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AP Art History in 15

Podcast door Robert Bruns

Engels

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Over AP Art History in 15

This podcast series is designed to help Advanced Placement (AP) Art History students gain an understanding of the "250" works of art and art history. The series will try to connect works of art and architecture to help students succeed in the AP Exam.

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73 afleveringen

aflevering AP Art History Exam Pep Talk 2026 artwork

AP Art History Exam Pep Talk 2026

Get ready for the AP Art History Exam with this special “Pep Talk” episode of AP Art History in 15 hosted by Mr. Bruns! In this motivational review session, Mr. Bruns walks students through every section of the AP Art History Exam — from the 80 multiple-choice questions to all six FRQs — while sharing practical strategies, writing advice, and confidence boosters to help students succeed on exam day. This episode covers: * MCQ survival strategies and essential art history knowledge * How to master comparison, contextual analysis, visual analysis, attribution, and CCOT essays * The importance of evidence, vocabulary, and formal analysis * Common mistakes students make on FRQs * Key regions and movements that may appear on the exam Mr. Bruns also reminds listeners why the “250” often becomes “the 400,” how to think like an art historian under pressure, and why confidence and careful observation matter just as much as memorization. Whether you’re reviewing Gothic cathedrals, Rococo elegance, Global Contemporary art, Byzantine mosaics, or Roman imperial sculpture, this episode is designed to help AP Art History students walk into the exam calm, focused, and ready to earn points. Perfect for last-minute review, the night before the test, or the ride to school on exam morning.

13 mei 2026 - 12 min
aflevering Global Contemporary Art: Purpose and Audience (1980 to Present) artwork

Global Contemporary Art: Purpose and Audience (1980 to Present)

Step into the world of Global Contemporary Art with Mr. Bruns in this episode of AP Art History in 15. This episode explores how artists and architects from 1980 to the present use art to communicate powerful ideas about memory, politics, identity, architecture, globalization, and public experience through the lens of Purpose and Audience. Mr. Bruns breaks down the essential art historical foundations of each work — including form, composition, materials, scale, content, and historical context — while connecting those ideas directly to the AP Art History exam’s comparison and FRQ skills. Featured works include: • Vietnam Veterans Memorial [https://www.mayalinstudio.com/memory-works/vietnam-veterans-memorial]by Maya Lin • Guggenheim Museum Bilbao [https://www.guggenheim-bilbao.eus/en] by Frank Gehry • MAXXI National Museum of XXI Century Arts [https://smarthistory.org/zaha-hadid-maxxi/] by Zaha Hadid • Shibboleth [https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/doris-salcedo-2695/doris-salcedo-shibboleth] by Doris Salcedo • Kui Hua Zi (Sunflower Seeds) [https://smarthistory.org/ai-weiwei-kui-hua-zi-sunflower-seeds/] by Ai Weiwei Listeners will discover how patrons, institutions, governments, and audiences influence the creation of contemporary art and architecture, and how artists use materials and space to shape emotional and intellectual responses.

11 mei 2026 - 17 min
aflevering How Rulers Used Art to Shape Society - Thrones, Propaganda, and Power artwork

How Rulers Used Art to Shape Society - Thrones, Propaganda, and Power

In this episode of AP Art History in 15, Mr. Bruns explores one of the most important themes students may encounter on the AP Art History Exam: how rulers used art to regulate society, legitimize authority, and shape public perception across cultures and time periods. The episode examines the political power of works including the Stele of Hammurabi [https://smarthistory.org/hammurabi-2/], Stele of Naram-Sin [https://smarthistory.org/victory-stele-of-naram-sin/], Colossal statue of Constantine the Great [https://smarthistory.org/the-colossus-of-constantine/], the Portrait of Mao Zedong at the Gate of Heavenly Peace [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portraits_overlooking_Tiananmen], Mao by Andy Warhol [https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/677119], and the Statue of Saddam Hussein. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saddam_Hussein_statue_destruction] Mr. Bruns also investigates how female rulers and royal women used art to establish authority and influence society through works such as Theodora and Attendants [https://smarthistory.org/theodora-rhetoric/], the Maya lintel showing Shield Jaguar and Lady Xoc [https://smarthistory.org/maya-the-yaxchilan-lintels/], Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and Three Daughters [https://smarthistory.org/house-altar-depicting-akhenaten-nefertiti-and-three-of-their-daughters/], The Armada Portrait [https://www.rmg.co.uk/queens-house/attractions/armada-portrait-elizabeth-i], and Marie Antoinette and Her Children [https://www.gallery.ca/magazine/in-the-spotlight/marie-antoinette-and-her-children-an-icon-of-french-painting]. Listeners will learn how form, composition, material, symbolism, and scale helped transform art into propaganda, religious authority, political messaging, and national identity — perfect preparation for thematic comparisons on the AP Art History Exam.

