Yay or Neigh?: Frederic Remington’s Bronco Buster, Public Art, and Socially-Engaged Art History Pedagogy
Yay or Neigh?: Frederic Remington’s Bronco Buster, Public Art, and Socially-Engaged Art History Pedagogy
This article outlines a collaborative, community-based project developed for two undergraduate art history courses at a large state university. The exercise focused on Frederic Remington’s 1894-95 sculpture, the Bronco Buster, a large bronze image of a cowboy whipping a bucking bronco with the goal of taming it. An enlarged replica of Remington’s sculpture was installed recently in the downtown district of this university town, raising questions about how it was selected and funded, as well as what message the sculpture sent about the town to its visitors. As we discussed our frustration with both the iconography and the selection process of the Bronco Buster, we wondered if we could translate it into powerful learning experiences for our art history students, tying their real-world, local experiences to the critical skills and historical knowledge that we teach in the classroom. In this essay, we describe and evaluate the semester-long collaborative learning experience that we designed and implemented. We discuss engaged scholarship and community interaction, consider the relevance of art history to contemporary life and politics, confront the pedagogical challenges posed by regionally, politically, and racially diverse student bodies, and generate a model for others invested in the connections between academic and everyday life.
Borland, Jennifer
551d1ad1-1ba2-4ff9-b590-0c248d8dc289
Siddons, Louise
c227b584-18d1-4f25-94f0-eabb2a31efd7
2018
Borland, Jennifer
551d1ad1-1ba2-4ff9-b590-0c248d8dc289
Siddons, Louise
c227b584-18d1-4f25-94f0-eabb2a31efd7
Borland, Jennifer and Siddons, Louise
(2018)
Yay or Neigh?: Frederic Remington’s Bronco Buster, Public Art, and Socially-Engaged Art History Pedagogy.
Art History Pedagogy & Practice, 3 (1).
Abstract
This article outlines a collaborative, community-based project developed for two undergraduate art history courses at a large state university. The exercise focused on Frederic Remington’s 1894-95 sculpture, the Bronco Buster, a large bronze image of a cowboy whipping a bucking bronco with the goal of taming it. An enlarged replica of Remington’s sculpture was installed recently in the downtown district of this university town, raising questions about how it was selected and funded, as well as what message the sculpture sent about the town to its visitors. As we discussed our frustration with both the iconography and the selection process of the Bronco Buster, we wondered if we could translate it into powerful learning experiences for our art history students, tying their real-world, local experiences to the critical skills and historical knowledge that we teach in the classroom. In this essay, we describe and evaluate the semester-long collaborative learning experience that we designed and implemented. We discuss engaged scholarship and community interaction, consider the relevance of art history to contemporary life and politics, confront the pedagogical challenges posed by regionally, politically, and racially diverse student bodies, and generate a model for others invested in the connections between academic and everyday life.
Text
Yay or Neigh_
- Version of Record
More information
Published date: 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 488102
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488102
PURE UUID: f6dd3198-ef17-4e32-a3d3-a22a92ccc94c
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 15 Mar 2024 17:45
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:07
Export record
Contributors
Author:
Jennifer Borland
Author:
Louise Siddons
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics