ARTSINST 6F: Professional Development in Music (MUSIC 6F)
Open to majors and non-majors. This course is designed for students who are considering careers in performance or the music industry to explore their personal and artistic identity. Weekly guest speakers provide real world insight on topics related to professional advancement.
Terms: Win, Spr
| Units: 1-2
Instructors:
Lee, J. (PI)
ARTSINST 6G: Entrepreneurial Development for Classical Musicians (MUSIC 6G)
Open to majors and non-majors. This course is designed for students who are interested in professional opportunities in classical music, whether conservatory bound or just exploring possible careers in classical music performance or related interests. Students will examine a wide range of entrepreneurial tools to help develop their personal and artistic identities. The class discussion covers a broad scope of conservatory topics, a survey of professions in classical music, and entrepreneurial skills. Guest speakers are invited to provide real world insight on topics related to professional advancement.
Terms: Win, Spr
| Units: 1-2
| Repeatable
2 times
(up to 4 units total)
Instructors:
Lee, J. (PI)
ARTSINST 11Q: Art in the Metropolis (ARTSTUDI 11Q, ENGLISH 11Q, FILMEDIA 11Q, MUSIC 11Q, TAPS 11Q)
This seminar is offered in conjunction with the annual "Arts Immersion" trip to New York that takes place over the spring break and is organized by the Stanford Arts Institute (SAI). Enrollment in this course is a requirement for taking part in the spring break trip. The program is designed to provide a group of students with the opportunity to immerse themselves in the cultural life of New York City guided by faculty and SAI staff. Students will experience a broad range and variety of art forms (visual arts, theater, opera, dance, etc.) and will meet with prominent arts administrators and practitioners, some of whom are Stanford alumni. In the seminar, we will prepare for the diverse experiences the trip affords and develop individual projects related to particular works of art, exhibitions, and performances that we'll encounter in person during the stay in New York. Class time will be divided between readings, presentations, and one studio based creative project. The urban setting in which the various forms of art are created, presented, and received will form a special point of focus. A principal aim of the seminar will be to develop aesthetic sensibilities through writing critically about the art that interests and engages us and making art. For further details please visit the Stanford Arts Institute website:
https://arts.stanford.edu/for-students/academics/arts-immersion/new-york/
Terms: Win
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II
Instructors:
Berlier, T. (PI)
ARTSINST 12AX: Los Angeles Arts Immersion (ARTHIST 10AX)
In this Arts Intensive, students will learn about the dynamic art histories of Mexican American/Chicanx and Black American artists in Los Angeles. Students will visit museums, galleries, and community centers dedicated to nurturing, showcasing, and archiving the art of people of color, including Black- and Latinx-founded art institutions. Students will meet curators, artists and other art professionals, be given private tours to view historical sites and modern and contemporary art, and will participate in at least one artist-led art-making workshop. Once back at Stanford, students will continue to explore the art histories of Black and Brown peoples through class discussions of primary texts, films, and artist interviews.
Terms: Sum
| Units: 2
Instructors:
Salseda, R. (PI)
ARTSINST 20AX: Arts Immersion Independent Study
This 1-unit independent study allows students who have taken an arts immersion as part of the summer Arts Intensive program to further develop the project they began in AI. Successful completion of this course following completion of a summer arts immersion course will fulfill the experiential arts requirement for the Inter-Arts Minor. Must be taken autumn quarter following successful completion of one of these summer quarter courses:
ARTSINST 12AX or
ARTSINST 21AX. Must be taken for a letter grade.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 1
Instructors:
Pipert, J. (PI)
ARTSINST 100B: The Questions of Cloth: Weaving, Pattern Complexity and Structures of Fabric (APPPHYS 100B)
Students will learn to weave on a table loom while examining textile structures from historic, artistic and scientific perspectives. Emphasis on analyzing patterns and structures generated by weaving, with elementary introductions to information-scientific notions of algorithmic complexity, image compression, and source coding. This class is primarily intended for non-STEM majors with little or no prior experience in working with textiles. Limited enrollment. Prerequisites: Instructor permission.
