18 Art History

AP® Art History Volume 1

Smarthistory

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Volume 1 contains all of Smarthistory’s content for numbers 1-47 (Global Prehistory and the Ancient Mediterranean).

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

AP® Art History Volume 2

Smarthistory

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Volume 2 contains all of Smarthistory’s content for numbers 48 – 98 (Early Europe, Colonial Americas).

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

AP® Art History Volume 3

Smarthistory

2020

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Volume 3 contains all of Smarthistory’s content for numbers 99 – 152 (Later Europe, The Americas).

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 202

AP® Art History Volume 4

Smarthistory

2020

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Volume 4 contains all of Smarthistory’s content for numbers 153 – 191 (Indigenous Americas, Africa, West and Central Asia).

Format: PDF

AP® Art History Volume 5

Smarthistory

2020

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Volume 5 contains all of Smarthistory’s content for numbers 192 – 250 (South, East, and Southeast Asia, The Pacific, and Global Contemporary).

Format: PDF

Art Appreciation

Bruce Schwabach (Herkimer Community College)

2017

Licence: CC BY

Adaptation of the course Art Appreciation by Lumen Learning covering elements and principles of design, what is art, context and perspective, periods in art history, fine art media and technique, and researching, communicating and evaluating arts information.

Formats: Online, EPUB, PDF, and more

Art History I

Bruce Schwabach (Herkimer Community College)

2018

Licence: CC BY

History of Art Survey course covering from prehistoric art to the Italian Renaissance.

Formats: Online, EPUB, PDF, and more

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Art History II

Bruce Schwabach (Herkimer Community College)

2018

Licence: CC BY

Survey course covering from the Proto-Renaissance to Post-Colonialism.

Formats: Online, EPUB, PDF, and more

Suggested for: ARHI 202

Art History Teaching Resources (AHTR)

Edited by Francesca Albrezzi, Michelle Millar Fisher, Parme Giuntini, Naraelle Hohensee, Renee McGarry, Alysha Meloche, Karen Shelby, Kathleen Wentrack, and Mary Zawadzki

2011

Licence: CC BY-NC

Art History Teaching Resources (AHTR) is a peer-populated platform for educators who use visual and material culture in their teaching practice. Home to an evolving and collectively authored repository of open educational content, AHTR serves as a collaborative virtual community for art history instructors at all stages of their academic and professional careers. The website supports learning in the classroom, in the museum, and online by blending traditional and technological approaches to pedagogy. AHTR strives to create engaging materials to support instructors and help them improve students’ understanding of art history and its value.

Format: Online

Art in Revolution: Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture

Keri Cronin (Brock University)

2022

Licence: CC BY

This open access book is the culminating product of an open pedagogy assignment in VISA 2P90: Art in Revolution: Nineteenth-Century Visual Culture taught at Brock University during the Autumn 2021 semester. In this class we explored the ways in which images can shape and challenge dominant ideas and how some of the legacies of 19th-century imagery can have relevance for us today. Each week we worked through a number of case studies intended to dig deeper into issues surrounding art and visual culture from the 19th century. Students were required to submit a response for three of these case studies. These responses were due 2 weeks after the topic was explored class. Students had a choice to submit a written response or an artistic response. This book is a showcase of some of those responses.

This book is part of the Public Domain Core Collection which consists of a collection of public domain texts and a faculty guidebook for using those texts either as standalone resources or as the basis of open assignments.

Format: Online

Suggested for: ARHI 202

Artistic Responses to the Zong Massacre (1781)

Magalí Armillas-Tiseyra (PennState-University Park) and Robin Mary Bower (Penn State Beaver) 

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Suitable for introductory or humanities survey courses, this module offers teaching resources for a unit on the 1781 Zong massacre. It focuses on artistic responses to the massacre and on how the massacre is a representative event of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. The module includes artworks and texts that could be used in the classroom, discussion questions and activities, and a culminating writing prompt. This module invites students to reflect on the gaps in the colonial archive and to think about the role of art and literature in shaping understandings of historical events. It also provides students with an opportunity to recognize how the dehumanizing logic of slavery shaped modernity and how black artists challenge its legacy through their work.

Format: Word files downloadable as a .zip file (after completing the “Course Download Questionnaire”)

The Bright Continent: African Art History

Kathy Curnow (Cleveland State University)

2021

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

Through nearly 1000 images, it explores both “traditional” and “contemporary” African art through general discussion and specifics. The first chapter discusses materials, gender, training, and patronage. Chapter Two covers the elements and principles of design, as well as stylistic and contextual analysis. Chapter Three takes a thematic approach to African art, including numerous case studies. Chapter Four explores how religions—traditional, Christian, and Muslim—impact art and how different types of societies—nomadic, small-scale, and kingdom-based—favor varied arts. Appendices on note-taking and research are included. Maps.

Formats: Online, EPUB, MOBI, and PDF

CanadARThistories

Alena Buis (Langara College), Devon Smither (University of Lethbridge), Elizabeth Anne Cavaliere (OCADU and Queen’s University), Jen Kennedy (Queen’s University), Johanna Amos (Queen’s University), and Sarah E.K. Smith (Western University)

2022

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

CanadARThistories, a new online course and associated open learning objects, addresses growing concerns around inclusion, regionalism, Indigenization, and internationalization in art history curricula, and is conceived as a response to these ideas. The course highlights the rich visual and material culture of this land through a series of entries, written by subject experts, focusing on the artistic contributions of Indigenous and settler makers. It can be further shaped and reshaped to challenge and redistribute the traditional, chronological, and rigid narratives of Canadian art and to encourage learners to be co-constructors of knowledge.

