Visual Arts

Courses

For course descriptions not found in the 2008-2009 General Catalog, please contact the department for more information.

Note: The following list of courses represents all visual arts offerings; not all courses are offered each year.

Lower-Division

1. Introduction to Art-Making: Two-Dimensional Practices (4)    An introduction to the concepts and techniques of art making with specific reference to the artists and issues of the twentieth century. Lectures and studio classes will examine the nature of images in relation to various themes. Drawing, painting, found objects, and texts will be employed. Prerequisite: none. This course is offered only one time each year.

2. Introduction to Art Making: Motion and Time Based Art (4)    An introduction to the process of art making utilizing the transaction between people, objects, and situations. Includes both critical reflection on relevant aspects of avant-garde art of the last two decades (Duchamp, Cage, Rauschenberg, Gertrude Stein, conceptual art, happenings, etc.) and practical experience in a variety of artistic exercises. Prerequisite: none. This course is offered only one time each year.

3. Introduction to Art-Making: Three-Dimensional Practices (4)    An introduction to art making that uses as its base the idea of the “conceptual.” The lecture exists as a bank of knowledge about various art world and non-art world conceptual plays. The studio section attempts to incorporate these ideas into individual and group projects using any “material.” Prerequisite: none. This course is offered only one time each year.

20. Introduction to Art History (4)    This course examines history of Western art and architecture through such defining issues as the respective roles of tradition and innovation in the production and appreciation of art; the relation of art to its broader intellectual and historical contexts; and the changing concepts of the monument, the artist, meaning, style, and “art” itself. Representative examples will be selected from different periods, ranging from Antiquity to Modern. Content will vary with the instructor. Prerequisite: none.

21A. Introduction to the Art of the Americas or Africa and Oceania (4)     Course offers a comparative and thematic approach to the artistic achievements of societies with widely divergent structures and political organizations from the ancient Americas to Africa and the Pacific Islands. Topics vary with the interests and expertise of instructor. Prerequisites: none. Student may not receive credit for VIS 21 and VIS 21A.

21B. Introduction to Asian Art (4)     Survey of the major artistic trends of India, China, and Japan, taking a topical approach to important developments in artistic style and subject matter to highlight the art of specific cultures and religions. Prerequisites: none. Student may not receive credit for VIS 21 and VIS 21B.

22. Formations of Modern Art (4)    Wide-ranging survey introducing the key aspects of modern art and criticism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including Neo-Classicism, Romanticism, Realism, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Symbolism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dada and Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Earth Art, and Conceptual Art. Prerequisite: none.

23. Information Technologies in Art History (4)    This seminar introduces fundamentals of art historical practice such as descriptive and analytical writing, compiling annotated bibliographies with traditional and online resources, defining research topics, and writing project proposals. Prerequisite: none. Art history majors only.

Note: Prerequisite for VIS 112 and highly recommended for all other seminars. Must be taken within a year of declaring major or transferring into the art history program.

40. Introduction to Computing in the Arts (4)    (Cross-listed with ICAM 40.) An introduction to the conceptual uses and historical precedents for the use of computers in art making. Preparation for further study in the computer arts area by providing overview of theoretical issues related to the use of computers by artists. Introduces the students to the program’s computer facilities and teaches them basic computer skills. Prerequisite: none. Materials fee required.

60. Introduction to Digital Photography (4)    An in-depth exploration of the camera and image utilizing photographic digital technology. Emphasis is placed on developing fundamental control of the processes and materials through lectures, field, and lab experience. Basic discussion of image making included. Prerequisite: none. Materials fee required.

70N. Introduction to Media (6)    Operating as both a lecture and production course, this introductory class provides a technical foundation and theoretical context for all subsequent production-oriented film and video studies. In the laboratory, the student will learn the basic skills necessary to initiate video production. Completion of Visual Arts 70N is necessary to obtain a media card. Prerequisite: none. Materials fee required.

