Art/Philosophy 395:
20th CENTURY ART AND PHILOSOPHY IN DIALOGUE

Spring, 1999

Professors: Jenny Anger and Alan Schrift
Office: Steiner 311   Steiner 311
Office Phone: 4472   3161
E-mail: anger@grinnell.edu   schrift@grinnell.edu
Office Hours: MW 1:30-3:00   MW 1:30-3:00
Return to Index of Philosophy Syllabi
Return to Department of Philosophy Home Page
Return to Alan Schrift Home Page

Required Texts

Course Requirements

Schedule

Required Texts

Jacques Derrida Truth in Painting
Michel Foucault This Is Not a Pipe
Wassily Kandinsky Concerning the Spiritual in Art
Robert Morris Continuous Project, Altered Daily
Steven Ross, ed. Art and Its Significance
Cruz, Smith, and Jones Cindy Sherman Retrospective

In addition to these texts, a copy packet of required readings is available at the Bookstore.

Return to top of page

Course Description

In this course, we will examine a number of the ways that philosophy and modern art have come into dialogue with each other. These dialogues have taken many different forms: philosophers have written about artists and their works, artists have appropriated the ideas of philosophers and created works that are indirectly and in some cases directly inspired by their readings of philosophers, art historians have used the ideas of philosophers to interpret artistic works, art historians have responded to philosophical commentaries on artistic works, artists and philosophers have collaborated on joint works. Through the semester, we will read textual documents and examine slides of the relevant works; we will also explore how art-historical and philosophical training and "prejudices" lead to different views on both the art and philosophy.

Course Requirements

This course is organized as a seminar, which means that active student participation is both expected and required. There will be a good deal of reading, and students will be expected to do all of the assigned reading and to come to class ready to discuss and/or ask questions about what they read. Formal work for the class will include the following:

1. Two Seminar Presentations-done in teams of two students (15%/20%):
     
  The seminar presentation will consist of a 3-5 page written summary of the reading assigned for class. This summary should be done in time to be duplicated for the members of the class, and will be read in class. In addition to summarizing the assigned reading, the written summary can (and should) raise questions for discussion. These questions can be exegetical (e.g., "what does Heidegger mean when he defines art as 'the happening of truth'?"), critical (e.g., "is Sherman's critique of representation ultimately more effective than Morris's or Lyotard's"?), or associative/comparative (e.g., "in what ways have the German expressionist painters understood, and how have they misunderstood, Nietzsche's philosophical position?").
     
2. Term Paper: 18-20 page research paper, due May 11. (35%) These papers are to be co-written with another student. No extensions will be granted except for medical emergency. The topic for this paper will be determined by the students in consultation with the instructors. In connection with this final paper, keep in mind the following requirements/deadlines:
     
  April 8: turn in a one-paragraph description of topic with annotated bibliography.
     
  April 15: turn in detailed outline.
     
  April 22: turn in 4 copies (two anonymous) of a 5-page thesis statement that describes your project in some detail. Two copies will be evaluated by the instructors, and two copies will be evaluated by fellow students.
     
  April 27: turn in comments on one another's thesis statements (copy final page summary and submit this to the instructors).
     
  May 11: Paper Due.
     
3. Seminar Report: a 15-20 minute summary presentation of your final paper (15%).
     
4. Position Papers/Class Participation: each week that you don't make a seminar presentation, submit on Thursday a one-page typed commentary on some aspect of the reading of that week. These papers will be graded and will comprise a part of your overall seminar participation grade component Alternatively, you may choose to submit via email (to ANGER and SCHRIFT) by 9:00 am two questions that will generate thoughtful discussion. (15%)

The final grade will be determined on the basis of these assignments and general performance in class during the course of the semester.

Return to top of page

Tentative Course Outline

Date Assignment
   
Jan. 26: Introduction
  Foucault, This Is not a Pipe
Jan. 28: Foucault, This Is not a Pipe
   
Feb. 2: Kant, Analytic of the Beautiful in Ross, pp. 95-113
Feb. 4: Kant, Discussion
   
Feb. 9: Derrida, "Parergon" pp. 34-82 in Truth in Painting
Feb. 11: Discussion of Derrida
   
Feb. 16: Kandinsky, Concerning the Spiritual in Art
  Greenberg, "The Modernist Painting" (handout)
Feb. 18: Du Duve, "Kant After Duchamp" (copy)
   
Feb. 23: Nietzsche, selections from Thus Spoke Zarathustra (copy) and Birth of Tragedy in Ross (162-167), Birth of Tragedy (sections 3-5; handout), Attempt at a Self-Criticism in Ross (168-178), Gay Science (handout), Twilight of the Idols (copy), On the Genealogy of Morals (handout)
Feb. 25: Jill Lloyd, selection from German Expressionism: Primitivism and Modernity (copy)
   
Mar. 2: Video
  Morris, Chapters 1-6,
Mar. 4: Morris, Chapter 13-14
   
Mar. 9: Foster, "The Crux of Minimalism" (copy)
  Chave, "Minimalism and the Rhetoric of Power" (handout)
Mar. 11: To be Decided
   
Mar. 16: Heidegger, "On the Origin of the Work of Art" in Ross, 254-280
Mar. 18: Schapiro, Selections (copy)
   
Mar.19-Apr.5 Spring Vacation
   
Apr. 6: Derrida, "Restitutions" from Truth in Painting, pp. 256-323
Apr. 8: Derrida, "Restitutions" pp. 323-382
  Description and Bibliography Due.
   
Apr. 13: Foucault, "Las Meninas" in Ross, pp. 440-454
Apr. 15: Lyotard, "The Sublime and the Avant Garde" (copy)
  Outline Due.
   
Apr. 20: Owens, "The Discourse of Other: Feminists and Postmodernism" in Ross, pp. 591-598
  Cruz and Smith essays in Cindy Sherman Retrospective
Apr. 22: Jones essay in Cindy Sherman Retrospective
  Thesis Statement Due
   
Apr. 27: Student Reports
Apr. 29: Student Reports
   
May 4: Student Reports
May 6:  
   
May 11: Student Reports
May 13:  
   
May 11: Final Paper Due

Return to top of page