Roger Reeves
Course Search Degree Programs
| Title | Catalog | Instructor | Schedule |
|---|---|---|---|
| Introduction to Clay | 1000 (001) | Emily Schroeder Willis | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
This course provides an introduction to clay as a material. Participants will be introduced to a wide variety of methods and techniques to build, decorate, and glaze ceramic. Demonstrations in Hand-building, coiling, slap-building and surface application including glaze development and application, slip decoration and firing methods, will give students a proficiency in working with clay and in the ceramic department. Introductions to the rich and complex history of ceramic through readings, lectures and museum visits, will provide students with exposures to the critical discourse of contemporary ceramic. This is primarily a beginner's course but open to all levels of students.
Readings will vary but typically include, Hands in Clay by Charlotte Speight and John Toki. Vitamin C: Clay and Ceramic in Contemporary Art by Clare Lilley. Ten thousand years of pottery by Emmanuel Cooper. 20th Century Ceramics By Edmund de Waal. Live Form: Women, Ceramics, and Community by Jenni Sorkin. The course will look at artist like Magdalene Odundo, George E. Ohr, Shoji Hamada, Roberto Lugo and Nicole Cherubini as well as historic ceramic from the Art Institutes of Chicago?s collection. Students are expected to complete 3 projects by the end of the semester, Biweekly readings will be part of the course. |
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Introduction to Clay | 1000 (002) | Nancy Fleischman | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM In Person |
Description
This course provides an introduction to clay as a material. Participants will be introduced to a wide variety of methods and techniques to build, decorate, and glaze ceramic. Demonstrations in Hand-building, coiling, slap-building and surface application including glaze development and application, slip decoration and firing methods, will give students a proficiency in working with clay and in the ceramic department. Introductions to the rich and complex history of ceramic through readings, lectures and museum visits, will provide students with exposures to the critical discourse of contemporary ceramic. This is primarily a beginner's course but open to all levels of students.
Readings will vary but typically include, Hands in Clay by Charlotte Speight and John Toki. Vitamin C: Clay and Ceramic in Contemporary Art by Clare Lilley. Ten thousand years of pottery by Emmanuel Cooper. 20th Century Ceramics By Edmund de Waal. Live Form: Women, Ceramics, and Community by Jenni Sorkin. The course will look at artist like Magdalene Odundo, George E. Ohr, Shoji Hamada, Roberto Lugo and Nicole Cherubini as well as historic ceramic from the Art Institutes of Chicago?s collection. Students are expected to complete 3 projects by the end of the semester, Biweekly readings will be part of the course. |
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Introduction to Visual Communication | 1001 (001) | John Bowers | Monday through Friday
12:15 PM - 3:15 PM All Online |
Description
This research, discussion, and critique course develops a visual and verbal vocabulary by examining relationships between form and content, word and image. Study includes symbolic association and the problem of effective communication in a highly complex culture.
PrerequisitesCorequisite: VISCOM 1002. |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| World Cultures and Civilizations: Prehistory to the Nineteenth Century | 1001 (001) | Artie Foster | Monday through Friday
12:15 PM - 3:15 PM All Online |
Description
This course is an introduction to art and design. Specific content varies by instructor and covers diverse ways of seeing and understanding the visual world. The course articulates connections between selected art of the past and contemporary practices. Students will gain first-hand knowledge from visits to and exercises in the Art Institute of Chicago and other collections.
Ultimately, the course teaches skills that enable students to understand their own practices better, orient themselves in relation to theories of art and design, and navigate our present moment where visual literacy is increasingly crucial. This course introduces students to key aspects of the history and theory of art and design. Students will become familiar with selected art of the past and how it has been connected to contemporary practices. |
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DepartmentLocation |
| Illustration Technologies Lab | 1002 (001) | Kimberly Karen Viviano | Monday through Friday
3:30 PM - 5:00 PM All Online |
Description
Digital visualization is essential to all contemporary creative communication. This class will familiarize students with the syntax, tools and methods of vector-based drawing and reinforce analogies to traditional methods of image-making covered in the First Year Program.
