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#SeeArtDifferently

Immersive technology brings world-class art to your fingertips.

New Students Get 10% Off a Barnes Class

Art is a powerful agent for learning, personal growth, and social progress. We’ve been teaching people from all walks of life to think critically and see the world differently through art inside our galleries for 100 years. Now, with our innovative, user-friendly technology, we’re able to bring our unique teaching method to all corners of the world in a singularly immersive experience. When you take an online class with one of our expert instructors, you’ll not only increase your understanding of art, you’ll also build a sense of community with fellow art lovers and deepen your appreciation for cultures and histories you may not know.

Scholarships available. Check out our FAQs for more information on online classes. Barnes classes also make great gifts.

For a limited time, get 10% off your first class. Simply enter code NEWSTUDENT at checkout.

Upcoming Online Classes

January

Surrealism, Then and Now

Mondays, January 5 – 26, 6 – 8pm
Revisit the movement’s origin and global expansion and consider its legacy today.

January

Caravaggio: Revolutionary Painter of the Roman Baroque

Wednesdays, January 7 – 28, 2 – 4pm
Learn how Caravaggio rejected classical idealism for raw naturalism, fueling works with psychological intensity.

January

Famous Heists: Crimes in the History of Art

Wednesdays, January 7 – 28, 6 – 8pm
An in-depth look at art crimes, including museum heists, stolen artifacts, and forgeries that fooled the world.

February

Art and Censorship in the 21st Century

Mondays, February 2 – 16, and Tuesday, February 24, noon – 2pm
Art censorship is on the rise worldwide. Explore the causes and implications of this alarming trend.

February

Exploring Impressionism: Modernity Painted in Broad Strokes

Wednesdays, February 4 – 25, 1 – 3pm
Learn about the radical artists who broke from tradition to represent the modern world around them.

February

The Harlem Renaissance in Philadelphia

Fridays, February 13 – March 13, 2 – 4pm
Uncover Philadelphia’s connections to the Harlem Renaissance and the movement’s enduring legacy on the city.

March

The Gilded Age: Art, Industry, and the Making of American Culture

Wednesdays, March 4 – 25, 2 – 4pm
Explore the relationship between art and industry during the Gilded Age and the era’s cultural legacy.

March

The Nabis: Late 19th-Century Prophets of the New

Mondays, March 9 – March 30, 6 – 8pm
Explore the legacy of this group of early modern trailblazers.

March

17th-Century Dutch Art’s “Holy Trinity”: Hals, Rembrandt, and Vermeer

Fridays, March 20 – April 10, 1 – 3pm
Examine Hals, Rembrandt, and Vermeer through deep-zoom analysis and cultural context.

April

The Art of the Late Medieval Book: Illuminated Treasures at the Met

Fridays, April 3 – 24, 1 – 3pm
Explore some of the great Western medieval manuscripts in the museum’s collections.

April

The Restless Modernism of John Singer Sargent

Wednesdays, April 8 – 29, 1 – 3pm
Explore Sargent’s artistic evolution, from his Paris training to his “restless” portraits in London, and consider his place in modern art.

April

Size Does Matter: A History of Miniatures in Art

Wednesdays, April 8 – 29, 6 – 8pm
What makes miniatures so fascinating? And what compels artists to work on such a tiny scale? This course shines a spotlight on the art of miniatures.

April

Monet at Giverny

Thursdays, April 9 – 30, 4 – 6pm
Explore Monet’s final decades at his home and gardens in Giverny, where he created his iconic Water Lilies series.

May

The Femme Fatale in Art, Film, and Pop Culture, 1890 to Now

Tuesdays, May 5 – 26, 4 – 6pm
Study the mysterious femme fatale, an archetype for exploring themes of gender, power, sexuality, and morality across art forms.

May

Abstraction in Modern Art

Wednesdays, May 6 – 27, 1 – 3pm
Studying artists as diverse as Hilma af Klint, Paul Klee, and Joan Miró, this course explores abstraction between the 1900s and 1950s.


May

Decades of Change: American Art and Culture 1950–70

Fridays, May 15 – June 5, 1 – 3pm
See how postwar American art reflected innovation, protest, and social change.

May

The Hudson River School in Context

Tuesdays, May 26 – June 16, 12 – 2pm
Explore 19th-century landscape painting and its politics through deep-zoom analysis.

June

Cézanne: The Battle of the Bathers

Wednesdays, June 3 – 24, 6 – 8pm
Compare Cézanne’s Bathers paintings through guided close looking and deep-zoom study.

June

Sicily: Crossroads of Art and Culture

Thursdays, June 4 – 25, 2 – 4pm
Explore the island’s rich artistic history from antiquity to the early modern era.