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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 credits The book is a unique and personal form of communication conveyed in A wide range of formats. Lavishly illustrated books where image dominates text can be found in virtually every section of A bookstore, including children's, travel, cooking, nature, and documentary. This course examines the genre of the "picture book".A topic is chosen by each student, who then creates a series of finished images for A proposed picture book presented at the end of the semester. Areas of exploration include a variety of book formats. Emphasis is on personal style, expression, and craftsmanship. Prerequisite: IILLU 3710.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits In this advanced editorial illustration course, students explore, through A series of illustrations, the personal and social characteristics and implications of obsessions and phobias. Students are required to research their topics and keep A detailed sketchbook. Concept formulation, personal expression, and experimentation are emphasized. Prerequisite: Any major elective, IILLU3710, IILLU3810 or IILLU 3910.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits An advanced course introducing students to the genre of science fiction and fantasy illustration. The focus of This course is on the concepts, techniques and referencing tools that enable the artist to transform imaginative people, characters, and environments into illusions of reality. Emphasis is on painting.
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3.00 Credits
Variable credit Through the internship program Illustration majors have the opportunity to work in A professional setting, while gaining important on-the-job experience. Internships provide exposure to A wide range of professional art environments, including, but not limited to, illustration studios, publishing, or media-based companies. The department will post opportunities or students may make arrangements on their own with prior approval from the chairperson of the department. (3.0 credits =180 hours of work.)
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1.00 Credits
1 credit IA workshop course devoted to learning the software and settings for making high quality digital prints in the Digital Printing Studio at AIB. This course serves the needs of Portfolio, but can be taken earlier. Prerequisite: ICOMP 2910.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits This course examines the techniques and expressive possibilities in photographing land and cityscapes, and interior environment with the large format camera. Field trips, classroom critiques and presentations by outside photographer are included. Prerequisite: IPHOT 2150 or permission of instructor. Offered every other year.
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3.00 Credits
1210, IPHOT 1300/ 1310. 3 credits This course surveys major contemporary trends and their evolution in fine art, documentary, and commercial photography since World War II. Individual photographer's styles are examined within an historical context. Slide lectures and class discussions are supplemented by guest lectures and visits to galleries and museums in the Boston area. Prerequisites: IPHOT 1200/ 1210.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits each Photography studies begin with these Photography Foundation courses. The intention of Lecture / Lab I & II is to prepare students to deal with A vast palette of photographic materials, and to serve as the technical complement to the conceptual, and critique based Visual Seminar I & II. Lecture / Lab I & II run concurrently with Visual Seminar I & II. In Lecture & Lab I, students learn the basic properties of light, camera and lens function; control of exposure and development; basics of B&W printing; concerns of craftsmanship and image control; and presentation options of the final imagery. In Lecture & Lab II, the course emphasizes the relationships of concept, materials, and techniques. Specific areas of study include color photography; advanced studies in camera mastery; equipment, optics, perspective; artificial and available lighting techniques; Polaroid materials; and non-silver photography.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits each This is an introductory (I) / intermediate (II) level seminar course in the contemporary, historical, and personal aesthetics of photography. Foundation Seminar is primarily A critique experience. The intention of the course is to investigate the personal, interdisciplinary, and subtle aspects of the medium, to help students become actively engaged with their own creative abilities and vision, and to cultivate, and support artistic risk within a nurturing and demanding environment.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Intro to Alternative Photographic Processes is an investigation into alternative processes and non silver photography from the historical birth of the medium through digital imaging. Students are introduced to A variety of processes including Salted Paper, Argyrotype, Kallitype, Cyanotype and Van Dyke. Interdisciplinary options including pinhole, Lazertran, hand applied emulsions, and digital negatives are also addressed.Prerequisites: IPHOT 1200/1210, IPHOT1300/1310 or Permission of Instructor.
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