Saturday Study

On campus and online

Saturday Study happens once a term and delivers short, intensive and sociable events that draw from our temporary exhibitions or our permanent collection to explore significant art-historical themes.

Saturday Study events take in the Lecture Theatre at Vernon Square; they will also be recorded and made available online from the following week.

Refreshments and entry to The Courtauld Gallery are included in the course fee for on-campus attendees.

Where Saturday Study events contextualise temporary exhibitions at The Courtauld Gallery, booking for online access remains open until the end of the relevant exhibition. The lecture recordings will be sent in the week directly after the Saturday in question, or once a week on Tuesdays thereafter. Recordings will be accessible for ten days from delivery.

Monet and London. Views of the Thames - In Context

Online recording available only

Exhibition curator Dr Karen Serres and Dr Anne Puetz

Online as a recording
£10 (£5 concessions)

Course description

This study morning accompanies The Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition Monet and London. Views of the Thames (27 September 2024 – 19 January 2025).  The show brings together a number of remarkable serial paintings of major London landmarks that Monet had painted over three visits to the British capital from 1899-1901, and realises his plan for a London exhibition of these works.  Join exhibition curator Dr Karen Serres in conversation with Dr Anne Puetz, as  they discuss, among other topics, Monet’s London, the concept of seriality, and the artist as curator.

Booking for online access remains open until the end of December 2024. The lecture recordings will be sent at noon on Tuesday 3 December, or once a week on Tuesdays for those booking after the 3 December, and will be accessible for 10 days from delivery. You can book via the button below.

Upcoming events - hold the date

The Reinharts of Winterthur: Merchants, Philanthropists and Collectors, Saturday 8 March 2025

Saturday 8 March 2025

10:30 (registration) to 13:15

Dr Ketty Gottardo and Dr Rachel Sloan

On campus at Vernon Square
£45 (£35 concessions)

Or

Online as a recording
£10 (£5 concessions)

This study event accompanies The Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition Goya to Impressionism: Masterpieces from the Oskar Reinhart Collection. Exhibition curators Dr Ketty Gottardo and Dr Rachel Sloan will illuminate the collecting activities and patronage of the wider Reinhart family, and delve into the riches of a collection which has intriguing historical parallels to that donated by Samuel Courtauld to The Courtauld Gallery.

Booking for this event will open shortly.

With Graphic Intent – German And Austrian Modernist Prints And Drawings In Context, Saturday 31 May 2025

Saturday 31 May 2025

10:30 (registration) to 13:15

Dr Emily Christensen and Dr Niccola Shearman

On campus at Vernon Square
£45 (£35 concessions)

Or

Online as a recording
£10 (£5 concessions)

This study event accompanies the display of works on paper from the German and Austrian Expressionist era With Graphic Intent. Looking at fine examples from our collection, we will discover how the inherent material properties of prints and drawings inspired new forms of artistic expression.  Join display curators Emily Christensen and Niccola Shearman as they explore the connections between these innovations and the uneasy climate of idealism and anxiety we associate with early twentieth-century Germany and Austria.

Booking for this event will open shortly.

Food in Art – Velazquez to Wayne Thiebaud, Saturday 22 November 2025

Saturday 22 November 2025

09:30 (registration) to 13:15

Dr Karen Serres, Dr Chloe Nahum, Dr Thomas Balfe and Janine Catalano

On campus at Vernon Square
£65 (£55 concessions)

Or

Online as a recording
£15 (£7.50 concessions)

This Study event accompanies The Courtauld Gallery’s pioneering UK exhibition of Wayne Thiebaud’s quintessentially post-war American subjects, such as diner food and deli counters.  Our speakers will explore the exhibition themes, and more widely, the rich symbolic and formal potential of food and its consumption in sixteenth- to eighteenth-century still-lifes and genre scenes, in the artistic innovations of artists like Cézanne and Picasso, and investigate the use of food as subject-matter and artistic medium in twentieth-century and contemporary installation and performance art.

This event will open for booking in mid-July 2025.

How to book

To book your chosen course(s) please use the book now button below and you will be taken to our booking system where you can book and pay (Visa / Mastercard / GooglePay / ApplePay).

At checkout, you will be prompted to login (if you have previously booked gallery tickets) or to register and create a new account.

(Please note: this ticketing login is not the same as your Short Courses VLE login if you have one).

Please note that in the EU new VAT rules for online courses are coming into effect.  This means that from 1 January 2025 we will be required to charge EU participants their local VAT rate.  VAT-inclusive prices for EU students will be displayed at check-out.

If you have any questions please email us at short.courses@courtauld.ac.uk

Archive of previous Study Events

“An Object of National Splendour”: Somerset House and the British Empire

The Courtauld Gallery reopened its doors to the public on 19 November. As audiences return to its home in Somerset House, our Study Day explores this magnificent building in depth. Somerset House was the most significant public building project in Britain in the late eighteenth century, and originally housed a number of key government offices, including the headquarters of the Navy Board, alongside England’s major learned societies. Our Study Day investigates the building’s sophisticated construction and external ornamentation, as well as its function and symbolic role within a wider network of British imperial spaces and architectures.

Speakers: Kyle Leyden, Dr Emily Mann, Dr Anne Puetz

Moderated by Dr Anne Puetz

Saturday 11 December 2021

Reflecting on Van Gogh’s Self-Portraits

Today, Vincent Van Gogh’s paintings achieve fantastic sums at auctions, his style is unmistakable, and his popular recognition arguably the highest of any modern painter. Collectively, we feel that we ‘know’ this artist.  The Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition Van Gogh’s Self-Portraits (3 February – 8 May 2022), the first ever devoted to the artist’s self-portraits across his entire career, asks us to think again, drawing on new research about his social networks, and about the works themselves. Exhibition curator Dr Karen Serres will reflect on both entrenched myths and the new perspectives gained about Van Gogh as man and artist.

