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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Miller Content: Emphasis on the relationship between exposure, film development, and finished print. Exploration of other film formats, scale, and refinement of the print to develop a consistent portfolio of finished work. Techniques and concepts address historical and contemporary issues. Introduction to color and digital photography. Prerequisite: Art 120 or consent of instructor. Students must have a 35mm or larger film camera. Taught: Annually, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
Staff Content: Introducing the intermediate student to nonsilver photographic processes, with emphasis on combining a variety of media to form one-of-a-kind photo-based images. Historical and contemporary trends. Prerequisite: Art 120 or consent of instructor. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits. May be taken twice for credit.
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3.00 Credits
Staff Content: Introduction to contemporary art photography produced through digital imaging. Emphasis on the integration of composition, subject, concept and text manipulation, and output. Basic technical skills of digital software and application of them in creation of digital artwork. Techniques and concepts studied and practiced through lectures, readings, assignments, and critical analyses that address contemporary issues in the digital arts. Experience on Macintosh computers desirable. Prerequisite: Art 120 or consent of instructor. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
Content: Select and study a topic or medium in studio art that is not addressed in the currently listed courses. Prerequisite: 100-level studio course. Taught: Alternate years.
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3.00 Credits
Odell Content: The artistic tradition engendered by the Buddhist faith as it originated in India and migrated to China, Japan, and Korea. Discussions of architecture, sculpture, painting, and illustrated books documenting transformations in Buddhist doctrine. European responses to Buddhism in the period of colonization. Prerequisite: None. Course in art history or East Asian studies recommended. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
Odell Content: Key movements and artists in China and the Chinese diaspora from the 19th century through today. Exploration of "Chinese" cultural identity as expressed in global economies of art production and performance. Consideration of painting, prints, calligraphy, photography, and sculpture, as well as mixed-media installations, performance art, video, and Web-based art. Prerequisite: None. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
Johnston Content: American art and architecture from the colonial period until the Great Depression. Cultural traits revealed through various art forms. Prerequisite: Art 111 or consent of instructor. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
David Content: Advanced introduction to the art of the early Italian Renaissance. Consideration of key works of painting, sculpture, and architecture from 1230 to 1500. Examination of the role of narrative painting, the relationship of art to the intellectual movement of Renaissance humanism, representations of gender and sexuality, Renaissance color theory. Prerequisite: Art 101 or 111 or consent of instructor. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
David Content: Examination of the art of 16th-century Italy. Special attention given to the works of Leonardo, Raphael, Michelangelo, Titian, and to the artists associated with "mannerism," which will be explored as a period and a concept. Consideration of themes including working practices, the changing social status of the artist, developments in artistic theory, the cultural engagement with classical antiquity, the crisis in religious art in the context of the Reformation, controversies of conservation (for example, the cleaning of the Sistine Chapel), different articulations of visual narrative. Prerequisite: Art 101 or 111. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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3.00 Credits
Johnston Content: The history of photography from its invention through contemporary practice. Major technical developments, changes in perceptions of the social role, and meaning of the photographic image. Examination of the manner in which photography has served as a tool for creating art in other media, the nature of its documentary status, and what kind of unique aesthetic experience it provides on its own. Prerequisite: Art 111. Taught: Alternate years, 4 semester credits.
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