The most student-friendly, contextual, and inclusive art history survey text on the market. For single term courses in Art History or Art Appreciation taught from a historical perspective with coverage of non-Western material. A Brief History provides a combination of formal analysis and contextual art history designed to engage a diverse student population. Co-authors Marilyn Stokstad and Michael Cothren–both scholars as well as teachers–share a common vision that survey courses should be filled with as much enjoyment as erudition and should foster an enthusiastic, as well as an educated, public for the visual arts. The new Fifth Edition includes links to online resources in MyArtsLab to further engage students and enrich their learning experience. Teaching and Learning Experience Personalize Learning - The new MyArtsLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals. Improve Critical Thinking- The new Learn About It and Think About It features prompts students to think critically and analyze the chapter material. Engage Students- Updated scholarship, MyArtsLab, and the readability of the text provide a wonderful engaging student experience. Explore Research- The authors constantly strive to deliver the latest research in the field of Art History, and the utilization of the Closer Look integrates this research with specific images and works of art. Support Instructors- Supported by the best instructor resources on the market, including MyArtsLab, ClassPrep for digital images, and Teaching with MyArtsLab PowerPoints make A Brief History an attractive choice for instructors. MyArtsLab does not come automatically packaged with this text. To purchase MyArtsLab, please www.MyArtsLab.com or you can purchase a valuepack of the text + MyArtsLab (at no additional cost): VP 0205237339/ VP 9780205237333
For an endeavour to frame the big picture of art history in more than six hundred pages, such a book is appropriate inasmuch as formal analyses are thoroughly written along with a good quality of exemplification. Providing a wide range of knowledge for especially students as well as art enthusiasts, Art: A Brief History is a great starting-point to adventure into arts from the past, sailing to contemporary arts and perhaps, linking to the future. Anyhow, the book still has its flaws from my personal perspective. A few unclear classifications of renowned pieces (such as chapter 18 of European and American Art from 1840 to 1910) and a multitude of definitions are far more complex than they should be. ___ Quyển sách đắt đỏ mình quằn quại mua cho môn Lịch Sử Nghệ Thuật và bây giờ thì không hối hận. Thời gian học cũng không đủ trải đều cho từng chương nên mình cố gắng đọc bù lại ở nhà. Quyển sách to, xem tranh rất đã, tới nỗi ban đầu còn say sưa xem tưởng như là đang đứng trước tranh thật (xong về sau tụt hứng một tẹo vì là tranh in sai màu cũng nhiều, mà cũng không trách được); dày cộm nhưng vẫn là ít ỏi để đi sâu vào bất kì điều gì, vẫn là một nền tảng tốt để tích cóp thêm kiến thức cho những quyển sau này đọc. Vì cùng đọc với bài giảng của giảng viên nên nhận ra là có một vài chi tiết, cách định nghĩa có vẻ quá phức tạp (đúng kiểu học thuật). Khi tự đọc thì một số phân loại tranh vào thời kì vẫn khiến mình bối rối (cũng chỉ có thể cân nhắc do sách được tham khảo từ nhiều nguồn khác nhau); về Nghệ Thuật Đương Đại, đối với mình thì có chút dư thừa khi nói về quá nhiều tác phẩm mà thật sự vẫn cần thời gian để minh chứng cho giá trị của chúng.
Một quyển sách tốt để giữ làm của như bách khoa toàn thư ấy, khi nào cần ôn lại điều gì cũng có thể tìm thấy (hầu hết) thứ mình cần.
Very good and comprehensive overview over Western art and its main influences from prehistoric times until recent days. I find the book well-structured, easy to follow and adequately illustrated. The small boxes with additional information on techniques or details of a specific artwork are a great addition. The detailed glossary in the back is very helpful for an art history student like me.
The chapters about Central and South American as well as African art are both quite short and cover only a very generalised overview over some of the most known art, craft and architecture. Enough to kindle curiosity for more detailed literature on the subjects.
