The faculty and students of the Department of
Art History and Archaeology form a dynamic core within a major
research university. The faculty offer a diverse selection of
courses in the art and archaeology of Europe, Asia, Africa,
and the Americas. Within this global range one finds a stimulating
variety of individual faculty interests, extending to field
archaeology, feminist interpretation, connoisseurship, iconological
scholarship, codicology, semiotics, reception theory, and cultural
contextual analysis. The faculty members are scholars and teachers,
readily available to students and genuinely concerned to provide
guidance from the student's first year to the last draft of
the doctoral dissertation.
Campus Resources
The Art Library, located on the second floor of
the Art/Sociology Building, contains a collection of approximately
100,000 volumes.
The Visual Resources Center, on the fourth floor of the Art/Sociology Building, houses 300,000 slides and 12,000 digital images. The Center has developed a data base for
images in the Department and on the internet. The University
Art Gallery contains a permanent holding of twentieth-century
American paintings and prints, as well as a collection of traditional
African sculpture.
For hands-on study of archaeological artifacts
the Department houses the Lloyd and Jeanne Raport Collection,
the Slator Clay Blackiston, Jr. Collection, and the Richard
R. Redinger Collection. These study collections contain objects
from ancient Egypt, Palestine, Greece, Rome, Pre-Columbian America,
and Africa.
Washington Resources
In addition to the resources offered by the university
are the artistic and research institutions in the Washington
D.C. (The campus is eight miles from the Capitol Building.)
The National Gallery of Art is one of the world's great museums
and also the site of the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual
Arts, with its research facilities and its changing group of
visiting art historians; the Center's library comprises about
250,000 volumes and a vast assortment of auxiliary material,
while its photo archive includes one-and-a-half million photographs
plus a far greater number of microfiche images. An authoritative
survey of modern art, frequently punctuated by exciting exhibits
of contemporary work, is found at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture
Garden. The permanent collection of the Corcoran Gallery is
also augmented by news-making temporary shows. The National
Portrait Gallery and the National Museum of American Art are
unique repositories of the painting and sculpture of the United
States; the latter museum administers the Archives of American
Art. The Phillips Collection displays masterpieces of nineteenth-
and twentieth-century painting. Two adjacent museums, the National
Museum of African Art and the Freer and Sackler Galleries, devoted
to the arts of Asia, display large holdings.
The new National Museum of the American Indian highlights Native American cultures. The work of women
artists is celebrated at The National Museum of Women in the
Arts. Dumbarton Oaks, in Georgetown, has substantial collections
in Byzantine and Pre-Columbian art, and superb research centers
for the advanced study of those fields and of the history of
landscape architecture; included at Dumbarton Oaks is the Princeton
Index of Christian Art, an invaluable tool for the study of
Christian iconography. The Museum of National History contains
the art of many tribal cultures. The Textile Museum presents
examples of cloth art from around the world, with particular
emphasis on Asia, the Middle East, Egypt and Latin America.
The Renwick Gallery mounts distinguished showings of design,
crafts and folk art. Architectural history is the theme of the
exhibition programs of the National Building Museum, which is
in the dramatic Old Pension Building, and the galleries of the
American Institute of Architects, which are in the Octagon House,
an architectural gem dating from the Federal period.
Beyond organizations primarily devoted to the
visual arts, the Washington area is home for a miscellaneous
wealth of study resources useful to art historians according
to their individual needs. Foremost among these is the Library
of Congress, perhaps the world's largest library. Of diverse
interest are the Folger Shakespeare Library, the National Archives
(large portions of which are now located adjacent to the College
Park campus) or the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of American
History, with its assortment of artifacts related to the history
of technology and popular culture.
Baltimore Resources
In Baltimore, about thirty minutes from College
Park, important collections are located at the Baltimore Museum
of Art, with objects ranging from antiquity to major examples
of contemporary art and work in non-Western traditions, and
The Walters Art Gallery, offering a similarly broad historical
scope and housing an outstanding collection of medieval manuscripts.