84. History of Film (4)    A survey of the history and the art of the cinema. The course will stress the origins of cinema and the contributions of the earliest filmmakers, including those of Europe, Russia, and the United States. Prerequisite: none. Materials fee required. This course is offered only one time each year.

87. Freshman Seminar (1)    The Freshman Seminar program is designed to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member in a small seminar setting. Freshman seminars are offered in all campus departments and undergraduate colleges, and topics vary from quarter to quarter. Enrollment is limited to fifteen to twenty students with preference given to entering freshmen. Prerequisite: none.

Upper-Division

104A. Performing the Self (4)    Using autobiography, dream, confession, fantasy, or other means to invent one’s self in a new way, or to evoke the variety of selves in our imagination, the course experiments with and explores the rich possibilities available to the contemporary artist in his or her own persona. Prerequisites: two from VIS 1, 2, 3 and 111.

104BN. Verbal Performance (4)    The course is designed to introduce the student to the part played by language in contemporary performance art. Monologues, musically derived sound poetry, vocalizations, verbally inscribed installations, and the uses of language and voice in film and video are some of the areas explored. Prerequisite: VIS 104A.

104CN. Personal Narrative (4)    The course will explore primary experiential materials to more fully understand the relationship of voice, style, language, and personality, to issues of memory, identity, self-awareness, and desire. Instructor and student will discuss student work as well as published personal narrative. Prerequisite: VIS 104BN.

105A. Drawing: Representing the Subject (4)    A studio course in beginning drawing covering basic drawing and composition. These concepts will be introduced by the use of models, still life, landscapes, and conceptual projects. Prerequisites: two from VIS 1, 2, 3 and 111.

105B. Drawing: Practices and Genre (4)    A continuation of VIS 105A. A studio course in which the student will investigate a wider variety of technical and conceptual issues involved in contemporary art practice related to drawing. Prerequisite: VIS 105A.

105C. Drawing: Portfolio Projects (4)    A studio course in drawing, emphasizing individual creative problems. Class projects, discussions, and critiques will focus on issues related to intention, subject matter, and context. Prerequisite: VIS 105B.

105D. The Aesthetics of Chinese Calligraphy (4)    This course examines Chinese calligraphy as an art form. This conceptually based introductory course combines fundamental studio exercises with creative explorations. Students are exposed to traditional and contemporary forms of Chinese calligraphy while encouraged to experiment with basic aesthetic grammars. Prerequisite: VIS 105A.

105E. Chinese Calligraphy as Installation (4)    This course concerns East–West aesthetic interactions. What are the conceptual possibilities when calligraphy, an ancient form of Chinese art, is combined with installation, a contemporary artistic Western practice? Emphasis is placed on such issues as cultural hybridity, globalization, multiculturalism, and commercialization. Prerequisite: VIS 105D.

106A. Painting: Image Making (4)    A studio course focusing on problems inherent in painting—transferring information and ideas onto a two-dimensional surface, color, composition, as well as manual and technical procedures. These concepts will be explored through the use of models, still life, and landscapes. Prerequisites: two from VIS 1, 2, 3 and 111.

106B. Painting: Practices and Genre (4)    A continuation of VIS 106A. A studio course in which the student will investigate a wider variety of technical and conceptual issues involved in contemporary art practice related to painting. Prerequisite: VIS 106A.

106C. Painting: Portfolio Projects (4)    A studio course in painting emphasizing individual creative problems. Class projects, discussions, and critiques will focus on issues related to intention, subject matter, and context. Prerequisite: VIS 106B.

107A. Sculpture: Making the Object (4)    A studio course focusing on the problems involved in transferring ideas and information into three-dimensions. Course will explore materials and construction as dictated by the intended object. Specific problems to be investigated will be determined by the individual professor. Prerequisites: two from VIS 1, 2, 3 and 111.

107B. Sculpture: Practices and Genre (4)    A studio course in which the student will investigate a wider variety of technical and conceptual issues as well as materials involved in contemporary art practice related to sculpture. Prerequisite: VIS 107A.