Students will begin with an introduction to the computer as a graphic design tool: the relationship of vector to raster graphics and the peripherals. The focus on building proficiency with industry-standard Adobe Illustrator software will be reinforced via tutorials and short design exercises which target specific topics and techniques covered during lectures. Students apply technical competencies to formal design problems during the second half of this course and in Beginning Graphic Design class. PrerequisitesCorequisite: VISCOM 1001 or VISCOM 1101. |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Issues in Modern and Contemporary Art | 1002 (001) | Mechtild Widrich | Monday through Friday
8:30 AM - 11:15 AM All Online |
Description
This course builds on the lessons of ARTHI 1001 by discussing specific issues in modern and contemporary art and design. It focuses on examining objects and concepts, addressing theoretical and critical issues. It also explores the historical, intellectual, and socioeconomic changes reflected in the works of artists and designers, highlighting their relevance to contemporary practices. Museum visits and group exercises supervised by the instructor and the teaching assistants will contribute to the important hands-on experience of works of art.
Note: ARTHI 1001 is the recommended prerequisite for ARTHI 1002. |
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DepartmentLocation |
| FYS II: Conspiracy Theories | 1005 (001) | Jennie Berner | Mon/Wed/Fri
8:30 AM - 11:15 AM All Online |
Description
In this writing-intensive course, we will be using the theme of ¿conspiracy theory¿ to explore what constitutes legitimate (and illegitimate) knowledge in academic, public, and virtual spaces. Our access to information today is unparalleled, but it also demands a kind of vigilance. How do we identify credible sources? What counts as expertise? And how do we think critically about the information we encounter? In addition to analyzing a range of conspiracy theories (e.g. assassinations, alien abductions, false flag operations, artificial diseases, New World Order, and vaccine controversies), we will also consider the broader social, psychological, and political forces that contribute to conspiracy thinking. Course readings will cover a wide array of subtopics including hoaxes, pseudoscience, and fake news. Writing assignments ¿ totaling 20-25 pages over the course of the semester ¿ will emphasize summary, analysis, argument, research, revision, and other academic writing skills, culminating in a research project that allows you to explore unorthodox explanations of a public event, issue, or phenomenon of your choosing.
PrerequisitesPrerequisite: ENGLISH 1001. |
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| English for International Students: Tutorial | 1035 (001) | Jacqueline M Rasmussen | Tues/Thurs
9:00 AM - 11:00 AM All Online |
Description
This class offers small group tutoring for students who do not speak English as their first language. Students meet with an EIS instructor in groups of three for 1 1/2 hours each week. Students receive assistance with their class assignments for Art History, Liberal Arts and Studio classes. Activities may include discussing class concepts, checking comprehension, exploring ideas for papers or projects, revising papers, or practicing pronunciation and presentations.
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| English for International Students: Tutorial | 1035 (002) | Annette Elliot-Hogg | Tues/Thurs
9:00 AM - 11:00 AM All Online |
Description
This class offers small group tutoring for students who do not speak English as their first language. Students meet with an EIS instructor in groups of three for 1 1/2 hours each week. Students receive assistance with their class assignments for Art History, Liberal Arts and Studio classes. Activities may include discussing class concepts, checking comprehension, exploring ideas for papers or projects, revising papers, or practicing pronunciation and presentations.
|
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| English for International Students: Tutorial | 1035 (003) | Suman Chhabra | Tues/Thurs
9:00 AM - 11:00 AM All Online |
Description
This class offers small group tutoring for students who do not speak English as their first language. Students meet with an EIS instructor in groups of three for 1 1/2 hours each week. Students receive assistance with their class assignments for Art History, Liberal Arts and Studio classes. Activities may include discussing class concepts, checking comprehension, exploring ideas for papers or projects, revising papers, or practicing pronunciation and presentations.
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Beginning Graphic Design | 2001 (001) | Piotr Michura | Monday through Friday
8:30 AM - 11:15 AM All Online |
Description
In this course students explore the principles of visual communication by creating two-dimensional printed comprehensive layouts, and three-dimensional mock-ups. Stress is placed on process and development of solutions to problems; idea and form exploration; research; image and text development; compositional structure and hierarchy; verbal, technical, and hand skills. The course also covers the technical aspects of graphic design such as printing methods, papers, and binding.
Students will produce 3-4 finished pieces exploring the use of image and type in both single page format, multi-page format, and possibly three-dimensional format. These projects are to be included in the VCD department's obligatory portfolio review for advancement into the VCD intermediate courses. PrerequisitesPrerequisite: VISCOM 1001 and 2011 |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Image Studio | 2002 (001) | Jiwon Son | Monday through Friday
12:15 PM - 3:15 PM All Online |
Description
Image Studio is a course that challenges students to interpret, critically read text, conceptualize, and assess project parameters to implement design solutions. The creative process is a core focus throughout the assignments. The goal of this course is to explore the process of creating original imagery and visual information.
