Search Course Listings
SCULP 2141-01
DIGITAL DESIGN & FABRICATION | ADDITIVE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
“Any attempt to understand an artistic medium through the lens of technology alone is futile and counterproductive,imposing limits on the conceptual understanding of the work. Good art is always both deeply rooted in and at the same time transcends its medium.”
-Christiane Paul
This course will explore digital design and fabrication within the context of contemporary art, design and architecture. Through a series of technical demonstrations and assignments, connections will be made between CAD/CAM software, fabrication technologies and the physical world. Additionally, the course will explore digital fabrication as it relates to traditional sculptural processes such as mold making + casting, metalworking and woodworking.
This course, although technical in nature, is not technical in spirit. Our goal is not the mastery of any one software application or fabrication technology, but instead an understanding of how to effectively leverage digital processes and tools in one’s studio.
The semester will be divided into a series of assignments, each exploring various approaches to digital design and fabrication, and will culminate in a final project blending digital fabrication with an existing project and/or research interest.
You will leave this course with the ability to model complex geometries, to collect and process 3D scan data, and to output using additive fabrication equipment. We will utilize the resources of RISD at large, but will focus on highly accessible, open source digital fabrication tools available within the Sculpture department.
Elective
SCULP 2142-01
DIGITAL AND DESIGN FABRICATION | SUBTRACTIVE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Any attempt to understand an artistic medium through the lens of technology alone is futile and counterproductive, imposing limits on the conceptual understanding of the work. Good art is always both deeply rooted in and at the same time transcends its medium.
- Christiane Paul
This course will explore digital design and fabrication within the context of contemporary art, design and architecture. Through a series of technical demonstrations and assignments, connections will be made between CAD/CAM software, fabrication technologies and the physical world. Additionally, the course will explore digital fabrication as it relates to traditional sculptural processes such as mold making + casting, metalworking, and woodworking.
This course, although technical in nature, is not technical in spirit. Our goal is not the mastery of any one software application or fabrication technology, but instead an understanding of how to effectively leverage digital processes and tools in one’s studio.
The semester will be divided into a series of assignments, each exploring various approaches to digital
design and fabrication, and will culminate in a final project blending digital fabrication with an existing
project and/or research interest.
You will leave this course with the ability to digitally model complex geometries in two and three
dimensions, generate toolpaths in two and three dimensions, and output to a CNC Plotter, CNC Plasma
Cutter, and CNC Router.
Elective
SCULP 2173-01
RETOOLING THE STUDIO TOOL KIT
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is structured according the notion that artists can use what is on hand to research and craft simple solutions to the complex physical, mechanical, and technical problems that must be routinely addressed in their making practices. This material and process based, hands-on, research studio will be structured in response to the issues that the advanced fine arts student is grappling with on a regular basis. Many of the issues that arise in the process of making provide the opportunity to transcend perceived material-based boundaries and thinking. Some of the questions this course attends to include: How do you defy gravity? How do you generate the hidden components required to physicalize the thing we can see in our mind's eye? How is the magic we need to create our work scalable to the resources we have readily available? Example working processes include: mig welding, tig welding, casting for prototyping, woodworking, and mold making.
Junior class level and above and instructor permission is required to register for this course, please contact the instructor directly.
Elective
SCULP 2173-01
RETOOLING THE STUDIO TOOL KIT
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is structured according the notion that artists can use what is on hand to research and craft simple solutions to the complex physical, mechanical, and technical problems that must be routinely addressed in their making practices. This material and process based, hands-on, research studio will be structured in response to the issues that the advanced fine arts student is grappling with on a regular basis. Many of the issues that arise in the process of making provide the opportunity to transcend perceived material-based boundaries and thinking. Some of the questions this course attends to include: How do you defy gravity? How do you generate the hidden components required to physicalize the thing we can see in our mind's eye? How is the magic we need to create our work scalable to the resources we have readily available? Example working processes include: mig welding, tig welding, casting for prototyping, woodworking, and mold making.
Junior class level and above and instructor permission is required to register for this course, please contact the instructor directly.
Elective
SCULP 2236-01
OPEN HARDWARE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The prevalence and rapid evolution of digital fabrication technology is due in large part to open source communities of users who actively develop and contribute to new software, hardware, and publishing platforms. In this hands-on studio we will explore both the history and potential of the open source movement as it relates to art, design, and its production. Specifically, we will build upon, modify, hack, and create new open source tools, workflows, and platforms that aid in the production of original artworks. The semester will begin with a series of projects in which students gain familiarity with the norms and practices of open source collaboration, development, and publishing. From there, students will have the opportunity to devise and use an example of open hardware in the creation of an original body of work. Topics include: bootstrapping, hacking, intellectual property, licensure and attribution, speculative fiction, Cyberpunk aesthetics, Afrofuturism, Shanzhai, additive and subtractive fabrication, physical computing, motion control systems, experimental materials, digital distribution, and dissemination.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Computation, Technology, Culture Concentration
SCULP 251G-01
GRADUATE STUDIO: EXPANSIVE PRACTICES II: THESIS EXHIBITION AND BEYOND
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course provides a critical platform for a graduate student’s ongoing artistic practice. Individual studio visits will be scheduled as well as meetings in smaller groups for in process studio discussions. Graduates will work independently to further delve into their intellectual trajectories, philosophical attitudes and the conceptual and formal frameworks of their respective practices. This class will also intersect with the Sculpture Department’s Visiting Artist Program which consists of 3-4 visiting artist/scholar lectures per semester. The department’s program is a site for intersectional thought and multi-disciplinary artistic practices due to the range of participating artists and scholars. Additionally, this course functions as an offshoot of the core course, Graduate Sculpture Studio, with a similar aim of providing a critical platform for a graduate student’s ongoing artistic practice.
