Art 081
The following courses serve as classes for the bachelor of arts (B.A.) and the bachelor of fine arts (B.F.A.) curricula.
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07:081:105
Visual Arts Practice (VAP) (1)
Involves supervised practical experience within the Department of Visual Arts studios, computer, media or photography labs, and galleries. Substantive projects outside of the department may qualify. (4 credits required for B.F.A; 2 credits required for B.A.) Students entering 2013 or after must take 07:081:107 in place of 1 VAP credit.
Required of all B.F.A. visual arts majors. Must be repeated for a total of 4 credits. Required of all B.A. visual arts majors. Must be repeated for a total of 2 credits.
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07:081:121
Drawing Fundamentals (4)
Introductory course designed to familiarize the student with the basic principles of drawing. Focusing primarily on fundamental skills such as accuracy in perceptual ability; a sensitivity to line; an understanding of compositional strategies; a working knowledge of one- and two-point perspective; an understanding of different strategies of creating space on a two-dimensional picture plane; as well as mastery of materials such as pencil and charcoal are covered.
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07:081:122
4-D Fundamentals (4)
Students learn fundamentals of time-based art making, working with still
and moving images, sound, and duration. Students make artworks that explore
techniques and practices of montage, sequencing, lighting, framing, and sound/image relationships.
Prerequisite: 07:081:121.
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07:081:200-201
Seminar in Contemporary Art A and B (3,3)
The focus of the seminar is on actual works of art, beginning with Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and culminating with current exhibitions of contemporary art. Students are required to go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in the first semester, and to familiarize themselves with galleries in New York, particularly in Chelsea and the Lower East Side, during the second semester. Work in all media from painting, drawing, and sculpture to film, photography, and performance will be discussed.
Prerequisites: 01:082:105-106, 01:355:101.
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07:081:221
Drawing I-A: Collage and Installation (4)
This course will explore the idea of drawing as a contemporary discipline that expands on the traditional notion and definition of drawing. Ideas of fracture, montage, image/object, process, and environment will all be explored as students develop their own vocabulary and studio practice. Historical models, relevant texts, and contemporary artists will be examined. Research/special projects and group and individual critiques are an integral part of the course.
Prerequisites: 07:081:121 and 122 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:222
Drawing I-B: Systems and Mapping (4)
This course will examine the nature of drawing as a discipline and process as well as its relationship to other visual arts media. The creation of various systems as a way to generate, organize, compose, pattern, plan, model, design, execute, and possibly destroy artwork will be explored. Examining and understanding other artists' work, reading relevant texts, research/special projects, the personal development of an active studio practice, and group and individual critiques are an integral part of this course.
Prerequisites: 07:081:121 and 122 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:227
Design and Visual Thinking A: Black and White (4)
An exploration of formalist design principles and basic compositional strategies in two and three dimensions; basic skill sets within a variety of materials and approaches; familiarity with the process of conceptual to visual ideation; and development of a working vocabulary with which to assess their own work and the work of others.
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07:081:228
Design and Visual Thinking B: Color (4)
Basic principles of color that address issues related to its physical properties, scientific principles, practical application, cultural implications, and concepts of color "theory."
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07:081:231
Design I-A: Methods and Thinking (4)
Introduction to a visual communication design process. Work with both hand
methods and digital technologies to develop original design solutions.
Assignments integrate conceptual thinking with formal experimentation. Students
explore problems dealing with visual metaphor, symbols, and the combination of
type and image for making meaning.
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07:081:232
Design I-B: Typography (4)
Introduction to typography, the practice of making verbal language
visual. Builds visual awareness of letterforms and their composition in space
through studio projects that engage with type as a means for clear
communication and visual expression. In addition to studio work, this course
demands absorbing technical and historical knowledge in order to develop a
visual sensitivity for typographic form.
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07:081:243
Media I-A: Introduction to Media Art: Screen/Image/Sound (4)
This introductory course focuses on the production and concepts of screen-based media artwork. Students learn about the interdisciplinary field of media art, which can include video
art, installation, and video sculpture; artists' cinema; experimental film and
video; participatory art; live media performance; and art for the internet. Students learn to navigate a landscape of continuously changing technologies and devices. The course includes lectures, workshops, technical demos, readings, critiques of student work, and screenings
of artists works. Students create a series of group and individual media art
projects. No technical experience required.
