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Eggleston

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Posts posted by Eggleston

  1. 19 hours ago, betsy303 said:

    Art history by Hatt and Klonk might help clarify the differences to you, if you are intrigued.

    Agreed - this is a terrific book to read if you're wrestling with the giant question of just what methodology is, as well as how various art historical methodologies differ and overlap, and how they developed historically. The writing is very clear and accessible, and I think also treats the topic with the kind of nuance that @poliscar is calling for.

    Also second @poliscar that looking at a scholar's sources, assigned readings on their syllabi, etc. is a good way to glean their methodological orientation. Now that I've done my exams, I often find myself looking at the bibliography or footnotes of any new book first, precisely for this reason. 

  2. On 4/29/2016 at 11:27 AM, NeuroMetro said:

    So, I will be attending beginning this Fall. My plan (partially because I have dogs) is to buy a relatively low-cost house, and if someone else does not hate my dogs, to sublet a room. Of course College Hill would be ideal, but most places there are over my ceiling of $175k (which to me is hilarious because where I live, you can't buy a condo for that). However, I am seeing listings just about everywhere else (Providence, Cranston, East Providence, Pawtucket etc.). As shopping from another city is difficult, I was wondering if there were any suggestions regarding which neighborhoods to target, and especially which to avoid?

    I know one person in my department bought a house or condo on the northwest side of Providence (I believe in North Providence or Smith Hill) and is happy with it. The East Side is definitely going to be the most expensive, whereas I believe there are more good deals to be had on the West Side (like in Federal Hill and off Broadway Ave), and in Pawtucket to the north. Check out the neighborhoods individually for safety though - here is a handy map for that: http://www.providenceri.com/police/crime-map 

    East Providence is a good option if you have a car, because otherwise it's hard to get to campus from there (the buses don't run that often) and almost everyone lives in the East Side, so if you're in East Providence you'll be a bit isolated from department socializing. But it is very fast to downtown Providence and the campus via the highway.

  3. 5 hours ago, Jatan Buch said:

    Hey all,

    I am moving to Providence this Fall as a graduate student in Physics, and I am looking for recommendations regarding apartments. It seems that the East side is preferred by students, but I couldn't find any forum where vacancies are listed by other grad students. Any leads in this regard will be appreciated. :)

     

     

    Welcome to Providence! I'm a current grad student and I found my apartment on Craigslist, which turned out well. But there is also this Brown-run website for apartment listings and I know some friends have had pretty good luck with it:

    http://www.brown.edu/Administration/Auxiliary_Housing/Listings/

    Lots of grad students also regularly post apartment and sublet listings on the Grad Student Listserv, which you can sign up for by looking at this page here: http://students.brown.edu/gsc/resources/mailing-lists/#subscribe 

    Specifically, the "GSBB" ("bulletin board") listhost is the one where people post about apartments. I would recommend signing up for it in digest mode because then you just get a big summary of the e-mails at the end of the day, instead of all them throughout the day which can quickly clog your inbox. Good luck!

  4. Hi all, I'm just starting to look for a place. May I ask what the "Brown graduate housing boards" are (as quoted below)? My current institution had a forum for incoming grad students to find roommates and discuss such matters, is this what the boards are? 

     

     

    I assume my department's visiting day will be a decent time to look around and try to find roommates and such, but I don't necessarily want to live with people in my department... variety is nice. It also looks like a lot of people are looking at single bedroom places, but it also looks like a lot of nice places exceed the recommended rent-to-income ratio... having never lived alone, is it worth having a worse place to myself or a much nicer shared space? 

     

    Hi PiTwoComplete, I'm not sure if you've already been to Brown for your visiting day since you posted a few weeks ago, but here are the graduate housing boards that are mentioned above:

     

    http://brown.edu/Administration/Auxiliary_Housing/Listings/

     

    It's not a forum as much as a mini Craigslist specifically for Brown affiliates. If you do end up coming here to Brown you can search for a roommate by sending out an e-mail to the grad student list host in summer. I live with my partner so I don't have an opinion on the roommate situation, but I can definitely suggest neighborhoods and/or specific streets to consider based on your preferences, if you're interested!

