The department offers an extensive curriculum in Islamic
art and Architecture and in the modern art and architecture of the Middle
East at the graduate and undergraduate levels. The program is supervised
by Nuha N. N. Khoury who established the field at UCSB.
We define the art and
architecture of Islam as including the cultural and creative
output of different historical groups in diverse parts of the world from
the 7th to the 18th centuries. The new curriculum in modern art and architecture
includes the landscapes of colonialism and orientalism, as well as contemporary
architectural, artistic, and exhibiting practices. Undergraduate courses
include introductory surveys and focused explorations of specific periods
in art and architecture, as well as thematic and comparative frameworks
in the visual arts, such as Image and Imagination. Graduate seminars
are thematic and varied in content. They cover topics as diverse as Re-constructed
Cities (on Beirut as the city of the 21st century), Cities & Texts,
(on the transformative role of monumental writing in public space), Ornament,
and Women & Children First (the art of nationalism in the modern
Arab world).
Our curriculum benefits from exceptional opportunities
available at UCSB for language training (in Arabic and Persian) and from
the presence of related specialties in such disciplines as history, religious
studies, the Medieval Studies program, the Architecture and
Environment program, and the Center for Middle East Studies
(CMES) on our campus. The CMES sponsors lectures, annual conferences
and film screenings. Graduate students of Islamic art and architecture
can benefit substantially from the Foreign Language Area Studies grants
(FLAS) administered by CMES.
Students are encouraged to make use of the archival and art collections
at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the San Diego Museum, the Getty
Center, and other institutions in southern California. Graduate students
take advantage of funding for on-site research and language training
in a variety of locations around the world. Current students are in process
of researching dissertation topics on modern Iranian artists, urbanism
and architecture under global capitalism, and medieval painting.