Open to all students.
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07:081:244
Media I-B: Experimental Practices and Techniques (4)
A course on experimental approaches to screen-based media art including experimental documentary and narrative, collage and montage, sampling, remixing, and abstraction. The course includes a series of technical workshops that may include 2-D animation, compositing, and other visual and digital tools and effects. Screening and discussions about media art in relation to art history and contemporary art. Includes lectures,
workshops, technical demos, readings, critiques of student work, and screenings of artists' works. Students create a series of short video and sound artworks.
Open to all students.
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07:081:251-252
Painting I-A and B (4,4)
Introduces a range of technical and experimental approaches to painting with oil and/or
acrylic in ways that relate to the histories of Modernist painting. The course offers varied approaches to the problems of structure, shape, and color, both in representation and abstraction. The development of formal coherence and imagery are guided and practiced through individual and group critiques. Selected
readings and museum visits required.
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07:081:261
Photography I-A: Introduction to Digital Photography (4)
A rigorous introduction to digital photography, featuring the digital camera, digital image file development including camera RAW, and the presentation of photographs on screen and in print. This studio-based course explores
photography by considering technical,
creative, historical, cultural, and critical issues of the multifaceted medium
of photography.
Open to all students.
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07:081:262
Photography I-B: Darkroom Photography (4)
Explores the
foundations of film photography with an emphasis on technique and aesthetic
concerns, coupled with an introduction to the history of photography.
Emphasizes mastery of the 35 mm and large format film camera techniques,
lighting, black-and-white film development, gelatin silver printing, visual
literacy, editing, and presentation methods.
Open to all students.
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07:081:271
Print I-A: Silkscreen (4)
In-depth exploration of silkscreen including
hand-drawn, computer-generated positives, and production. The course encourages
the combination of other print media and will include a short segment on
print as a 3-D structure. Artistic development concerning composition, content,
and conceptual ideas will be addressed through individual and group critiques.
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07:081:272
Print I-B: Relief (4)
In-depth exploration of woodcut, linocut,
reduction print; work will be in both black and white and printing of
multicolored blocks including reduction block printing. The course encourages
the combination of other print media. Artistic development concerning
composition, content, and conceptual ideas will be addressed through individual
and group critiques.
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07:081:281-282
Sculpture I-A and B (4,4)
An introduction to the fundamentals of
sculpture. Utilizing traditional and nontraditional techniques. Processes will
include learning the application of various hand tools and machines, welding,
additive and subtractive techniques, and mold making. Slide presentations will
be shown and informal discussions held throughout the semester.
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07:081:303
Seminar in Media (3)
A survey of contemporary media art including
video art and installation, expanded and artists' cinema, experimental film and video, sound art, and art for the internet. Students are introduced to a range of media art practices that may include experimental narratives and
documentaries, radical and activist media, multimedia installations, found
footage collage and remix work, online art interventions, and live media
performance. The course explores histories,
theories, and critical writing on avant-garde media from the 20th century to the present.
Open to all students.
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07:081:305
Art Criticism (3)
There are official readings of art and culture, which most graduate students are familiar with. The focus of this seminar is on unofficial readings, on readings that challenge, unravel, and examine the underlying assumptions of both Modernist and Postmodernist theorizing. As Charles Olson said: "There are only/eyes in all heads/to be looked out."
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07:081:306
Seminar in Print (3)
This seminar considers the history of print, paper, and
collaboration from Guttenberg to the internet. The course focuses on the
dissemination of printmaking and on the multiple in installation, paper,
photography, sculpture, and book forms. Readings, lectures, slides, and film
presentations familiarize students with current ideas, history, criticism,
practices, and artists who deal with the multiple. The history of the
relationship between the collaborative studio and the artist is explored
through the Brodsky Center for Innovative Editions (BCIE), a working model for
the collaborative shop housed adjacent to the print studios.
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07:081:308
Seminar in Design A: History (3)
Exploration of historical and contemporary critical debates in graphic design.
Students investigate the ways historical, cultural, political, and economic factors
have shaped design through readings, lectures, research, and presentation.
