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Resources – how to write an art history paper, introduction to the topic.

There are many different types of assignments you might be asked to do in an art history class. The most common are a formal analysis and a stylistic analysis. Stylistic analyses often involve offering a comparison between two different works. One of the challenges of art history writing is that it requires a vocabulary to describe what you see when you look at a painting, drawing, sculpture or other media. This checklist is designed to explore questions that will help you write these types of art history papers.

Features of An Art History Analysis Paper

Features of a formal analysis paper.

This type of paper involves looking at compositional elements of an object such as color, line, medium, scale, and texture. The goal of this kind of assignment it to demonstrate how these elements work together to produce the whole art object. When writing a formal analysis, ask yourself:

  • What is the first element of the work that the audience’s eye captures?
  • What materials were used to create the object?
  • What colors and textures did the artist employ?
  • How do these function together to give the object its overall aesthetic look?

Tips on Formal Analysis

  • Describe the piece as if your audience has not seen it.
  • Be detailed.
  • The primary focus should be on description rather than interpretation.

Features of a Stylistic / Comparative Analysis

Similar to a formal analysis, a stylistic analysis asks you to discuss a work in relation to its stylistic period (Impressionism, Fauvism, High Renaissance, etc.). These papers often involve a comparative element (such as comparing a statue from Early Antiquity to Late Antiquity). When writing a stylistic analysis, ask yourself:

  • How does this work fit the style of its historical period? How does it depart from the typical style?
  • What is the social and historical context of the work? When was it completed?
  • Who was the artist? Who commissioned it? What does it depict?
  • How is this work different from other works of the same subject matter?
  • How have the conventions (formal elements) for this type of work changed over time?

Tips for Stylistic and Comparative Analysis

  • In a comparison, make a list of similarities and differences between the two works. Try to establish what changes in the art world may account for the differences.
  • Integrate discussions of formal elements into your stylistic analysis.
  • This type of paper can involve more interpretation than a basic formal analysis.
  • Focus on context and larger trends in art history.

A Quick Practice Exercise...

Practice - what is wrong with these sentences.

The key to writing a good art history paper involves relating the formal elements of a piece to its historical context.  Can you spot the errors in these sentences? What would make the sentences better?

  • “Courbet’s The Stone Breakers  is a good painting because he uses texture.”
  • “Duchamp’s work is in the Dada style while Dali’s is Surrealist.”
  • “Pope Julius II commissioned the work.”
  • “Gauguin uses color to draw in the viewer’s eye.”

Answers for Practice Sentences

  • Better: “Courbet’s  The Stone Breakers  is a radical painting because the artist used a palette knife to create a rough texture on the surface.”
  • Better: “The use of everyday objects in Duchamp’s work reflects the Dada style while Dali’s incorporation of absurd images into his work demonstrates a Surrealist style.”
  • Better: “In 1505, Pope Julius II commissioned the sculpture for his tomb.”
  • Better: “The first element a viewer notices is the bold blue of the sky in Gauguin’s painting.”

Adapted by Ann Bruton, with the help of Isaac Alpert, From:

The Writing Center at UNC Handouts ( http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/art-history/ )

The Writing Center at Hamilton College ( http://www.hamilton.edu/writing/writing-resources/writing-an-art-history-paper ) 

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Art history writing guide.

I. Introduction II. Writing Assignments III. Discipline-Specific Strategies IV. Keep in Mind V. Appendix

Introduction

At the heart of every art history paper is a close visual analysis of at least one work of art. In art history you are building an argument about something visual. Depending on the assignment, this analysis may be the basis for an assignment or incorporated into a paper as support to contextualize an argument. To guide students in how to write an art history paper, the Art History Department suggests that you begin with a visual observation that leads to the development of an interpretive thesis/argument. The writing uses visual observations as evidence to support an argument about the art that is being analyzed.

Writing Assignments

You will be expected to write several different kinds of art history papers. They include:

  • Close Visual Analysis Essays
  • Close Visual Analysis in dialogue with scholarly essays
  • Research Papers

Close Visual Analysis pieces are the most commonly written papers in an introductory art history course. You will have to look at a work of art and analyze it in its entirety. The analysis and discussion should provide a clearly articulated interpretation of the object. Your argument for this paper should be backed up with careful description and analysis of the visual evidence that led you to your conclusion.

Close Visual Analysis in dialogue with scholarly essays combines formal analysis with close textual analysis.

Research papers range from theoretic studies to critical histories. Based on library research, students are asked to synthesize analyses of the scholarship in relation to the work upon which it is based.

Discipline-Specific Strategies

As with all writing assignment, a close visual analysis is a process. The work you do before you actually start writing can be just as important as what you consider when writing up your analysis.

Conducting the analysis :

  • Ask questions as you are studying the artwork. Consider, for example, how does each element of the artwork contribute to the work's overall meaning. How do you know? How do elements relate to each other? What effect is produced by their juxtaposition
  • Use the criteria provided by your professor to complete your analysis. This criteria may include forms, space, composition, line, color, light, texture, physical characteristics, and expressive content.

Writing the analysis:

  • Develop a strong interpretive thesis about what you think is the overall effect or meaning of the image.
  • Ground your argument in direct and specific references to the work of art itself.
  • Describe the image in specific terms and with the criteria that you used for the analysis. For example, a stray diagonal from the upper left corner leads the eye to...
  • Create an introduction that sets the stage for your paper by briefly describing the image you are analyzing and by stating your thesis.
  • Explain how the elements work together to create an overall effect. Try not to just list the elements, but rather explain how they lead to or support your analysis.
  • Contextualize the image within a historical and cultural framework only when required for an assignment. Some assignments actually prefer that you do not do this. Remember not to rely on secondary sources for formal analysis. The goal is to see what in the image led to your analysis; therefore, you will not need secondary sources in this analysis. Be certain to show how each detail supports your argument.
  • Include only the elements needed to explain and support your analysis. You do not need to include everything you saw since this excess information may detract from your main argument.

Keep in Mind

  • An art history paper has an argument that needs to be supported with elements from the image being analyzed.
  • Avoid making grand claims. For example, saying "The artist wanted..." is different from "The warm palette evokes..." The first phrasing necessitates proof of the artist's intent, as opposed to the effect of the image.
  • Make sure that your paper isn't just description. You should choose details that illustrate your central ideas and further the purpose of your paper.

If you find you are still having trouble writing your art history paper, please speak to your professor, and feel free to make an appointment at the Writing Center. For further reading, see Sylvan Barnet's A Short Guide to Writing about Art , 5th edition.

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Purdue Online Writing Lab Purdue OWL® College of Liberal Arts

Writing in Art History

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Copyright ©1995-2018 by The Writing Lab & The OWL at Purdue and Purdue University. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, reproduced, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our terms and conditions of fair use.

These OWL resources provide guidance on typical genres with the art history discipline that may appear in professional settings or academic assignments, including museum catalog entries, museum title cards, art history analysis, notetaking, and art history exams.

The following resource includes writing strategies for anyone within the art history discipline. Many of these sources pertain to assignments that students might face either at the introductory level or in intermediate art history or museum studies courses. This resource provides sources on how to write a museum catalog entry, how to write a museum title card, art history formal and stylistic analysis, studying iconography, compare and contrast essay, taking notes, citing art, and preparing for an exam, as well as academic sources for anyone in the art history discipline.

In this section

The Writing Center • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Art History

What this handout is about.