We utilize digital and analog means to create design solutions to projects that also require fundamental explorations with typography. We explore a diverse means of image construction from paper collage to photography and Photoshop manipulation. Form studies examine design basics such as juxtaposition, repetition, and progression as well as the use of metaphor, analogy, and semiotics. The introduction of design context, audience awareness, and sequential narrative is also addressed. PrerequisitesPrerequisite: VISCOM 1001 or VISCOM 1101. |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Throwing: Multilevel | 2005 (001) | Javier Jasso | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM In Person |
Description
This multilevel class is for students with or without experience in wheel throwing. Beginning students are introduced to ideas, materials and techniques for throwing vessels. They acquire the necessary skills to construct and analyze a wide range of vessel forms. Intermediate and advanced students continue their individual development of throwing, glazing and firing kilns. Course discussions focus on issues around the vessel to acquire critical understanding of containers and their functions, as well as using the wheel as a means for constructing sculptural forms.
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DepartmentLocation |
| Beginning Fashion Illustration | 2007 (001) | Steven Miller | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM All Online |
Description
This course develops drawing skills with an emphasis on figure gesture and proportion along with a wide range of media. Students are taught to sketch from a live model while communicating design concepts in clothing with style and expression.
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Screenprinting: Multi-Level | 2008 (001) | Anna Laure Kielman | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
For the beginning student this course offers a concentrated introduction to the entire stencil making and printing process. The advanced student may explore the more sophisticated techniques of digital and photographic stencil-making, photo-mechanical darkroom and printing work.
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DepartmentLocation |
| Artists' Books | 2018 (001) | Myungah Hyon 현명아 | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM All Online |
Description
Artists' Books is a beginning/intermediate level course that focuses on the fundamental techniques of bookbinding so as to be able to design and produce one or an edition of artists' books and boxes. The class begins by learning a range of traditional binding techniques, discussing material choices, and learning about the history of artists' books. Later on breaking out of the box to take risks, explore concepts and unconventional materials will be strongly encouraged for individual projects. In addition, the intention of this class is to meld your own studio work and personal expression with the form of artists' books.
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DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Landscape Painting | 2020 (001) | Noelle Africh | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
This course explores the interpretation of the landscape using both drawing and painting mediums. The class works both inside and outside of the studio, taking advantage of the natural and architectural sites of Chicago adjacent to the School.
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DepartmentLocation |
| Ceramic Sculpture | 2051 (001) | Sonya Bogdanova | Mon/Tues/Thurs
9:00 AM - 2:15 PM In Person |
Description
This course introduces students to sculptural ideas executed in various ceramic hand construction techniques including slab, coil, press mold, etc. Students will explore how the unique physical characteristics of clay can contribute to the content of the work. Construction strategies will be examined in a conceptual context, investigating issues of space, technology, and architectural implication to build a dimensional perspective of personal and societal relevance. Emphasis will be on process, exploration, and discussion.
We will examine artists who've instrumentalized clay in inventive and boundary-pushing ways. Some of the artists we'll look at are Arlene Schechet, Annabeth Rosen, Ron Nagel, Huma Bhabha, Genesis Belanger and more. Readings and screenings will vary but typically include interviews with contemporary artists and critical essays by Eva Respini, Clare Lilley, Rosalind Krauss and more. Students should expect to produce a body of work consisting of assigned and self directed projects to be presented in a culminating midterm and final critique. |
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DepartmentLocation |
| Japan: Craft in Contemp Art | 3000 (001) | Alan Labb, Dan Price, Mayumi Lake |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This 15-day immersive studio course invites students to investigate the dynamic intersection of traditional craftsmanship and contemporary art practice in Japan. Traveling through three culturally significant regions¿the Seto Inland Sea, Kansai (Kyoto, Osaka, Kobe), and Tokyo¿participants will engage directly with Japan¿s layered histories through hands-on workshops, studio visits, and curated explorations of key cultural sites.