Lesser-known Baltimore art institutions include the Peale Museum,
established by Rembrandt Peale and recognized as America's oldest
museum, and the art collections of the Peabody Institute and
the Maryland Historical Society.
New Technologies
Maryland is in the forefront of exploring new
technological resources for art historical teaching and research.
As a partner in the Getty Museum Educational Site Licensing
Project, Maryland helped develop sophisticated search mechanisms
for the on-line teaching and study of art. A number of classes
are taught in the AT&T Teaching Theater and graduate students
are encouraged to consider the ramifications of teaching art
in this new way.
Graduate Studies
The Department offers two graduate degrees: the
Master of Arts and the Doctor of Philosophy. The M.A. program
is designed to provide a sound knowledge of art history, essential
bibliography, and basic methods of research. The Ph.D. program
trains scholars to pursue advanced research in more specific
areas of study. In addition to the departmental conditions,
all pertinent requirements of the University of Maryland Graduate
School must be met; please consult the Graduate School Catalogue
for those stipulations. Interested students may call Deborah Down at: 301-405-1487, or e-mail ddown@umd.edu.
Application for Admission
Applications for admission and for financial support
are accepted for the fall semester only. A Graduate School application form must be received no later than midnight December 10, 2007. Supporting documentation, which includes a statement of experiences and research interests,
three letters of recommendation, transcripts from all colleges
and universities attended, a recent research paper, and Graduate
Record Examination scores must be received no later than midnight December 21, 2007. TOEFL scores are required for all
non-native English speakers and should be included with supporting documentation. Applicants are strongly encouraged
to use the on-line application process at http://www.vprgs.umd.edu/gss/admission.htm.
All application materials that are in hard copy should be mailed to:
University of Maryland College Park
Enrollment Services Operations
Application for Graduate Admission
0130 Mitchell Building
College Park, Maryland 20742
Applications will be carefully reviewed by the
Departmental Graduate Admissions Committee. All aspects of the
application will be considered, including background, academic
strength, recommendations, and the professional plans of the
applicant. Admission to the program is very competitive. Many
factors influence the decision, including the availability of
the professor to work with a prospective student.
Applicants judged insufficiently prepared in specific
areas may be required to audit additional courses. Students
intending to concentrate in African art, Asian art, Native American
art, or other highly specialized fields and possessing a strong
academic background in those subjects but little training in
the history of Western art may be admitted to the graduate program
with the provision that they, in consultation with their advisor,
audit without credit a number of undergraduate courses in art
history sufficient to prepare themselves for colloquia and seminars
in other fields.
Financial Aid
The Graduate School offers Recruitment Fellowships
for students entering the University.
Four Department of Art History and Archaeology
Museum Fellowships, which have stipends equal to Graduate School
assistantships and fellowships, are awarded each semester and
are renewable for a second semester. The Department has also
initiated the Frank Di Federico Fellowship, in memory of Professor
Di Federico, to provide support for research and work on the
doctoral dissertation.
In addition, the Department awards approximately
seventeen graduate assistantships each academic year and five
or more additional assistantships in the summer. Assistantships
are usually awarded for one year at a time and are not automatically
renewed, although the normal tenure for assistantships is two
years at the M.A. level and four years at the Ph.D. level. A
graduate assistant must meet the Graduate School requirements
for full registration (48 units per semester, as explained in
the Graduate School Catalogue).
An applicant to the graduate program wishing financial
assistance should so indicate on the admissions form. All fellowships
and assistantships granted in the Department provide a stipend
and remission of tuition; assistantships also carry health insurance.
In honor of its former chair, the Department has
established the George Levitine Art History Endowment, a heavily
funded source of support for research activities of both faculty
and graduate students, providing finances for travel, photographs
and other materials as well as for visiting scholars and symposia.
The Graduate School and the Department also make available to
Ph.D. candidates assistance for travel expenses required by
the presentation of papers at scholarly conferences.