9 mei 2026 - 17 min
aflevering Birth, Death, and Eternity: Themes of Life and Immortality in AP Art History artwork

Birth, Death, and Eternity: Themes of Life and Immortality in AP Art History

In this episode of AP Art History in 15, Mr. Bruns explores two major themes students may encounter on the AP Art History Exam: Art and the Cycle of Life and Mortality versus Immortality. Through thematic analysis, listeners learn how civilizations across time used art to explain birth, death, rebirth, memory, and eternal existence. Mr. Bruns breaks down each artwork through: * form, * content, * purpose, * and cultural meaning, while also discussing the kinds of thematic comparison questions students may face on the AP exam. Works discussed in this episode include: * Tlazolteotl Giving Birth to the Maize God [https://www.wikiart.org/en/aztec-art/tlazolteotl-birthing-figure] * Nativity by Sandro Botticelli [https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/sandro-botticelli-mystic-nativity] * Studies of the Fetus in the Womb by Leonardo da Vinci [https://www.rct.uk/collection/919102/the-fetus-in-the-womb-sketches-and-notes-on-reproduction] * Dead Christ by Andrea Mantegna [https://smarthistory.org/andrea-mantegna-dead-christ/] * The Taj Mahal [https://smarthistory.org/the-taj-mahal/] * Lord Pacal Sarcophagus Lid [https://smarthistory.org/palenque/] * Shiva Nataraja (Lord of the Dance) [https://smarthistory.org/shiva-as-lord-of-the-dance-nataraja/] * The Journey of the Sun God Re [https://egypt-museum.com/the-journey-of-the-sun-god-re/] * King Tut’s Sarcophagus [https://smarthistory.org/tutankhamuns-tomb-innermost-coffin-and-death-mask/] From Aztec fertility imagery to Renaissance Christianity, from Maya funerary symbolism to Egyptian afterlife beliefs, this episode helps students connect artistic traditions across cultures while strengthening AP Art History thematic thinking and visual analysis skills.

8 mei 2026 - 19 min
aflevering Global Voices, Shared Forms: Cultural Interactions in Contemporary Art (1980–Present) artwork

Global Voices, Shared Forms: Cultural Interactions in Contemporary Art (1980–Present)

In this episode of AP Art History in 15, Mr. Bruns explores how Global Contemporary artists navigate identity, power, and globalization through interactions within and across cultures. Focusing on four major works—Rebellious Silence [https://smarthistory.org/shirin-neshat-rebellious-silence-women-of-allah-series/], Lying with the Wolf [https://smarthistory.org/kiki-smith-lying-with-the-wolf/], Old Man’s Cloth [https://smarthistory.org/el-anatsui-old-mans-cloth/], and Preying Mantra [https://smarthistory.org/wangechi-mutu-preying-mantra/]—this episode breaks down both what viewers see and how artists construct meaning through form. Listeners will gain a deeper understanding of how artists use line, color, texture, material, and scale to communicate complex ideas about gender, colonialism, environment, and global exchange. From Shirin Neshat’s powerful use of contrast and calligraphy to challenge perceptions of Muslim women, to Kiki Smith’s reimagining of human and animal relationships, each work reveals how visual choices carry cultural weight. Mr. Bruns also examines how El Anatsui transforms discarded materials into monumental statements about trade and history, and how Wangechi Mutu uses fragmentation and collage to critique global beauty standards and postcolonial identity. Perfect for AP Art History students preparing for the exam, this episode emphasizes a key takeaway: in contemporary art, form is never separate from meaning. Understanding how artists shape their work is essential to understanding what their work says.

6 mei 2026 - 15 min
Super app. Onthoud waar je bent gebleven en wat je interesses zijn. Heel veel keuze!
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