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

Maura M Frana

Assistant Professor

Bio

Visiting Artist, Visual Communication Design (2016). BA, 2008, Iowa State University, Ames, IA; MFA, 2013, Pratt Institute, NY, NY. Publications: No Kidding: Design Books That Get it Right for All Ages, Designers & Books, NY, NY, 2013; Transform-Action: Adventures in the Realm of Transformation Design, Pratt Institute, NY, NY, 2013; Five Conversations on Graphic Design and Creative Writing, Pratt Press, 2012. Presentations: BLUNT: Explicit and Graphic Design Criticism Now, AIGA Design Educators Conference, Norfolk, VA, 2013.

Personal Statement

Teaching Interests: Authorship, interdisciplinary design, semantics-driven processes and methodologiesResearch Interests: Communication theories, empathetic design, pedagogy and curriculum developmentProfessional Interests: Design systems, narrative-driven design

 

Courses

Title Department Catalog Term

Description

This studio course explores typography's impact on language to create meaning, organization and tone. Students experiment in typographic composition and page structure with special regard to the flow and rupture of different text types and reading scenarios. Students learn the technical aspects of typography (specification and copyfitting), methods for composing dynamic multipage formats (combining digital and analog), and contexts (both historical and structural) for understanding the vast repository of typefaces. This course is a core requirement for the Visual Communication Design portfolio review. The framing text for this class is Ellen Lupton's Thinking with Type. But students will be introduced to numerous examples from the history of (predominantly Western) letterforms and concretized language. Understanding these historical forms in their contexts will reveal the logic behind the modern classification of digital type. Students produce weekly type projects which are critiqued and handed in as three project sets. The first set analyses letterforms, structurally and then programmatically. The next project set covers text setting and typographic compositions of increasing semantic and syntactic complexity. The last project is a multilingual, illustrated book layout where students engage the fundamental concept of 'structured variety' over a series of pages.

Class Number

1396

Credits

3

Description

This studio course explores typography's impact on language to create meaning, organization and tone. Students experiment in typographic composition and page structure with special regard to the flow and rupture of different text types and reading scenarios. Students learn the technical aspects of typography (specification and copyfitting), methods for composing dynamic multipage formats (combining digital and analog), and contexts (both historical and structural) for understanding the vast repository of typefaces. This course is a core requirement for the Visual Communication Design portfolio review. The framing text for this class is Ellen Lupton's Thinking with Type. But students will be introduced to numerous examples from the history of (predominantly Western) letterforms and concretized language. Understanding these historical forms in their contexts will reveal the logic behind the modern classification of digital type. Students produce weekly type projects which are critiqued and handed in as three project sets. The first set analyses letterforms, structurally and then programmatically. The next project set covers text setting and typographic compositions of increasing semantic and syntactic complexity. The last project is a multilingual, illustrated book layout where students engage the fundamental concept of 'structured variety' over a series of pages.

Class Number

1395

Credits

3

Description

Taken every semester, the Graduate Projects courses allow students to focus in private sessions on the development of their work. Students register for 6 hours of Graduate Project credit in each semester of study.

Class Number

1266

Credits

3 - 6