Our MA is designed to prepare students for specialised postgraduate research in the fields of Art History and Visual Studies. You will have the option of spending the autumn term in Venice or can study for the full year on the Warwick campus.
The course enables you to develop your research skills by studying different periods and media in the history of art, and by taking an active part in research, exploring some of the broader issues in Art History today such as cross-cultural interaction and the arts, the spatial contexts of art, architecture and urbanism, and the arts within a global society.
Core modules
Art History and its Methods
You will become acquainted with the major methodologies that have shaped the discipline of art history as an historical discipline. To this end, this module will examine several theories of the history of art that either construct art as something with its own (internal) history, or understand it as something determined by wider social and political contexts. The module may also engage with some of the more pertinent methodological and interdisciplinary issues on the boundaries of Art History, for example Material Culture Studies.
Dissertation
The Dissertation is an extended piece of writing of 15,000 words in length about a topic that you select, with the support of your supervisor. It allows you to demonstrate your research skills and formulate an independent perspective on your topic. You will be supported in your research and writing not only by your supervisor but through the Academic Preparation for History of Art module, and a series of planning workshops during the spring term.
Academic Preparation for History of Art
This module (which is not taken for credit) will help you to develop the academic skills you need for graduate study in History of Art. It will facilitate the transition from undergraduate to postgraduate study, as well as helping you to engage with History of Art as a new discipline.
Optional modules
Optional modules can vary from year to year. Example optional modules may include:
- Research in Medieval and/or early Modern Art/Architectural History (taught in Venice)
- Research in Modern and/or Contemporary Art and Architecture (taught in Venice)
- Exhibiting the Contemporary (taught in Venice)
- East meets West: The Visual Arts in Colonial and Post-colonial India
- Leonardo: Art and Science
- Reality after Film
- Giotto and Assisi
- Colour and its Meaning