Elective
SCULP 3216-01
SPATIAL VIDEO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Our eyes are nearly always drawn towards something moving over something inert. What innovative strategies can be employed to incorporate video, sculpture, and physical space into a single work, without one medium dominating the other? How can an artist resolve the fundamental differences between two-dimensional moving images and three-dimensional objects or space? This intensive studio elective will explore methods and issues of assimilating video, photography, sound, performance, objects, and space through studying and constructing multimedia sculpture and installations. Throughout the semester we will be presented with assignments that examine these different possibilities from multiple perspectives, including studio projects that deploy video in a sculptural context, and sculpture that is only activated through a video work. We will study the recent history of artists and designers who engage multimedia techniques and experiment with new formats and technologies. Students will learn the basics of DSLR camera technique, digital video editing, audio production, audio/video display technology, and installation techniques. Students in the course should have an understanding of sculptural materials and fabrication techniques, and should be ready to experiment with the fundamental structure of the presentation of media.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $150.00
Elective
SCULP 450G-01
ADVANCED CRITICAL ISSUES SEMINAR I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
What is the meaning of contemporary? What is the meaning of critique? What are models for sustainable and ethical artistic practice? What is the role of the artist in contemporary culture? These are but a few of the frameworks we will use to explore an array of new tools for thinking, feeling, perceiving, and analyzing the textures of our inter-subjective environment. Together, we will address the challenges implicit in the willful consideration of what exists beyond what we think we know; beyond what we have been told is true about our chosen field as artists. We take up this exploration through a selection of readings, films, lectures and class discussions. Some of the discourses we engage include the relationship between politics and aesthetics, critical race theory, myriad feminist theories, theories of institutional critique, and methods of radical practice in contemporary art.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
SCULP 451G-01
ADVANCED CRITICAL ISSUES SEMINAR II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Advanced Critical Issues Seminar 2 introduces a rigorous theoretical framework for thinking and writing about contemporary sculpture practice. Each seminar develops from a specific theme drawing on research from Grad Critical Issues 1, current debates in the field and contemporary events. Past seminars include: Artificial Natures, Precarious Relations, Frankenstein and Crime, Vanishing Points, as examples. Trespassing across sculpture, performance, cinema, fiction, feminist, queer, race and political theory and back again, we will address writings by Walter Benjamin, Lauren Berlant, Judith Butler, Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Maggie Nelson, Claudia Rankine, Jacques Rancire (as examples) in conversation with contemporary artists writings and projects to cultivate a conceptual grammar to extend to our studio practice. Approaching issues in contemporary sculpture through these discursive perspectives generates new strategies simultaneously material, conceptual, and critical.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
SCULP 461G-01
GRADUATE SCULPTURE CRITIQUE I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
What theories and methods concerning political, historical, and artistic languages do artists rely on to inform their practices? How are you and members of your cohorts approaching aesthetic form in your own practice? What is the language being used in and around the work you are creating? How can we as a community create space to refine these messages within our work? What role does the method of critique play in this collective investigation?
Graduate Sculpture Critique is a discussion-based, collaborative critique seminar that makes space for multiple voices and ways of being in community; foregrounding and supporting the burgeoning artistic practices represented in the grad cohorts. This course centers community building, supplemental reading, group and peer-to-peer critique, and other dialectical methods that foster an intellectual and artistic intimacy among cohort mates. Here we build a foundation that supports risk-taking, question-asking, and the reimagining of predetermined boundaries. Students are asked with great intention to expand the discussion around intersectionality, interstitially, and interdisciplinarity and how the space between things comes to bear on the method of critique.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
SCULP 463G-01
GRADUATE SCULPTURE CRITIQUE III
SECTION DESCRIPTION
What theories and methods concerning political, historical, and artistic languages do artists rely on to inform their practices? How are you and members of your cohorts approaching aesthetic form in your own practice? What is the language being used in and around the work you are creating? How can we as a community create space to refine these messages within our work? What role does the method of critique play in this collective investigation?
