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GLASS 2395-01
GLASS IN NATURE/NATURE IN GLASS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Glass, a material that is derived from natural processes and human ingenuity, has occupied the threshold between man and nature for millennia. In natural form it can be the byproduct of volcanoes, lightning strikes, extraterrestrial impacts (tektites, moldavites, ...) and deep-sea sponges. Early civilizations, recognizing the potential of its wondrous properties, used volcanic glass (obsidian) to create mirrors and arrowheads. The myriad optical and physical qualities of manmade glass have been used to create telescopes, magnifying glasses and a vast array of alchemical and scientific instruments. From the ubiquitous glass vessel, to the most advanced technology of silica-based nanostructures, glass has been instrumental in our ability to perceive and conceive of nature. It has shaped our understanding of nature and our place within it.
Through a process of material investigations and site visits/ explorations we will conduct an intensive study of the role that glass has played in our observation and understanding of nature over time. Using both traditional and experimental hot glass working techniques we will create works inspired by, and responding to specific themes each week. Themes will highlight ideas that present and contain nature, that magnify nature, that duplicate nature, and that vitrify nature.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $150.00
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
GLASS 4300-01
GLASS IA STUDIO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This beginning glass major studio combines studio practice, critical discourse and contemporary issues through assignments, reports, and scheduled critiques. The course develops awareness of three-dimensional issues concerning material, concept, process and light to establish criteria for artistic striving. Students are required to develop the sketchbook as an essential creative tool.
Estimated Materials Cost: $200.00
This course is a requirement for Sophomore Glass students. Non-majors may enroll pending seat availability. Email the Department Head and instructor jointly to request permission.
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
GLASS 4301-01
GLASS IIA STUDIO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Glass IIA is an intermediate studio course in which students continue their ongoing investigation of material processes. Emphasis is on developing personal concepts and imagery and visual research skills through investigations of regularly assigned topics. Students develop a substantial idea sketchbook, participate in scheduled class activities, and group critique.
Estimated Materials Cost: $200.00
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
GLASS 4302-01
GLASS IIIA STUDIO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Glass IIIA is an advanced major studio that requires intermediate glass working skills and familiarity with the material. This course stresses the continuing development of personal imagery, viewpoint, visual source research and the refinement of material processes in terms of individual artistic requirements. As preparation leading to the senior thesis project, independent studio work and individual consultation are emphasized. During this semester, each student is expected to seek out at least one professional artist outside the Glass Department and develop an artistic association with this advisor for the duration of the senior year.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $300.00
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
GLASS 4305-01
BEGINNING GLASSWORKING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This beginning course introduces basic glassblowing and molten glassworking processes. It includes offhand" glassblowing, "solidworking" and glassblowing with molds. Students apply new technical skills to self-generated projects. Students maintain detailed technical notes and a project sketchbook.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $400.00
This course is a requirement for Sophomore Glass students. Non-majors may enroll pending seat availability. Email the Department Head and instructor jointly to request permission.
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
GLASS 4316-01
GLASS IIA DEGREE PROGRAM WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This seminar/studio course is centered around a series of invited artists, writers, scientists who work at the intersection of diverse identities and lived experiences to model their specific perspectives on making as a counterpoint to historically euro-centric and monolithic approaches that have burdened glass as a creative medium. Readings, discussions and class activities prioritize issues of identity, culture, gender, race, colonialism - questioning past cannons of making and proposing challenging alternatives. The participatory and collaborative work done for this class is fundamental to our thinking and making community; a willingness to share ideas and make earnest attempts to connect and support one another is central. Our lecturers and HotNights participants set a broad and challenging spectrum of topics which are built on by the research and perspectives of everyone in the class. In each case, we will strive to address topics, discussions and shop time problem solving in a manner that is respectful to all individuals.
Junior Glass Students register for GLASS-4316 (Fall) and GLASS-4318 (Spring).
Senior Glass Students register for GLASS-4320 (Fall) and GLASS-4322 (Spring).
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
COURSE TAGS
- Social Equity + Inclusion, Upper-Level
GLASS 431G-01
GRADUATE GLASS I STUDIO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This first semester of graduate study emphasizes varied experimentation, extensive visual source research, maximum productivity and conceptual growth. Students are expected to develop professional associations with artists outside the glass department in addition to the department's faculty and its scheduled roster of Visiting Artists and critics.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $500.00
Major Requirement | MFA Glass
GLASS 4320-01
GLASS IIIA DEGREE PROGRAM WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This seminar/studio course is centered around a series of invited artists, writers, scientists who work at the intersection of diverse identities and lived experiences to model their specific perspectives on making as a counterpoint to historically euro-centric and monolithic approaches that have burdened glass as a creative medium. Readings, discussions and class activities prioritize issues of identity, culture, gender, race, colonialism - questioning past cannons of making and proposing challenging alternatives. The participatory and collaborative work done for this class is fundamental to our thinking and making community; a willingness to share ideas and make earnest attempts to connect and support one another is central. Our lecturers and HotNights participants set a broad and challenging spectrum of topics which are built on by the research and perspectives of everyone in the class. In each case, we will strive to address topics, discussions and shop time problem solving in a manner that is respectful to all individuals.