Students situate their practice within the design discourse of today through an
examination of the development of the discipline.
Open to both 081 (visual arts) and 208 (design) majors.
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07:081:310
Seminar in Photography (3)
Examines historical and contemporary discourse in photography. The course will include detailed discussion of major theoretical approaches to photography. Students encounter aspects of the history of photography and its interaction with other cultural forms through the development of historical, cultural, and political
factors and their relationships to the present through key readings, lectures,
film, and guest speakers.
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07:081:317
Seminar in Sculpture (3)
Study of sculpture from the 60's to current contemporary sculpture through readings, discussions, museums, galleries, and practicing sculptor's studio visits.
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07:081:321
Drawing II-A: The Figure (4)
Intensive study of the human figure using a variety of techniques to develop skill, accuracy, and expressiveness.
Prerequisites: 07:081:121 and 122.
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07:081:322
Drawing II-B: Body as Subject (4)
Self-directed work where subjectivity, the abject, and the body in its less-representational formats will be examined through critical texts, presentations, and class discussions.
Prerequisites: 07:081:121 and 122.
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07:081:329
Seminar in Painting (3)
This course consists of readings, presentations, and studio assignments pertaining to
current painting practice and the precedents that created it. Through discussions in museums and galleries in the presence of painting, students practice looking and situating what we see with the help of the texts, and learn to
engage painting discourse from within.
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07:081:331
Design II-A: Systems (4)
Exploration of complex multipart design problems dealing with series, sequences, and grids.
Development of personal interests and voice as a designer within given prompts addressing book design, identity design, and motion graphics. Further develops skills in design research, visual experimentation, and digital applications for
print and screen.
Prerequisites: 07:081:231-232.
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07:081:332
Design II-B: Introduction to Interaction Design (4)
This course is focused on modalities and aesthetics of a wide range of digital media
and techniques. In four distinct modules covering hypertext, algorithmic forms
and motion, data visualization, and physical interaction, students gain insights and a set of skills for digital methodologies and interfaces of artistic expression and design.
Pre- and corequisite: 07:081:331.
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07:081:343
Media II-A: Media Art Installation and Expanded Cinema (4)
This course focuses on making and displaying screen- and time-based media in galleries and other architectural environments. Students learn about sequencing in space as well as
principles and practices of sound and exhibition design. The course explores how different spaces affect moving images, sound, and projections, and how moving images, sound, and projections can construct and alter space. Students learn about historical precedents and current practices, from pre-cinematic magic lantern shows to expanded
cinema, and from video sculpture and site-specific installation art to multichannel video installations, urban screens, and artists' cinema. The course includes technical workshops on syncing multiple channels of video and surround sound. Students create their own media installations and environments.
Prerequisites: 07:081:243-244 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:344
Media II-B: Media and Performance (4)
A course on various intersections between media and performance art. Topics may include performance for the camera, online performances and interventions, participatory art works,
autobiography and video diaries,the filmed body as medium, and live video and cinema performance and events. Students create their own recorded or live media art projects.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
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07:081:351-352
Painting II-A and B (4,4)
This course nurtures individual growth as a painter in technical mastery and conceptual understanding. Emphasis is placed on working in increasingly self-directed series. Selected readings and visits to exhibitions required, as
are group discussions and reviews.
Prerequisites: 07:081:251-252 or permission of department.
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07:081:356
Seminar in Drawing (4)
This seminar examines contemporary drawing within the context of its history and traditions as a fluid discipline through the use of diverse media with nonspecific temporal and spatial boundaries. Students will explore aesthetic, historical, cultural, and theoretical issues in relation to drawing as a medium; and method and practice through written assignments, readings, presentations, lectures, studio visits to practicing artists, and visits to galleries and museums.
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07:081:361
Photography II-A: Digital Image and Print (4)
Features the refinement of digital photography with an emphasis on making exhibition-quality prints and building print portfolios. Through creative assignments, this studio-based course
explores photography with particular focus on expressive, historical, and theoretical aspects of the ubiquitous medium.
Prerequisites: 07:081:261, or all students with Photoshop experience and permission of the instructor.
