

MA History of Art/Mathematics
About this course
History of art and mathematics is an unusual pairing that rewards precisely because it brings together two quite different ways of understanding the world. History of art seeks to explain how and why paintings, sculptures, buildings, and works of design in a variety of media come to look the way they do. It is a discipline that combines close visual analysis with historical, social, and theoretical contextualisation, asking what objects meant to those who made and used them and what they mean to us now. Mathematics, by contrast, works through abstraction, proof, and the analysis of structure and pattern, developing a kind of rigorous thinking that is quite unlike the interpretive methods of the humanities. At the University of Glasgow you will study across four years on a full-time programme, with a year abroad that broadens both your art-historical and mathematical education in an international context. The history of art strand will develop your ability to look carefully and argue persuasively about visual and material culture, from antiquity through to the contemporary, engaging with a wide range of media and contexts. The mathematics strand will develop your analytical and quantitative capacities, covering pure and applied mathematics and the formal reasoning that distinguishes mathematical thinking from other intellectual disciplines. The combination is challenging and intellectually demanding, but it produces graduates with a genuinely distinctive profile: capable of rigorous analysis in both verbal and mathematical registers, comfortable with both interpretation and proof. The careers open to graduates of this combination are correspondingly diverse. Art museums, galleries, auction houses, and commercial art dealing draw on the art-historical training. Finance, data analysis, technology, and quantitative research draw on the mathematical skills. Teaching at secondary level in either subject is a well-supported direction. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in art history, mathematics, or fields that bridge the two, such as digital humanities or computational approaches to art history. Postgraduate study in law, management, or public policy is also a realistic direction for graduates who want to apply their analytical skills in professional contexts.
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