Special Subject: Study in Modern Art — Color

Description

Color cuts through several realms of human activity, present and past. As “qualia” (an aspect of experience rather than a measurable or material entity), it has posed intriguing problems for cultural practitioners and theorists for centuries. Color is philosophically understood as living in the mind, raising the question of whether or not it “belongs” to objects in the world. Beginning from a central discipline of art history (histories of pigments, materials, minerals, and values) we will also explore color in the contexts of: chemical innovation, conventional naming systems, racialized concepts, psychophysics, trade, empire, and industry. A sometimes anxiety-provoking discourse in art and architecture, color is today a huge industry that exists to stabilize chroma, standardize color, and capitalize on the branding capacities and emotional connotations of hue. We will explore the philosophy and practice of color across the history of art and architecture, and the instructor welcomes final research projects that support your own work.

This graduate-level seminar will have an undergraduate track and can be negotiated for variable credit.

4.s67 Syllabus (MIT certificate protected)

Subject Number
4.s67
Semester
Year
2024
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 15
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
Thesis
No
Cancelled
No
Instructors
Schedule
R 2-5
Location
5-216
Credits + Level
3-0-9
G