Please note: For this class there will be additional costs (about €200,-) for the excursion to Paris
Admission requirements
This course is an (extracurricular) Honours Class: an honours elective in the Honours College programme. There are limited spots available for non honours students. Admission will be based on motivation.
Students that want to graduate in the summer of 2018 are advised not to take a summer course, since we cannot guarantee that your grade will be processed in time for Bachelor’s certification and/ or Master’s admission procedures.
Description
Art from the Dutch Golden Age is often presented as a laudation of everyday life, the real and the bourgeois. By contrast, art from the French âge classique is praised for its clarity of expression and its moderation. Thus the Golden Age and the âge classique seem to show a clear rupture from the centuries-old fascination of art as an experience of contrasting emotions of fascination and horror, and fear and attraction. These conflicting emotions seem not to correspond with the ‘calm’ Dutch painters as Vermeer, De Hooch or Potter whose works were increasingly used to define the Golden Age, nor with the work of Poussin or Le Brun used to define the âge classique. Passionate feelings are far more often related to the impact of their baroque and ecstatic counterparts in the Southern Netherlands and Italy, with Rubens and Caravaggio as most famous examples.
Nevertheless, in Dutch and French painting, sculpture, drawings, prints, decorative arts, and architecture the strong emotions of fear and attraction do play an important role. There are, for example, the many representations of anatomy lessons in which the human body is shown in its goriest details. The vanitas still lives with the skull as central feature give more than mere detached contemplations of the inevitable death. They send shivers down the spine because of the concrete nearness of human decline. The realism of Dutch and French portraits often evokes a scary presence, while the marble busts seem to be living or sleeping persons. Sculptors, painters, print makers, architects, and applied artists did not avoid to show war, political violence or other forms of human suffering as directly as possible. Also landscape and marine paintings are often showing attractive, but fearful sights.
Course objectives
Knowledge: At the end of the summer school the students have acquired a better view on painting, sculpture, drawings, prints, and architecture of the Dutch Golden Age and the French âge classique. They will have developed other perspectives complementary to the dominant view on Dutch and French seventeenth-century art as an expression of the pious burghers and their everyday life or of royal magnificence. The students will also have learned that the Golden Age and the âge classique are historical constructions from later periods than the seventeenth century to provide these later periods of norms and values.
Skills: Being able to accomplish independent art historical research: to formulate and present a well-considered judgement on scientific literature and relate this to the analysis of art and architecture in both a written and oral manner. The course objectives are:
To select a subject for an art historical research and to formulate a relevant definition of the problem
To choose an adequate method to solve this problem, to carry out a thorough analysis of secondary literature and of visual and textual primary sources which is elaborated in a bibliography that corresponds to academic requirements.
To be able to write a structured discourse in max. 4000 words, incl. notes and bibliography, starting for a relevant definition of the problem and with a thorough conclusion.
Timetable
The summer school will start in Leiden on June 27th till June 29th. These days we will make excursions to museums in The Hague and Amsterdam. We will be in Paris on 1, 2 and 3 July where we will visit the Louvre and Versailles.
Location
Classes will take place at the Old Observatory room c006 in Leiden and at the Ecole du Louvre (Quai des Tuilleries, Porte des Lions) in Paris.
Programme
27, 28, 29 June: Lectures from 9 am till 2 pm and visites to museums are scheduled in the afternoon till 6 pm.
1, 2, 3 July: Excursion to Paris (Ecole du Louvre).
It’s important to realise that you have to be fully available for the Honours Class during this period.
Course Load
This course is worth 5 EC, which means the total course load equals 140 hours.
Lectures: 8 lectures of 2 hours: 16 hours
Excursion: 5 excursions of 5 hours: 25 hours
Literature reading & practical work: 40 hours
Final essay: 59 hours
Assessment method
30% Participation assessed continually through participation in summer school
70% A final paper of 4000 words
Blackboard and uSis
Blackboard will be used in this course. Students can register for the Blackboard site two weeks prior to the start of the course.
Please note: students are not required to register through uSis for the Honours Classes. Your registration will be done centrally.
Reading list
The required literature will be available on Blackboard.
Registration
Please note: For this class there will be additional costs (about €200,-) for the excursion to Paris
Enrolling in this course is possible from Monday November 6th until Thursday November 16th 23.59 hrs through the Honours Academy, via this link. It is not necessary to register in uSis.