Program highlights include: Intensive workshops with master artisans in traditional techniques such as washi papermaking, textile dyeing, and ukiyo-e woodblock printing Visits to contemporary galleries, artist-run spaces, museums, and studios that illuminate Japan's evolving art landscape Immersive encounters with cultural landmarks¿from Kyoto's contemplative temples to Tokyo's vibrant, hybrid art scenes Through direct engagement with artists, curators, and scholars, students will critically examine how inherited craft practices inform and challenge contemporary modes of artmaking. This cross-cultural studio experience encourages experimentation with unfamiliar materials, processes, and conceptual frameworks, supporting students in expanding their own creative vocabularies through the lens of Japan¿s unique artistic context. A six-credit option for this course is available for students who wish to extend their practice and complete portfolio-worthy work. This will require the production of a substantial body of work, accompanied by an online journal that documents the creative process and source information material as documented during our time in Japan. The experience will include additional independent studio time and culminate in a critique session held within six weeks of returning from Japan. PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Japan: Craft in Contemp Art | 3000 (001) | Alan Labb, Dan Price, Mayumi Lake |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This 15-day immersive studio course invites students to investigate the dynamic intersection of traditional craftsmanship and contemporary art practice in Japan. Traveling through three culturally significant regions¿the Seto Inland Sea, Kansai (Kyoto, Osaka, Kobe), and Tokyo¿participants will engage directly with Japan¿s layered histories through hands-on workshops, studio visits, and curated explorations of key cultural sites.
Program highlights include: Intensive workshops with master artisans in traditional techniques such as washi papermaking, textile dyeing, and ukiyo-e woodblock printing Visits to contemporary galleries, artist-run spaces, museums, and studios that illuminate Japan's evolving art landscape Immersive encounters with cultural landmarks¿from Kyoto's contemplative temples to Tokyo's vibrant, hybrid art scenes Through direct engagement with artists, curators, and scholars, students will critically examine how inherited craft practices inform and challenge contemporary modes of artmaking. This cross-cultural studio experience encourages experimentation with unfamiliar materials, processes, and conceptual frameworks, supporting students in expanding their own creative vocabularies through the lens of Japan¿s unique artistic context. A six-credit option for this course is available for students who wish to extend their practice and complete portfolio-worthy work. This will require the production of a substantial body of work, accompanied by an online journal that documents the creative process and source information material as documented during our time in Japan. The experience will include additional independent studio time and culminate in a critique session held within six weeks of returning from Japan. PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Japan: Craft in Contemp Art | 3000 (001) | Alan Labb, Dan Price, Mayumi Lake |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This 15-day immersive studio course invites students to investigate the dynamic intersection of traditional craftsmanship and contemporary art practice in Japan. Traveling through three culturally significant regions¿the Seto Inland Sea, Kansai (Kyoto, Osaka, Kobe), and Tokyo¿participants will engage directly with Japan¿s layered histories through hands-on workshops, studio visits, and curated explorations of key cultural sites.
Program highlights include: Intensive workshops with master artisans in traditional techniques such as washi papermaking, textile dyeing, and ukiyo-e woodblock printing Visits to contemporary galleries, artist-run spaces, museums, and studios that illuminate Japan's evolving art landscape Immersive encounters with cultural landmarks¿from Kyoto's contemplative temples to Tokyo's vibrant, hybrid art scenes Through direct engagement with artists, curators, and scholars, students will critically examine how inherited craft practices inform and challenge contemporary modes of artmaking. This cross-cultural studio experience encourages experimentation with unfamiliar materials, processes, and conceptual frameworks, supporting students in expanding their own creative vocabularies through the lens of Japan¿s unique artistic context. A six-credit option for this course is available for students who wish to extend their practice and complete portfolio-worthy work. This will require the production of a substantial body of work, accompanied by an online journal that documents the creative process and source information material as documented during our time in Japan. The experience will include additional independent studio time and culminate in a critique session held within six weeks of returning from Japan. PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Prague: Surreal Cityscapes | 3000 (002) | Jeremy Biles, Kathie Bergquist |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This course immerses participants in the life and work of Franz Kafka, surrealist thought, and contemporary Prague arts, including the installation art of David ¿erný. Students will visit cultural landmarks such as the DOX Center for the Arts, Franz Kafka Museum, Museum of Communism, and more, as well as excursions to Terezin Concentration Camp, Kutná Hora's ossuary, and Karlstejn Castle. The program coincides with the Prague International Fringe Theater Festival, providing students with a wide range of further cultural activities to experience. Students will explore surrealism, the uncanny, and the absurd, using journaling and sketchbooks to engage with dream imagery, hone attention to both assigned texts and the city, experiment with multiple modes of writing, and cultivate a surrealist sensibility, all while drawing on Prague's unique landscape, history, and creative culture for inspiration.
PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Prague: Surreal Cityscapes | 3000 (002) | Jeremy Biles, Kathie Bergquist |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This course immerses participants in the life and work of Franz Kafka, surrealist thought, and contemporary Prague arts, including the installation art of David ¿erný. Students will visit cultural landmarks such as the DOX Center for the Arts, Franz Kafka Museum, Museum of Communism, and more, as well as excursions to Terezin Concentration Camp, Kutná Hora's ossuary, and Karlstejn Castle. The program coincides with the Prague International Fringe Theater Festival, providing students with a wide range of further cultural activities to experience. Students will explore surrealism, the uncanny, and the absurd, using journaling and sketchbooks to engage with dream imagery, hone attention to both assigned texts and the city, experiment with multiple modes of writing, and cultivate a surrealist sensibility, all while drawing on Prague's unique landscape, history, and creative culture for inspiration.
PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| The Graphic Book: London | 3000 (004) | Alex Karenina Kostiw, Mark Addison Smith |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This is a 0 credit study trip placeholder course. Specific credit courses will be applied to your enrollment for the term based on your Study Trip Preregistration information.
PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| The Graphic Book: London | 3000 (004) | Alex Karenina Kostiw, Mark Addison Smith |
TBD - TBD In Person |
Description
This is a 0 credit study trip placeholder course. Specific credit courses will be applied to your enrollment for the term based on your Study Trip Preregistration information.
PrerequisitesMust Have Completed Study Trip Pre-Registration |
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Credits |
DepartmentLocation |
| Comics: Summer Intensive | 3004 (001) | Jeremy R Tinder, Caroline Cash | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
DescriptionThis is a team-taught class in an intensive, three-week immersion in comics. The faculty meet with the students individually and conduct rigorous group critiques. Students work with faculty one-on-one, participate in group critiques, and attend lectures prepared by the faculty members and/or guest speakers. Individual studios are provided to each student enrolled this course. Activities may include: studio visits, local field trips, visiting artists, and print demos. Grad and undergrad welcome. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Comics: Summer Intensive | 3004 (001) | Jeremy R Tinder, Caroline Cash | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
DescriptionThis is a team-taught class in an intensive, three-week immersion in comics. The faculty meet with the students individually and conduct rigorous group critiques. Students work with faculty one-on-one, participate in group critiques, and attend lectures prepared by the faculty members and/or guest speakers. Individual studios are provided to each student enrolled this course. Activities may include: studio visits, local field trips, visiting artists, and print demos. Grad and undergrad welcome. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Top: Inside / Out: Photosynthesis | 3005 (001) | Sara Condo | Mon/Tues/Wed, Thurs/Fri
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
In this class students will create photographic work inside and outside in the natural elements. This three-week course, Inside / Out, delves into both digital and analog using solar-printing techniques, with a unique focus on printing not only on paper but also on textiles and organic materials. Students will work with a variety of printing processes such as solar fast dye, cyanotypes to transform photographic imaging utilizing digital and analog methods. Students are encouraged to create sculptural contraptions to best capture the sun¿s rays to their preferred substrate of choice.
Students will investigate how artistic internal forces can influence the external changing sociopolitical landscape and vice versa. Class visits will include excursions to Chicago¿s parks and gardens. We will research historical scientific photography and local botany. Through digital printing, students will learn to work with inkjet printers to create negatives, while sun-printing techniques will allow them to create eco-friendly designs on cotton and other textiles. By the end of the course, students will develop a diverse portfolio that includes both traditional photographic prints and textile artwork, blending the technical precision of indoor printing with the organic, unpredictable results of outdoor sun printing to stitch together new photographic forms. PrerequisitesPrerequisite: 6 credits of PHOTO 2000-level courses or PHOTO 3008 or by instructor consent. |
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DepartmentLocation |
| Top: Countersexual Futures | 3007 (001) | Ivan Bujan | Monday through Friday
8:30 AM - 11:15 AM All Online |
Description
This seminar explores the politics and practices of a countersexual society, drawing on the framework developed by trans studies scholar Paul B. Preciado. This framework challenges the heteronormative social order and reimagines the body as a space for freedom and expression. The course critically engages with traditional narratives of gender, race, and sexuality, examining the oppressive conventions that sustain them. We will investigate countersexual practices¿such as casual pleasure, pain, race play, drug use, and BDSM¿as sites of political action and resistance, reframing them as alternatives to normative structures. Our inquiry will begin with an examination of sexuality in early 20th-century sexology and feminism, extending to more recent trends in queer of color critique, Black feminism, and trans studies. Additionally, we will explore contemporary case studies in performance and body art to understand the role of the body¿s materiality in pursuing a countersexual revolution.
