Course Specification. 1. Course Title: Art: Theory and Practice since Date of production/revision: 5 November Level: SCQF 11 (TBC)

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Course Specification Course Code: Session: PELC205 2016/17 1. Course Title: Art: Theory and Practice since 1960 2. Date of production/revision: 5 November 2014 3. Level: SCQF 11 (TBC) 4. Credits: 15 (TBC) 5. Lead School/Board of Studies: School of Fine Art 6. Course Contact: Dr. William Clark 7. Course Aims: This course aims to: introduce students to key themes and developments within western art practice since c.1960; provide students with a variety of theoretical perspectives relevant to contemporary cultural practices; facilitate cross-disciplinary thought and practical connections, by bringing together students on different programmes of study; enable students to conduct and manage their own critical inquiry; interrogate the relationships between forms of research and modes of practice. Page 1 of 9

8. Intended Learning Outcomes of Course: By the end of this course students will be able to: demonstrate a basic understanding of the critical debates and concepts associated with the course material; engage critically with the course material; explain their understanding of the relation between their own practice and its historical and intellectual contexts; demonstrate an ability to participate in discussion and debate which relates to historical and contemporary issues within their specialism; work independently and demonstrate initiative in the context of independent learning; research and prepare work to an appropriate standard for assessment, and be able to evaluate its strengths and weaknesses. 9. Indicative Content: Session one Modernism in Dispute : 1. Medium-specific purity 2. Flatness, shape and objecthood 3. Enlightenment rationalism 4. Binary thought 5. Centre and Margins 6. Historicism and progress in art 7. Krauss's model of sculpture in the expanded field 8. Craig Owens on modernism and the suppression of writing 9. The critique of originality: some introductory comments Session two The Paintings Are Dead : 1. The various lives and deaths of painting s surface. Page 2 of 9

2. Richard Wollheim on the use of the surface and the fact of the surface. 3. The fact of the surface and the literalization of paint. 4. Leo Steinberg and Äúthe flatbed picture plane. Äù 5. From nature to culture: painting as a sign system. 6. The photographic condition of painting 7. The society of the spectacle. 8. Pictures of paintings: fakes and simulation. 9. Gerhard Richter. 10. The commodification of abstract painting. Session three The Death of the Author : 1. Mediaeval conceptions of originality and authorship 2. European humanism 3. Contemporary copyists 4. Burgin on painting, humanism and logocentrism 5. Humanism and anti-humanism: historical perspectives 6. Photography and ownership 7. Painting and the marketing of temperaments 8. Foucault and the functions of the figure of the author 9. The 'expressive fallacy' 10. Representation knows only a 'subject', not a 'person' 11. Cindy Sherman and the identity that is already spoken 12. The problem of grounding meaning within a system of infinite referral 13. David Salle and inter-textuality 14. The fugitive self 15. Lacan: the Mirror Stage (Imaginary) and entry into language (Symbolic) 16. Fixed-point perspective and centred subjectivity Page 3 of 9

17. Polyphony and dialogism 18. Authorial meaning and intention 19. The sign is 'half someone else's' Session four From Work to (Con)Text : 1. From autonomy to contextuality 2. Framing 3. "Transmission Gallery" 4. "Comments On Communication" 5. The Institutional Context 6. Daniel Buren and the artist's studio 7. The Container and the Contained 8. Robert Smithson: Absence and Presence 9. Gordon Matta-Clark's urban archaeology Session five The Politics of Representation : 1. Aestheticisation 2. Lyotard on the Postmodern Sublime 3. On Difficulty 4. Louis Althusser and Ideological State Apparatuses 5. Representation and Power 6. Jenny Holzer and the subversion of media messages 7. Roland Barthes and mythology 8. Interpolation 9. Barbara Kruger: Poses and Positions 10. Hans Haacke and the politics of representation 11. Martha Rosler and the problem of 'speaking for others' Page 4 of 9

12. Sophie Calle: presentation, representation and surveillance Session six In The Ruins of History : 1. History as undifferentiated "pastness" 2. Lyotard: Master Narratives and History as Fiction 3. Frederic Jameson and the schizophrenic repetition of the present 4. Kenny Hunter's Hyperboreans 5. Gerhard Richter's Oktober 1977: history and the mass media 6. Historicism and progress in art 7. Anselm Kiefer: History, Mourning and Melancholy 8. Anti-Monuments Anti-Memorials Session seven Art/Commodities/Signs/Desire : 1. Use-value and exchange-value 2. The manufactured gift-item 3. Modernism and the Art Object 4. Repression... 5. The Return of the Repressed 6. Art and serial production 7. Baudrillard and "sign-value" 8. Desire 9. The eroticism of sight 10. Haim Steinbach 11. Cultural tourism (the Disneyland syndrome) 12. Jeff Koons: Desire and the commodity form Session eight Difference and Identity : Page 5 of 9

