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1 - 10 of 146 results for: ARTSTUDI

ARTSTUDI 10A: Digital Workshop for Artists

This one-unit pass/fail introductory workshop class is designed for students who are new to working with code and electronics, and will give them the technical background necessary to feel comfortable in digital studio classes such as Embodied Interfaces (162), Drawing with Code (163), Making it With Arduino (130), and other Emerging Media courses. By teaching introductory electronics and programming concepts in a step-by-step, hands-on manner with a focus on creative practice, this workshop class provides an accessible introduction to using electronics in students' own artistic endeavors. Students will learn to program LED strips, read sensors with Arduino, start to code in Processing, and become familiar with methods for connecting all three. Through guided tutorials and creative exploration in class, students will learn a basic skillset for creative practice using electronics and software interfaces, with a focus on skills students can use in their work in future classes. No technical experience required.
Last offered: Spring 2020

ARTSTUDI 19N: An Artist's Life: Diverse Voices and Changing Contexts

This course is designed for students considering an Art Practice minor or major. In this course, students gain confidence and experience connecting to their artistic voices as we explore the myriad possible career paths artists take to build sustainable careers. The course consists of a series of studio projects, each centered around a different artist whose career and art practice we study. The example artists will be primarily artists of color, or artists from communities which are underrepresented in the art world, with practices and careers ranging from the conventional to the more unusual. The goal of these artist selections is to model the possibilities of an art career for students who do not easily see themselves well represented in the mainstream art world, while also broadening all students¿ understanding of the many different methods for making work and practicing as an artist today.
Last offered: Autumn 2020 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE

ARTSTUDI 21AX: Bay Area Arts Immersion

Students explore the arts in San Francisco, the East Bay, the North Bay, the Peninsula, and the South Bay with Kevin B. Chen. The Bay Area Arts Immersion combines field trips with on-campus workshops.
Last offered: Summer 2022

ARTSTUDI 22AX: Drawing and Creative Writing

Drawing and Creative Writing is a dynamic mix of hands-on drawing studio time and guided writing assignments. This hybrid studio course invites students to experience the perceptual power of drawing and the written word in concert. Drawing and writing are at the roots of most works of art. An intensive practice of these disciplines gives us a marvelous, meditative place from which to learn about the art one can make, uniquely, and about the wisdom of "beginner's mind." This course is open to everyone. We will get our hands dirty with the ABCs of drawing, look closely into the visual dimensions of language, make up semiotic games, word-shapes, and in general use drawing to experiment with inventive tensions between text and image. What does it mean to draw with the eyes of a writer? Or to write like an artist? We will see that our work can be both an artifact and a portal that leads to transformative chains of associations. Here are key tools for visual thinking and problem solving and growing our imagination. And as we play with poem-pictures and word-works and images of writing as we interrogate their cross-pollinations, purposes, possibilities our aim will also be to repair our ability to pay sustained attention. So we'll work to expand our awareness, see with fresh eyes, challenge stereotypes, allow wild ideas to flow, and come into direct contact with surprising art. We will look at art history as artists.
Last offered: Summer 2022

ARTSTUDI 23AX: Drawing

Two fun activities on campus during the summer are drawing in the studio and being outdoors. In this Arts Intensive Drawing class students will do both. The course will revolve around composition and layout, expressive mark-making, and basic drawing techniques. Mainly using pencil and charcoal as our primary medium, this class will explore dynamic compositions found in nature, gestural figure drawing, and portraiture. Students will also have the opportunity to work on quick and in-depth drawings, gaining a more excellent working knowledge of line, shape, perspective, proportion, volume, and composition. On-campus drawing-based visits will include the Anderson Collection and Cactus Garden. An off-campus docent-led tour at the San Jose Museum of Modern Art will provide students the historical awareness of artists who have worked in this manner. The whole class is meant to be an experimental lab while allowing students to gain a rigorous foundation in drawing. Honing individual style is encouraged!
Terms: Sum | Units: 2
Instructors: Toomer, L. (PI)

ARTSTUDI 32XSI: Sustainable Design and Practice in Native American Architecture (CEE 32XSI, NATIVEAM 32SI)

This lecture series highlights and celebrates Native American design practices, both in architectural design and in materials use. As practicing Indigenous architects and designers, the guest speakers aim to share how Indigineity and Nativeness influence the built environment. Equally important is the future, what is the place and responsibility of Native design as we combat climate change and as Native tribes fight to preserve land and heritage?

ARTSTUDI 40SI: Introduction to Art in Entertainment

Art and artists play a huge role in the production of video games, films, television shows, comics, and other forms of popular visual media. In this course, students will be introduced to the different roles art has in the realm of entertainment. Over the course of ten weeks, students will complete drawing exercises and produce work for an original project that can be placed into an art portfolio. Topics include character design, background painting, illustration, storyboarding, and animation. Access to digital art tools is recommended. Prior experience in art is not required. Space is limited, please fill out the following form to enroll in the course: https://forms.gle/MvgkGexY8P9D8QwF9
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 2
Instructors: Chagoya, E. (PI)

ARTSTUDI 101: Art Practice Foundation I

This course is based on the central role of interdisciplinary connections and exchanges in artistic practice. Students will explore the two-dimensional areas of art: painting, drawing, printmaking and photography. They will work on their projects in various area labs, focusing on the translation of concepts across different modes of expression, geared to generate a creative vision beyond traditional media boundaries. Students will also learn how to develop and refine ideas around the design and lay-out of an exhibition and the various ways to document their work as professional artists.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 4 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE

ARTSTUDI 102: Art Practice Foundation II

This course is based on the central role of interdisciplinary connections and exchanges in artistic practice. Students study the work of several prominent artists using different three-dimensional media taught in the department's studio program, including sculpture, video and digital art. This is a practically oriented class with a seminar component, which focuses on the translation of concepts across different modes of expression in order for students to develop a creative vision beyond traditional media boundaries. Prerequisite: ARTSTUDI 101
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 4 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE
Instructors: Weefur, L. (PI)

ARTSTUDI 123I: Undergraduate Seminar in Composition: Music, Art, and Intermedia (MUSIC 123I)

How do music and art relate? How does one speak for, with, the other? In the past century, Western visual art turned towards abstraction and time-based works. Techniques and processes for interaction between image and sound expanded dramatically. What better place to learn about them than the Anderson Collection? Through students' own visual and aural creations, we will explore and share individual approaches to time, symbol, memory, and meaning. Previous experience in music composition is welcome but not required. This course must be taken for a minimum of 3 units and a letter grade to be eligible for Ways-AII credit.
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-CE
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