  5. What are your interests in photography? Since you'd be applying (at the PhD level, at least) to work with a specific professor/group of professors, you can begin to narrow down your list by looking at the courses those professors teach, as well as their publications. Try to get a sense of whether their interests and (more importantly) their methods appeal to you. Another thing to consider is whether any given school would provide you with a community of other photo history students- some schools have only a handful of students studying the subject, while others (like Brown and BU) have quite a handful.

    As for free-standing MAs, you should keep looking at UNM (Zuromskis), Arizona (Albers), BU (Sichel), Tufts (McTighe), and SUNY Stonybrook.

    For PhDs look into Brown (Nickel), Harvard (Kelsey), Columbia (Alberro, Elcott), Princeton (McCauley), UCLA (Baker), UCSB (Keller), Penn (Silverman, Beckman) and Rutgers (Sheehan, Zervigon)- and BU also has a PhD in addition to the terminal MA. I'd recommend Chicago but Joel Snyder is currently chair of the department and hasn't taken a student in a few years now.

    ^The specialties and approaches of these individuals, as well as the resources their institutions have, vary incredibly widely. Since you have quite a bit of time left in your undergrad, I'd suggest trying to narrow down your list to a selection of both MAs and PhDs (even if you think they're "reach" programs) where the interests/approaches of the particular faculty members are to your liking, and go from there. Good luck!

  6. By the way, Brown has a special arrangement with Harvard where PhD students can take Harvard courses at no additional cost. Is anyone planning to take advantage of that?

    I might! The art history department (where I'm headed) is quite small, and though my advisor is awesome and teaches a variety of great courses on my specialization (history of photography), I might try to take just a few more modern/contemporary related courses at Harvard in my 2nd or 3rd year if possible. Boston is such a short train ride away, so if you signed up for a once-a-week seminar, I'm sure it would be easy to get back/forth one day a week.

  7. There are also the Auxiliary Housing listings- this is where current grad students and recent grads who happen to own or rent out apartments post:

    http://www.brown.edu/Administration/Auxiliary_Housing/Listings/

    The downside is no pictures :/ But I had a few current grad students tell me that this was a great way to go if you're looking to avoid Craigslist.

    I plan on probably using Craigslist anyway. I've found quite a few nice listings by doing what LLajax suggested- searching "East Side" or any of the main street names/neighborhoods (Wickenden, Wayland Square, Thayer, etc.)

  8. As someone who did their undergrad at UChicago, and having been in some mixed ug/grad classes and solely grad classes alongside MAPH students, I can definitely vouch for the quality of the coursework and interactions with professors that you'll experience if you come here and take full advantage of what the program has to offer. My impression has been that some of the philosophy department faculty don't view MAPH and its students as favorably, but that certainly isn't the case in the art history department. You begin conceptualizing your thesis as early as the end of fall quarter (which ends in December), and from there it's a fast track to completing it, under the guidance of both faculty and current PhD students who act as your preceptors. The program is ideal for people who didn't have much undergrad coursework in their intended area of PhD study, and want to build a solid foundation to switch fields.

    As for whether it would "make a big difference for your application," having MAPH on your CV could serve as affirmation to other peer institutions that you have what it takes to do rigorous grad level art history work even without an undergrad major, and at a fast pace. Recent art history department 'rankings' (whatever they're worth to you) have placed UChicago in the top 3 programs in the nation. Also, what is your concentration within art history? Are you probably going to continue with medieval? Aden Kumler, the medievalist in the art history department, is awesome and teaches some really exciting grad seminars.

