In Tandem: Chemistry & Art
Автор: ND College of Arts and Letters
Загружено: 2025-09-23
Просмотров: 229
Описание:
How do you bridge the gap between two drastically different fields? For a Notre Dame art historian and chemist, all it took was sharing a classroom for a semester.
Only Connect Chemistry and Art is a course that integrates human experiences by exploring the intersection of two disciplines that, nevertheless, share surprising aspects in common. Taught by Michael Schreffler, a professor of art history and associate dean for the arts in the College of Arts & Letters, and Bahram Moasser, a teaching professor in the Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry with the College of Science, the class explores how art and chemistry enrich each other and, at a deeper level, have a common approach to inquiry.
A new College of Arts & Letters video series titled “In Tandem” showcases the importance and value of interdisciplinary research and teaching. In this first installment, Schreffler and Moasser discuss how they began working together, the surprising connections they’ve discovered between art and science, and the ways in which exploring another field has broadened their perspective.
The title of the course is drawn from the epigraph of the E.M. Forster novel Howard’s End, which, through the phrase “Only connect!”, extols the virtues of bringing disparate elements together. Schreffler, who is also the director of Notre Dame’s Arts Initiative, and Moasser have taught the course the past two spring semesters, and no prerequisites are necessary. It fulfills the Core Integration Ways of Knowing requirement in Notre Dame’s Core Curriculum, and is ideal for any student looking to explore connections between disciplines.
al.nd.edu
---
With 19 departments across the humanities, arts, and social sciences, the College of Arts and Letters is home to exceptional faculty and talented students who are studying what they love. It's an environment to ask big questions, read classic texts, and explore languages and cultures.
We're not just about learning through acquisition. We're about learning through exploration. Our undergraduate students travel the globe to research topics that fascinate them, then turn their observations into conclusions about the world.
Through the liberal arts, you learn to read deeply. Think about issues critically. Discuss topics thoughtfully. Write arguments persuasively. Contribute to projects creatively. And these abilities aren't just vital in the classroom—they're exactly what employers, graduate schools, and service organizations are looking for.
Subscribe to Arts and Letters on YouTube:
http://goo.gl/I2Sru
YouTube Channel:
/ artslettersnd
Twitter:
@artslettersnd
Website:
http://al.nd.edu
Artwork featured in this video:
Jean-Marc Nattier (French, 1685 - 1766), Portrait of a Woman (A Lady of the French Court), 1749, Oil on canvas. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Gift of Mrs. Fred J. Fisher, 1951.004.006.
Gilbert Stuart (American, 1755 - 1828), Portrait of the Marquess of Waterford, ca. 1787-1792, Oil on canvas. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Lawrence and Alfred Fox Foundation and Edward, ND ’50 and Ann Abrams Funds, 2000.007.002.
Gilbert Stuart (American, 1755 - 1828), Portrait of Elizabeth, Marchioness of Waterford, ca. 1787-1792, Oil on canvas. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Lawrence and Alfred Fox Foundation and Edward, ND ’50 and Ann Abrams Funds, 2000.007.001.
Doccia Porcelain Manufactory (Italian, active 1735 - present), Salt Cellar or Sweetmeat Dish, ca. 1755-1757, Hard-paste porcelain. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Marten Family Fund, 2003.019.
Kenneth Snelson (American, 1927 - 2016), Maquette for Mozart I, 1982, Brass tubes and wire. Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. Gift of Thomas T. Solley, 2004.030.
Повторяем попытку...
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео
-
Информация по загрузке: