Summer Courses
AH0831
(non-credit)
Learn how to look at and appreciate the variety of styles, media, and subjects of modern and contemporary art.
AH0850
(non-credit)
Examine sculpture in the nation’s capital as an expression of nationalism, civic pride, and freedom of expression.
AH0860
(non-credit)
Explore the lives and works of 20th century female artists who broke away from traditional women’s roles to make significant contributions to Modern (and Postmodern) Art.
AH3393
(3.0 credits or audit)
This intensive one-week seminar examines the major monuments, memorials, and museums of Washington, D.C. as well as their social, political, and historical significance.
AH3394
(3.0 credits or audit)
This immersive one-week seminar examines the role of the visual arts in representing aspects of the Civil War then and now. (Undergraduate)
AH4410
(3.0 credits)
Since the early twentieth-century, mass-produced objects or interior complexes assembled with specific design vocabularies have stimulated a major consumer industry, mediated by sales and marketing strategies that intentionally appeal to the broadest possible clientele.
AH6393
(3.0 credits)
This intensive one-week seminar examines the major monuments, memorials, and museums of Washington, D.C. as well as their social, political, and historical significance. (Graduate level)
AH6394
(3.0 credits)
This immersive one-week seminar examines the role of the visual arts in representing aspects of the Civil War then and now. (Graduate Level)
AH6410
(3.0 credits)
Since the early twentieth-century, mass-produced objects or interior complexes assembled with specific design vocabularies have stimulated a major consumer industry, mediated by sales and marketing strategies that intentionally appeal to the broadest possible clientele.
AH7531
(3.0 credits)
Learn how the modern suburb developed and flourished in the period following World War II. (Graduate level)
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