    That said, you are very right to bring up the fact that if you choose UChicago MAPH (which is only a year), you'd only be about a third through the program by the time you'd be submitting PhD applications for 2013-2014. It's possible, but not ideal, and even "discouraged" according to this page on the program's website. I have a friend who has also been accepted to MAPH for this year (for Anthropology, switching from Philosophy in undergrad) and she's certain that she's applying to PhDs this fall. So it's definitely possible, just maybe not what most people would advise you to do. You start your MAPH Core 2 weeks before UofC's fall quarter even begins, so in early to mid-September- which would give you some time to develop relationships with professors early if you 1) really hit the ground running and 2) choose your fall classes very carefully.

    I don't know much about Rutgers but it sounds like a very solid program, and the fact that you'd be there for 2 years might really appeal to your desire to take a tad more time before applying to PhDs. Given that you haven't had much art history coursework yet, just as you brought up in your latest ^ post, it also might be really beneficial to take classes across a wide spectrum of media/time periods, etc. just in case you end up becoming really excited about a subject and shift your area of focus. And of course, you can't beat the proximity to New York.

    All in all, I suppose that however much I love UChicago and tell people to come here :) , I'd probably go with Rutgers in this case because the 2 year length of the program plays into your desire to "really establish a strong background in art history." The art history classes I've taken at Chicago have been outstanding, but Rutgers would give you a lot more time to hone your specific interests, which would be good to eventually showcase in your PhD applications.

  9. Thanks for the advice, guys! Very helpful to know that most apartments include a parking space and that Zipcar takes care of most needs like Target trips anyway. I'll probably just stick with Zipcar for the first semester or year, at least, and leave purchasing a car to second year or later.

  10. Does anyone have any advice as to whether a car is necessary in Providence? I know that the city proper is walkable, and that there are some buses, but the nearest Target is in all the way in Cranston... just wondering whether anyone has an opinion on this. Thanks!

  11. Does anyone have any suggestions about some great reading material? I'll take anything: general 20th century textbooks, gender/queer theory, introduction to the field, etc. I'd be most appreciative.

    The two-volume set Art Since 1900 (by Hal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, Benjamin Buchloh, and Yve-Alain Bois) would be a great place to start. It's pretty dense, quite comprehensive, and just an all-around good investment.

  12. I don't have much experience with graduate housing because I was an undergrad at the UofC, but I'd recommend looking for an apartment (graduate housing or otherwise) in the north or eastern portions of Hyde Park close to the lake, just because it's easier to get downtown. It's basically a matter of walking a few minutes to the bus or Metra (if you live by the lake), versus a 15+ minute walk from the inner/Western parts of the neighborhood, which can be annoying, especially in Winter.

    Anything off of 51st Street is probably a good bet, because a lot of the buses that go downtown stop at 51st and Lake Park and continue their routes north. There is also a Metra stop there, the 51st/53rd stop.

    If you're looking to live close to a grocery store, eventually anything off 51st will be a pretty good location given that the Whole Foods at 53rd/Lake Park should open in 2014. In the meantime, there is Treasure Island at 55th and Lake Park, Hyde Park Produce at 53rd and Kimbark (good place to go if you're vegetarian and/or live in Western/Central Hyde Park), or Village Foods, which is at 51st/Lake Park but closing once the new construction for the Whole Foods complex takes over.

    If you want to get a non-UofC apartment instead, you should look at marketplace.uchicago.edu and http://www.uchicagoapartments.com/.

  13. Thanks for reviving the thread! Excited to be attending Brown starting in Fall for Art History (specifically, the history of photography). I visited this past September and really enjoyed both campus and Providence. Hoping to meet more F12 first years!

  14. Applying for Art History PhDs and MAs at top tier schools... just got my scores today and am pretty disappointed at how their projected range for my Verbal deviated from my actual score in the end! Sigh. Did a lot better on practice tests. So it goes.

    V: 164, 94th percentile (projected 710-800, where even just a 710 would have translated to a 167, or 98th percentile)

    Q: 155, 69th percentile (projected 690-790, so pretty accurate)

    Edit: whoops! Forgot my writing score. Pretty happy with that one: 6.0. Whee.

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