This handout discusses a few common assignments found in art history courses. To help you better understand those assignments, this handout highlights key strategies for approaching and analyzing visual materials.

Writing in art history

Evaluating and writing about visual material uses many of the same analytical skills that you have learned from other fields, such as history or literature. In art history, however, you will be asked to gather your evidence from close observations of objects or images. Beyond painting, photography, and sculpture, you may be asked to write about posters, illustrations, coins, and other materials.

Even though art historians study a wide range of materials, there are a few prevalent assignments that show up throughout the field. Some of these assignments (and the writing strategies used to tackle them) are also used in other disciplines. In fact, you may use some of the approaches below to write about visual sources in classics, anthropology, and religious studies, to name a few examples.

This handout describes three basic assignment types and explains how you might approach writing for your art history class.Your assignment prompt can often be an important step in understanding your course’s approach to visual materials and meeting its specific expectations. Start by reading the prompt carefully, and see our handout on understanding assignments for some tips and tricks.

Three types of assignments are discussed below:

  • Visual analysis essays
  • Comparison essays
  • Research papers

1. Visual analysis essays

Visual analysis essays often consist of two components. First, they include a thorough description of the selected object or image based on your observations. This description will serve as your “evidence” moving forward. Second, they include an interpretation or argument that is built on and defended by this visual evidence.

Formal analysis is one of the primary ways to develop your observations. Performing a formal analysis requires describing the “formal” qualities of the object or image that you are describing (“formal” here means “related to the form of the image,” not “fancy” or “please, wear a tuxedo”). Formal elements include everything from the overall composition to the use of line, color, and shape. This process often involves careful observations and critical questions about what you see.

Pre-writing: observations and note-taking

To assist you in this process, the chart below categorizes some of the most common formal elements. It also provides a few questions to get you thinking.

Let’s try this out with an example. You’ve been asked to write a formal analysis of the painting, George Morland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty , ca. 1800 (created in Britain and now in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond).

An oil painting of two pigs with piglets in a sty.

What do you notice when you see this image? First, you might observe that this is a painting. Next, you might ask yourself some of the following questions: what kind of paint was used, and what was it painted on? How has the artist applied the paint? What does the scene depict, and what kinds of figures (an art-historical term that generally refers to humans) or animals are present? What makes these animals similar or different? How are they arranged? What colors are used in this painting? Are there any colors that pop out or contrast with the others? What might the artist have been trying to accomplish by adding certain details?

What other questions come to mind while examining this work? What kinds of topics come up in class when you discuss paintings like this one? Consider using your class experiences as a model for your own description! This process can be lengthy, so expect to spend some time observing the artwork and brainstorming.

Here is an example of some of the notes one might take while viewing Morland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty :

Composition

  • The animals, four pigs total, form a gently sloping mound in the center of the painting.
  • The upward mound of animals contrasts with the downward curve of the wooden fence.
  • The gentle light, coming from the upper-left corner, emphasizes the animals in the center. The rest of the scene is more dimly lit.
  • The composition is asymmetrical but balanced. The fence is balanced by the bush on the right side of the painting, and the sow with piglets is balanced by the pig whose head rests in the trough.
  • Throughout the composition, the colors are generally muted and rather limited. Yellows, greens, and pinks dominate the foreground, with dull browns and blues in the background.
  • Cool colors appear in the background, and warm colors appear in the foreground, which makes the foreground more prominent.
  • Large areas of white with occasional touches of soft pink focus attention on the pigs.
  • The paint is applied very loosely, meaning the brushstrokes don’t describe objects with exact details but instead suggest them with broad gestures.
  • The ground has few details and appears almost abstract.
  • The piglets emerge from a series of broad, almost indistinct, circular strokes.
  • The painting contrasts angular lines and rectangles (some vertical, some diagonal) with the circular forms of the pig.
  • The negative space created from the intersection of the fence and the bush forms a wide, inverted triangle that points downward. The point directs viewers’ attention back to the pigs.

Because these observations can be difficult to notice by simply looking at a painting, art history instructors sometimes encourage students to sketch the work that they’re describing. The image below shows how a sketch can reveal important details about the composition and shapes.

An oil painting of two pigs with piglets in a sty demarcating large compositional elements in different colors.

Writing: developing an interpretation

Once you have your descriptive information ready, you can begin to think critically about what the information in your notes might imply. What are the effects of the formal elements? How do these elements influence your interpretation of the object?

Your interpretation does not need to be earth-shatteringly innovative, but it should put forward an argument with which someone else could reasonably disagree. In other words, you should work on developing a strong analytical thesis about the meaning, significance, or effect of the visual material that you’ve described. For more help in crafting a strong argument, see our Thesis Statements handout .

For example, based on the notes above, you might draft the following thesis statement:

In Morland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty, the close proximity of the pigs to each other–evident in the way Morland has overlapped the pigs’ bodies and grouped them together into a gently sloping mound–and the soft atmosphere that surrounds them hints at the tranquility of their humble farm lives.

Or, you could make an argument about one specific formal element:

In Morland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty, the sharp contrast between rectilinear, often vertical, shapes and circular masses focuses viewers’ attention on the pigs, who seem undisturbed by their enclosure.

Support your claims

Your thesis statement should be defended by directly referencing the formal elements of the artwork. Try writing with enough specificity that someone who has not seen the work could imagine what it looks like. If you are struggling to find a certain term, try using this online art dictionary: Tate’s Glossary of Art Terms .

Your body paragraphs should explain how the elements work together to create an overall effect. Avoid listing the elements. Instead, explain how they support your analysis.

As an example, the following body paragraph illustrates this process using Morland’s painting:

Morland achieves tranquility not only by grouping animals closely but also by using light and shadow carefully. Light streams into the foreground through an overcast sky, in effect dappling the pigs and the greenery that encircles them while cloaking much of the surrounding scene. Diffuse and soft, the light creates gentle gradations of tone across pigs’ bodies rather than sharp contrasts of highlights and shadows. By modulating the light in such subtle ways, Morland evokes a quiet, even contemplative mood that matches the restful faces of the napping pigs.

This example paragraph follows the 5-step process outlined in our handout on paragraphs . The paragraph begins by stating the main idea, in this case that the artist creates a tranquil scene through the use of light and shadow. The following two sentences provide evidence for that idea. Because art historians value sophisticated descriptions, these sentences include evocative verbs (e.g., “streams,” “dappling,” “encircles”) and adjectives (e.g., “overcast,” “diffuse,” “sharp”) to create a mental picture of the artwork in readers’ minds. The last sentence ties these observations together to make a larger point about the relationship between formal elements and subject matter.

There are usually different arguments that you could make by looking at the same image. You might even find a way to combine these statements!

Remember, however you interpret the visual material (for example, that the shapes draw viewers’ attention to the pigs), the interpretation needs to be logically supported by an observation (the contrast between rectangular and circular shapes). Once you have an argument, consider the significance of these statements. Why does it matter if this painting hints at the tranquility of farm life? Why might the artist have tried to achieve this effect? Briefly discussing why these arguments matter in your thesis can help readers understand the overall significance of your claims. This step may even lead you to delve deeper into recurring themes or topics from class.

Tread lightly

Avoid generalizing about art as a whole, and be cautious about making claims that sound like universal truths. If you find yourself about to say something like “across cultures, blue symbolizes despair,” pause to consider the statement. Would all people, everywhere, from the beginning of human history to the present agree? How do you know? If you find yourself stating that “art has meaning,” consider how you could explain what you see as the specific meaning of the artwork.

