As a Chapman Art History student, you will learn useful and necessary reading, thinking, and speaking skills that will facilitate a critical engagement with art and culture. Our program is founded on the principal that art is a vital feature of visual and material culture, especially in relation to the politics of space, place and representation. The capacity to critically examine how the visual world shapes, creates, and constitutes our reality, and the ability to articulate those concepts, is deeply consequential. The B.A. in Art History allows students to develop and master the ability to understand images of all kinds through a close examination of the visual and material world.
Our faculty are deeply invested in teaching students how to write and speak effectively about the visual world around them. The Art History curriculum broadly spans time and geography, with specialists in the fields of: European and American modernism; Ancient Mediterranean culture; Latin American visual and material culture; and East Asian art.
(Pictured right: Art History students and faculty)
Our Art History faculty: Wendy Salmond is a specialist in Russian and early Soviet art, architecture and design; Justin St. P. Walsh is a specialist in ancient Greek and Roman art, cultural heritage protection, and the archaeology of human activity in space; Amy Buono is a specialist in Brazilian and transatlantic visual and material culture and museum history and theory; Fiona Shen, a specialist in design history, East Asian art, and museum studies and is the Director of the Escalette Permanent Collection of Art at Chapman University.
The Escalette Collection, which focuses on modern and contemporary art, is an accessible and engaging resource for the campus community. The Collection supports class learning and research in many ways including tours of the permanent collection, temporary exhibitions, and access to artworks. Student opportunities include working with the collection as a collections assistant, volunteering as an art ambassador, contributing to the acquisitions process, and helping curate physical and virtual exhibitions.
The B.A. in Art History offers students opportunities to explore a wide range of careers and professions. Among many career options open to them, Art History students go on to become curators, conservators, art restorers, art dealers, art auctioneers, architects and architectural historians, teachers and professors, cultural heritage workers, journalists, filmmakers, game design consultants, and lawyers, to name only a selection.
Art History majors pursue internships in a wide array of cultural institutions across Southern California and the United States, and help build professional networks that assist them upon graduation. Our students have interned at: Philadelphia Museum of Art; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; American Museum of Ceramic Art; Sotheby’s Los Angeles; Laguna Beach Museum; Bowers Museum; Orange County Museum of Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Art; New Orleans Museum of Art; Patrick Painter Gallery; Hauser & Wirth Gallery.
Fall 2024 course offerings in Art History:
- AH 200 Ancient to Medieval Art M W 2:30–4:50 p.m. (Walsh)
- AH 201 Renaissance to Modern Art T TH 10:30–11:45 a.m. (Solon)
- AH 229 The Arts of Africa, Oceania, and Indigenous North America M 4–6:50 p.m. (Carnahan)
- AH 300 Egyptian Art M W 10:30-11:45 a.m. (Walsh)
- AH 330 19th Century T TH 1–2:15 p.m. (Salmond)
- AH 334 Soviet/Post-Soviet Art T TH 2:30–3:45 p.m. (Salmond)
- AH 335 Theories of Modernism T TH 10:30-11:45 a.m. (Salmond)
- AH 337 Cultures of Outer Space M W 1–2:15 p.m. (Walsh)
- AH 340 Contemporary Art: 1945-1970 M W 9–10:15 a.m. (Staff)