107CN. Sculpture: Portfolio Projects (4)    A studio course in sculpture emphasizing individual creative problems. Class projects, discussions, and critiques will focus on issues related to intention, subject matter, and context. Prerequisite: VIS 107B.

108. Advanced Projects in Art (4)    A studio course for serious art students at the advanced level. Stress will be placed on individual creative problems. Specific orientation of this course will vary with the instructor. Topics may include film, video, photography, painting, performance, etc. May be repeated twice for credit. Prerequisite: consent of instructor, department stamp required.

109. Advanced Projects in Media (4)    Individual or group projects over one or two quarters. Specific project organized by the student(s) will be realized during this course with instructor acting as a close advisor/critic. Concept papers/scripts must be completed by the instructor prior to enrollment. Prerequisites: VIS 180A and VIS 180B for media majors, or consent of instructor for ICAM majors. Open to media and ICAM majors only. Two production course limitation.

110A. Contemporary Issues and Practices (4)    An examination of contemporary studio art practice. The course is divided among research, discussion, and projects. Field trips to galleries and discussions with artists will combine with the students moving their work into a dialogue with the issues raised. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110B. New Genre/New and Old Technologies (4)    Advances the idea of different materials, methods, and practices raised at the intermediate level in drawing, painting, and sculpture, and explores and utilizes new and traditional media in studio production of work. Emphasis on multiple media, combining traditional and electronic media, as well as different genres, in an attempt to create new directions for the student’s ideas. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110C. Proposals, Plans, Presentations (4)    Explores the use of the maquette, or sketch, in the process of developing, proposing and planning visual works in various media for public projects, site specific works, grants, exhibition proposals, etc. The student will work on synthesizing ideas and representing them in alternate forms that deal with conception, fabrication and presentation. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110F. Installation: Cross-Disciplinary Projects (4)    Attempts to expand the idea contained in a singular work, or object, into the use of multiple objects, images, and media that redefines the idea as well as the space for which it is intended. Examination of historic, modern, and contemporary works would be brought into discussion of project development and execution. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110G. The Natural and Altered Environment (4)    Explores the natural and altered environment as a basis for subject as well as placement of work pertaining to the environment. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110H. Image and Text Art (4)    Devoted to the study and practice of the multiple ways in which writing and other forms of visible language have been incorporated into contemporary and traditional artworks, including artists’ books, collaging and poster art, visual and concrete poetry, typographical experiments, and calligraphies. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110I. Performing for the Camera (4)    The dematerialization of the performer into a media based image—video, film, slides, still photographs, using the camera as a spy, a co-conspirator, a friend or a foe—employing time lags, spatial derangement, image deconstruction, along with narrative, text, history, to invent time based pieces that break new ground while being firmly rooted in an understanding of the rich body of work done in this area over the last three decades. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110J. Ritual Performance (4)    The course will explore forms of art making that use dream and myth, body art, dance, social drama, happenings, story telling, and enactments of contemporary and traditional forms of performance art that involve a crossing of the lines between different arts and genres. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110K. Installation Performance (4)    The artist as performer working with materials, objects, props, technology, to create multi-layered, experimental, interesting three-dimensional art spaces in which the artist’s body, voice, actions, or memory, moves through, enlivens, or haunts the physical space. Prerequisites: two from VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN and 147B.

110M. Studio Honors I (4)    An advanced studio course intended for the productive, motivated, and self-disciplined student with a clear and unified body of work. The intent is to help refine and expand the student’s work and ideas towards an exhibition and verbal written position. Prerequisite: consent of the instructor, department stamp required. Note: The Studio Honors I and the attached Studio Honors II count as one course toward the fulfillment of a Group IV requirement.

110N. Studio Honors II (4)    The second advanced studio course in the Honors Program in Studio, the successful completion of which will lead towards an honors degree in the studio major. The course builds on the critical and technical issues raised in Studio Honors I. Prerequisite: VIS 110M.