Double-check your prompt. Do you need secondary sources to write your paper? Most visual analysis essays in art history will not require secondary sources to write the paper. Rely instead on your close observation of the image or object to inform your analysis and use your knowledge from class to support your argument. Are you being asked to use the same methods to analyze objects as you would for paintings? Be sure to follow the approaches discussed in class.

Some classes may use “description,” “formal analysis” and “visual analysis” as synonyms, but others will not. Typically, a visual analysis essay may ask you to consider how form relates to the social, economic, or political context in which these visual materials were made or exhibited, whereas a formal analysis essay may ask you to make an argument solely about form itself. If your prompt does ask you to consider contextual aspects, and you don’t feel like you can address them based on knowledge from the course, consider reading the section on research papers for further guidance.

2. Comparison essays

Comparison essays often require you to follow the same general process outlined in the preceding sections. The primary difference, of course, is that they ask you to deal with more than one visual source. These assignments usually focus on how the formal elements of two artworks compare and contrast with each other. Resist the urge to turn the essay into a list of similarities and differences.

Comparison essays differ in another important way. Because they typically ask you to connect the visual materials in some way or to explain the significance of the comparison itself, they may require that you comment on the context in which the art was created or displayed.

For example, you might have been asked to write a comparative analysis of the painting discussed in the previous section, George Morland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty (ca. 1800), and an unknown Vicús artist’s Bottle in the Form of a Pig (ca. 200 BCE–600 CE). Both works are illustrated below.

An oil painting of two pigs with piglets in a sty for comparison with the image of a bottle in the form of a pig.

You can begin this kind of essay with the same process of observations and note-taking outlined above for formal analysis essays. Consider using the same questions and categories to get yourself started.

Here are some questions you might ask:

  • What techniques were used to create these objects?
  • How does the use of color in these two works compare? Is it similar or different?
  • What can you say about the composition of the sculpture? How does the artist treat certain formal elements, for example geometry? How do these elements compare to and contrast with those found in the painting?
  • How do these works represent their subjects? Are they naturalistic or abstract? How do these artists create these effects? Why do these similarities and differences matter?

As our handout on comparing and contrasting suggests, you can organize these thoughts into a Venn diagram or a chart to help keep the answers to these questions distinct.

For example, some notes on these two artworks have been organized into a chart:

Pigs and Piglets in a Sty Both Art Works Bottle in the Form of a Pig
Topic Both depict a pig-like animal
Number Focus is on two pigs and two piglets (4 animals total) Focus is on one pig-like animal that makes up the majority of the vessel; vessel’s spout resembles a bird
Colors White and pink colors on the animals contrast with browns and blues in background Both use contrasting colors to focus the viewer’s eye Borders and other elements are defined by black and cream slip to highlight specific anatomical features
Setting Trees, clouds, and wooden fence in background; animals and trough in foreground No setting beyond the vessel itself
Shape Rectilinear, vertical shapes of trees and fence contrast with circular, more horizontal shapes of animals Both use shape to link individual components to the whole composition Composed of geometric shapes: the body is formed by a round cylinder; ears are concave pyramids, etc.

As you determine points of comparison, think about the themes that you have discussed in class. You might consider whether the artworks display similar topics or themes. If both artworks include the same subject matter, for example, how does that similarity contribute to the significance of the comparison? How do these artworks relate to the periods or cultures in which they were produced, and what do those relationships suggest about the comparison? The answers to these questions can typically be informed by your knowledge from class lectures. How have your instructors framed the introduction of individual works in class? What aspects of society or culture have they emphasized to explain why specific formal elements were included or excluded? Once you answer your questions, you might notice that some observations are more important than others.

Writing: developing an interpretation that considers both sources

When drafting your thesis, go beyond simply stating your topic. A statement that says “these representations of pig-like animals have some similarities and differences” doesn’t tell your reader what you will argue in your essay.

To say more, based on the notes in the chart above, you might write the following thesis statement:

Although both artworks depict pig-like animals, they rely on different methods of representing the natural world.

Now you have a place to start. Next, you can say more about your analysis. Ask yourself: “so what?” Why does it matter that these two artworks depict pig-like animals? You might want to return to your class notes at this point. Why did your instructor have you analyze these two works in particular? How does the comparison relate to what you have already discussed in class? Remember, comparison essays will typically ask you to think beyond formal analysis.

While the comparison of a similar subject matter (pig-like animals) may influence your initial argument, you may find that other points of comparison (e.g., the context in which the objects were displayed) allow you to more fully address the matter of significance. Thinking about the comparison in this way, you can write a more complex thesis that answers the “so what?” question. If your class has discussed how artists use animals to comment on their social context, for example, you might explore the symbolic importance of these pig-like animals in nineteenth-century British culture and in first-millenium Vicús culture. What political, social, or religious meanings could these objects have generated? If you find yourself needing to do outside research, look over the final section on research papers below!

Supporting paragraphs

The rest of your comparison essay should address the points raised in your thesis in an organized manner. While you could try several approaches, the two most common organizational tactics are discussing the material “subject-by-subject” and “point-by-point.”

  • Subject-by-subject: Organizing the body of the paper in this way involves writing everything that you want to say about Moreland’s painting first (in a series of paragraphs) before moving on to everything about the ceramic bottle (in a series of paragraphs). Using our example, after the introduction, you could include a paragraph that discusses the positioning of the animals in Moreland’s painting, another paragraph that describes the depiction of the pigs’ surroundings, and a third explaining the role of geometry in forming the animals. You would then follow this discussion with paragraphs focused on the same topics, in the same order, for the ancient South American vessel. You could then follow this discussion with a paragraph that synthesizes all of the information and explores the significance of the comparison.
  • Point-by-point: This strategy, in contrast, involves discussing a single point of comparison or contrast for both objects at the same time. For example, in a single paragraph, you could examine the use of color in both of our examples. Your next paragraph could move on to the differences in the figures’ setting or background (or lack thereof).

As our use of “pig-like” in this section indicates, titles can be misleading. Many titles are assigned by curators and collectors, in some cases years after the object was produced. While the ceramic vessel is titled Bottle in the Form of a Pig , the date and location suggest it may depict a peccary, a pig-like species indigenous to Peru. As you gather information about your objects, think critically about things like titles and dates. Who assigned the title of the work? If it was someone other than the artist, why might they have given it that title? Don’t always take information like titles and dates at face value.

Be cautious about considering contextual elements not immediately apparent from viewing the objects themselves unless you are explicitly asked to do so (try referring back to the prompt or assignment description; it will often describe the expectation of outside research). You may be able to note that the artworks were created during different periods, in different places, with different functions. Even so, avoid making broad assumptions based on those observations. While commenting on these topics may only require some inference or notes from class, if your argument demands a large amount of outside research, you may be writing a different kind of paper. If so, check out the next section!

3. Research papers

Some assignments in art history ask you to do outside research (i.e., beyond both formal analysis and lecture materials). These writing assignments may ask you to contextualize the visual materials that you are discussing, or they may ask you to explore your material through certain theoretical approaches. More specifically, you may be asked to look at the object’s relationship to ideas about identity, politics, culture, and artistic production during the period in which the work was made or displayed. All of these factors require you to synthesize scholars’ arguments about the materials that you are analyzing. In many cases, you may find little to no research on your specific object. When facing this situation, consider how you can apply scholars’ insights about related materials and the period broadly to your object to form an argument. While we cannot cover all the possibilities here, we’ll highlight a few factors that your instructor may task you with investigating.

