Teaching in Early Modern
The courses offered change from year to year, but recent early modern offerings have included:
BA1 Courses
- Looking at the Overlooked: an introduction to early modern still life
Taught by Thomas Balfe - Display as Discourse: Persian Manuscripts in London Collections
Taught by Melanie Gibson (2016-17) and Sussan Babaie (2013- ) - The Possibilities of Portraiture
Taught by Naomi Lebens - Hogarth in London
Taught by John Chu - Rubens in Paint and Paper
Taught by Caroline Rae
BA2 Courses
- From Shiraz to Beijing: Persian Arts in the Global Fifteenth Century
Taught by Sussan Babaie, Melanie Gibson and George Manginis - Arts in Italy 1580-1680: Mass Culture, Innovation and Censorship
Taught by Sheila McTighe, Anita Sganzerla and Giulia Weston - Power and Patronage: Buildings, Books and the Courtly Arts for the House of Timur
Taught by Sussan Babaie
BA3 Courses
- Mughal Painting 1555-1748
Taught by Ursula Weekes - Representing Nature in Early Modern Europe
Taught by Thomas Balfe - Caravaggio & Caravaggism in 17th-century Painting
Taught by Sheila McTighe
Postgraduate Diploma
- Rococo to Revolution: Painting and Sculpture in France c.1715-1790
Taught by Katie Scott - Seventeenth-century Art in Italy, Spain and France
Taught by Sheila McTighe
MA
- Art, Object, Sense: Crossings in the Anthropology and Art History – the case of eighteenth-century France
Taught by Katie Scott - Bodies of Knowledge in the Early Modern Netherlands, c. 1540 – c. 1660
Taught by Joanna Woodall - Made in Britain: Forging a Visual Art for a Nation at War, 1793-1815
Taught by David Solkin and Mark Hallett - Modernity and Antiquity in British Architecture, 1615-1815
Taught by Christine Stevenson - Persian Painting and Transcultural Visuality: from the Mongols to the Safavids (14th-17th Centuries)
Taught by Sussan Babaie - Print Culture and the Early Modern Arts in Italy, France and Spain
Taught by Sheila McTighe