Sunday, October 15
Join us on campus for one of the nation's largest portfolio days, plus come a day early for "Saturday with SAIC" and learn how to make the most of your NPD experience!
The Department of Fiber and Material Studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) is internationally renowned as a visionary program and one of the leading contemporary fiber arts education programs in the world. Research-based, concept-driven, and resolutely engaged with hands-on making, the program educates students to make ambitious, complex, and innovative contemporary art. The department’s historical mission and vision are anchored in feminist and queer politics of community, compassion and care, and our classes offer free materials to students to augment their learning free of worries about the cost of supplies.
Sunday, October 15
Join us on campus for one of the nation's largest portfolio days, plus come a day early for "Saturday with SAIC" and learn how to make the most of your NPD experience!
Saturday, October 21
Graduate Portfolio Day provides the opportunity for prospective students to meet one-on-one with faculty, receive immediate feedback on their portfolios, and learn more about the curricula, faculty, and application procedures from a number of colleges. RSVP.
Courses emphasize the creation of fiber and textiles within a contemporary art context, supported by historical traditions and current theoretical discourse. Students learn a vast range of techniques including weaving, textile construction, print, dye, collage, paper making, sewing, quilting, felting, knitting, crochet, spinning, embellishment, sculpture, installation, and performative approaches. With a footprint of over 15,000 square feet, our facilities are the largest in the country and feature a broad range of analog and digital equipment to support material-specific and transdisciplinary approaches to making.
Studio practice is contextualized and supported and through teaching that emphasizes histories that are deeply interwoven into the discipline. Students consider political, cultural, and formal themes and issues that have informed the field of fiber and material studies. These may include:
• Labor, economy, globalization, and production of textiles
• Sustainability, the environment, and climate change
• Colonization and decolonization
• New technologies
• Abstraction
• Gender and transness
• Queerness
• Critical race studies
In addition to studio and classroom experiences, Chicago offers you a wealth of opportunities for studying Fiber and Material Studies within an art and cultural context.
The Textile Resource Center (TRC) is a hands-on teaching/study collection and a curricular resource of over 450 textile objects and more than 2000 books. The TRC supports student learning about global textile histories and contemporary themes.
The curriculum is augmented with onsite lectures by prominent national and international artists and scholars thanks to The William Bronson and Grayce Slovett Mitchell Lectureship in Fiber and Material Studies.
The Art Institute of Chicago offers a comprehensive collection of textiles, fiber, and contemporary art. Other local resources include the Chicago Textiles Week, the Weaving Mill, and the Field Museum. Students also may visit artists' studios, museums, and gallery exhibitions.
Maria Burundarena
Chair
Christine Tarkowski ctarko@saic.edu
Graduate Coordinator
Jade Yumang jyumang@saic.edu
Senior Administrative Director
Aaron Kissman akissman@saic.edu
Administrative Director
Kaitlyn Albrecht kalbrecht@saic.edu
Administrative Assistant
Jennie Bukowski jbukow@saic.edu
Assistant Director of Facilities
Melissa Leandro mleandro@saic.edu
Manager of Facilities
Kate Smith ksmith27@saic.edu