Iconography

Papers that ask you to consider iconography may require research on the symbolic role or significance of particular symbols (gestures, objects, etc.). For example, you may need to do some research to understand how pig-like animals are typically represented by the cultural group that made this bottle, the Vicús culture. For the same paper, you would likely research other symbols, notably the bird that forms part of the bottle’s handle, to understand how they relate to one another. This process may involve figuring out how these elements are presented in other artworks and what they mean more broadly.

Artistic style and stylistic period

You may also be asked to compare your object or painting to a particular stylistic category. To determine the typical traits of a style, you may need to hit the library. For example, which period style or stylistic trend does Moreland’s Pigs and Piglets in a Sty belong to? How well does the piece “fit” that particular style? Especially for works that depict the same or similar topics, how might their different styles affect your interpretation? Assignments that ask you to consider style as a factor may require that you do some research on larger historical or cultural trends that influenced the development of a particular style.

Provenance research asks you to find out about the “life” of the object itself. This research can include the circumstances surrounding the work’s production and its later ownership. For the two works discussed in this handout, you might research where these objects were originally displayed and how they ended up in the museum collections in which they now reside. What kind of argument could you develop with this information? For example, you might begin by considering that many bottles and jars resembling the Bottle in the Form of a Pig can be found in various collections of Pre-Columbian art around the world. Where do these objects originate? Do they come from the same community or region?

Patronage study

Prompts that ask you to discuss patronage might ask you to think about how, when, where, and why the patron (the person who commissions or buys the artwork or who supports the artist) acquired the object from the artist. The assignment may ask you to comment on the artist-patron relationship, how the work fit into a broader series of commissions, and why patrons chose particular artists or even particular subjects.

Additional resources

To look up recent articles, ask your librarian about the Art Index, RILA, BHA, and Avery Index. Check out www.lib.unc.edu/art/index.html for further information!

Works consulted

We consulted these works while writing this handout. This is not a comprehensive list of resources on the handout’s topic, and we encourage you to do your own research to find additional publications. Please do not use this list as a model for the format of your own reference list, as it may not match the citation style you are using. For guidance on formatting citations, please see the UNC Libraries citation tutorial . We revise these tips periodically and welcome feedback.

Adams, Laurie Schneider. 2003. Looking at Art . Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Barnet, Sylvan. 2015. A Short Guide to Writing about Art , 11th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Tate Galleries. n.d. “Art Terms.” Accessed November 1, 2020. https://www.tate.org.uk/art/art-terms .

You may reproduce it for non-commercial use if you use the entire handout and attribute the source: The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Art History essay writing guide: top tips!

(Last updated: 29 November 2018)

Since 2006, Oxbridge Essays has been the UK’s leading paid essay-writing and dissertation service

We have helped 10,000s of undergraduate, Masters and PhD students to maximise their grades in essays, dissertations, model-exam answers, applications and other materials. If you would like a free chat about your project with one of our UK staff, then please just reach out on one of the methods below.

Although the general information given on how to write an essay goes a long way to helping the Art History student, there are some parts of essay writing technique which are particular to the Art History essay.

Here are a few pointers to keep in mind:

When you refer to a particular work of art, you need to make it clear exactly which version you are writing about. With so many copies of an important or popular work of art (made by the original painter or an admirer), this becomes particularly important, for example, Gilbert Stuart’s painting of George Washington. You should make a reference (either in text or in the footnotes ) giving the title of the artwork in italics , the artist (where known), the date (or rough date for those works that cannot be dated exactly, eg. the 1790s) and the gallery or collection that holds the artwork. Like so,

George Washington ("Lansdowne" portrait), Gilbert Stuart, 1796, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.

The title of a work of art should be written in italics , whether you refer to it in the text or in the references .

The name of a building (for an Art History essay dealing with architecture) should be written in regular text (not italics or bold ). The first time you mention it in your text, list the architect’s name, the date construction work started and the location, e.g. Paris.

Make yourself aware of the different types of Art History essay you may be asked to write. For example, sociological essays will require you to look at the artist or their work in the context of the times they lived in, examining the impact of political movements, wars, rebellions or zeitgeist. An essay that required you to look at iconography would need an examination of the symbolism within the artwork. Become familiar with the full range of Art History essay types. “A Short Guide to Writing About Art” by Sylvan Barnet is a good book to help you approach your essays in more detail. It covers both homework and exam essays .

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By Chaz T. G. Patto

Art history essays play a pivotal role in art history studies, serving as a key medium through which students engage with and contribute to the field. These essays provide a platform for critical analysis, contextual understanding, and the exploration of artistic movements and themes. This article delves into the significance of art history essays, highlighting their role in fostering research skills, promoting in-depth analysis, encouraging original interpretations, and contributing to the broader art historical discourse.

I. Developing Research Skills:

Art history essays require students to undertake comprehensive research, enabling them to develop valuable skills in locating and analyzing primary and secondary sources. Through the process of research, students engage with scholarly articles, books, museum collections, archival materials, and artistic works themselves. This cultivates critical thinking and information literacy, allowing students to contextualize artworks within historical, cultural, and socio-political frameworks.

II. Fostering In-Depth Analysis:

Art history essays encourage students to conduct in-depth analysis and interpretation of artworks. This involves examining formal elements such as composition, color, and technique, as well as investigating historical context, artistic intentions, and thematic significance. By engaging in close visual analysis and employing art historical methodologies, students develop a nuanced understanding of artworks and their broader implications.

III. Encouraging Original Interpretations:

Art history essays provide students with a platform to express their own unique interpretations and perspectives. Through careful research and critical analysis, students can develop original arguments and contribute fresh insights to the field. This encourages creativity and independent thinking, fostering a sense of ownership over their scholarly contributions and promoting intellectual growth.

IV. Contributing to the Art Historical Discourse:

Art history essays are not only an exercise in individual academic achievement; they also contribute to the broader art historical discourse. By disseminating their research and ideas, students add to the collective body of knowledge in the field. This ongoing conversation and exchange of ideas shape and expand the discipline, allowing for a deeper understanding and appreciation of art across cultures and time periods.

V. Enhancing Communication and Writing Skills:

Art history essays refine students' communication and writing skills, as they learn to articulate complex ideas and arguments in a coherent and persuasive manner. Clear and effective writing is crucial for conveying nuanced interpretations, supporting claims with evidence, and engaging readers in the scholarly dialogue. These communication skills are valuable not only in academic settings but also in various professional endeavors.

Conclusion:

Art history essays serve as a vital component of art history studies, offering students an opportunity to engage with artworks, develop research skills, foster in-depth analysis, and contribute to the art historical discourse. Through these essays, students refine their critical thinking, enhance their communication skills, and cultivate a deeper understanding of art and its multifaceted connections to history, culture, and society. As a cornerstone of art history education, essays continue to play a significant role in shaping the future of the discipline by fostering originality, intellectual growth, and scholarly contributions that contribute to a rich and diverse understanding of the visual arts.

By Chaz T. G. Patto

While art history essay assignments have traditionally been a valuable component of art history studies, it is important to acknowledge the challenges they pose. This article explores the potential drawbacks associated with art history essay assignments, specifically focusing on issues such as plagiarism, the rise of AI-generated essays, and the role of essay writing services. By examining these concerns, we can gain a comprehensive understanding of the limitations and potential negative consequences associated with this assessment method.

