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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Students will learn the basic terminology, methods and principles of film production. The methods of teaching will be classroom lecture and laboratory work in film production . Fall.
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3.00 Credits
This course investigates the role design plays in human communication. Students will gain familiarity with the basic concepts and assumptions underlying design practice and learn to see applied arts such as graphic design, industrial design, architecture, and multimedia design function as communicative activities. Special attention will be given to the rhetorical methods associated with identifying design problems and implementing design solutions. Fall (same as COMM 251).
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to facilitate the treatment of topics across disciplinary boundaries. Topics will vary from year to year. Course, but not individual topics, may be repeated for credit. No more than one 290 course may be used to fulfill a core requirement. Offered on demand.
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce and examine photography from 1826 to the present, from its invention to recent controversies over the NEA funding of photographers such as Robert Mapplethorpe, Andres Serrano, and Joel-Peter Witkin. While we investigate popular applications of photography (including photojournalism and colonial, scientific, digital, and art photography), you will learn about related technological changes and historical events that perceptibly altered the medium. Spring of alternate years.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the processes involved in the making and printing of etchings, woodcuts, linoleum block prints, and lithographs, with lecture and studio practice. Four hours a week with outside work and weekly critique sessions. Fall, alternate years.
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3.00 Credits
A systematic study of several methods of paintings, including oil, encaustic, polymer, egg tempera, acrylic and an examination of the techniques of some of the old masters. Four hours a week with outside work and weekly critique sessions. Spring.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: permission of Dept. Chair. The materials and techniques of drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking, multimedia, film, video or photography are explored through classroom projects and assignments in the areas of the students' interests. Six hours studio per week plus outside work and weekly critique sessions. Spring.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: COMM/ART 251. This course introduces students to fundamental concepts, issues, and concerns associated with Web-based multimedia design. Course readings and exercises encourage students to explore the aesthetic and historical/cultural dimensions of design and then use this knowledge as they plan, propose, implement, and rationalize their own Web site designs. Every spring. (Same as COMM 351).
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ART 103, 203, or 208. A practical study of large scale painting and rendering. Spring.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 101. An analysis of cinema or television as an aesthetic form and a social document, usually with an emphasis on American and European film or television. Recent topics have included "Masculinty and Feminity in Film", "Film and Literature", and "Television Studies". This course meets six hours per week, three of which are devoted to screenings. May be elected up to six hours credit as topic changes. Spring of alternate years. (Same as ENGL 399 and ENGL 399).
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