111. The Structure of Art (4)    This course will address the structure of signification in art. We will consider the modes of signification in a wide range of representational and nonrepresentational artworks from architecture through drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, video, and film to performance. Examples will be selected from various places and epochs. This course is required for transfer students. This course is offered during winter quarter only.

112. Art Historical Methods (4)    A critical review of the principal strategies of investigation in past and present art-historical practice, a scrutiny of their contexts and underlying assumptions, and a look at alternative possibilities. The various traditions for formal and iconographic analysis as well as the categories of historical description will be studied. Required for all art history and criticism majors. Prerequisites: VIS 23 and one upper-division art history course; two recommended.

113AN. History of Criticism I: Early Modern (4)    Introducing Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance theories of the image, we concentrate on developments in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries: Neo-Classicism, Romanticism, Realism, and Symbolism. Prerequisite: one from VIS 20, VIS 21A, VIS 21B, VIS 22 or upper-division standing.

113BN. History of Criticism II: Early Twentieth Century (1900–1950) (4)    The principal theories of art and criticism from Symbolism until 1945: formalism and modernism, abstraction, Surrealism, Marxism, and social art histories, phenomenology, existentialism. Prerequisite: none; VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended.

113CN. History of Criticism III: Contemporary (1950–Present) (4)    Recent approaches to the image in art history and visual culture: structuralism, semiotics, psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, post-modernism, feminism, post- colonialism, cultural studies. Prerequisite: none; VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended.

117A. Narrative Structures (4)    How can a fixed image represent events in time? The strategies of storytelling and their consequences for the meaning of works of art will be investigated. Content of the course will vary. May be repeated twice for credit with permission of the instructor. Prerequisite: none; VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended.

117B. Theories of Representation (4)    A discussion of major Western theories of representation with a critique of their applicability to art. Material is drawn from a wide variety of historical periods from Antiquity to Modern. Emphasis is given to theories special significance for art history, but some attention is given to representation theories in other contexts. Readings may include selections from such modern theorists as Peirce, Panofsky, Gombrich, Bernheimer, Barfield, Barthes, Goodman, Foucault, Bryson, Summers, and Mitchell and from classic texts by Plato, Aristotle, John of Damascus, Alberti, and Leonardo. Prerequisite: none; one or more upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended. Note: Majors must have taken VIS 23.

117E. Problems in Ethnoaesthetics (4)    This seminar will address and critique various approaches to studying the art of non-Western societies with respect to their own aesthetic and cultural systems. Students are encouraged to explore comparative philosophies of art and test paradigms of Western aesthetic scholarship. Prerequisite: none; VIS 21A or 21B or 112 or two upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended.

117F. Theorizing the Americas (4)     Examines the philosophical debates that locate the Americas in relation to the modern world. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

117G. Critical Theory and Visual Practice since 1980 (4)     This seminar will examine key moments in the interaction between the world of art and the world of ideas: the goal is to get you thinking about the whole theory/practice relation, as it connects with your own projects and research. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

117H. Constructing Gender in Fifth-Century BC Athens and Eighteenth-Century France (4)     Ideas concerning gender and sexuality are crucial in every human society, but there are enormous shifts between cultures and historical periods. This course examines the changing cultural constructions of sexuality by examining in detail two very different epochs. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

117I. Western and Non-Western Rituals and Ceremonies (4)     This course will examine the process of image-making within specific ceremonies and/or rituals. Selected ceremonies from West Africa, Melanesia, Nepal, and the United States, including both Christian and non-Christian imagery, will be considered. Performance art and masquerade will be analyzed within a non-Western framework. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126F and VIS 117I.