I. Plagiarism:

One of the primary concerns with art history essay assignments is the risk of plagiarism. Due to the abundance of readily available information on the internet and other sources, students may be tempted to copy content without proper attribution. Plagiarism not only undermines academic integrity but also hinders the development of critical thinking skills and original thought, which are vital in the field of art history.

II. AI-Generated Essays:

With the advancement of artificial intelligence technologies, the emergence of AI-generated essays has become a pressing issue. These sophisticated systems can produce essays that mimic human writing to a remarkable extent, making it increasingly difficult to detect plagiarism. This challenges the authenticity and originality of student work, as AI-generated essays can appear as legitimate academic contributions.

III. Influence of Essay Writing Services:

The availability of essay writing services further exacerbates the challenges associated with art history essay assignments. These services offer to write custom essays for students, often promoting quick and easy solutions to academic demands. While not all essay writing services are inherently problematic, the use of such services undermines the learning process, as students may rely on external sources rather than engaging in independent research and critical analysis.

IV. Limitations on Creative Expression:

Art history essay assignments, by their very nature, tend to be structured and formal in their approach. This can limit the scope for creative expression and exploration of alternative formats for presenting research findings. Students may feel constrained by the expectations of essay writing, preventing them from fully engaging with the subject matter and expressing their ideas in a more innovative or visually-oriented manner.

V. Inequality in Access and Support:

Art history essay assignments can inadvertently perpetuate inequality in access and support. Students with limited access to resources such as textbooks, museum collections, or archival materials may face challenges in conducting comprehensive research. Additionally, students without sufficient guidance and support may struggle to develop effective research strategies or refine their writing skills, putting them at a disadvantage in completing these assignments.

Conclusion:

While art history essay assignments have long been an integral part of art history studies, it is essential to acknowledge the potential drawbacks and challenges they present. Plagiarism, the rise of AI-generated essays, the influence of essay writing services, limitations on creative expression, and inequality in access and support are legitimate concerns that require attention. In order to address these issues, educational institutions should implement strategies such as plagiarism detection software, academic integrity education, diversified assessment methods, and enhanced guidance and support systems. By critically evaluating and adapting art history essay assignments, we can strive to create a more inclusive and authentic learning environment that fosters intellectual growth and original contributions in the field of art history.


By Chaz T. G. Patto

Art history courses at the university level traditionally rely on essay assignments as a means of assessing students' understanding and critical analysis. However, in light of the challenges posed by plagiarism and the emergence of AI-generated essays, there is a growing need to reconsider the assessment methods used in these classes. This essay argues that universities should shift towards open book examinations for art history courses as an effective alternative to essay assignments. By doing so, educational institutions can eliminate plagiarism concerns, promote deeper learning, encourage critical thinking, and address the implications of AI-generated essays.

I. Eliminating Plagiarism Concerns:

Plagiarism is a persistent issue in academia, and art history classes are not immune to this problem. Students may be tempted to plagiarize from existing sources, compromising the integrity of their work. Open book examinations provide a viable solution by allowing students to refer to course materials, textbooks, and scholarly resources during the assessment process. This encourages students to engage in comprehensive research and analysis while ensuring that their work is grounded in originality and proper citation practices.

II. Encouraging Deeper Learning:

Art history is a multidimensional discipline that requires students to develop a comprehensive understanding of artistic movements, cultural contexts, and critical analysis. Open book examinations offer an opportunity for students to delve deeper into the subject matter. By allowing access to reference materials, students can explore a wider range of sources, engage in further research, and develop a more nuanced understanding of the art and its historical significance. This approach fosters a deeper learning experience, encouraging students to go beyond memorization and actively engage with the subject matter.

III. Promoting Critical Thinking:

Essay assignments often limit students to pre-determined prompts, restricting their ability to explore alternative perspectives or think critically about art history. Open book examinations, on the other hand, provide an environment that encourages students to critically analyze artworks, evaluate historical contexts, and develop coherent arguments on the spot. This promotes the cultivation of analytical skills, enabling students to think independently and develop their own interpretations of art, thereby enhancing their overall understanding of the subject.

IV. Addressing the Rise of AI-Generated Essays:

The proliferation of AI technologies presents a new challenge in academia, including the creation of AI-generated essays. These essays can mimic human writing to a remarkable extent, making it increasingly difficult to detect plagiarism. Open book examinations provide an effective solution to this issue, as AI-generated essays are rendered ineffective when students are allowed to refer to reference materials during the exam. By implementing open book exams, universities can ensure that students' work reflects their own understanding and critical thinking skills, thus maintaining the authenticity and integrity of assessments.

Conclusion:

Incorporating open book examinations as an alternative to traditional essay assignments in art history classes offers several advantages. It mitigates plagiarism concerns, fosters deeper learning, promotes critical thinking, and addresses the challenges posed by AI-generated essays. As educational institutions adapt to an evolving academic landscape, embracing open book examinations provides a progressive approach that aligns with the goals of art history education. By implementing this shift, universities can enhance the learning experience, encourage academic integrity, and equip students with the analytical skills necessary to excel in the field of art history.

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Compare and contrast: preparing for an art history essay exam, acknowledgements:.

Kathleen Wheeler

Courses in this area are hands-on courses that enable students to present and critically evaluate competing interpretations through written and oral analysis. Students are expected to distinguish between different artistic and historical schools or periods using the varying approaches and viewpoints characterized by those periods under study. In addition, these courses encourage students to identify the values that underlie the world-views of different cultures and peoples, as well as their own culture(s) over time.

This learning activity supports the preparation of students in the UK Core Program   to conduct a sustained piece of analysis of a work of art, in this case, and that makes use of logical argument, coherent theses and evidence of art history, ideally with an informed, appropriate use of library sources. In a course fulfilling the Intellectual Inquiry in the Humanities, students learn to interpret, evaluate and analyze creations of the human intellect while recognizing the validity of different points of view.

Step 1: Choose two art pieces to analyze

Do this exercise a week or so before your exam, using material already covered in class so that it is related to the material on which you will be tested for that exam. 

First, read some blogs about art history. Check out Masterpiece Cards website where there are many images of interest to art historians. Under the “Blog” tab, you'll find the “Famous Painters Blogroll” that lists many excellent blogs there.

Now, choose a few pieces of art that you like or are curious about – maybe you like the colors or the theme of the piece. Once you have selected several works of art, think about which two have similarities: is it the subject matter? the colors? the size? texture? Are they both sculptures,or both landscape paintings, for example? Perhaps they both manage to evoke a particular feeling in you. It’s important that you choose two that you are interested in personally for some reason. They should “speak” to you – not just emotionally, but intellectually as well.

Here’s an example of a compare-and-contrast essay < http://academichelp.net/samples/essay/compare-contrast/two-art-periods-major-works.html > using two works from the Renaissance and Neoclassicism eras: Michelangelo’s David and Antonio Canova’s Psyche Revived by Cupid’s Kiss. Notice that these two pieces were chosen because they both are considered by scholars to be representative of their time periods and that both of the artists used unconventional ideas in their depiction of the current political and social conditions of the day.  It’s important that you choose two pieces that allow you to make appropriate comparisons relating to the concepts you are learning in your art history class.  This is an important first step as you prepare to write an effective essay that covers multiple main issues covered in class.

