

MA Art History and Italian
About this course
Art history and Italian is a combination that brings two of the richest European cultural traditions into dialogue. Art history teaches you to analyse images and objects, developing visual literacy and the capacity to engage with different critical approaches and theoretical frameworks. You will explore the complex role that visual culture plays in questions of aesthetics, politics, power, and identity, and understand how art and its display have both reflected and shaped human history and experience. Italian, meanwhile, is the language of one of the greatest artistic civilisations the world has produced, from the Renaissance masters to the poetry of Dante, the operas of Verdi, and the cinema of Fellini. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time programme develops your ability to analyse the history, context, style, and meaning of images and objects alongside genuine proficiency in the Italian language. Your art history studies will range across periods and geographies, developing a theoretical and critical toolkit that allows you to approach works from any tradition with analytical rigour. Your Italian studies will build linguistic competence through grammar, reading, spoken language, and engagement with literature and cultural texts, situating the language within its social and historical context. A year abroad is built into the programme, giving you the opportunity to spend time in Italy, which is transformative both for your language development and your understanding of Italian cultural life encountered directly. The combination of Italian and art history is particularly natural, since so much of the foundational history of Western art is inseparable from Italian culture, patronage, and ideas. Graduates from art history and language programmes work in museums and galleries, heritage organisations, auction houses, arts journalism, cultural diplomacy, education, and the commercial art world, as well as in a wide range of roles where visual literacy and language skills are valued. Postgraduate study in art history, curating, or Italian studies is a common next step.
Syllabus & Modules
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