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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Fall Semester 2009 Major movements such as Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, Minimalism, Super Realism, Neo-Expressionism as well as works which go beyond traditional media (earthworks, video art, performance art, digital imaging). Day trips to museums and galleries complement class material.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Not Offered 2008-2009 Examines attitudes toward food in various cultures as seen in art. Topics include food as necessity, ritualistic and religious significance of food, eating as social/political engagement, food and body image, and medical/psychological issues related to food.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Spring Semester 2010 Survey of the visual arts in Italy, France, Spain, Flanders, and Holland during the Seventeenth Century. Students consider some of the world's most evocative and emotionally stirring art that was shaped by the demands of monarchs and popes. Also explored are cultural, religious, and scientific factors which influenced changes in artistic style and technique.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Not Offered 2008-2009 Through the intersection of art and biology and using the act of "journaling" and art as avehicle for investigation, students explore their inner voices while looking outward to observe the natural world.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Spring Semester This course will introduce students to the use of sequential imagery in art. It will focus on animation and graphic novels. Methods will include photography, Claymation and drawing. Narrative and non-narrative approaches will be contrasted in order to better understand each. Topics will include composition, transition, pacing and exaggeration.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Fall Semester Urban architecture, sculpture and painting in Greece and Rome. All aspects of city life during Antiquity will be explored: religious, civic, domestic, and social. Students will gain a deep knowledge of life in the ancient world through the study of its cities and citizens. May not receive credit for both FA 312 and FA 225.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Not Offered 2008-2009 Students will be introduced to the changing trends in public art, focusing on developments since the mid twentieth-century. New definitions of art for the public realm will be examined. Controversial public art projects will be discussed as well as the complexities of public commissions and the shifting focus of funding organizations.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Not Offered 2008-2009 Examines the traditional and contemporary arts of various non-western cultures, focusing on a particular culture each time the course is offered. Specific cultures to be studied include: Indian, Chinese, Japanese, African, and Native American.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Fall and Spring Semesters This workshop provides an introduction to the study of the piano in a class setting, and is intended for beginning students. The following components are included: learning to read music, basic music theory, piano technique, and both individual and ensemble performance. Students use digital pianos with headphones for individualized instruction. The course culminates with a performance for the college community.
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3.00 Credits
Three Credits Fall Semester Breathing, phonation, resonation and diction. Students learn physiology and classical voice production, while acquiring enhanced performance skills through practice and performance in class. Singing repertory is drawn from various styles and will be tailored to individual talents and needs. Ability to read music not necessary for this class.
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