Now that you’ve chosen your two art pieces, be sure and write down the most important ways by which you want to identify them.  You can use a local library and online museums (check out, for example, the Art Cylopedia 's Art Museums Worldwide website) to get this information:

Artist’s full name

Title of the art piece

Year of production, country/location/culture

Size of the art piece

Materials/medium used to create it

Formal elements such as line, color, composition

Art style or school the piece comes from (with some basic descriptors of the hallmarks of that art style in general)

Subject matter of the piece

Step 2: Choose 5 elements, items, topics for a comparison chart

In order for you to create an art history exam question yourself, start first with a detailed list of at least five elements, items, or topics you expect to use in your comparison.  In addition to the characteristics and elements listed in Step 1 above, you might also consider using the following in your comparison list:

Style of the piece, e.g., abstract, naturalistic, idealistic, realistic

Function or symbolism of the piece (What was it used for? Does it communicate a message? Is it asking for something? Is it sacred or secular)

Cultural context, e.g., how might the quality of life at the time and place the piece was created affected its function and style? Do historical events relate to the image or story depicted?

Step 3: Brainstorm to compare and contrast the two art pieces

Download and use th Venn Diagram below to help you start brainstorming – put the similarities in the middle and differences to either side. 

Or you can use the Read-Write-Think Interactive Venn Diagram online: http://www.readwritethink.org/files/resources/interactives/venn/index.html .

This will help you visualize how much the two art pieces have in common and how much difference there is.

Now, revise and sharpen.  You must decide which of the characteristics you’ve listed are interesting, important, and relevant enough to be included in an essay. Ask yourself these questions:

What’s relevant to the course I’m taking? Why did I choose these two pieces of art?

What’s interesting and most revealing to my readers?

What matters most to the argument I am going to make?

What’s the most basic or central idea (and needs to be mentioned, even if obvious)?

Overall, what’s more important—the similarities or the differences?

Charts to download and use

Step 4: create a chart with 5 main elements to analyze.

Now, list on a chart those 5 main elements you’ve chosen to focus in on and compile detailed notes for each piece in relation to those elements, items or topics to expand upon in the comparison essay. 

You can use a Double Cell Diagram (see for example the bubble graphic organizer at http://www.graphic.org/bubble.html ) and start making your own for free online at bubble.us or at TheBrain.com .  Or you can use the simple chart, available for download above.

Be sure to use the appropriate terminology and skills from the course readings and specific to the discipline of art history.  For example, in introductory art history courses, students are required in their exam essays typically to compare and contrast different works demonstrating not only their learned skills of formal visual analysis, but also their ability to place works and monuments in a historical context.  This means comparing works not only in terms of the differences in their formal elements, but also in terms of the socio-political, theological, regional or cultural reasons behind those differences.

Step 5: Write Your Own Essay Exam Question

Now that you have the information and key information for a good essay answer, what is the question?  Spend some time thinking from your instructor’s perspective and develop a good essay exam question that would be the prompt for you to write an essay from your brainstorming and chart developed in Steps 3 and 4.

Good essay exam questions are hard to write.  Review some basics on how to write ideal test items here at the Study Guides and Strategies Website: Constructing Essay Exams .  Be sure and use precise directives in your question – review these good tips for definitions associated with the verbs used in essay exams.

Now post your exam question and your chart for others to see and comment on.

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Art History Resources

Guidelines for analysis of art.

  • Formal Analysis Paper Examples
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Knowing how to write a formal analysis of a work of art is a fundamental skill learned in an art appreciation-level class. Students in art history survey and upper-level classes further develop this skill. Use this sheet as a guide when writing a formal analysis paper. Consider the following when analyzing a work of art. Not everything applies to every work of art, nor is it always useful to consider things in the order given. In any analysis, keep in mind: HOW and WHY is this a significant work of art?

Part I – General Information

  • In many cases, this information can be found on a label or in a gallery guidebook. An artist’s statement may be available in the gallery. If so, indicate in your text or by a footnote or endnote to your paper where you got the information.
  • Subject Matter (Who or What is Represented?)
  • Artist or Architect (What person or group made it? Often this is not known. If there is a name, refer to this person as the artist or architect, not “author.” Refer to this person by their last name, not familiarly by their first name.)
  • Date (When was it made? Is it a copy of something older? Was it made before or after other similar works?)
  • Provenance (Where was it made? For whom? Is it typical of the art of a geographical area?)
  • Location (Where is the work of art now? Where was it originally located? Does the viewer look up at it, or down at it? If it is not in its original location, does the viewer see it as the artist intended? Can it be seen on all sides, or just on one?)
  • Technique and Medium (What materials is it made of? How was it executed? How big or small is it?)

Part II – Brief Description

In a few sentences describe the work. What does it look like? Is it a representation of something? Tell what is shown. Is it an abstraction of something? Tell what the subject is and what aspects are emphasized. Is it a non-objective work? Tell what elements are dominant. This section is not an analysis of the work yet, though some terms used in Part III might be used here. This section is primarily a few sentences to give the reader a sense of what the work looks like.

Part III – Form

This is the key part of your paper. It should be the longest section of the paper. Be sure and think about whether the work of art selected is a two-dimensional or three-dimensional work.

Art Elements

  • Line (straight, curved, angular, flowing, horizontal, vertical, diagonal, contour, thick, thin, implied etc.)
  • Shape (what shapes are created and how)
  • Light and Value (source, flat, strong, contrasting, even, values, emphasis, shadows)
  • Color (primary, secondary, mixed, complimentary, warm, cool, decorative, values)
  • Texture and Pattern (real, implied, repeating)
  • Space (depth, overlapping, kinds of perspective)
  • Time and Motion

Principles of Design

  • Unity and Variety
  • Balance (symmetry, asymmetry)
  • Emphasis and Subordination
  • Scale and Proportion (weight, how objects or figures relate to each other and the setting)
  • Mass/Volume (three-dimensional art)
  • Function/Setting (architecture)
  • Interior/Exterior Relationship (architecture)

Part IV – Opinions and Conclusions

This is the part of the paper where you go beyond description and offer a conclusion and your own informed opinion about the work. Any statements you make about the work should be based on the analysis in Part III above.

  • In this section, discuss how and why the key elements and principles of art used by the artist create meaning.
  • Support your discussion of content with facts about the work.

General Suggestions

  • Pay attention to the date the paper is due.
  • Your instructor may have a list of “approved works” for you to write about, and you must be aware of when the UA Little Rock Galleries, or the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts Galleries (formerly Arkansas Arts Center) opening April 2023, or other exhibition areas, are open to the public.
  • You should allow time to view the work you plan to write about and take notes.
  • Always italicize or underline titles of works of art. If the title is long, you must use the full title the first time you mention it, but may shorten the title for subsequent listings.
  • Use the present tense in describing works of art.
  • Be specific: don’t refer to a “picture” or “artwork” if “drawing” or “painting” or “photograph” is more exact.
  • Remember that any information you use from another source, whether it be your textbook, a wall panel, a museum catalogue, a dictionary of art, the internet, must be documented with a footnote. Failure to do so is considered plagiarism, and violates the behavioral standards of the university. If you do not understand what plagiarism is, refer to this link at the UA Little Rock Copyright Central web site: https://ualr.edu/copyright/articles/?ID=4
  • For proper footnote form, refer to the UA Little Rock Department of Art website, or to Barnet’s A Short Guide to Writing About Art, which is based on the Chicago Manual of Style. MLA style is not acceptable for papers in art history.
  • Allow time to proofread your paper. Read it out loud and see if it makes sense. If you need help on the technical aspects of writing, contact the University Writing Center at 501-569-8343 or visit the Online Writing Lab at https://ualr.edu/writingcenter/
  • Ask your instructor for help if needed.

