A wide shot of a ceramics studio, featuring students working with pottery wheels and other tools.

Isabel Garcia-Gonzales

Lecturer

Bio

Education: BA, 1997, University of Wisconsin, Madison; MFA, 2004, Mills College, Oakland, CA. Publications: Fledgling Comics; Nonwhite and Woman: 131 Micro Essays on Being in the World; Kuwento: Lost Things, An Anthology of New Philippine Myths; Riksha: Asian American Arts in Action. Awards/Residencies: Hedgebrook; Breadloaf Writers Conference; VONA/Voices; Finalist, Poets and Writers’ California Writers Exchange; Finalist, Glimmer Train Very Short Fiction Award. Community-based Arts Practice: Core Organizer, Banyan: Asian American Writers Collective.

Courses

Title Department Catalog Term

Description

What are the concerns that drive one's creative practice? How does one set the terms for its future development? Sophomore Seminar offers strategies for students to explore, reflect upon, and connect common themes and interests in the development of an emerging creative practice that will serve as the basis of their ongoing studies at SAIC and beyond. Students will examine historical and contemporary influences and contextualize their work in relation to the diverse art-worlds of the 21st Century. Readings, screenings, and field trips will vary each semester. Presentations by visiting artists and guest speakers will provide the opportunity for students to hear unique perspectives on sustaining a creative practice. One-on-one meetings with faculty will provide students with individualized mentorship throughout the semester. During interdisciplinary critiques, students will explore a variety of formats and tools to analyze work and provide peer feedback. The class mid-term project asks students to imagine a plan for their creative life and devise a self-directed course of study for their time at school. The course concludes with an assignment asking students to develop and document a project or body of work demonstrating how the interplay of ideas, technical skills, and formal concerns evolve through iteration, experimentation and revision.

Prerequisite: Must be a sophomore to enroll.

Class Number

2165

Credits

3