

BA German and History of Art
About this course
German and history of art is a combination that places two of Europe's richest cultural traditions in dialogue with one another. German is the most widely spoken native language in Europe and the language of a philosophical, literary, musical, and visual culture of extraordinary depth, from Goethe and Schiller to Kant, Hegel, Rilke, and Brecht, and from the Baroque through Expressionism to the Bauhaus and beyond. History of art, meanwhile, is the discipline that asks how visual and material objects are made, what they mean, and how they function in culture and society. Together, the two subjects illuminate each other: Germany and the German-speaking world have been central to the history of Western art, and art history is itself a discipline with deep German intellectual roots. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme benefits from exceptional resources in both fields. UCL's Slade School of Fine Art and its strong art history provision, combined with the university's German department and London's extraordinary concentration of museums, galleries, and auction houses, make this a particularly enriching environment for this degree. You will develop real fluency in German, reading literature and culture in the original language, alongside a systematic study of art history from the medieval to the contemporary, with particular attention to the German tradition where the two subjects naturally intersect. Language study at this level develops precision, cultural sensitivity, and the ability to inhabit another intellectual world. Art history trains you to look carefully, to build interpretive arguments from visual evidence, and to situate works in their historical and social contexts. The combination produces a graduate with a rich and differentiated set of analytical capabilities. Graduates in German and history of art pursue careers in museums and galleries, particularly those with strong German and European collections, as well as in auction houses, commercial galleries, arts journalism and criticism, academic research, publishing, and cultural diplomacy. The German language opens additional doors in business, media, and the legal and financial sectors in Germany and the wider German-speaking world. Postgraduate study in German, art history, or museum studies is a natural next step for those who want to specialise further.
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