Further Information

For further information and more discussions about writing a formal analysis, see the following sources. Some of these sources also give information about writing a research paper in art history – a paper more ambitious in scope than a formal analysis.

M. Getlein, Gilbert’s Living with Art (10th edition, 2013), pp. 136-139 is a very short analysis of one work.

M. Stokstad and M. W. Cothren, Art History (5th edition, 2014), “Starter Kit,” pp. xxii-xxv is a brief outline.

S. Barnet, A Short Guide to Writing About Art (9th edition, 2008), pp. 113-134 is about formal analysis; the entire book is excellent for all kinds of writing assignments.

R. J. Belton, Art History: A Preliminary Handbook http://www.ubc.ca/okanagan/fccs/about/links/resources/arthistory.html is probably more useful for a research paper in art history, but parts of this outline relate to discussing the form of a work of art.

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Tips for Writing an Art History Paper

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You have been assigned an art history paper to write. You would like to finish your assignment on time with a minimum of stress, and your instructor fervently hopes to read an engaging, well-written paper. Here are some dos and don'ts to guide you, written by an art history professor who has graded thousands of these papers ranging from the superlative to the good, the bad and the phenomenally ugly.

Choose a Topic You Love

  • Look through an art history book, slowly and leisurely.
  • Look through our list of art history topics for ideas. Good starting points are our lists of movements , artists' bios, and image galleries .
  • Pick a topic based on eye appeal and compelling personal interest.

Fill Your Brain with Information

  • Remember: a car works on gas, a brain works on info. Empty brain, empty writing.
  • Research your topic using websites, books, and articles.
  • Read the footnotes in the books and articles - they can lead to creative thinking.

Be an Active Reader

  • Ask yourself questions while you read and look up what you can't find or don't understand on the page.
  • Take notes.
  • Search the internet with the words, names, titles you learn.
  • Write down interesting facts and thoughts that come to mind while you read.

Writing Your Introduction

  • Compose a thesis statement. Declare that you have noticed something about the art, building, artist, architect, critic, patron, or whatever your focus is for your analysis.
  • Then, "frame" your thesis. Tell your reader about discovering information that can help us understand the work of art/building better. (For example, the French artist Paul Gauguin moved to Tahiti late in life. Your thesis analyzes his late paintings in terms of his Tahiti lifestyle. You've read his biography, Noa, Noa and other sources for ideas to support your thesis.)
  • If you are focusing on artworks, remember to put the artist's name/artists' names, the title(s) of the work(s) and the date (s) in the first paragraph. You can refer to the title(s) alone thereafter.

Describe and Point Out What You Want the Reader to Notice

  • If you are going to include the artist's/architect's biography, begin with a short summary. Unless your paper is a biography of the person, most of your paper should be about art, not life.
  • Make sure your arguments are constructed in a parallel fashion: Establish a sequence of information.
  • Consider the paragraph a unit of information. Each paragraph should discuss one topic within the quantity of information you plan to cover.
  • Ideas for units of information or topics: appearance, medium and technique, narrative, iconography, history, artist's biography, patronage, etc. - whatever will help you support your thesis.
  • Iconography might require more than one paragraph, especially if your whole paper is about analyzing the iconography of a work of art.
  • Write about the connections between what you described in these analyses and what you declared in the thesis statement
  • Follow the same sequence of ideas for the second artwork, building, artist, architect, critic, patron, etc.
  • Follow the same sequence for the third artwork, building, artist, architect, etc.
  • When you have analyzed all the examples, synthesize: compare and contrast .
  • Comparison: Dedicate one paragraph to discussing what is the same about the artworks, the building, the architects, the artists, the critics, the patrons, etc.
  • Contrast: Dedicate one paragraph to discussing what is different about the artworks, the building, the architects, the artists, the critics, the patrons, etc.

What Do You Want Your Reader to Learn from Your Essay?

  • Reiterate the thesis.
  • Remind your reader about your findings in a summary sentence or two.
  • Persuade the reader that you have demonstrated that your thesis is soundly based on your findings.
  • Optional: state that your analysis is important in terms of understanding a larger picture (but not too large). For examples, the artist's other work from that period, the artist's work all together, the artwork's relationship to the movement or the artwork's relationship to that moment in history. The connection should not open a new topic, but simply offer the reader food for thought and then declare this investigation is beyond the scope of your paper. (It demonstrates that you thought of it, but you're not going to go there.)
  • DO NOT write that art history is wonderful and you've learned a lot. You are writing to your teacher, and s/he is tired of reading that sentence for the umpteenth time. Leave a good impression and avoid being trite.
  • Be sure to footnote/cite your sources in the body of the paper when you use information or an opinion from a book, article, website, etc.
  • Make a list of your sources at the end of the paper. Follow your teacher's instructions and/or visit a website on citation style or bibliography style. Ask the teacher which citation style s/he prefers.
  • Titles for works of art should be in italics: The Birth of Venus
  • First and last names begin with a capital letter. Exceptions include place and familial indicators including "da," "del," "de," "den" and "van," among others, unless the last name begins the sentence. ("Van Gogh lived in Paris.")
  • Months and days of the week begin with a capital letter.
  • Language, nationalities and country names begin with a capital letter.
  • Leonardo is not called da Vinci .
  • Do not wait until the last minute to begin your essay.
  • Start your research after midterms.
  • Start to write at least one week before the paper is due.
  • Take the time to EDIT, EDIT, EDIT - be concise and clear.
  • Ask your professor for help and advice as you write your paper - s/he will enjoy discussing the topic with you.
  • 10 Topic Ideas for Art History Papers
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  • Outline of Art History - Visual Arts Movements from 30,000 BC-400 AD
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AP Art History

Review the free-response questions from the 2024 ap exam., exam overview.

Exam questions assess the course concepts and skills outlined in the course framework. For more information, download the AP Art History Course and Exam Description (CED).

Encourage your students to visit the AP Art History student page for exam information.

Thu, May 15, 2025

AP Art History Exam

Exam format.

The AP Art History Exam has consistent question types, weighting, and scoring guidelines every year, so you and your students know what to expect on exam day.

Section I: Multiple Choice

80 Questions | 1 Hour | 50% of Exam Score

Questions on the exam will appear both as:

  • sets of 2–3 questions, with each set based on color images of works of art.
  • individual questions, some of which are based on color images of works of art.
  • The multiple-choice section includes images of works of art both in and beyond the image set.

Section II: Free Response

6 Questions | 2 Hours | 50% of Exam Score

Question 1 : Comparison is a long essay question that assesses students’ ability to compare a work of their choice with a provided work from the image set and articulate a claim explaining the significance of the similarities and differences between those works, citing evidence to support their claim.

Question 2 : Visual/Contextual Analysis is a long essay question that assesses students’ ability to analyze visual and contextual features of a work of art from the image set (image not provided) and respond to the prompt with an art historically defensible claim supported by evidence.

Question 3: Visual Analysis is a short essay question that assesses students’ ability to analyze visual elements of a work of art beyond the image set (image provided) and connect it to an artistic tradition, style, or practice.

Question 4: Contextual Analysis is a short essay question that assesses students’ ability to analyze contextual elements of a work of art from the image set and explain how context can influence artistic decisions or affect the meaning of a work of art.

Question 5: Attribution is a short essay question that assesses students’ ability to attribute a work of art beyond the image set (image provided) and justify their assertion by providing specific visual evidence.

