Skip to content
Back Home
Smarthistory Logo
  • About
      • ABOUT SMARTHISTORY
      • What is Smarthistory?
      • Who is Smarthistory?
      • Is Smarthistory reliable?
      • Major donors
      • Press coverage
      • Our blog
      • Give us feedback
      • Contact us
      • At Smarthistory, the Center for Public Art History, we believe art has the power to transform lives and to build understanding across cultures. We believe that the brilliant histories of art belong to everyone, no matter their background.

        With 503 contributors from 201 colleges, universities, museums, and research centers, Smarthistory is the most-visited art history resource in the world.

  • For Learning
      • ART HISTORIES
      • Start here
      • Prehistoric
      • Africa
      • Americas
      • Asia
      • Ancient Mediterranean
      • Medieval Europe & Byzantine
      • The Islamic World
      • Europe 1300–1800
      • Europe 1800–1900
      • Pacific Islands
      • Modernisms 1900–1980
      • Art since 1980
      • COURSES
      • Art Appreciation
      • AP® Art History
      • A-Level Art History
      • History of photography
      • Creating and conserving
      • Understanding museums
      • Oppression and resistance in art
      • Illness, plagues, and pandemics in art
      • See all short courses
      • SPECIAL PROJECTS
      • The U.S. Civil War in Art
      • Seeing America
      • ARCHES: At-risk Cultural Heritage
      • Expanding the Renaissance
      • Across Cultures
      • Virtual Visits
  • Books
      • SMARTHISTORY BOOKS
      • Reframing Art History, a new kind of textbook
      • Guide to Byzantine Art
      • Guide to Ancient Roman Art
      • Guide to AP® Art History vol. 1 (#1–47)
      • Guide to AP® Art History vol. 2 (#48–98)
      • Guide to AP® Art History vol. 3 (#99–152)
      • See complete collection of titles
      • NEW TITLES
        • reframing art history cover smReframing Art History
          a new kind of textbook
        • Byzantine cover jpgGuide to Byzantine art
  • For Teaching
      • TOOLS FOR TEACHING
      • All content for teaching
      • Webinars past & present
      • Teaching with images: K-12
      • Sample syllabi
      • Do-it-yourself tools
        • UPCOMING EVENT
        • Check back soon for upcoming events
        • PAST EVENT
          • The Kaaba with Dr. Nancy Demerdash

            Apr.06.2022

            1:00–1:30 pm eastern

            The Kaaba with Dr. Nancy Demerdash

  • Support
      • SUPPORT SMARTHISTORY
      • Donate
      • Contribute an essay
      • We created Smarthistory to provide students around the world with the highest-quality educational resources for art and cultural heritage—for free.

  • Search
Search

All Results

Generic filters
Search in excerpt
Search

over here

Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank


Overview and Q&A about the Reframing Art ...


The Master of Calamarca’s Angel with Arquebus ...


The Parthenon with Dr. Rachel Kousser


Dr. Melody Rod-ari, on Angkor Thom



Dr. Cristin McKnight Sethi, on teaching textiles, ...


Ancestral Puebloan art

by Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank

Teo pyr grid

Art of Teotihuacan

by Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank

lapis grid
There were close connections between the Indus Valley civilization and eastern Iran.

Lapis lazuli stamp seal

by Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank and The British Museum


Dr. Allison Young, Teaching El Anatsui & ...


Dr. Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch on a Benin ...


Dr. Elizabeth Macaulay on the Dome of ...


Dr. Thomas Folland on Pablo Picasso’s Les ...



Dr. Kristen Loring Brennan on Ren Xiong’s ...


Dr. Heather Graham on Raphael’s Girl with ...


Dr. Stephanie Porras on Hispano-Philippine ivories


Dr. Cristin McKnight Sethi, on teaching textiles, ...



Dr. Maia Nuku on Oceanic Art


Sh Commons conversation logo
Smarthistory Commons webinars—a new series of conversations that began in January 2021. Join us for our free 30-minute webinars!

Smarthistory Commons Conversations

by Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank

Dr. Senta German on an Assyrian Lamassu


witham shielf grid

Celtic

by Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank


Post navigation

  • See More >>

Flickr IconBrowse Smarthistory images for teaching & learning! 

Sign up for our newsletter!

Receive occasional emails about new Smarthistory content.

Bank of America's Masterpiece Moment

Hasegawa Tōhaku, Pine Trees

with Masami Zenyia, Executive Director of the Tokyo National Museum

Crafted in the 16th century, this pair of six-panel screens is painted in ink on paper and showcases both Yamato-e and Chinese painting styles. The work features pine trees―a typical Japanese motif―and it has beautifully captured the richness of a Japanese landscape.

Watch the video
Learn more about Bank of America's Masterpiece Moment Close

Smarthistory is a nonprofit organization

At Smarthistory we believe art has the power to transform lives and to build understanding across cultures. We believe that the brilliant histories of art belong to everyone, no matter their background. Smarthistory’s free, award-winning digital content unlocks the expertise of hundreds of leading scholars, making the history of art accessible and engaging to more people, in more places, than any other publisher.

  • Donate
  • Contact Us
facebook icon
twitter icon
instagram icon
youtube icon
flickr icon
  • About Smarthistory
  • Smarthistory’s blog
  • Contribute an essay
  • Content editors and contributors

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

· © 2022 Smarthistory · Powered by · Designed with the Customizr theme ·

over here