Graduate Sculpture Critique is a discussion-based, collaborative critique seminar that makes space for multiple voices and ways of being in community; foregrounding and supporting the burgeoning artistic practices represented in the grad cohorts. This course centers community building, supplemental reading, group and peer-to-peer critique, and other dialectical methods that foster an intellectual and artistic intimacy among cohort mates. Here we build a foundation that supports risk-taking, question-asking, and the reimagining of predetermined boundaries. Students are asked with great intention to expand the discussion around intersectionality, interstitially, and interdisciplinarity and how the space between things comes to bear on the method of critique.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
SCULP 4717-01
SENIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Building upon the independent work accomplished in Junior studio, students are expected to generate self directed work supported by in-process critiques, formal critiques, and individual meetings. Faculty and peer feedback will help students clarify their objectives, fine tune their technical abilities, and develop a strong working practice. Students are expected to hone their creative problem-solving skills and engage in a high level of dialog and work. Throughout the fall, students will practice integrating their source research into their studio practice. An increased and rigorous integration of contemporary art, critical theory, and criticism is expected. The visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department; registration is not available in Workday. Enrollment is limited to Senior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 4717-02
SENIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Building upon the independent work accomplished in Junior studio, students are expected to generate self directed work supported by in-process critiques, formal critiques, and individual meetings. Faculty and peer feedback will help students clarify their objectives, fine tune their technical abilities, and develop a strong working practice. Students are expected to hone their creative problem-solving skills and engage in a high level of dialog and work. Throughout the fall, students will practice integrating their source research into their studio practice. An increased and rigorous integration of contemporary art, critical theory, and criticism is expected. The visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department; registration is not available in Workday. Enrollment is limited to Senior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 471G-01
GRADUATE STUDIO I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Students in the MFA program pursue individual work under advisement of resident faculty, visiting artists and critics. This tutorial experience has been organized to nurture student work toward a set of goals and outcomes through routine conversations with faculty and their cohort. The priority is to assist students with recognizing new objectives in their practice. Faculty work with students to develop new or hone existing skills to set priorities and meet goals and deadlines. At the MFA level students will experience a deeper sense of individualized mentorship. While advising students on the material aspects of their work, faculty will simultaneously guide students toward new conceptual, theoretical and or philosophical frameworks for their work.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
SCULP 4721-01
JUNIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The Fall semester of Junior year represents a crucial pathway out of the sophomore experience and into independent, self-directed work in sculpture. Junior Sculpture Studio, together with Research Studio, is designed to support student’s individual interests and incorporate the multifaceted and highly personalized condition of artistic research with studio methodologies. The semester will consist of two major critique sessions, alongside various demos, assignments, artist talks, and work sessions that direct students’ conversation and growth within the studio. The work sessions will consist of artistic pursuits specific to individual practices, formal small and larger group critiques, and 1 on 1 and small group studio visits with faculty, teaching assistants and peers. The sculpture department’s visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course and allows insight into the practices and work of professional artists. Additionally, a curated selection of material, and personally collected archives, digital and physical as well as various forms of media will prompt deeper investigations into artist practice throughout the semester, exploring the very nature of how to explore, research, and investigate the world around you.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Junior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 4721-02
JUNIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO I
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The Fall semester of Junior year represents a crucial pathway out of the sophomore experience and into independent, self-directed work in sculpture. Junior Sculpture Studio, together with Research Studio, is designed to support student’s individual interests and incorporate the multifaceted and highly personalized condition of artistic research with studio methodologies. The semester will consist of two major critique sessions, alongside various demos, assignments, artist talks, and work sessions that direct students’ conversation and growth within the studio. The work sessions will consist of artistic pursuits specific to individual practices, formal small and larger group critiques, and 1 on 1 and small group studio visits with faculty, teaching assistants and peers. The sculpture department’s visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course and allows insight into the practices and work of professional artists. Additionally, a curated selection of material, and personally collected archives, digital and physical as well as various forms of media will prompt deeper investigations into artist practice throughout the semester, exploring the very nature of how to explore, research, and investigate the world around you.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Junior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 472G-01
GRADUATE STUDIO II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Students pursue individual work under advisement of resident faculty, visiting artists and critics during the semester. Individual objectives are clarified and professional practices are discussed. Group interaction and discussions expected.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture
SCULP 4739-01
JUNIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is a continuation of the vital pathway into independent work in Sculpture. Thematically driven prompts will provide the scaffolding of three major work sessions that direct the conversation in the studio. These studio conversations will take the form of in-process critiques, formal group critiques, and scheduled individual meetings. Students may also expect intersecting projects with shorter timeframes when appropriate. The visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Junior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 4739-02
JUNIOR SCULPTURE: STUDIO II
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is a continuation of the vital pathway into independent work in Sculpture. Thematically driven prompts will provide the scaffolding of three major work sessions that direct the conversation in the studio. These studio conversations will take the form of in-process critiques, formal group critiques, and scheduled individual meetings. Students may also expect intersecting projects with shorter timeframes when appropriate. The visiting artist lecture series is a vital component of this course.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Junior Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Sculpture
SCULP 473G-01
GRADUATE STUDIO III
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Students pursue individual work under advisement of resident faculty, visiting artists and critics during the semester. Individual objectives are clarified and professional practices are discussed. Group interaction and discussions are expected.
Students are pre-registered for this course by the department; registration is not available in Workday. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Sculpture Students.
Major Requirement | MFA Sculpture