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WRITTEN AND VISUAL NARRATIVE: CRAFTING THE THESIS BOOK
SECTION DESCRIPTION
All Landscape Architecture graduate students at RISD are required to submit a Thesis Book that is the culmination of the work undertaken in the Advanced Design Research Studio (Thesis). The Thesis Book class is designed to support the written and graphic component of the Thesis Book. The course will provide resources to support the framing and reflection of the thesis work through writing. In addition, the graphic layout of the book will be used as a tool to help structure the inquiry into student's thesis topics.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $200.00
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Landscape Architecture Students.
Major Requirement | MLA-I, MLA-II Landscape Architecture
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
WRITTEN AND VISUAL NARRATIVE: CRAFTING THE THESIS BOOK
SECTION DESCRIPTION
All Landscape Architecture graduate students at RISD are required to submit a Thesis Book that is the culmination of the work undertaken in the Advanced Design Research Studio (Thesis). The Thesis Book class is designed to support the written and graphic component of the Thesis Book. The course will provide resources to support the framing and reflection of the thesis work through writing. In addition, the graphic layout of the book will be used as a tool to help structure the inquiry into student's thesis topics.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $200.00
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Landscape Architecture Students.
Major Requirement | MLA-I, MLA-II Landscape Architecture
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
VESSELS: DIGITAL FABRICATION FOR CEREMONY, SHELTER AND IMPERMANENCE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This elective explores how 3D printing can be used to design and fabricate vessels that engage themes of shelter, ceremony, and impermanence in the landscape. Through lectures, readings, and material research, students will examine historical and cultural precedents grounded in landscape—from tea bowls to earthships/vernacular structures, and sarcophagi—as a basis for design inquiry. Projects will scale up in complexity, beginning with small-format clay containers and evolving toward body-scale enclosures and speculative off-grid living models. Using clay and other bio-based material mixes, students will engage digital mesh modeling and extrusion-based fabrication, focusing on the interplay between material behavior, fabrication logic, and symbolic meaning. No prior experience with modeling or 3D printing is required. The course moves fluidly between research and hands-on making, positioning the vessel as both spatial construct and cultural artifact.
Elective
AUTUMN SITE WORKS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Autumn Site works is a grounded, creative space for a more attentive and reciprocal relationship between people and local biodiversity. Our weekly classroom will be an outdoor test plot at RISD’s Tillinghast Farm, where we will listen to visiting speakers, tend to plants and soil with our hands, and draw our close attention to the many life forms, forces, and surprises in the landscape. Each student will have the creative freedom to design an experimental land-based practice, installation, or event within the plot. Our work will be respectful of diverse ethics, from climate resilience to symbiosis and beauty. However, our learning direction will be focused on topics like the labor of caring for a landscape rich with relationships, local material sourcing for habitat creation, and community stewardship building.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $100.00
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
SPRING SITE WORKS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Spring Site works is a grounded, creative space for a more attentive and reciprocal relationship between people and local biodiversity. Our weekly classroom will be an outdoor test plot at RISD’s Tillinghast Farm, where we will listen to visiting speakers, tend to plants and soil with our hands, and draw our close attention to the many life forms, forces, and surprises in the landscape. Each student will have the creative freedom to design an experimental land-based practice, installation, or event within the plot. Our work will be respectful of diverse ethics, from climate resilience to symbiosis and beauty. However, our learning direction will be focused on topics like the labor of caring for a landscape rich with relationships, local material sourcing for habitat creation, and community stewardship building.
Elective
BOG, SWAMP, RIVER & MARSH: A FIELD SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
It is estimated that since the early 1600’s, North American land in the United States has lost half of the wetland habitat that provided essential areas for wildlife, held water on the land, hydrated soils, and supported vast areas of wetland vegetation. Wetlands provide essential fish and wildlife habitat, supporting rare plants, animals, and birds. Wetlands also store carbon, filter pollutants from water, and retain floodwaters. However, the legacy of viewing marshes and swamps as wasteland, continues to result in the degradation and destruction of many freshwater wetlands by human activity. In this field-oriented seminar students will spend class time within these important habitats, learning to understand them for their varied forms, their biodiversity, and their ability to store carbon and water with the potential of ameliorating on-going climate changes. Through field emersion, students will learn to see the landscape for the evidence it holds of what wetland habitat once was. They will identify the plant species that depend on wetlands for their survival, and will become intimately familiar with the water and soil that support these plant species. Extensive reading will support field observations and conversation in the field. The policies that brought about wetland destruction as well as protection, will be topics covered, along with wetland banking and restoration. Final projects for this class will offer students an opportunity to explore how their studio work can inform salient aspects of these watery worlds.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $75.00
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
BOUND TO AGGREGATE: DESIGNING A SUSTAINABLE MATTER IN GRAINS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This is a seminar/workshop on sustainable material explorations. Through hands-on demonstrations and physical experimentation, we will study low-carbon material composites such as earth, concrete and terrazzo. A composite is a material system in two parts: one part which gives structure (aggregates) and another which binds (binder). Sustainable composites may incorporate renewable binders such as clay, lime, natural cement, and recycled aggregates such as glass, stone, shell, ceramic. We will explore the the physical and cultural contradictions of granular materials -- that both components flow as 'soft matter' -- learning to design for 2D, sculptural and spatial applications.