PrerequisitesPrerequisite: First Year English requirement. |
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DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| The Electronic Manuscript | 3019 (001) | Judy Malloy, Grace Grace Grace |
TBD - TBD All Online |
Description
Electronic manuscripts combine images, words and potentially other media including sound and video. They include but are not limited to online narratives with interactive, hypertextual, animated, or generative elements; artists books (either online or with digital elements); innovative online portfolio pages; SoundWorks hosted on a webpage with textural or visual elements; and installations with digital narrative components. We will study issues in creating content for electronic manuscripts and explore the software, algorithms, and interfaces with which they are created, including social media platforms, HTML5/CSS; JavaScript, twine, and Inform7.
The works we will study in this course include Matt Huynh's scrolling 'The Boat,' in which a harrowing narrative of Vietnamese 'boat people' refugees unfolds amidst animated falling rain, storm-rocking graphics, voiced laments, light and dark, moving text, and floating images; Carla Gannis' triptych animation:'The Garden of Emoji Delights; Nick Montfort's generative concrete poetry 'Autopia'; Catt Small's 'SweetXheart¿, an interactive game that asks 'Can you get through a week in the life of a modern black woman?; and installed works such as Carolee Schneemann¿s 'Venus Vectors' and Noah Wardrip-Fruin and Camille Utterback's 'Talking Cure'. Students will traverse examples; create content; learn/practice HTML5/CSS, basic JavaScript, twine, inform7, and social media-based authoring platforms, create work in the media of their choice. |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| The Electronic Manuscript | 3019 (001) | Judy Malloy, Grace Grace Grace |
TBD - TBD All Online |
Description
Electronic manuscripts combine images, words and potentially other media including sound and video. They include but are not limited to online narratives with interactive, hypertextual, animated, or generative elements; artists books (either online or with digital elements); innovative online portfolio pages; SoundWorks hosted on a webpage with textural or visual elements; and installations with digital narrative components. We will study issues in creating content for electronic manuscripts and explore the software, algorithms, and interfaces with which they are created, including social media platforms, HTML5/CSS; JavaScript, twine, and Inform7.
The works we will study in this course include Matt Huynh's scrolling 'The Boat,' in which a harrowing narrative of Vietnamese 'boat people' refugees unfolds amidst animated falling rain, storm-rocking graphics, voiced laments, light and dark, moving text, and floating images; Carla Gannis' triptych animation:'The Garden of Emoji Delights; Nick Montfort's generative concrete poetry 'Autopia'; Catt Small's 'SweetXheart¿, an interactive game that asks 'Can you get through a week in the life of a modern black woman?; and installed works such as Carolee Schneemann¿s 'Venus Vectors' and Noah Wardrip-Fruin and Camille Utterback's 'Talking Cure'. Students will traverse examples; create content; learn/practice HTML5/CSS, basic JavaScript, twine, inform7, and social media-based authoring platforms, create work in the media of their choice. |
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Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Next to Skin | 3019 (001) | Liat Smestad | Monday through Friday, Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM In Person |
Description
This course explores the sensualness and design of over one hundred years of lingerie making through the use of beautiful fabrics including linen, lace, silk, satin, chiffon and ribbons. Historical references and modern technology are explored through slides, video, books, museums and boutiques for the design of lingerie and under garments. The students drape, make patterns, and fit on a live model. Students are required to make one garment in muslin and their choice of fabric.
