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

James Paul Wetzel

Lecturer

Contact

Personal Statement

James Wetzel is a Chicago based artist and musician. He received his B.A. degree from Knox College where he focused on German, Philosophy, and Jazz Studies. In 2012 he received an Master of Fine Arts degree in the Sound Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. His artwork combines technology, craft, and sound into large scale electro-acoustic sculpture. His musical output takes shape primarily through the physical combination of drums, percussion and analog synthesis, manifesting as live solo drum/synth performance. He also plays in the Chicago based noise-rock band Melkbelly. 

 

Courses

Title Department Catalog Term

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.

Class Number

1325

Credits

3

Description

Sound is an undeniably physical material but also fleeting in nature. It is a momentary touch of vibrating magic that can reveal to us much more than the plane of sight. This course emphasizes the relationship between the ear and the eye, and students will research and explore various methods of harnessing the power of sound for new ways of making art and music. Students will work across disciplines, creating music, images, and objects in order to more effectively connect the planes of sight and sound. Research will cover a wide array of artists and musicians ranging from Kurt Schwitters to Aphex Twin and will be complemented by listening sessions. Studio projects may culminate in the form of musical performances, and collaboration with other students will be encouraged. The music, texts, and artwork of Sun Ra will be a primary creative resource, and students will be given the opportunity to explore and research within the vast Sun Ra/El Saturn collection at the Experimental Sound Studio.

Class Number

1667

Credits

3

Description

Studio Techniques is an intermediate-level course that approaches the analog recording studio and its technologies as a creative environment for sound manipulation and exploration. Beginning with the sound sample as a material basis, the course combines a detailed approach to the fundamentals of acoustics and auditory perception with thorough instruction on analog signal processing and mixing. Students produce assigned and independent projects using these sample-based analog techniques. Topics are supplemented by listening exercises and examples of various artists? works to give historical and cultural context. Topics in acoustics and auditory perception include sound localization, spatial characteristics of sound, frequency spectrum, and dynamics and loudness. Artists and musicians whose works serve as examples include Carl Stone, Jaap Blonk, John Wall, Laetitia Sonami, Moreno Veloso, and others. Assigned projects include generating disparate sound materials from simple sources; composing sound/music works using self-generated samples and sources; live mixing/composing using analog technologies; independent projects using technologies and strategies introduced in the course content.

Class Number

1757

Credits

3

Description

This course focuses on the relationship of sound to moving image, and introduces post-production techniques and strategies that address this relationship as a compositional imperative. Thorough instruction is given on digital audio post-production techniques for moving image, including recording, sound file imports, soundtrack composition and assembly, sound design, and mixing in stereo and surround-sound. This is supplemented by presentations on acoustics and auditory perception. Assigned readings in theories and strategies of sound-image relationships inform studio instruction. Assigned projects focus on gaining post-production skills, and students produce independent projects of their own that integrate sound and moving image. Artists include Chantal Dumas, Walter Verdin, Deborah Stratman, Lucrecia Martel, Martin Scorcese, Abigail Child, Frederic Moffet, Gyorgi Palvi, Francis Ford Coppola, Gary Hill, and others. Writings in theory include texts by Michel Chion, Rick Altman, and others. The student?s independent image-and-sound work is foregrounded and supported; supplemental assigned projects include sound sequence composition and ADR recording and mixing.

Class Number

1237

Credits

3

Description

This course focuses on the relationship of sound to moving image, and introduces post-production techniques and strategies that address this relationship as a compositional imperative. Thorough instruction is given on digital audio post-production techniques for moving image, including recording, sound file imports, soundtrack composition and assembly, sound design, and mixing in stereo and surround-sound. This is supplemented by presentations on acoustics and auditory perception. Assigned readings in theories and strategies of sound-image relationships inform studio instruction. Assigned projects focus on gaining post-production skills, and students produce independent projects of their own that integrate sound and moving image. Artists include Chantal Dumas, Walter Verdin, Deborah Stratman, Lucrecia Martel, Martin Scorcese, Abigail Child, Frederic Moffet, Gyorgi Palvi, Francis Ford Coppola, Gary Hill, and others. Writings in theory include texts by Michel Chion, Rick Altman, and others. The student?s independent image-and-sound work is foregrounded and supported; supplemental assigned projects include sound sequence composition and ADR recording and mixing.

Class Number

1444

Credits

3

Description

This seminar critically and creatively examines noise in the context of experimental music and sound art: noise as music, noise in music, noise vs. music. We will closely read philosophical, musicological, and art historical texts, and analyze a range of sonic art works. Political connections will be highlighted, and the course will conclude by considering the role of noise (and music) in protests today. Required projects will be written and creative.

Class Number

2304

Credits

3