Research Studio I |
Contemporary Practices |
1020 (016) |
Fall 2024 |
Description
This studio course focuses on themes, practices, contexts, and questions undertaken by contemporary artists and designers. Research Studio I is a course that asks students to begin to develop and connect their own work and ideas with a diverse range of artists, designers, and communities. This course engages with cultural institutions including: museums, galleries, libraries and archives as resources of critical engagement.
Students will undertake various types of research activities: a) collecting and classification, b) mapping and diagramming, c) systems of measurement, d) social interaction, e) information search systems, f) recording and representation, and g) drawing and other notational systems.
Assignments in this course are faculty directed, open-media, interdisciplinary and idea based. The projects are designed to help students recognize their work habits, biases, strengths, and weaknesses. Students will experience a wide range of research methods and making strategies. Critique as an evaluative process used in art and design schools, is a focus in this course. Various methods and models of critique are used in order to give students the tools to discuss their own work and the work of others.
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Class Number
1327
Credits
3
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Research Studio I |
Contemporary Practices |
1020 (10S) |
Fall 2024 |
Description
This studio course focuses on themes, practices, contexts, and questions undertaken by contemporary artists and designers. Research Studio I is a course that asks students to begin to develop and connect their own work and ideas with a diverse range of artists, designers, and communities. This course engages with cultural institutions including: museums, galleries, libraries and archives as resources of critical engagement.
Students will undertake various types of research activities: a) collecting and classification, b) mapping and diagramming, c) systems of measurement, d) social interaction, e) information search systems, f) recording and representation, and g) drawing and other notational systems.
Assignments in this course are faculty directed, open-media, interdisciplinary and idea based. The projects are designed to help students recognize their work habits, biases, strengths, and weaknesses. Students will experience a wide range of research methods and making strategies. Critique as an evaluative process used in art and design schools, is a focus in this course. Various methods and models of critique are used in order to give students the tools to discuss their own work and the work of others.
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Class Number
1321
Credits
3
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RS: Shelter from the Storm |
Contemporary Practices |
1022 (012) |
Spring 2025 |
Description
Concepts of home and place are often thought of as providing refuge from the turbulence of the outside world. They speak a visual and spatial language of belonging and centeredness, but the comfort that language offers can be used for widely differing purposes. It can justify withdrawal from, or support engagement with, the uncertainties that lie just outside our front door. Most often though, it helps us shuffle between those extremes in the messy and necessary choices of everyday life. This class explores what home and place mean to us, and how that is expressed symbolically and metaphorically in the structures and spaces that we imagine, construct, occupy, and leave.
We will consider examples ranging from Thoreau's cabin on Walden Pond to Levittown; from Arcadian ruins to utopian urban visions; from Little House on the Prairie to Rachel Whiteread's House; from Bentham's Panopticon to Phillip Johnson's Glass House; and from Disney's urban planning in Celebration, Florida to Tonika Lewis Johnson' Folded Map Projects. These examples and others will help us to explore the archetypes and conventions that inform our experience and understanding of the places and spaces we call our own.
Course work will vary, but typically requires 3-5 studio assignments and projects, as well as readings, discussions, written responses, and field trips to view relevant works.
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Class Number
1189
Credits
3
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Siena:Living Past in Present |
Off Campus |
3000 (001) |
Winter 2025 |
Description
Siena is a hill town in Tuscany that was first settled by the Etruscans in 900 ¿ 400 BC. It reached its peak as a political, economic and artistic center in the Medieval period from 1150 ¿ 1350 AD. During those years it prospered, enjoying a ¿golden¿ era as an independent republic with a representative government, where enlightened trade and economic philosophies fostered modern banking practices and distinctive styles of painting, sculpture, and architecture developed in the service of aesthetic pleasure and civic pride. Today, Siena¿s historic center is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the city¿s art, medieval architecture, museums, archives, university and cuisine are internationally renowned. Living the Past in the Present will use the archival and cultural resources there to give young artists greater insight into how historical interests and study can serve as a catalyst for their own growth and work as contemporary artists and thinkers. We will be interacting with artists, historians, archivists, art and architecture conservators, scientists and ordinary Sienese to understand how the experience of growing up, living, working and creating in a place with hundreds of years of vibrant historical and cultural traditions affects contemporary identity and expression. Our time on the study trip will primarily be used for visiting and learning about sites, collections, and the people who study and live amongst them. We will also be gathering reference information to document what we are looking at and learning about: sketches, drawings, lists, diagrams, photographs, research notes, and reflective writing. There will be two assignments (one studio, one academic) that we will work on in Siena.
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Class Number
1037
Credits
0
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Siena:Living Past in Present |
Off Campus |
3050 (001) |
Winter 2025 |
Description
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Class Number
1040
Credits
3 - 6
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