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07:081:362
Photography II-B: The Book and Online Presence (4)
A course focused on refining your photographic images or images of your artwork for a
book or catalog made in InDesign and printed on-demand; a slide presentation of
the work; and a website or blog. Your project will be self-directed.
Prerequisites: Basic Photoshop experience and any visual arts studio concentration course (design, drawing, media, painting, photography, print, or sculpture) or permission of the instructor.
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07:081:371
Print II-A: Intaglio (4)
In-depth focus on intaglio, including
engraving, drypoint, etching, aquatint, and spit bite. The course encourages
the combination of other print media and will include a segment on photo
polymer plates. Artistic development concerning composition, content, and
conceptual ideas will be addressed through individual and group critiques.
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07:081:372
Print II-B: Lithography (4)
In-depth focus on lithography, including
stones, aluminum plates, photo-litho plates, and color lithography. The course
encourages the combination of other print media. Artistic development
concerning composition, content, and conceptual ideas will be addressed through
individual and group critiques.
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07:081:381-382
Sculpture II-A and B (4,4)
In this course students explore a selection of diverse concepts, materials, and processes associated with making sculpture. Emphasis will be on exploring alternative methods of art production, expanding conceptual development as well as furthering students' technical skills. The course will address the development in transforming ideas into form.
Prerequisites: 07:081:281-282.
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07:081:383
Seminar in Design B: Issues (3)
This course aims
to introduce students to ways of thinking about design. It exposes them to
topics and issues that help them understand themselves as designers and as
users of design. It helps students develop a personal philosophy of design and
a sense of how they will practice as a designer.
Prerequisite: 07:081:308. Open only to 208 (design) majors.
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07:081:391,392
Independent Study (B.F.A.,BA)
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07:081:393,394
Internships (B.F.A.,BA)
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07:081:396
Art and Society (3)
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07:081:420
Artists Writings (3)
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07:081:421,422
Drawing III-A, III-B (4,4)
Through practice, experimentation, research, and use of a variety of media and methodologies, students will explore more complex approaches to their drawing practice. These may include: the use of image and text; time, sequence, and narrative in drawing; and drawing as a performance practice, among others. Self-directed work in the studio and research and reading of critical texts are required.
Prerequisites: 01:081:221 and 07:081:222.
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07:081:431
Design III-A: Design for the Digital Realm (4,4)
This course trains students to research, analyze, prototype,
and develop design concepts for digital media such as online, tablets, and mobile
apps, for three distinct social and cultural contexts. The focus is on practice and
experimentation to master UI/UX design. This course consists of three projects
addressing experience design and its presentation.
Pre- and corequisite: 07:081:332.
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07:081:432
Design III-B: Portfolio (4)
Development of a diverse, refined body of work and
format for its presentation. Lectures and readings survey current issues in design practice. Critiques and discussions underpin the process of defining and articulating the student's interests and approach to design.
Pre- and corequisite: 07:081:431.
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07:081:433-434
Advanced Design A and B: Practicum (4,4)
Design
Practicum is a hands-on course that provides an opportunity to design for
real-world situations in a noncommercial environment. It is an advanced
production studio for students interested in collaborating with academics from
other fields, university administrators, local representatives, and other
designers. Students will engage in research, concept development, design,
production, and presentation. Students are expected to work in close contact
with peers and outside collaborators to produce visual projects that meet
mutually agreed upon parameters.
Pre- and corequisite: 07:081:431.
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07:081:441
Media III-A: Independent Media Production (4)
Students work under the direction of faculty and in discussion with the class on producing self-directed, independently conceived media artworks that reflect their own
interests and ideas. Students will proceed through
all stages to fully realize their work--from research, proposal, production, postproduction
to installation, screening, or other form of display. Ongoing group discussions, critiques, readings, and screenings related to students' creative projects.
Prerequisites: 07:081:343-344 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:442
Media III-B: Interaction Design and Data Visualization (4)
This course is focused on modalities and aesthetics of a wide range of digital media
and techniques. In four distinct modules covering hypertext, algorithmic forms and motion, data visualization, and physical interaction, students gain insights and a set of skills for digital methodologies and interfaces of
artistic expression and design.
Prerequisite: 07:081:441 or permission of instructor. Cross-listed with Design II-B 07:081:332.