Junior Glass Students register for GLASS-4316 (Fall) and GLASS-4318 (Spring).
Senior Glass Students register for GLASS-4320 (Fall) and GLASS-4322 (Spring).
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
COURSE TAGS
- Social Equity + Inclusion, Upper-Level
GLASS 4321-01
GLASS COLDWORKING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This beginning course will provide comprehensive technical instruction on basic glass coldworking" processes including glass polishing, sandblasting, etching, cutting, engraving, gluing, laminating, glass drilling. Students will apply new technical skills to self-generated projects. Students must maintain detailed technical notes and a project sketchbook.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $200.00
This course is a requirement for Sophomore Glass students. Non-majors may enroll pending seat availability. Email the Department Head and instructor jointly to request permission.
Major Requirement | BFA Glass
GLASS 433G-01
GRADUATE GLASS III STUDIO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The student is expected to begin refining a personal viewpoint that incorporates glass in preparation for the graduate degree project. Studio work continues to include consultation and group critique with department faculty, its visiting artists, critics, and the student's own outside advisors.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $500.00
Major Requirement | MFA Glass
GLASS 435G-01
GRAD GLASS I DEGREE PROGRAM WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
All Glass junior, senior and graduate degree program students meet together to engage both practical and theoretical issues of a glass career through: field trips, technical demonstrations, visitor presentations, and direct exchange with visiting professionals from relevant disciplines through student/professional collaborations, artist residencies, individual consultations, critique, and organized group discussion. Class will require reading, active participation in weekly discussions, and prepared student presentations.
First-year graduate students register for GLASS-435G (Fall) and GLASS-436G (Spring).
Second-year graduate students register for GLASS-437G (Fall) and GLASS-438G (Spring).
Major Requirement | MFA Glass
GLASS 437G-01
GRAD GLASS III DEGREE PROGRAM WORKSHOP
SECTION DESCRIPTION
All Glass junior, senior and graduate degree program students meet together to engage both practical and theoretical issues of a glass career through: field trips, technical demonstrations, visitor presentations, and direct exchange with visiting professionals from relevant disciplines through student/professional collaborations, artist residencies, individual consultations, critique, and organized group discussion. Class will require reading, active participation in weekly discussions, and prepared student presentations.
First-year graduate students register for GLASS-435G (Fall) and GLASS-436G (Spring).
Second-year graduate students register for GLASS-437G (Fall) and GLASS-438G (Spring).
Major Requirement | MFA Glass
GLASS 451G-01 / GRAD 451G-01
GRAD CRITICAL ISSUES SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This graduate seminar provides an intensive study of current critical issues in contemporary art. Each Fall a visiting curator or critic is invited to lead the course. While the themes covered each semester will vary with the visiting instructor, the structure of the course will remain the same. The class is divided into two segments: a seminar and a studio. Each week the seminar lasts for three hours followed by studio visits with each student. This course helps students carry the dialogue of contemporary art issues into the studio more effectively.
This course is a requirement for Graduate Glass students. Non-major graduate-level students may enroll pending seat availability. Email the Department Head and instructor jointly to request permission.
Major Requirement | MFA Glass
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
GRAD 031G-01
MAPPING THE INTELLIGENCE OF YOUR WORK
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This seminar is for graduate students who are preparing their written thesis. Within the context of this writing-intensive course, we examine the thesis form as an expressive opportunity to negotiate a meaningful integration of our visual work, how we think about it, and how we wish to communicate it to others. In support of this exploration, weekly thematic writing sessions are offered to open the imaginative process and to stimulate creative thinking as a means of discovering the underlying intelligence of our work. In addition, we also engage in individual studio visits to identify and form a coherent 'voice' for the thesis, one that parallels our actual art involvement. Literary communications generated out of artists' and designers' processes are also examined. The outcome of this intensive study is the completion of a draft of the thesis.