1. Gender: Difference and Identity 2. Representation and Gendered Identity ÄîThe Politics of Representation 3. Avoiding binarism 4. Problematizing Masculinity 5. Gendered identity as a position within representation 6. What's wrong with "Images of Women"? 7. Difference 8. The psychoanalytic approach 9. Lacan I: the phallus and phallocentrism 10. The figure of "Woman" as a token or Gift 11. Woman "as...(untruth)" 12. Woman "as" woman 13. Woman "as" Man 14. Deconstruction: the feminine inhabits the masculine 15. Lacan II: the Imaginary and the Symbolic order 16. The Imaginary as the site of the feminine? 17. The question of essentialism in mediums and iconography 18. The female body and feminist art 19. Mary Kelly's Post-Partum Document, 1973-78 Selected artists covered by the course: Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg, Cindy Sherman, Sherrie Levine, Mike Bidlo, Richard Prince, David Salle, Sigmar Polke, Philip Taaffe, Ross Bleckner, Peter Halley, David Salle, Gerhard Richter, Frank Stella, Robert Morris, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Robert Smithson, Kenneth Noland, Anthony Caro, Marcel Broodthaers, Gordon Matta-Clark, Jenny Holzer, Martha Rosler, Sophie Calle, Anselm Kiefer, Jeff Koons, Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Andy Warhol, Helen Chadwick, Mary Kelly. Selected theorists covered by the course: Roland Barthes, Jacques Derrida, Jacques Lacan, Ferdinand de Saussure, Jean Baudrillard, Clement Greenberg, Rosalind Krauss, Jean-Francois Lyotard, Louis Althusser, Victor Burgin, Frederic Jameson, Marina Warner, Linda Nochlin, Griselda Pollock. Page 6 of 9

10. Description of Summative Assessment: Attendance at lectures, seminars and group discussions will be mandatory. In addition, students will: either submit a 2,500 word written essay (this should include examples of visual work and a bibliography); or deliver a 10 minute oral presentation, supported by visual material in an appropriate form. 10.1 Please describe the Summative Assessment arrangements: TBC 11. Formative Assessment: Students on this course will be assessed on their ability to: demonstrate a critical understanding of the concepts, theories and practices presented within the course; reflexively relate these concepts, theories and practices to their own work; demonstrate a detailed knowledge of modes of artistic practice and theorization post-1960; devise and manage their own research projects. 11.1 Please describe the Formative Assessment arrangements: None 12. Collaborative: Yes 12.1 Teaching Institutions: Click here to enter text. No 13. Requirements of Entry: None 14. Co-requisites: None 15. Associated Programmes: This is a cross-gsa elective open to all PGT students Page 7 of 9

16. When Taught: Second Term. 17. Timetable: TBC. 18. Available to Visiting Students: Yes No 19. Distance Learning: Yes No 20. Placement: Yes No 21. Learning and Teaching Methods: Method Formal Contact Hours Notional Learning Hours (Including formal contact hours) Lecture Studio Seminar/Presentation 16 16 Tutorial 1 1 Workshop Laboratory work Project work Professional Practice E-Learning / Distance Learning Placement Examination Essay Private Study Not Applicable 133 Other (please specify below) TOTAL 17 150 22. Description of Other Teaching and Learning Methods: Page 8 of 9

23. Additional Relevant Information: The course was previously taught by John Calcutt but lapsed for the last couple of years and it has been prepared without ant major changes using the material from the old course. 24. Indicative Bibliography: Selected references covered by the course: Clement Greenberg Modernist Painting Michael Fried Art and Objecthood Rosalind Krauss Sculpture in the Expanded Field Hal Foster (ed) Postmodern Culture Victor Burgin The Absence of Presence: Conceptualism and Postmodernisms Benjamin Buchloh Neo-Avantgarde and the Culture Industry, Richard Wollheim The Work of Art as Object Roland Barthes The Death of the Author Victor Burgin The Absence of Presence Terry Eagleton Literary Theory Michel Foucault What is an Author? Serge Guilbaut Reconstructing Modernism Jacques Lacan The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Daniel Buren The Function of the Museum Craig Owens Beyond Recognition Gisela Ecker (ed) Feminist Aesthetics Page 9 of 9