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Painting
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Painting is one of the oldest and most studied subjects in the arts, appearing across art history, studio art, humanities, and general education courses. Essays on painting ask students to move beyond casual observation and engage with how visual works are constructed, what they communicate, and how they fit into broader cultural and historical contexts. Works such as Raphael's School of Athens, the Mona Lisa, The Marriage Feast at Cana, and Cimabue's Enthroned Madonna and Child appear frequently as primary subjects because they reward close formal and contextual analysis. Artists including Kandinsky, Peter Paul Rubens, and others represented in student work offer additional angles into how individual style and artistic intention shape meaning.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Descriptive and comparative essays examine how painters use light, figure placement, and composition to guide the viewer's eye and establish a scene's mood. Some papers focus on a single work or artist in depth, as with analyses of Kandinsky or Michael Parkes, while others place two paintings side by side to highlight contrasts in technique or subject matter, as seen in comparisons of works like La Grenouillère and Wheat Field with Cypresses. Museum response papers represent another common format, asking students to reflect on direct encounters with original works.

A strong essay on painting anchors its argument in specific formal elements — the treatment of a figure's face, the use of light, the relationship between foreground and background — rather than relying on vague impressions. A focused thesis takes a clear position on what a painting achieves or means. The most common pitfall is summarizing what is visible without explaining why those choices matter to the work's overall effect.

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Paper Undergraduate
Henry Thomas Buckle\'s Original 1858
This study examines different types of knowledge and how women have affected progress in these domains through a critical review of the relevant literature, including open source media such as Wikipedia, but peer-reviewed and scholarly sources as well concerning H. T. Buckle's discourse from 1858 concerning the contributions of women to the progress of knowledge. A summary of the research and a synthesis of the findings are presented in the study's conclusion concerning the contributions of women to the progress of knowledge in the years since Buckle's original discourse.
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The merging of artistic and popular music: The Romantic, nationalist strains of Antonin Dvorak's Symphony No.5 in F Major, Op.76.
Paper Masters
Marriage Feast at Cana Sebastiano
Sebastiano Ricci's 18th century oil painting entitled "The Marriage Feast at Cana" is both romantic and hedonistic. Painted in the early 1700s, Ricci's work does not depict the actual time period in which the artist…
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To evaluate the impact that Native American art has had on the evolution of late Modernism - and vice versa - is not an easy task. It was only in the 1930s that art critics and historians began paying attention to…
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Paper Undergraduate
Arts management practices and organizational approaches
The Evolution of Arts and Cultural Districts
Paper Undergraduate
Gauguin and Degas Paul Gauguin
Paul Gauguin and Edgar Degas shared many similarities as artists. Both were Impressionists, though Degas began as a classical artist and moved on to become one of the founders of the Impressionist movement, while…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Asher Lev Just as One
Just as one can develop a sociological analysis of the development of a person in the environment in which he or she was raised and make certain judgments about what influenced that development and how, so can one do…