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| The Illustrated Poster | 3020 (001) | Dijana Granov | Mon/Wed/Fri
9:00 AM - 2:45 PM All Online |
Description
This course focuses on creating promotional posters and book covers, from concept to the final product; telling a story through a single illustration. Divided into four major projects, it covers different stages of creation of a visually engaging illustration; from collecting references, thumbnails, preliminary illustration, to finishing in a medium of choice. It combines fine art with the professional, taking into consideration format, placement, visual hierarchy, and creation of a dynamic figure interacting with a setting. Some classes include guest lecturers.
PrerequisitesPrerequisite: FASH 2007 |
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| Digital Comics | 3021 (001) | Beth Kathleen Hetland | Monday through Friday
12:15 PM - 3:15 PM All Online |
Description
Artists of all walks of life have made the plunge over the last two decades to create work digitally with a tablet. This skills-based intensive will investigate a wide range of digital drawing techniques, best practices, and formal concerns as they relate to comics specifically utilizing ProCreate and Adobe Illustrator software.
Examples will vary but typically include vertical scroll webcomics, editorial cartoons, caricature, and publication asset design. Students can expect short technical assignments to make up the majority of this course. Students are expected to provide their own iPad and laptop for this course. PrerequisitesPre: PTDW 2002 or Grad Student |
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| UI / UX Responsive Web Design | 3030 (001) | John Bowers | Monday through Friday
8:30 AM - 11:30 AM All Online |
Description
This course is an introduction to the User Interface (UI) / User Experience (UX) principles, issues, and methods of user-centered responsive web design (mobile, tablet, and laptop).
Students design a website of their choice, in two ways. The first way is making the website with Figma (2 weeks), and the second way translates the Figma website into a simplified HTML/ CSS website made with Dreamweaver (1 week). Principles, issues and methods explored include: problem-solving processes, content organization / wireframes, navigation strategies, usability principles, interface look and feel, interface design elements, user requirements /specifications, audience analysis, and professional best practices. This course is for students from all departments who may have no previous web design experience, as well as those with some experience who want to explore web design in new ways. There are no prerequisites for this course, and all necessary software skills will be taught in class. |
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| Air, Fluid and Actuators | 3033 (001) | Dan Miller | Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
This kinetics course will explore the activation of art projects with materials that flow, inflate, pump, pour and move in unique ways. Demonstrations will introduce: basic electronics, pneumatics, air-muscles, inflatables, pumps, motors, actuators and the necessary means to power these devices. This course will explore materials and their unique properties when activated by these processes. Students will learn various techniques to animate and control art projects, including the use of the Arduino micro-controller and sensors.
Throughout the course, screenings and readings will introduce students to artists who work with kinetics, robotics and related fields. Artists shown and discussed in class include: Theo Jansen, Rapheal Lozano-Hemmer, Chico Mac Murtrie, Rebecca Horn. Students will be introduced to organizations, galleries and networks that support this type of art work including ARS Electronica, Rhizome and Bitforms gallery. A series of workshops and smaller assignments will expose students to the potentials of these devices and processes in art making. Next, students will develop projects that utilize one or more of the systems covered in class. Students will be guided in project proposal development where ideas will be explored in group discussions. Mechanical and electronic fabrication techniques will be further explored through project development. Completed projects will be evaluated in group critiques. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Sensitivity & Exposure: Concepts and Techniques in Light Based Printing | 3036 (001) | Frances Lightbound, Monika Niwelinska | Monday through Friday, Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
In this course, we'll delve into the intriguing intersection of photography and printmaking, acquiring light and pressure-based printing skills and conceptually integrating them into an art practice that approaches print as a site-responsive medium, sensitive to light, pressure, and context. The introductory section explores the material sensitivity of embossing and frottage, treating them as akin to documentary photography. The second section introduces light sensitivity through cyanotype and gelatin silver processes, engaging directly with objects and surfaces. The final segment employs digital fabrication to create laser-engraved linoleum blocks and printed photogravure plates, enabling relief and intaglio inking techniques and printing processes.