When I was undergraduating, many moons ago, the standard art history text was H.W. Janson's A Basic History of Art. It lacked color photos (except for a few plates), non-Western art for the most part, and ignored women artists. But when my daughter took an introductory art history course, Janson was replaced by Art: A Brief History by Marlyn Stokstad, perhaps the new standard. It's much more multi-cultural (Asian art, African art, Islamic art, and Art of the Americas are developed at great length now). And women artists are included now both in text and picture. That's the good news. Now the bad news. Very bad news. The omissions by Stokstad in regards modern art are numerous and quite unbelievable. NOWHERE in this 400 page volume can you find any mention of these major artists of the Twentieth Century: Max Ernst, Francis Picabia, Giorgio DeChirico, Oskar Kokoschka, Max Beckman, Georges Roualt, Gustav Klimt, Alberto Giacometti, Henri Cartier- Bresson, Rene Magritte, Pierre Bonnard, Amadeo Modigliani, Chaim Soutine, Man Ray, Arshile Gorky, Edouard Vuillard, Juan Gris, Balthus, Marc Chagall, and Kurt Schwitters. Paul Klee is only mentioned in passing as a teacher in the Bauhuas. Yikes! No mention of the women artists Anni Albers, Hilma af Klint, Joan Mitchell, Berenice Abbott, Yayoi Kusama, Louise Bourgeois, Diane Arbus, Nancy Graves, and Agnes Martin. No mention of post-war artists as Barnett Newman, Robert Motherwell, Clifford Still, Franz Kline, Hans Hoffman, Ad Reinhardt, Morris Louis, Frank Stella, Lucian Freud, Joseph Albers, or Brice Marden, among others. INSTEAD we get such artists as Joseph Kosuth, Hugo Ball, Judith F. Baca, Wenda Gu, Jennifer Steinkamp, Jenny Holzer, Faith Ringgold, Miriam Schapiro, Bruce Nauman, Yves Klein, Roland Barthes, Emily Carr, Marianne Brandt, and Emmy Hennings.
تعداد کتاب های تاریخ هنری که خوندم انگشت شمارن و بیشتر با مستند با این موضوع برخورد داشتم. در بین همین چند کتاب تاریخ هنر اما، این بهترینشون بود. تنوعی که کتاب داره واقعا عالیه. زمان های مختلف، کشور های متنوع، و همینطور سبک های بسیار زیاد. کتاب به این هم توجه میکنه که توی سبک هایی که میگه حتما حداقل یک هنرمند زن رو معرفی کنه. حتی انواع هنرهایی که توی کتاب اشاره شدن هم بسیار متنوع بودن. اما خب این قدر تنوع یه نکته منفی داره که اون هم فشرده بودن مطالب و اشاره کردن به بعضی مباحثه. تعداد زیادی از هنرمندهای بسیار مهم و تاثیر گذار فقط یک اثر ازشون توی کتاب هست. برای همین این اثر برای بررسی کل تاریخ هنر عالیه اما برای جزئیات نیاز به سرچ یا مطالعه کتاب های دیگه حتما حس میشه.
This is a good introduction to art history for someone (like me) who needs to get a bit acquainted with terminology and different schools. Perhaps not the most inspiring reading - but it is a comprehensive volume with a lot of information.
Last year I originally took Art History because it was an art requirement. I had taken a ceramics class the year before and realized that not only can I not make ceramic materials well, but I didn't really enjoy it. But when I got into Art History, I realized that I could appreciate art all day. I know it may seem silly that I'm reviewing an Art History textbook, but this one of my favorite textbooks I've ever had. The amazing detail and the interesting facts the textbook gave made Art History so fun (I also have to give credit to my amazing teacher!)!
I could look at all the Western art found in this book all day. From the Hellenistic art piece Laocoon and His Sons, to Caravaggios's Calling of St. Matthew, to Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon or Guernica, to Dali's Persistence of Memory. This textbook definitely tries its best to be faithful to the composition of the original art pieces it displays (but it's definitely not the same as actually seeing the art pieces!). I'd definitely purchase this book just to read it in my spare time; appreciating art is actually calming. It definitely boosts your cognitive processes.
Art can be anything: from telling a story well, to having a good speech, to how to wear your hair. Stokstad is ignorant enough to feel "I know it all", and instead of restricting it to let's say "one armed, three eyed statues made in late Hellenic style", Stokstad gives a "brief" history of everything. Is it crap? Of course, but because Stokstad did not have the time to write it all, right?
I was never that much into art until one day an artist friend said to me:
Corrine: Kellie, let me explain it to you this way: art is a physical manifestation of the artists opinion, emotion, desire, hunger...what have you. You are not a plebeian if you don't like a piece of art. That is not it's purpose. Art has only one purpose: to make you FEEL something. Anger, happiness, disgust, desire, sadness, elation. If you, as an observer, feel ANYTHING, then the artist has done his or her job.
Oh, that Corrine-she is a wise woman. I actually have favourite artists now: Mark Ryden, Ray Caesar, Marion Peck just to name a few.
This is one of my favorite textbooks this quarter. The images were stunningly clear and the composition accompanying them were just enough to evoke a bit of history of the piece and artist as well as its tie to that particular era in history. Granted, the version we used was specifically for MCC, but it was perfect for a quarter-long class. I found myself reading quickly through each chapter and anticipating the coming chapters.
Ultra-Readable. An excellent, high-quality textbook. One of the best I've read. It has as many beautiful, glossy images as you could wish for in an art history book and the writing is very enjoyable.
This of course was a book for school, but I always find myself going back to it to remind myself of things because it has a lot of good works and artists in it.