120A. Greek Art (4)    Greek classical civilization was a turning point in the history of humanity. Within a new kind of society, the idea of the individual as free and responsible was forged, and with it the invention of history, philosophy, tragedy, and science. The arts which expressed this cultural explosion were no less revolutionary. The achievements of Greek art in architecture, sculpture, and painting will be examined from their beginnings in the archaic period, to their epoch-making fulfillment in the classical decades of the fifth century B.C., to their diffusion over the entire ancient world in the age of Alexander and his successors. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

120B. Roman Art (4)    Roman art was the “modern art” of antiquity. Out of their Italic tradition and the great inheritance of Greek classic and Hellenistic art, the Romans forged a new language of form to meet the needs of a vast empire, a complex and tumultuous society, and a sophisticated, intellectually diverse culture. An unprecedented architecture of shaped space used new materials and revolutionary engineering techniques in boldly functional ways for purposes of psychological control and symbolic assertion. Sculpture in the round and in relief was pictorialized to gain spatial effects and immediacy of presence, and an extraordinary art of portraiture investigated the psychology while asserting the status claims of the individual. Extreme shifts of style, from the classicism of the age of Augustus to the expressionism of the third century A.D., are characteristic of this period. The new modes of architecture, sculpture, and painting, whether in the service of the rhetoric of state power or of the individual quest for meaning, were passed on to the medieval and ultimately to the modern West. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

120C. Late Antique Art (4)    During the later centuries of the Roman Empire, the ancient world underwent a profound crisis. Beset by barbarian invasions, torn by internal conflict and drastic social change, inflamed with religious passion which was to lead to a transformed vision of the individual, the world, and the divine, this momentous age saw the conversion of the Roman world to Christianity, the transfer of power from Rome to Constantinople, and the creation of a new society and culture. Out of this ferment, during the centuries from Constantine to Justinian, there emerged new art forms fit to represent the new vision of an otherworldly reality: a vaulted architecture of diaphanous space, a new art of mosaic which dissolved surfaces in light, a figural language both abstractly symbolic and urgently expressive. The great creative epoch transformed the heritage of classical Greco-Roman art and laid the foundations of the art of the Christian West and Moslem East for the next thousand years. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 or 120B recommended.

120D. Prehistoric Art (4)    Tens of thousands of years before the dawn of history, the hunting peoples of Ice Age Europe invented the first language of visual images. Their painted cave sanctuaries, such as Lascaux and Altamira, are dazzling in their expressive vitality and mystifying in meaning. This course link cave art with what is known about contemporary conditions of nature, society, and human life. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

121AN. The Idea of Medieval Art (4)    This course introduces the art and architecture of Western Europe from the fourth through the thirteenth centuries. A leading theme is the changing idea of what “medieval” has come to mean, from the coining of the terms “Middle Ages” and “Dark Ages” by Renaissance humanists, to the Romantic fascination with Gothic ruins, and finally to the fantasy medievalisms of twentieth century popular culture and current approaches to medieval art in art historical scholarship. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

121B. Castles, Cathedrals, and Cities (4)    This course explores European art and architecture of the twelfth through the fourteenth centuries against the background of the rituals of chivalry, church, and civic life that made a dazzling spectacle of art and life in the High Middle Ages. Prerequisite: upper-division standing; VIS 20 recommended.

121D. The Illuminated Manuscript in the Middle Ages (4)    This seminar charts the changing pictorial problematics presented by the illuminated manuscript from its origins in late antiquity to the disintegration of the manuscript tradition under the impact of the first printed books. Works such as the Book of Kells and the Tres Riches Heures of the Duke of Berry, among the most brilliant achievements of Western painting, are among those considered. Prerequisite: none; VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history strongly recommended.

122AN. Renaissance Art (4)    Italian artists and critics of the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries were convinced that they were participating in a revival of the arts unparalleled since Antiquity. Focusing primarily on Italy, this course traces the emergence in painting, sculpture and architecture, of an art based on natural philosophy, optical principles, and humanist values, which embodied the highest intellectual achievement and deepest spiritual beliefs of the age. Artists treated include Giotto, Donatello, Masaccio, Brunelleschi, Jan van Eyck, Mantegna, Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Bramante, Durer, and Titian. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

122CN. Defining High Renaissance Art (4)    Since the sixteenth century, the names of Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Bramante have conjured up images of the highest artistic achievement. This course shows the intellectual concerns common to the artist and scientific productions of Leonardo help illuminate the distinctive character of the art of two of his greatest contemporaries. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20, 122AN, or 122BN recommended.

