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Facilities and Opportunites
Fields
of Study
Located in a region of unsurpassed artistic
riches, Johns Hopkins University offers special opportunities
for the study of art history. Students work closely with a faculty
of research scholars on aspects of European and American art
and have access to the remarkable collections in Baltimore and
Washington. In small classes and informal excursions, they integrate
their direct experience of works of art with knowledge acquired
through historical research. Programs leading to the B.A., M.A.,
and Ph.D. degrees emphasize
the value of investigating works of art in various historical
contexts and enable students to deepen their understanding of
cultural history through courses in other departments.
Facilities and Opportunities
Johns Hopkins is
well situated for the study of art history. The
University maintains an extensive art library which
includes the Fowler Collection of treatises on
architecture. Research materials in numerous regional
libraries and museums and in the Library of Congress
are also accessible to art history students.
Diverse and extraordinarily active museums and
research institutions provide a rich environment for
the study of art at Johns Hopkins. The Baltimore Museum
of Art, adjacent to the campus, has recently completed
a new addition to house its growing collections and exhibitions.
A short distance from Hopkins, the Walters Art Museum
preserves rare collections of ancient and medieval art,
Renaissance and 19th-century painting.
Washington, only an hour away, is one of the
most exciting art centers in the world. The National
Gallery of Art specializes in painting, sculpture,
and the graphic arts from the Renaissance to the present
day. Modern art is presented in the permanent collections
and exhibitions of the Hirshhorn Museum, the National
Museum of American Art, and the Phillips Collection.
Unique exhibitions of Byzantine and pre-Columbian art
are maintained at Dumbarton Oaks, and collections of
Asian and African art are housed in the Freer Museum
and the Museum of African Art.
Fields of Study
Medieval
Ever since it was established by Adolf Katzenellenbogen,
the department has given special emphasis to the study of
medieval art. Students work under the direction of Herbert
Kessler, Henry Maguire, and Daniel Weiss. As an adjunct member
of the faculty, Gary Vikan is available for consultation.
Stephen Nichols of the Department of Romance Languages and
Literature offers courses on illuminated manuscripts and
related topics. Seminars in Byzantine art, offered each year
at Dumbarton Oaks, are open to Hopkins students.
The extraordinary holdings at the Walters Art
Museum and at Dumbarton Oaks are especially valuable
for students interested in manuscript illumination and
the so-called minor arts. Students also have access to
the Dumbarton Oaks research facilities, which include
a copy of the Princeton Index of Christian Art.
Renaissance and Baroque
An annual seminar for Hopkins students at the Villa
Spelman dramatizes the special interests and resources for
Renaissance and Baroque art available to Hopkins graduate
students. Located on six acres of gardens a short walk from
the center of Florence, the villa is growing into a major
center of Renaissance studies to which Hopkins graduate students
have access.
In Baltimore, students work with Professors
Charles Dempsey and Stephen Campbell.
Associates of the department, Professor
Elizabeth Cropper, Salvatore Settis, and Carl
Strehlke also work with students.
Modern
Students interested in 18th-, 19th-, and early 20th-century
art work with Professors Michael Fried, Ronald
Paulson, Doreen Bolger, and occasional visiting scholars.
In addition, students can develop critical skills by taking
courses offered through the Humanities Center, the Philosophy
Department, and the departments of literatures.
The Baltimore Museum of Art, which houses the
Cone Collection, and museums in Washington provide stimulating
resources and activities for students of modern art.
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