Elective
GRAD 146G-01
BIODESIGN SEMINAR
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The course aims to create sufficient awareness of what yields life on earth, and a complementary biocentric view of the world. New ethical and critical challenges are continually presented to human society with the growth of material science and its implications for design; the course introduces sources and research references to assist with our understanding of these challenges. We explore aspects of human knowledge of living systems, providing a research-based approach to such topics as BioDesign; biomimicry in materials, processes, and structures; functional morphology and the cognitive phenomena of Biophilia. The 'affinities and aversions' we as humans have regarding natural living systems are in everything: from the spaces we inhabit to the metaphors we employ in order to understand complexity in general, including issues connected with health, recuperation and resilience. Using the recently extended facilities and resources of the Edna Lawrence Nature Lab, faculty and graduate students together create opportunities to experiment, observe, and learn about the networked aspects of living systems, materials, structures and processes. Theoretical frameworks associated with the biology of living systems, the growth and formation of natural materials including the contemporary revolutions in evolutionary theory are introduced and examples discussed with visiting specialists.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $30.00
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
GRAD 148G-01 / PAINT 148G-01
PROCESSING THE CONTEMPORARY: CONVERSATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY ART
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course frames contemporary art as a set of conversations, arguments and counterarguments that have been proposed in key exhibitions, works of art, and critical writings produced across multiple continents over the past three decades. We will identify and critique the ideas that have shaped contemporary art, discuss their impetus, and examine their assumptions. Through such conversations, the course presents contemporary art as a form of processing a present and a past in which the artwork is indivisible from the dialogues and conversations that create, define and continue to change it. The title of the class alludes not only to the idea of making and reading contemporary art as cognitive, rhetorical and dialogic activities, but also to the art world as a series of geographically dispersed and temporally promiscuous processes, deeply resistant to modernist systems of order, periodization and mapping. The course combines lectures by the instructor, as well as by visiting critics and art historians, which outline some of the key issues and historical pressures of contemporary art, alongside seminar-type discussions where we process the lectures and select readings as a group.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
GRAPH 2010-01
REFRAMING THE POSTER
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The poster has been an archetypal graphic design format since the late 19th century when lithographic printing technology came of age and captured the imagination of artists, bringing their vision into Paris streets. This course will invite you to explore future possibilities and contexts for the poster-as paper and as screen-building on its singular capacity to transform ideas into iconic picture planes; and examining the dynamics of typography and image, both still and in motion. Prompts will progress from individual posters, to sequences, to site-specific installations that explore the potential for interactive discourse in public space. Studio assignments will be supported with presentations and readings about poster history and contemporary poster design.
Elective
GRAPH 2117-01
WKSHP: UI/UX DESIGN: FROM MIND TO SCREEN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
UI/UX design is the backbone of digital experiences. It shapes how we interact with screens, transforms innovative ideas into intuitive interfaces, guides navigation through complex systems, and creates aesthetic coherence that makes technology accessible and engaging. At its core, UI/UX design bridges creativity and usability, ensuring that digital products are not only functional but also meaningful and enjoyable to use.
This workshop introduces students to the workflow and foundational knowledge of UI/UX design for smartphone applications. Using Figma as the primary tool, students will learn methodologies and tools central to app design, including researching existing forms and functionalities, translating concepts into wireframes, and developing visual aesthetics and navigation systems. In the initial sessions, students will analyze the intuitiveness and patterns of existing apps, critically assess and redefine their functionalities, and explore alternative modes of use. Subsequent sessions focus on redesigning an app by addressing existing frustrations or repurposing its intended use, creating prototypes that challenge standard user expectations, and developing high-fidelity interactive prototypes that integrate navigation and interaction design. No prior experience in UI/UX or coding is required, and coding will not be taught in this course.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $25.00
Elective
GRAPH 2117-02
WKSHP: UI/UX DESIGN: FROM MIND TO SCREEN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
UI/UX design is the backbone of digital experiences. It shapes how we interact with screens, transforms innovative ideas into intuitive interfaces, guides navigation through complex systems, and creates aesthetic coherence that makes technology accessible and engaging. At its core, UI/UX design bridges creativity and usability, ensuring that digital products are not only functional but also meaningful and enjoyable to use.
This workshop introduces students to the workflow and foundational knowledge of UI/UX design for smartphone applications. Using Figma as the primary tool, students will learn methodologies and tools central to app design, including researching existing forms and functionalities, translating concepts into wireframes, and developing visual aesthetics and navigation systems. In the initial sessions, students will analyze the intuitiveness and patterns of existing apps, critically assess and redefine their functionalities, and explore alternative modes of use. Subsequent sessions focus on redesigning an app by addressing existing frustrations or repurposing its intended use, creating prototypes that challenge standard user expectations, and developing high-fidelity interactive prototypes that integrate navigation and interaction design. No prior experience in UI/UX or coding is required, and coding will not be taught in this course.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $25.00
Elective
GRAPH 2117-03
WKSHP: UI/UX DESIGN: FROM MIND TO SCREEN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
UI/UX design is the backbone of digital experiences. It shapes how we interact with screens, transforms innovative ideas into intuitive interfaces, guides navigation through complex systems, and creates aesthetic coherence that makes technology accessible and engaging. At its core, UI/UX design bridges creativity and usability, ensuring that digital products are not only functional but also meaningful and enjoyable to use.
This workshop introduces students to the workflow and foundational knowledge of UI/UX design for smartphone applications. Using Figma as the primary tool, students will learn methodologies and tools central to app design, including researching existing forms and functionalities, translating concepts into wireframes, and developing visual aesthetics and navigation systems. In the initial sessions, students will analyze the intuitiveness and patterns of existing apps, critically assess and redefine their functionalities, and explore alternative modes of use. Subsequent sessions focus on redesigning an app by addressing existing frustrations or repurposing its intended use, creating prototypes that challenge standard user expectations, and developing high-fidelity interactive prototypes that integrate navigation and interaction design. No prior experience in UI/UX or coding is required, and coding will not be taught in this course.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $25.00
Elective