122D. Michelangelo (4)    This course offers new approaches to understanding Michelangelo’s greatest creations. By considering how each work relates to the setting for which it was intended, by regarding critical literature and artistic borrowings as evidence about the works, and by studying the thought of the spiritual reformers who counseled Michelangelo, new interpretations emerge which show the artist to be a deeply religious man who invested his works with both public and private meanings. Prerequisite: upper-division standing; or one of the following courses: VIS 20, 21, 22 or 23; or any upper-division course in art history and criticism or in European history.

122F. Leonardo’s La Gioconda (4)     A critical, art historical look at the world’s most famous painting and its interpretations. Prerequisite: VIS 23. One upper-division course in art history (113AN-129F) is recommended.

123AN. Between Spirit and Flesh: Northern Art of the Early Renaissance (4)    The art of the Early Renaissance in Northern Europe is marked by what appears to be striking conflict: on the one hand, a new love of nature and of the pleasures of court society; and on the other, an intensified spirituality and focus on personal devotion. This course explores these provocative cross-currents in works by master painters like Jan van Eyck and Hieronymous Bosch as well as in lesser known mass-produced objects of everyday use. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20, 121AN, and/or 122AN recommended.

123BN. Jan van Eyck (4)    Intensive study of the career of Jan van Eyck, whose magical paintings have always fascinated viewers with their microscopically detailed naturalism and subtly disguised spiritual meanings. Masterpieces such as the “Arnolfini Wedding” are emphasized. Prerequisite: none; VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history recommended.

124AN. Baroque Art (4)    This course discusses the achievement of such major artists as Caravaggio, Gentileschi, Bernini, Borromini, Rubens, Rembrandt, Velasquez, and Vermeer within a culture marked by increasing intellectual specialization, the entrenchment of modern national boundaries, the co-existence of rival religious organizations, the formations of artistic academies, and the rise of an art market serving the flourishing middle class. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 recommended.

124BN. Art and the Enlightenment (4)    Eighteenth century artists and critics were convinced that art could be a force to improve society. This course places Roccoco and Neo-Classical artists such as Watteau, Fragonard, Tiepolo, Hogarth, Reynolds, Vigee Lebrun, Blake, and David, within the context of art academies, colonialism, the Grand Tour, Enlightenment conceptualizations of history and nature, and the American and French Revolutions. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 or 22 recommended.

124CN. Nineteenth Century Art (4)    A critical survey discussing the crisis of the Enlighten-ment, Romanticism, Realism and Naturalism, Academic Art and History Painting, representations of the New World, the Pre-Raphaelites, Impressionism, international Symbolism, Post-Impressionism, and the beginnings of Modernism. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 or 22 recommended.

125A. Twentieth Century Art (4)   A critical survey outlining the major avant-gardes after 1900: Fauvism, Cubism, Metaphysical Painting, Futurism, Dada, Surrealism, Neo-Plasticism, Purism, the Soviet avant-garde, Socialist Realism, and American art before Abstract Expressionism. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 or 22 recommended.

125BN. Contemporary Art (4)    Art after Abstract Expressionism: Happenings, Post-painterly Abstraction, Minimalism, Performance, Earth Art, Conceptual Art, Neo-Expressionism, Post-Conceptualism and development in the 1990s, including non-Western contexts. We also explore the relation of these tendencies to Postmodernism, Feminism, and ideas of Postcoloniality. Prerequisite: none; VIS 20 or 22 recommended.