The student may wish to apply for financial assistance
from outside sources. Our graduate students have competed successfully
for grants from the Kress Foundation, the Fulbright Program,
the American School of Classical Studies, the Smithsonian Institution,
the National Gallery of Art and other funding organizations.
The Department's Coordinator of Fellowships can assist in locating
and applying for outside grants.
Advising
A temporary adviser will be assigned to a new
student until the student has chosen a field of concentration
and has obtained the agreement of a professor to supervise his/her
work. At that time that professor will become the student's
adviser. The student should be in touch with his/her adviser
regularly and may not register for courses without the permission
of the adviser and/or the Graduate Program Coordinator.
Language Examinations
The language examinations at both the M.A. and
Ph.D. levels are administered by the Department and are designed
to test the student's ability to use a language as an effective
scholarly tool. Students needing additional preparation are
urged to register for an intensive language course the summer
or year preceding entry into the art history program. The language
examinations are offered each semester during the first week
of classes. Entering students must take their examination(s)
the first semester they register. If the examination is not
taken during the first semester of registration, it will be
considered an unsuccessful attempt. Should any student fail
the examination, another opportunity to pass it will be given
the following semester. If the examination is failed a second
time, the student will not be allowed to register for credit
after that semester. Resumption of the program may be accomplished
by passing the examination at a later time.
Language examinations consist of a passage approximately
500 words in length. Students will be asked to translate the
passage, with the use of a dictionary, within two hours. The
examinations are read by two or more members of the graduate
faculty. They are graded pass or fail. Past examinations may
be consulted in the Department of Art History and Archaeology
Office.
Program Evaluation
The academic achievement of all M.A. and Ph.D.
students is evaluated by the Graduate Faculty at the end of
each semester. Exceptional students will be commended and recommended
for fellowships or assistantships if that is appropriate. Programmatic
or academic deficiencies noted by the faculty will be reported
to a student by the advisor or Director of Graduate Studies.
A student whose performance is deemed unsatisfactory may be
asked to withdraw from the program.
Liaisons with other Institutions
For the enrichment of its curriculum, the Department
of Art History and Archaeology regularly asks scholars from
local research institutions and museums to conduct courses.
Arthur Wheelock and Franklin Kelly, who are professors in the
Department and curators at the National Gallery of Art, hold
some of their graduate classes at the National Gallery.
Every spring the Department, with the National
Gallery of Art, hosts the Middle Atlantic Symposium in Art History,
giving selected graduate students representing leading universities
in the Middle Atlantic region the opportunity to present their
research papers at the National Gallery; the sessions, which
are now in their thirty-fourth year, include a distinguished
lecture presented in honor of George Levitine.
To facilitate study of Chinese art, an agreement
has been signed with the Taipei Fine Arts Museum to provide
opportunities for faculty, independent researchers, and students
to pursue their research and training at the University of Maryland
and the Taipei Museum. Scholars from Taiwan, China who have
served as visiting scholars are Professor Hsiu-Hsiung Wang,
formerly Dean of the Graduate Institute of Fine Arts, National
Taiwan Normal University; and Professor Te-Hsing Yuan, Curator,
The National Palace Museum in Taiwan.
The Department collaborates with the University
of Maryland's Center for Renaissance and Baroque Studies in
the formation of interdisciplinary symposia; two recent events
of this sort have been a consideration of seventeenth-century
Dutch culture, entitled The Public and Private in Dutch Culture
of the Golden Age, and Attending to Early Modern Women, on the
place of women in Renaissance and Baroque culture.
In order to enhance the graduate student's curricular
choices, the Department maintains an arrangement for course
exchange with the Art History Department of The Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore. Advanced students may also participate
in seminars given by the prestigious Folger Institute at the
Folger Shakespeare Library. To similar effect, the Department
is a member of the Washington Area Art History Consortium, uniting
the graduate art history departments in the greater Washington
area.