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HUM 20 Info Session with Prof. Yukio Lippit

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Monday, August 22, 2022 10:30am to 11:30am

A blue background with 12 details from works of art, including Albrecht Dürer's self portrait, Maya Lin's design for the Vietnam War Memorial, a daguerreotype of Frederick Douglass, a detail of the Green Tara painting from Reting monastery, Eadweard Muybridge's animal locomotion studies, and a view of ancient Persepolis. White letters read "HUM 20."

Event Dates

Monday, August 22, 2022 10:30am to 11:30am

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Calling all Harvard undergraduates! Want to learn more about HUM20, HAA’s dynamic introduction to the humanities? Attend the info session with Professor Yukio Lippit Monday, August 22nd at 10:30 AM. Zoom link is available on the course site in Canvas.

Course description:

Our course is an introduction to the study of the humanities through major works of art and architecture from around the world, taught by five members of the Harvard faculty. The course was specially created for students focusing on the humanities or interested in a wide-ranging introduction to works of art and architecture and the many issues they embody.

Each week immerses students in the cultural and imaginary world of an artwork, whether it be a Japanese woodblock print by Hokusai, a daguerreotype of Frederick Douglass, a Mughal court painting from India, a woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, Maya Lin’s design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the scientific illustrations of Robert Hooke’s Micrographia, Max Beckmann’s self-portrait, or the animal locomotion photography of Eadweard Muybridge. Each week, an artwork is introduced during a 75-minute lecture. Then, students attend a weekly looking lab, where they develop skills of visual observation, analysis, and description. The looking lab is followed by a discussion section where ideas from the lecture, looking lab, and selected readings will be explored further.

Humanities 20 teaches students what it means to engage deeply with an artwork, and how to think through that artwork about large questions. The course will consider: the relationship between race, visuality, and social justice; modernism; monuments and cultural memory; encounters between cultures; the relationship between art and science and time; artworks and the expression of religious beliefs; and how different cultures have thought about life, death, and the beginning of the world. The readings emphasize engagement with primary source texts which include artists’ statements, manifestoes, art criticism, religious narratives, and history.

Please contact nrosengarten@g.harvard.edu with any questions regarding the info session.

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