanding figures in art and architectural history who are represented in our collections, and then they got to choose which artists, architects, and objects they wanted to continue working with,” she says. “This was not a superficial look. This was a deep dive into artistic oeuvres, methods, and critical ideas.”

For example, Adam Hsu ’19 focused on the famous Margaret Bourke White photograph, Mahatma Gandhi and the Spinning Wheel, while Max Greenblatt ’18 studied Salvador Dali illustrations for “Alice in Wonderland.” Angela Tillapaugh ’18 chose the Anna Hyatt Huntington sculpture “Diana of the Chase,” while Christina Rosace ’18 studied an image of the goddess Durga from the collection of Indian calendar art amassed by former SU religion professor H. Daniel Smith.

woman working with papers

Tammy Hong

In addition to a research paper, the students shared their findings with each other and with the campus community through Eight + One, a scholarly magazine they produced featuring op-ed-length essays about their research subjects. The magazine, the first of its kind produced at SU, was meant to be “a lasting record of the hard work the students put in,” says Ray.

The magazine was designed by class member Benjamin Farr ’18, a double major in art history and magazine journalism, who studied John James Audubon’s bird prints for the course. “Creating Eight + One with Professor Ray was one of the most rewarding experiences of my time at SU,” says Farr, who is currently working at the Rockwell Museum in Corning, New York, while applying to graduate school. “The art history program is very writing intensive, but few people save professors ever read our papers. After reading through the magazine, some members of my family even asked to read my older papers.”

Tammy Hong ’18, who studied Hyacinthe Rigaud’s paintings of Louis XIV, says that while she was delighted to immerse herself in the SU collections and share some of the gems contained with the SU community, the magazine project was particularly valuable for honing her writing. “The rigorous editing process made me realize how polished my writing had to be in order to produce a thought-provoking and concise piece,” says Hong, currently the Andrew W. Mellon Research Assistant in Modern Materials in the Conservation Division at the National Gallery of Art.

Ray couldn’t be more pleased with the results of the course. “It showcases the research potential that our art collections at SU hold for our undergraduate students,” she says. “This kind of hands-on learning experience followed by a publication makes students realize that they are an integral part of research in the humanities at SU.”

 

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Renée Gearhart Levy

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