Speakers: Dr Karen Serres in conversation with Dr Anne Puetz

Saturday 12 March 2022

Object/Subject: Modern Women in Impressionist, Post-Impressionist and Expressionist Art

Women feature prominently in a number of key works from The Courtauld’s modern collections, appearing as barmaids, nudes, dancers or fashionable sitters in portraits. Looking beyond our own collections, it is clear that in much avant-garde art – mostly painted by men – women abound as ‘subject-matter’; as objects to be looked at, to put it another way. This event foregrounds a number of striking women artists of the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, including Berthe Morisot, Gabriele Münter, Marianne Werefkin and Paula Modersohn Becker, and explores the connections between women (as subject-matter and as agents) and wider nineteenth-century concepts and connotations of modernity. We shall look closely at the ways nineteenth century attitudes to women and their experience reveal themselves in paint, and ask how these differ when the woman herself is the producer of the work. Progressing into the early twentieth century, we shall discuss the boundaries to be negotiated by female painters, considering the ways in which they bridged the gap between their desire to work in a man’s world, and society’s expectations of an appropriate feminine identity. For each of these artists, complex questions of creative agency are at stake.

Speakers: Dr Anne Puetz and Dr Niccola Shearman

Saturday 14 May 2022

Henry Fuseli and his Drawings of the 'Modern Woman'

Exhibition curators Professor David Solkin and Dr Ketty Gottardo discuss the life and work of one of British Romantic art’s most unusual figures, the Swiss-born painter and draughtsman Henry Fuseli (1741-1825). We’ll try to make sense of Fuseli’s private and highly inventive drawings of the ‘modern woman’, by considering their relationship to previous and contemporary figure studies.

Speakers: Professor David Solkin and Dr Ketty Gottardo

Moderated by Dr Anne Puetz

Saturday 26 November 2022

The Morgan Stanley Exhibition: Peter Doig. New and Recent Works – In Context

Our Saturday Study event accompanies The Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition of new and recent paintings and prints by Peter Doig (10 Feb – 29 May 2023). One of the most renowned British contemporary figurative artists, Doig lived and worked in Trinidad since 2000 before re-establishing himself in London in 2021. Our lecturers will set Doig into the wider context of post WWII British figurative painting before exploring his working practices and the themes of his large-scale expressive landscapes and figure paintings of Canadian and Trinidadian subjects, and of the recent experience of cultural relocation.

With exhibition curator Dr Barnaby Wright, independent curator and art historian Catherine Lampert and Dr Catherine Howe, Research Officer at Zaha Hadid Foundation. Moderator: Dr Anne Puetz (The Courtauld)

Drawing on Arabian Nights – Orientalism in Context

Saturday 29 April 2023

This Saturday Study event will provide an opportunity to delve deeper into the ideas raised in The Courtauld Gallery exhibition Drawing on Arabian Nights (22 February – 3 June 2023). The first of three talks will introduce the exhibition and the works: a selection of Orientalist works on paper from The Courtauld’s collection, and explore the curatorial decision to present them in the context of the folk tales Arabian Nights. The second talk will look more broadly at the history and complexity of Orientalist paintings, and examine the multiple interpretations they invite. Our final talk will introduce the reception and production of Orientalist visual and written material in the region of Turkey and the Levant in the nineteenth and twentieth century.

Speakers: Dr Emily Christensen and Dr Ambra D’Antone. Moderator: Dr Anne Puetz

Frank Auerbach. The Charcoal Heads – In Context

Saturday 23 March 2024

This Saturday Study event accompanied The Courtauld Gallery’s spring exhibition Frank Auerbach. The Charcoal Heads.

Uniquely, this show brings together a series of large-scale portrait drawings of the artist’s friends, and one self-portrait, accompanied by a selection of related paintings the artist made of the same sitters. Join exhibition curator Dr Barnaby Wright and independent curator and writer Jane Alison to explore these poignant images over which the artist took evident care, characteristically re-working them in numerous sessions with the sitters.  We shall also set these works of the 1950s and early 1960s into the context of post-war British portraiture.

Speakers: Dr Barnaby Wright, Jane Alison. Moderator: Dr Anne Puetz

Vanessa Bell: A Pioneer of Modern Art - In Context

Saturday 22 June 2024

Our summer term Saturday Study event accompanied The Courtauld Gallery’s first focused display of works by the important Bloomsbury artist and designer Vanessa Bell.

We’ll investigate Bell’s artistic development and milieu in the context of the wider British art world of the time, ask what it took to be a pioneering woman artist at the time, what we understand by Modernism in Britain in the early years of the 20th century and in what ways Bell, and the Bloomsbury group more widely, contributed to it.  We’ll weigh the benefits of belonging to a collaborative avant-garde group against the disadvantages of later commentators’ excessive focus on the Bloomsbury artists’ notoriously unorthodox private lives, and ask why it took so long for female artists like Bell to step out of the shadow of her better-known male colleagues.

Speakers are the exhibition curator Dr Rachel Sloan (The Courtauld) and Dr Wendy Hitchmough (formerly curator at the Bloomsbury artists’ home, Charleston, and senior lecturer emerita at the University of Sussex).

Moderator: Dr Anne Puetz

Citations