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07:081:446
Advanced Media A (4)
Students work under the direction of faculty and in discussion with the class on producing self-directed, independently conceived media artworks that reflect their own
interests and ideas. Ongoing group discussions,
critiques, readings, and screenings in media art.
Pre-or corequisites: 07:081:441-442 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:447
Advanced Media B (4)
Students work under the direction of faculty and in discussion with the class on producing independent media art projects. The class addresses life after art school, including options and approaches to exhibiting and distributing media art, preparing portfolios, and writing proposals and statements.
Prerequisites: 07:081:442 or permission of instructor.
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07:081:451-452
Painting III-A and B (4,4)
Students focus on individual practice, such as development of personal style and content
meaning. Selected readings and visits to exhibitions required, as are group
discussions and reviews.
Prerequisites: 07:081:351-352. Primarily for students who have concentrated in this area.
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07:081:453-454
Advanced Painting A and B (4,4)
Mentored individual work in painting toward thesis.
Pre- or corequisites: 07:081:451-452.
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07:081:455-456
Advanced Drawing A and B (4,4)
Exploration of advanced projects in drawing.
Prerequisites: 07:081:221 and 222.
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07:081:461-462
Photography III-A and B: Exhibition and Portfolio (4,4)
Concentrates on individual development by which students can develop an awareness and understanding
of experimental and creative approaches to conceptual projects within the
framework of contemporary photographic art practice. Photography IIIB continues
further experimentation and analysis where students are encouraged to develop a
more informed and individual approach to their photographic practice within the
context of contemporary art. Advanced theoretical studies and individual
practical investigations are used to support an emerging independent work
process culminating in a final body of work.
Prerequisites: 07:081:361-362.
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07:081:463-464
Advanced Photography A and B (4,4)
Projects in this special topics class concentrate on the approach to specialized development in photography areas such as artists books, multimedia approaches, performance, installation, and photography-based public art. Individual and
group work includes research and short- and long-term project development.
Prerequisites: 07:081:461-462.
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07:081:471
Print III-A: Letterpress (4)
In-depth focus on letterpress including hand
typesetting and polymer plates on the Vandercook press. The course will cover
broadsides, artists' books, and chap books. Artistic development concerning composition, content, and conceptual
ideas will be addressed through individual and group critiques.
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07:081:472
Print III-B: Papermaking (4)
In-depth focus on papermaking including Western style formation, working with Japanese fibers, three-dimensional pulp
casting, coloring of pulps, stencils, watermarking, sizing, pressing, and
drying. Artistic development concerning composition, content, and conceptual
ideas will be addressed through individual and group critiques.
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07:081:473
Advanced Print A: Mass Media Print (4)
In-depth focus on the digital print in
mass printed culture including zines, books on demand, the poster as an art
form, and installation. Artistic development concerning composition, content, and
conceptual ideas will be addressed through individual and group critiques.
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07:081:474
Advanced Print B: Artists' Books (4)
In-depth focus on handmade artists'
books including Japanese stab binding, accordion structures, single and
multiple signatures, Coptic, and alternative books. Artistic development
concerning composition, content, and conceptual ideas will be addressed through
individual and group critiques.
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07:081:481-482
Sculpture III-A and B (4,4)
This class will set an environment that encourages students to explore, define, and develop their artistic voice. Students will be working independently on their own projects. The object is to learn about one's own work through lectures, readings, and group and individual critiques.
Prerequisites: 07:081:381-382.
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07:081:483-484
Advanced Sculpture A and B (4,4)
Independently conceived sculpture project developed in consultation with the instructor.
Pre- or corequisites: 07:081:481-482.
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07:081:491, 492
Independent Study (B.F.A.,BA)
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07:081:493,494
Internships (B.F.A.,BA)
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07:081:497-498
Thesis and Exhibition A and B (3,3)
Summary work for art majors combining individual creative work with the planning and production of a senior exhibition and the writing of a senior thesis.
Students in the design concentration take the Thesis and Exhibition A and B
courses as a separate section, taught by design faculty. Students create works
that explore a personal focus within design, and present their work within the
senior exhibition.
Open only to B.F.A. seniors.
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