Bethany Johns

Professor
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R I S D faculty member Bethany Johns
BA, University of Iowa
BA, University of Iowa
MFA, Rhode Island School of Design

Bethany Sage Johns received a BA in Fine Arts and English from the University of Iowa and an MFA in graphic design from the Rhode Island School of Design. She has returned to RISD as the Graduate Program Coordinator in Graphic Design, and continues the design practice she began in New York City. Before starting her own practice in 1989, she worked with Katy Homans and later for M&Co. Her clients include national and international art museums and publishers, and she has received both prestigious and obscure awards for publication design.

Clients include the Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, International Center of Photography, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Independent Curators International, and Dia Center for the Arts, as well as various publishers, foundations, galleries and individual artists. Ms. Johns serves on the board of directors of Printed Matter Inc., NY, and was a member of the AIGA/NY board before returning to Providence.

Her work has been included in the exhibitions Mixing Messages: Graphic Design in Contemporary Culture at the National Design Museum, Public Notice: Art and Activist Posters 1951-1997 at Exit Art, New York, The Graphic Imperative: International Posters for Peace, Social Justice & The Environment 1965-2005 at Massachusetts College of Art (traveling) and in I.D., Eye, and U&LC magazines. Before returning to RISD, she taught at SUNY Purchase, The Hartford Art School and in Yale University’s graduate graphic design program.

Courses

Fall 2023 Courses

GRAPH 323G-01 - GRADUATE STUDIO I
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2023
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 323G-01

GRADUATE STUDIO I

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2023
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2023-09-06 to 2023-12-13
Times: TH | 1:10 PM - 6:10 PM Instructor(s): Bethany Johns, Ramon Tejada Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 15 Status: Closed

SECTION DESCRIPTION

This studio course, as groundwork for the graduate thesis, will emphasize inquiry as a primary means for learning. Through making, reflection, collaboration, and critique, we will explore the underlying principles that design objects require, and synthesize theory and practice as necessary partners in graphic design. We will look at the designer's role in the process of revealing and making meaning - as an objective mediator, and as an author/producer, integrating content and form across projects as visual expressions of the preliminary thesis investigation.

Please contact the department for permission to register; registration is not available in Workday. 


Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design

GRAPH 327G-01 - GRADUATE THESIS I
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2023
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 327G-01

GRADUATE THESIS I

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2023
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2023-09-06 to 2023-12-13
Times: W | 11:20 AM - 4:20 PM Instructor(s): Anther Kiley, Bethany Johns Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 15 Status: Open

SECTION DESCRIPTION

The MFA degree requires completion of a graduate thesis. The thesis, as a major undertaking for advanced study and personal development, also assists the student to direct a program of study for an experience that best serves that individual's interests and needs. The thesis is an inquiry into the process, expression and function of the visual in graphic design. Visual search is the primary means by which to develop and substantiate original work which provides proof of concept for the thesis argument, critique, or point of view. The graduate student is encouraged to go beyond established models and to project his/her unique character in the thesis rather than to evidence vocational training, which is implicit. The productions can involve any medium suitable to need and content. Ultimately the thesis is submitted as a written document supported by a body of visual work that is a meaningful synthesis of the visual and verbal, and a lasting contribution to the field of graphic design. Two copies of the document remain, one for the Library and one for the department. Completion is required before graduation as stipulated by the College.

Please contact the department for permission to register; registration is not available in Workday. 


Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design

Spring 2024 Courses

GRAPH 324G-01 - GRADUATE STUDIO II
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Spring 2024
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 324G-01

GRADUATE STUDIO II

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Spring 2024
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2024-02-15 to 2024-05-24
Times: M | 1:10 PM - 6:10 PM Instructor(s): Bethany Johns, Lucinda Hitchcock Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 10 Status: Closed

SECTION DESCRIPTION

This studio course is based on the premise that the narrative shaping of information is fundamental to human communication. As active participants in cultural production, graphic designers naturally collaborate within varied areas of expertise, assuming a documentary role in how society views itself. Narrative methods enable us to speak to (and through) any content with a sense of the story it has to tell - visually representing historical, curatorial, scientific, and abstract ideas and events. Students will explore design as a process of storytelling that includes linear and non-linear relationships, with an emphasis on developing formal strategies for multiple approaches to shaping a narrative experience from given as well as self-generated content. Particular emphasis is on sequence, framing, cause and effect, the relationships between elements, and the synthesis of parts into wholes. With text and image, and across media, we employ narrative methods to make sense of complex content meant to be shared and understood.

Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Graphic Design Students.


Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design (2yr)

GRAPH 328G-01 - GRADUATE THESIS II
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Spring 2024
Credits 9
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 328G-01

GRADUATE THESIS II

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Spring 2024
Credits 9
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2024-02-15 to 2024-05-24
Times: TH | 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM; W | 11:20 AM - 4:20 PM Instructor(s): Anne West, Bethany Johns, Pouya Ahmadi Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 18 Status: Open

SECTION DESCRIPTION

This course is a continuation of the work begun in fall semester's Graduate Thesis I (GRAPH 327G). The 6-credit studio component is complemented with a 3-credit thesis writing seminar, together guiding the synthesis of independent visual and verbal investigations into a coherent thesis body of work. The MFA degree requires completion of a graduate thesis. The thesis, as a major undertaking for advanced study and personal development, also assists the student to direct a program of study for an experience that best serves that individual's interests and needs. The thesis is an inquiry into the process, expression and function of the visual in graphic design. Visual search is the primary means by which to develop and substantiate original work which provides proof of concept for the thesis argument, critique, or point of view. The graduate student is encouraged to go beyond established models and to project his/her unique character in the thesis rather than to evidence vocational training, which is implicit. The productions can involve any medium suitable to need and content. Ultimately the thesis is submitted as a written document supported by a body of visual work that is a meaningful synthesis of the visual and verbal, and a lasting contribution to the field of graphic design. Two copies of the document remain, one for the Library and one for the department. Completion is required before graduation as stipulated by the College.

Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Graphic Design Students.

Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design

Image
R I S D faculty member Bethany Johns
BA, University of Iowa
BA, University of Iowa
MFA, Rhode Island School of Design