125DN. Marcel Duchamp (4)    A critical examination of the work of one of the most radical twentieth century artists. In Duchamp’s four dimensional perspective, the ideas of art-object, artist, and art itself are deconstructed. The Large Glass and Etant Donnees . . . are the twin foci of an oeuvre without boundaries in which many twentieth-century avant-garde devices such as chance techniques, conceptual art, and the fashioning of fictive identities, are invented. Prerequisite: none.

125F. Latin American Film (4)     An overview of film and filmmaking in Latin America and its reception in a national context and beyond. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

126AN. Pre-Columbian Art of Ancient Mexico and Central America (4)    An introduction to the cities and monuments of the ancient civilizations which flourished in Mexico and Central America before the Spanish Conquest. This course will cover the major cultures of Mesoamerica, including the Olmec, Aztec, and neighboring groups. Prerequisite: none; VIS 21 recommended.

126BN. The Art and Civilization of the Ancient Maya (4)    This course offers a history of Maya society from its formative stages to the eve of the Spanish Conquest through an investigation of its art and archeology. Special attention is given to its unique calendar and writing systems. Prerequisite: none; VIS 21 recommended.

126C. Problems in Mesoamerican Art History (4)     Topics of this seminar will address special problems or areas of research related to the major civilizations of ancient Mexico and Central America. Course offerings will vary to focus upon particular themes, subjects, or interpretive problems. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126B and VIS 126C.

126D. Problems in Ancient Maya Iconography and Inscriptions (4)     This seminar focuses upon the art, architecture, and inscriptions of the ancient Maya. Topics will vary within a range of problems that concern hieroglyphic writing, architecture, and visual symbols the Maya elite used to mediate their social, political, and spiritual words. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended.

126HN. Pacific Coast American Indian Art (4)      Explores the art and expressive culture of American Indians of far western United States, including California and Pacific Northwest. Social and cultural contexts of artistic traditions and their relations to the lifeways, ceremonialism, beliefs, and creative visions of their makers. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126CN and VIS 126HN.

126I. Southwest American Indian Art (4)     Examines the history, art, and architecture of Navajo, Hopi, Zuni, and other Native American communities of New Mexico and Arizona; the origins of their civilization; and how their arts survived, adapted, and changed in response to Euro-American influences. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126D and VIS 126I.

126J. African and Afro-American Art (4)     The dynamic, expressive arts of selected West African societies and their subsequent survival and transformation in the New World will be studied. Emphasis will be placed on Afro-American modes of art and ceremony in the United States, Haiti, Brazil, and Suriname. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126DN and VIS 126J.

126K. Oceanic Art (4)     An examination of the relation of art to ritual life, mythology, and social organization in the native Polynesian and Melanesian cultures of Hawaii, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Australia. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21A recommended. Student may not receive credit for VIS 126E and VIS 126K.

126P. Latin American Art: Modern to Postmodern, 1890–1950 (4)     A survey of major figures and movements in Latin American art from the late-nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

126Q. Latin American Art: Modern to Postmodern, 1950–Present (4)     A survey of major figures and movements in Latin American art from the mid-twentieth century to the present. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

126R. Latin American Photography (4)     An overview of the history of photography, concentrating on developments in Latin America. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

127B. Arts of China (4)     Course will survey major trends in the arts of China from a thematic point of view, explore factors behind the making of works of art, including political and religious meanings, and examine contexts for art in contemporary cultural phenomena. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127C. Arts of Modern China (4)     Course will explore Chinese art of the twentieth century. By examining artworks in different media, we will investigate the most compelling of the multiple realities that Chinese artists have constructed for themselves. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127D. Early Chinese Painting (4)     Explore representations of figures and landscapes from the dawn of Chinese painting through the Yuan dynasty, with stress on developments in style and subject matter and relationships to contemporary issues in philosophy, religion, government, society, and culture. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127E. Later Chinese Painting (4)     Explores major schools and artists of the Ming and Qing periods, including issues surrounding court patronage of professional painters, revitalization of art through reviving ancient styles, commercialization’s challenges to scholar-amateur art, and the influences of the West. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127F. Japanese Buddhist Art (4)     Explore the development of Buddhist art and architecture in Japan. Focus on the role of art in Buddhist practice and philosophy and the function of syncretic elements in Japanese Buddhist art. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127G. Twentieth-Century Chinese Art (4)     Through examining artworks in different media, theoretical writings and documentary data, will explore the ways in which Chinese artists of the twentieth century have defined modernity and their own tradition against the complex background of China’s history. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127N. Twentieth-Century Art in China and Japan (4)     Surveys the key works and developments in the modern art and visual culture of Japan from Edo and Meiji to the present and of China from the early twentieth century to contemporary video, performance, and installation art. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127P. Arts of Japan (4)     Course is a survey of the visual arts of Japan, considering how the arts developed in the context of Japan’s history and discussing how art and architecture were used for philosophical, religious, and material ends. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