Question 6: Continuity and Change is a short essay question that assesses students’ ability to analyze the relationships between a work of art from the image set and a related artistic tradition, style, and/or practice.

Questions 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6  will include images of works of art.

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IMAGES

  1. American Art History Essay Example

    art history essay template

  2. How to Write a History Essay Template Organizer by History and More Store

    art history essay template

  3. Writing an Art History Essay

    art history essay template

  4. Essay Tips for Writing Art History Papers

    art history essay template

  5. Historical Essay Outline Template in Word, Google Docs

    art history essay template

  6. Art history Research Paper Example

    art history essay template

VIDEO

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  4. History Essay Workshop

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  6. Importance of the history| Understanding our Identity (1)

COMMENTS

  1. Writing Essays in Art History

    Art History Analysis - Formal Analysis and Stylistic Analysis. Typically in an art history class the main essay students will need to write for a final paper or for an exam is a formal or stylistic analysis. A formal analysis is just what it sounds like - you need to analyze the form of the artwork. This includes the individual design ...

  2. Guidelines for Writing Art History Research Papers

    The following are basic guidelines that you must use when documenting research papers for any art history class at UA Little Rock. Solid, thoughtful research and correct documentation of the sources used in this research (i.e., footnotes/endnotes, bibliography, and illustrations**) are essential. Additionally, these guidelines remind students ...

  3. Resources

    Answers for Practice Sentences. Generally, art history papers do not ask you to make a value judgment about the quality of a work, so there is no reason the writer should call the painting "good.". Furthermore, the writer does not specify what the texture of the painting is like. All paintings have texture, so the write must describe more ...

  4. Formal Analysis Paper Examples

    Formal Analysis Paper Example 3. VISIT OUR GALLERIES SEE UPCOMING EXHIBITS. Contact. School of Art and Design. Windgate Center of Art + Design, Room 202. 2801 S University Avenue. Little Rock, AR 72204. 501-916-3182. 501-683-7022 (fax)

  5. PDF ART HISTORY: GUIDE TO ESSAY WRITING

    ART HISTORY: GUIDE TO ESSAY WRITINGThe aim of formal essay writing is to engage your critical reading and writing skills to cra. t an articulate and polished essay. It provides an opportunity to consider a topic in depth, combining the synthesis of source materials with your own c.

  6. art history guide final

    Guide for Writing in Art History. Art history courses cultivate critically analyze images, objects, and architectural spaces as well as academic discourse, scholarship, and historical sources. Art history is a humanistic discipline that brings together research to explore historical contexts while engaging in ways of looking at, describing, and ...

  7. PDF Art History

    Although art historians vary in their approaches to art, there are a few common approaches that form the backbone of the field. The following handout describes these approaches briefly and lets you know what you might need to do to tackle a paper assignment in this field. Just remember: there is more than one way of doing art history.

  8. Art History Writing Guide

    The writing uses visual observations as evidence to support an argument about the art that is being analyzed. You will be expected to write several different kinds of art history papers. They include: Close Visual Analysis in dialogue with scholarly essays. pieces are the most commonly written papers in an introductory art history course.

  9. LibGuides: Art and Art History: How to Write About Art

    Like its predecessor, this new edition consists of essays that cover a wide variety of "loaded" terms in the history of art, from sign to meaning, ritual to commodity. Each essay explains and comments on a single term, discussing the issues the term raises and putting the term into practice as an interpretive framework for a specific work of art.

  10. Introduction

    Writing in Art History. These OWL resources provide guidance on typical genres with the art history discipline that may appear in professional settings or academic assignments, including museum catalog entries, museum title cards, art history analysis, notetaking, and art history exams. The following resource includes writing strategies for ...

  11. Art History

    In art history, however, you will be asked to gather your evidence from close observations of objects or images. Beyond painting, photography, and sculpture, you may be asked to write about posters, illustrations, coins, and other materials. Even though art historians study a wide range of materials, there are a few prevalent assignments that ...

  12. Art History essay writing guide: top tips!

    The name of a building (for an Art History essay dealing with architecture) should be written in regular text (not italics or bold). The first time you mention it in your text, list the architect's name, the date construction work started and the location, e.g. Paris. Make yourself aware of the different types of Art History essay you may be ...

  13. Art History Essays and the Role they Play in Art History Studies

    By Chaz T. G. Patto. Art history essays play a pivotal role in art history studies, serving as a key medium through which students engage with and contribute to the field. These essays provide a platform for critical analysis, contextual understanding, and the exploration of artistic movements and themes.

  14. Compare and Contrast: Preparing for an Art History Essay Exam

    Step 2: Choose 5 elements, items, topics for a comparison chart. In order for you to create an art history exam question yourself, start first with a detailed list of at least five elements, items, or topics you expect to use in your comparison. In addition to the characteristics and elements listed in Step 1 above, you might also consider ...

  15. PDF Microsoft Word

    The following guidelines refer to both basic writing skills and general paper format specific to art history. They are based on the guidelines published in the Chicago Manual of Style, the style preferred for art history publications. The CM is available in hardcopy in the Reference section at Morgan Library. Information about documentation is ...

  16. Guidelines for Analysis of Art

    Guidelines for Analysis of Art. Knowing how to write a formal analysis of a work of art is a fundamental skill learned in an art appreciation-level class. Students in art history survey and upper-level classes further develop this skill. Use this sheet as a guide when writing a formal analysis paper. Consider the following when analyzing a work ...

  17. Citations, Style and Bibliography for an Art History Essay

    Writing and Research in Art History Citations, Style and Bibliography. Sample Essay: Citation Practices, Style, Bibliographic Forms, and Caption Format We have created a fictional excerpt from a fictional essay in order to demonstrate correct writing and citation format.

  18. Tips for Writing an Art History Paper

    Writing Your Introduction. Compose a thesis statement. Declare that you have noticed something about the art, building, artist, architect, critic, patron, or whatever your focus is for your analysis. Then, "frame" your thesis. Tell your reader about discovering information that can help us understand the work of art/building better.

  19. PDF Guidelines for Preparation of Master's Thesis in Art History

    Research" (ARTH 799). The signed form should then be returned to the Art Office where it will be placed in your personal file. The advisor may require an abstract and/or an outline, along with a preliminary bibliography, before signing the Thesis Agreement Form. Check well in advance whether this is the case.

  20. Essays

    Art of the Pleasure Quarters and the Ukiyo-e Style; Art of the Roman Provinces, 1-500 A.D. The Art of the Safavids before 1600; The Art of the Seljuq Period in Anatolia (1081-1307) The Art of the Seljuqs of Iran (ca. 1040-1157) Art of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries in Naples; Art of the Sufis; The Art of the Timurid Period (ca ...

  21. AP Art History Exam

    80 Questions | 1 Hour | 50% of Exam Score. Questions on the exam will appear both as: sets of 2-3 questions, with each set based on color images of works of art. individual questions, some of which are based on color images of works of art. The multiple-choice section includes images of works of art both in and beyond the image set.

  22. Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History

    Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Discover the story of art and global culture through The Met collection. Funded by the Heilbrunn Foundation, New Tamarind Foundation, and Zodiac Fund. Essays Explore more than 1,000 essays on a wide range of topics, including artists, materials, movements, and themes. Read more essays ...

  23. Assignments & Rubrics

    template can be used as an assignment once or twice during the semester as a way to a) have your students undertake a concise written exercise that b) asks them to look closely at one object (or two if you'd like them to compare and contrast) and c) also asks them to engage with the museum or gallery space to make them aware of the cultural ...