The course will introduce pivotal artists associated with taught printing techniques and their historical context. We'll explore the works of artists such as Anna Atkins and Albrecht Durer, who played significant roles in the development of their respective techniques. We'll also examine figures like Alfred Stieglitz and Robert Overby, who influenced the trajectory of their media, and contemporary artists like William Kentridge and Do Ho Suh, who have reshaped our perception of print. Additionally, we'll read and screen 'Contact: Art and the Pull of Print' by Jennifer Roberts from Harvard, and invite her for an online discussion with our students. The coursework will adhere to a media and technique-based structure, with the creation of six bodies of work with separate critiques. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Sensitivity & Exposure: Concepts and Techniques in Light Based Printing | 3036 (001) | Frances Lightbound, Monika Niwelinska | Monday through Friday, Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
In this course, we'll delve into the intriguing intersection of photography and printmaking, acquiring light and pressure-based printing skills and conceptually integrating them into an art practice that approaches print as a site-responsive medium, sensitive to light, pressure, and context. The introductory section explores the material sensitivity of embossing and frottage, treating them as akin to documentary photography. The second section introduces light sensitivity through cyanotype and gelatin silver processes, engaging directly with objects and surfaces. The final segment employs digital fabrication to create laser-engraved linoleum blocks and printed photogravure plates, enabling relief and intaglio inking techniques and printing processes.
The course will introduce pivotal artists associated with taught printing techniques and their historical context. We'll explore the works of artists such as Anna Atkins and Albrecht Durer, who played significant roles in the development of their respective techniques. We'll also examine figures like Alfred Stieglitz and Robert Overby, who influenced the trajectory of their media, and contemporary artists like William Kentridge and Do Ho Suh, who have reshaped our perception of print. Additionally, we'll read and screen 'Contact: Art and the Pull of Print' by Jennifer Roberts from Harvard, and invite her for an online discussion with our students. The coursework will adhere to a media and technique-based structure, with the creation of six bodies of work with separate critiques. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Sensitivity & Exposure: Concepts and Techniques in Light Based Printing | 3036 (001) | Frances Lightbound, Monika Niwelinska | Monday through Friday, Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
In this course, we'll delve into the intriguing intersection of photography and printmaking, acquiring light and pressure-based printing skills and conceptually integrating them into an art practice that approaches print as a site-responsive medium, sensitive to light, pressure, and context. The introductory section explores the material sensitivity of embossing and frottage, treating them as akin to documentary photography. The second section introduces light sensitivity through cyanotype and gelatin silver processes, engaging directly with objects and surfaces. The final segment employs digital fabrication to create laser-engraved linoleum blocks and printed photogravure plates, enabling relief and intaglio inking techniques and printing processes.
The course will introduce pivotal artists associated with taught printing techniques and their historical context. We'll explore the works of artists such as Anna Atkins and Albrecht Durer, who played significant roles in the development of their respective techniques. We'll also examine figures like Alfred Stieglitz and Robert Overby, who influenced the trajectory of their media, and contemporary artists like William Kentridge and Do Ho Suh, who have reshaped our perception of print. Additionally, we'll read and screen 'Contact: Art and the Pull of Print' by Jennifer Roberts from Harvard, and invite her for an online discussion with our students. The coursework will adhere to a media and technique-based structure, with the creation of six bodies of work with separate critiques. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |
| Sensitivity & Exposure: Concepts and Techniques in Light Based Printing | 3036 (001) | Frances Lightbound, Monika Niwelinska | Monday through Friday, Monday through Friday
9:00 AM - 3:30 PM, 9:00 AM - 3:30 PM In Person |
Description
In this course, we'll delve into the intriguing intersection of photography and printmaking, acquiring light and pressure-based printing skills and conceptually integrating them into an art practice that approaches print as a site-responsive medium, sensitive to light, pressure, and context. The introductory section explores the material sensitivity of embossing and frottage, treating them as akin to documentary photography. The second section introduces light sensitivity through cyanotype and gelatin silver processes, engaging directly with objects and surfaces. The final segment employs digital fabrication to create laser-engraved linoleum blocks and printed photogravure plates, enabling relief and intaglio inking techniques and printing processes.
The course will introduce pivotal artists associated with taught printing techniques and their historical context. We'll explore the works of artists such as Anna Atkins and Albrecht Durer, who played significant roles in the development of their respective techniques. We'll also examine figures like Alfred Stieglitz and Robert Overby, who influenced the trajectory of their media, and contemporary artists like William Kentridge and Do Ho Suh, who have reshaped our perception of print. Additionally, we'll read and screen 'Contact: Art and the Pull of Print' by Jennifer Roberts from Harvard, and invite her for an online discussion with our students. The coursework will adhere to a media and technique-based structure, with the creation of six bodies of work with separate critiques. |
Class Number |
Credits |
DepartmentArea of StudyLocation |