The course supports a second-year undergraduate survey of art in Canada. Through thematic modules, diverse visual traditions and their intersections will be introduced, as will the changing roles of art in society. The thematic modules and suggested assignments will centre learners, engaging them in active learning practices and the creation of new learning objects and resources, while also developing critical and analytical skills central to the field of art histories.

Formats: Online, EPUB, and PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 301

Guide to Ancient Aegean Art

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book the Ancient Aegean, including Cycladic, Minoan, and Mycenaean art.

Format: PDF

Reviews: Open Textbook Library

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Ancient Egyptian Art

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers ancient Egyptian art.

Format: PDF

Reviews: Open Textbook Library

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Ancient Etruscan Art

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers ancient Etruscan art.

Format: PDF

Reviews: Open Textbook Library

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Ancient Greek Art

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers ancient Greek art.

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Ancient Near Eastern Art

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers Sumerian, Akkadian, Neo-Sumerian / Ur III, Babylonian, Assyrian and Persian art.

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Ancient Roman Art 

Ruth Ezra, Beth Harris, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2019

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers ancient Roman art.

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Byzantine Art

Edited by Evan Freeman and Anne McClanan (Smarthistory)

2021

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book covers Byzantine art.

Formats: Online, PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Italian Art in the 1300s

Matt Collins, Corey D’Augustine, David Drogin, Holly Flora, Beth Harris, Donna L. Sadler, Joanna Milk Mac Farland, Louisa Woodville, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2020

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book contains all of Smarthistory’s content for Italian art in the 1300s.

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Guide to Italian Art in the 1400s

Lisa Ackerman, David Boffa, Joseph Dauben, David Drogin, Lane Eagles, Heather Graham, Sally Hickson, Beth Harris, Heather A. Horton, Rebecca Howard, Elaine Hoysted, Ellen Hurst, Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank, Joanna Milk Mac Farland, Susan Nalezyty, Shannon Pritchard, Elizabeth Rodini, Lorenza Smith, Christine Zappella, and Steven Zucker (Smarthistory)

2020

Licence: CC BY-NC-SA

This book contains all of Smarthistory’s content for Italian art in the 1400s.

Format: PDF

Suggested for: ARHI 201

Introduction to Art: Design, Context, and Meaning

Pamela J. Sachant, Peggy Blood, Jeffery LeMieux, and Rita Tekippe (University of North Georgia Press)

2016

Licence: CC BY-SA

Introduction to Art: Design, Context, and Meaning offers a comprehensive introduction to the world of Art. Authored by four faculty members with advanced degrees in the arts, this textbook offers up-to-date original scholarship. It includes over 400 high-quality images illustrating the history of art, its technical applications, and its many uses. Combining the best elements of both a traditional textbook and a reader, it introduces such issues in art as its meaning and purpose; its meaning and purpose; its structure, material, and form; and its diverse effects on our lives. 

Format: PDF

Modernism and the Spiritual in Russian Art: New Perspectives

Sebastian Borkhardt (University of Tübingen), Jennifer Brewen (University of Cambridge), Ninba Gurianova (Northwestern University), Louise Hardiman (ed.), Myroslava Mudrak (The Ohio State University), Nicola Kozicharow (ed.) (University of Cambridge), Natalia Murray (The Courtauld Institute of Art), Wendy Salmond (Chapman University), Oleg Tarasov (Russian Academy of Sciences), Maria Taroutina (Yale-NUS College)

2018

Licence: CC BY
This diverse collection of essays introduces new and stimulating approaches to the ongoing debate as to how Russian artistic modernism engaged with questions of spirituality in the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries. Ten chapters from emerging and established voices offer new perspectives on Kandinsky and other familiar names, such as Kazimir Malevich, Mikhail Larionov, and Natalia Goncharova, and introduce less well-known figures, such as the Georgian artists Ucha Japaridze and Lado Gudiashvili, and the craftswoman and art promoter Aleksandra Pogosskaia.

Format: PDF

A Quick and Dirty Guide to Art, Music, and Culture

Clayton Funk (The Ohio State University)

2016

Licence: CC BY

This is a guidebook to a web resource of Artist and Musician biographies (http://aaep1600.osu.edu). We discuss art and music in the context of popular culture, so chances are you will see relationships between art and music and what you are learning and the way you live, to connect them to your own experience.

Format: Online, PDF, MOBI, EPUB

Where Does Art Come From?

Leah McCurdy

2022

Licence: CC BY

Who am I? What is beautiful? Where do babies come from? These questions populate our lives and inform our perceptions of the world. Explore these questions according to the expressions of artists from all over the world. Go beyond Western art to consider where art comes from and how it impacts all of us.

Format: Online, PDF, EPUB

A World Perspective of Art Appreciation

Deborah Gustlin and Zoe Gustlin (Evergreen Valley College)

2020

Licence: CC BY

Art appreciation is centered on the ability to view art throughout history, focusing on the cultures and the people, and how art developed in the specific periods. You cannot understand art without understanding the culture, their use of materials and sense of beauty. Art is also conveyed by the simple act of creating art for art’s sake. Every person is born with the innate desire to create art and similar to other professions, training is essential in honing skills to produce art.

Formats: Online and PDF

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

OER by Discipline Guide: Athabasca University Copyright © 2023 by Dan Cockcroft is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book