Elective
CONSTRUCTED GROUND: TERRAIN AND LANDFORM
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This seminar explores the parallels between designing and constructing the ground. It's focus is on landform - analyzing it as part of a larger natural system; understanding its inherent opportunities and limitations; altering it for human use & occupation; and building it with varying construction methodologies. The means for this exploration will primarily be through three-dimensional representations with two dimensional contour plans; however, diagrams, sketches, sections, and narratives will be necessary throughout the semester.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Landscape Architecture Students.
Major Requirement | MLA-I, MLA-II Landscape Architecture
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
LDAR THESIS: OPEN RESEARCH
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Building on the work completed this fall, this seminar will support the advancement of the design thesis. Through hands-on making, students will refine their design research investigations by establishing clear objectives, methods, and outcomes for their Thesis work.
PAINTING PRACTICUM
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This graduate level wintersession studio course will be comprised of two external faculty that are professional artist working in the field. Activities will include studio visits, lectures by each visiting critic, group-critique, potential field trips, all in direct engagement with graduate student practice. It will culminate a final critique at the end of the five week session.
This course is open to second-year Painting Graduate students.
Elective
MEANING IN THE MEDIUM OF PAINTING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This first-year graduate seminar approaches painting as a technical skill, a historical practice and an intellectual project. Weekly sessions begin with group discussions of key readings about recent painting. Readings are organized in three sections. The first looks backward, to the problem of medium that preoccupied modernist painting and, residually, contemporary practices until the 1980s. The second section looks at the academy, the institution and the art market, and their effect on how painting is produced, disseminated, discussed and received. The third, the most speculative, looks laterally at a range of contemporary practices and their cultural frameworks from the 1990s to the present. Frequent studio visits will occur and drive some of the reading and discussion.
Please contact the instructor for permission to register. Preference is given to Graduate Painting Students.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
GRADUATE PAINT STUDIO CRITIQUE I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This period is designed for the students to evaluate and analyze the directions he/she established as an undergraduate. Criticisms of the student's work will be aimed at identifying strengths and weaknesses and help the students clarify fundamental objectives. Group and individual critiques will occur by resident faculty and visiting artists and critics during the semester. Successful completion of this course is a prerequisite for continuance in the program.
Open to Graduate Painting Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
GRADUATE PAINT STUDIO CRITIQUE II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This period is designed for the student to evaluate and analyze and pursue the directions he/she established in Grad Paint Studio Critique I. Group and individual critiques will occur by resident faculty and visiting artists and critics during the semester.
Open to Graduate Painting Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
GRADUATE DRAWING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course presents the graduate student with a series of problems intended to develop drawing as a tool for inquiry into a terrain outside the well-known beaten paths of his/her past studio practice. Expanding the role for drawing in studio experimentation is a goal. Work will be done outside class. There are critiques each week.
Open to Graduate Painting Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
GRADUATE PAINT STUDIO CRITIQUE III
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This period is designed as an advanced critique course which involves visits by resident faculty, visiting artists and critics, with special reference to current issues and concerns in contemporary art.
Open to Graduate Painting Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
GRADUATE PAINTING STUDIO THESIS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This period is designed for development and presentation of a body of work supported by a written thesis in consultation with resident faculty, visiting artists and critics during the semester. A final exhibition of work will be evaluated by a jury of Painting Faculty Members.
Open to Graduate Painting Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
THREE CRITICS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Three Critics will offer graduate students the opportunity to get inside the art critic's head and learn how writers think about the visual. Students will be exposed to a wide range of viewpoints and discourse on contemporary art issues as defined by the interests of three different, practicing critics. Each critic will become part of the RISD community for approximately one month, conducting 3 sessions on campus and one in New York or Boston. On-campus meetings will consist of lectures, reading and writing assignments, group critiques and one-on-one studio visits. Off-campus trips will include visits to museums, galleries and artist studios. Small groups of students will be expected to lead several classes. Outside coursework and full participation in class discussion required for successful completion.
Major Requirement | MFA Painting
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
GRADUATE CRITIQUE I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is an ongoing discussion of individual work with special reference to current issues and concerns in contemporary art. Each student will be required to show and discuss work. Grades by participation.
Enrollment is limited to Graduate Photography Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Photography
GRADUATE CRITIQUE II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is an ongoing discussion of individual work with special reference to current issues and concerns in contemporary art. Each student will be required to show and discuss work. Grades by participation.
Enrollment is limited to Graduate Photography Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Photography
GRADUATE CRITIQUE III THESIS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is an ongoing discussion of individual work with special reference to current issues and concerns in contemporary art. Each student will be required to show and discuss work. Grades by participation.
Enrollment is limited to Graduate Photography Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Photography