Tutor information
David Morgan
David Morgan has taught art and architectural history for the Department since 2004. He has also taught courses for Birkbeck College, University of London, and for the WEA. His recent publications have centred upon the history of British visual satire.
Courses
Join us in Oxford to explore the world of The Beatles through a mix of academic insight, cultural discussion, and multimedia experiences. This interactive day event is ideal for music lovers, pop culture enthusiasts, and anyone curious about the Beatles.
Join us to explore the rich and dazzling architecture of the Italian Renaissance in three key cities. We will investigate the differing ways in which the classical styles of the Renaissance found expression in Florence, Rome and Venice.
This course is designed to enable you to 'read' the architecture of the Western world in a critically informed way.
Explore the turbulent, rebellious, and innovative progress of art in Britain since 1940, from Francis Bacon to the Brit-Pack with this hybrid lecture series.
From notions of Modernist formal radicalism to torturous and febrile emotional expressionism, discover the British sculptors of the 1940s and 50s in this hybrid lecture.
Examine British paintings of the 1950s and 60s, including Peter Blake and David Hockney's 'Pop Art', with this hybrid lecture.
Peter Blake's work on the cover for the Beatles' 1967 album, 'Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', vividly encapsulated a new social and cultural phenomenon. Explore how high art became less incongruous with popular culture in this hybrid lecture.
Discover the richness and diversity of Oxford's art collections. Explore first hand the many facets of world-class museums and galleries, such as the Ashmolean, History of Science, Natural History, and Pitt Rivers museums.
This course aims to give students an introduction and overview of that architectural tradition enabling students to 'read' the architecture of the contemporary built environment in a critically informed way.
Beginning with the vital structural innovations of the late Victorian era, this online course traces the rise and spread of modernism in European and American architecture, and concludes by examining contemporary architecture and future possibilities.
Beginning with the vital structural innovations of the late Victorian era, this course traces the rise and spread of modernism in European and American architecture, and concludes by examining contemporary architecture and future possibilities.
This course is designed to enable you to 'read' the architecture of the Western world in a critically informed way.
Discover the richness and diversity of Oxford's art collections. Explore first hand the many facets of world-class museums and galleries, such as the Ashmolean, History of Science, Natural History, and Pitt Rivers museums.