Last offered: Winter 2023
| UG Reqs: WAY-FR
ARTSINST 101: Introduction to the Arts: Black Artistry (TAPS 101T)
Charting a course from colonial America to contemporary London, this course explores the long history of Black performance throughout an Atlantic diaspora. Defining performance as "forms of cultural staging," from Thomas DeFrantz and Anita Gonzalez's Black Performance Theory, this course takes up scripted plays, live theatre, devised works, performance art, and cinematic performance in its survey of the field. We will engage with theorists, performer, artists, and revolutionaries such as Ignatius Sancho, Maria Stewart, William Wells Brown, Zora Neale Hurston, Derek Walcott, Danai Gurira, and Yvonne Orji. We will address questions around Black identity, history, time, and futurity, as well as other essential strategies Black performers have engaged in their performance making. The course includes essential methodological readings for Black Studies as well as formational writings in Black performance theory and theatre studies. Students will establish a foothold in both AAAS (theory & methodology) and in performance history (plays and performances). As a WIM course, students will gain expertise in devising, drafting, and revising written essays. This course, as a required course for the Interdisciplinary Arts Minor, will provide foundational readings and perspectives. All students interested in Honors in the Arts and/or IDA should consider enrolling!
Terms: Win
| Units: 4
Instructors:
Robinson, A. (PI)
;
Ryu, Z. (TA)
ARTSINST 141: Network Performance Practice (MUSIC 153A)
JackTrip software, developed at Stanford, provides the means for ultra-low-latency, uncompressed sound transmission for live music-making. Remote ensemble rehearsals, coaching, music lessons, jamming and concert broadcasting make use of the technology. The open-source project continues to develop, especially in its ability to support large ensembles of home-to-home connections. The course will cover recent features, history and theory of JackTrip and engage in a series of practical, participatory performance sessions. Students will learn the software and related network and audio principles with a focus on intuition building and ear training. Course participants will work from home and be able to use CCRMA facilities remotely. The course can be audited or coordinated with another course.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 1
| Repeatable
4 times
(up to 16 units total)
ARTSINST 142: Drawing with Code (ARTSTUDI 163)
This studio course will engage coding practices as drawing tools. What makes a good algorithmic composition? How do we craft rule-sets and parameters to shape an interesting work? What changes if we conceive of still outputs, ongoing processes, or interactive processes as the "finished" work? We will look at the history of algorithmic drawing, including analog precedents like Sol LeWitt and other conceptual artists, along with current pioneers like John Simon Jr., Casey Reas, and LIA. Outputs will involve prints as well as screen-based works. Some basic coding experience is helpful, but not required. Assignments are based on conceptual principals that students can engage with at different coding skill levels. This is a good way for non CS students to explore coding practices as well as for CS students to hone their skills. We will work primarily in the free Processing software for our explorations.
Terms: Spr
| Units: 4
| UG Reqs: WAY-CE
Instructors:
Utterback, C. (PI)
ARTSINST 150G: Performing Race, Gender, and Sexuality (CSRE 150G, CSRE 350G, FEMGEN 150G, LIFE 150G, TAPS 150G)
In this theory and practice-based course, students will examine performances by and scholarly texts about artists who critically and mindfully engage race, gender, and sexuality. Students will cultivate their skills as artist-scholars through written assignments and the creation of performances in response to the assigned material. Attendance and written reflection about a live performance event on campus are required. Students will also learn various meditation practices as tools for making and critiquing performance, in both our seminar discussions and performance workshops. We will approach mindfulness as method and theory in our own practice, as well as in relation to the works studied. We will also consider the ethics and current debates concerning the mindfulness industry. Examples of artists studied include James Luna, Nao Bustamante, Renee Cox, William Pope.L, Cassils, boychild, Curious, Adrian Piper, Xandra Ibarra, Valérie Reding, Guillermo Gomez-Peña, and Ana Mendieta.
Last offered: Autumn 2022
| UG Reqs: WAY-CE, WAY-EDP
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