Artist Research Paper
In this course, you will write a research paper analyzing an artwork from an artist of your choosing. You will given general background information on their life and an art historical context.
Write a brief proposal for your Research Paper, stating the following:
Due Sep 18th, Wednesday
Final Paper:
The contents of your paper should include the following:
Your final paper will be a well-written essay, 1,000 to 1,250 (maximum) words in length (this is the equivalent to a four to five-page paper if double-spaced and in 12-point font).
Cited Sources: No more than one of your sources should be a webpage (that is, something that exists only as a webpage; here, the Met website might be used as a fifth source). When using an internet source, remember that it must be legitimate, meaning that it is authored and published by an academic or art institution (look for .edu or .org websites). When published sources are included in your final paper, you must provide proper citations. You may use either MLA style or the Turabian Style. Information on how to use either style is available through the SAC Library website (see citation guide (Links to an external site.)). Your final paper will be due on November 21. All late papers will lose one-third a letter grade per day they are late.
Submit: Use the submit link at the top of this page and upload your final paper as directed.
Grading: Your grade for this assignment will be based on the quality of your paper following the guidelines above and the inclusion of a complete and properly Works Cited page. In terms of quality, I will be looking for a well-written paper that reflects a thoughtful and thorough analysis of the subject matter (the art you have chosen to investigate), supported by your outside research.
Important scholarly journals delivered as high quality page images and articles downloads are in PDF format. Coverage usually stops from 2 to 5 years prior to current year depending on each journal's publisher. Subjects include: African American Studies, Anthropology, Asian Studies, Ecology, Economics, Education, Finance, History, Language & Literature, Mathematics, Philosophy, Political Science, Population Studies, Sociology, & Statistics.
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