Dates:April 2 - May 7, 2025
Meets:Wednesdays, April 2 - May 7, 2025, 1-3 p.m.
Location:First Presbyterian Church
Cost: $0.00

There are still openings remaining at this time.

OR

Please note: this course requires membership in Annual Membership or Annual Membership or Semi-Annual Membership or Associate Membership or Carnegie Membership or Sample Membership

Artists such as Picasso, David, and Goya came to grips with the political upheavals of their day with heroic and searing images that elicit our admiration or moral outrage. Picasso's Guernica is more than a fractured scene of the horror, pain, and chaos during the bombing of a Basque town. It is also an indelible political statement about the tragedies of modern technological warfare, especially the indiscriminate killing of civilians. Jacques-Louis David's Death of Marat and Napoleon Crossing the Alps paint the French Revolution and Napoleonic wars in heroic, mythic terms. But Francisco Goya's The Third of May, 1808, is a scathing indictment of those wars. This interplay between artistic expression and social and political content is a complex one. In this class we'll focus on five historical turning points and see how artists interpret their times in ways that can both inspire patriotic sentiment and, as in the recent cases of toppled confederate statues, provoke political debate about the meaning of history and national identity.
Fee: $0.00
Hours:12.00

First Presbyterian Church

9325 Presbyterian Circle
Columbia, MD 21045

Judy Scott Feldman

Judy Scott Feldman, PhD, is an art historian with over 35 years of teaching experience on a wide range of art and architecture topics. She is founder and chair of the National Mall Coalition, a DC-based nonprofit organization that advocates comprehensive, visionary planning to support the crucial role of the Mall—our Athenian Acropolis—in American democracy in its third century. Her previous courses for Osher include Art of the Middle Ages (2020), Thought-Provoking Ideas in Art History (2021), and Designing Washington (2021).

Date Day Time Location
04/02/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church
04/09/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church
04/16/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church
04/23/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church
04/30/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church
05/07/2025Wednesday1 PM to 3 PM First Presbyterian Church

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