127Q. Japanese Painting and Prints (4)     Explore major trends in Japanese pictorial art from the seventh century to the nineteenth century, with focus on function, style and subject matter, and with particular emphasis on the relationship between Japanese art and that of continental Asia. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. VIS 21B recommended.

128A-F. Topics in Art History and Theory (4)   These lecture courses are on topics of special interest to visiting and permanent faculty. Topics vary from term to term and with instructor and many will not be repeated. These courses fulfill upper-division distribution requirements. As the courses under this heading will be offered less frequently than those of the regular curriculum, students are urged to check for availability and descriptions of these supplementary courses in the annual catalogue listings. Like the courses listed under VIS 129, below, the letters following the course number designate the general area in which the courses fall. Students may take courses with the same number but of different content, with consent of instructor and/or program advisor. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: none; courses in art history recommended.

128A. Topics in Pre-Modern Art History (4)    A lecture course on a topic of special interest in ancient or medieval art. Prerequisites: upper-division standing; courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128B. Topics in Early Modern Art History (4)    A lecture course on a topic of special interest in Renaissance or Baroque art. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisites: upper-division standing; courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128C. Topics in Modern Art History (4)    A lecture course on a topic of special interest on Modern or Contemporary art. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisites: upper-division standing; courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128D. Topics in Art History of the Americas (4)     A lecture course on the topic of special interest in the Ancient Americas or Africa and the Pacific Islands. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. Courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128E. Topics in Art History of Asia (4)     A lecture course on the topic of special interest in India, China, and Japan. Prerequisites: upper-division standing. Courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128F. Topics in Art Theory and Criticism (4)    A lecture course on a topic of special interest in art theory, art criticism, or the history of literature on art. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisites: upper-division standing. Courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F) are recommended.

128P. Curatorial Practices Workshop (2)     Students will be exposed to the professional context of institutional art research, preparation, exhibition and publication. The content of the course will revolve around the curatorial experience of the particular faculty member. May be repeated once for credit. Two two-unit curatorial practices workshop courses count as one course towards the fulfillment of a Group III Elective requirement in the major. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129A-F. Seminar in Art Criticism and Theory (4)    These seminar courses provide the opportunity for in-depth study of a particular work, artist, subject, period, or issue. Courses offered under this heading may reflect the current research interests of the instructor or treat a controversial theme in the field of art history and criticism. Active student research and classroom participation are expected. Enrollment is limited and preference will be given to majors. The letters following 129 in the course number designate the particular area of art history or theory concerned. Students may take courses with the same number but of different content more than once for credit, with consent of the instructor and/or the program advisor. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history.

129A. Seminar in Pre-Modern Art History (4)    A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in ancient or medieval art. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129B. Seminar in Early Modern Art History (4)    A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in Renaissance or Baroque art. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129C. Seminar in Modern Art History (4)    A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in Modern or Contemporary art. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129D. Seminar in Art History of the Americas (4)     A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in the Ancient Americas to Africa and the Pacific Islands. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129E. Seminar in Art History of Asia (4)     A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in India, China, and Japan. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129F. Seminar in Art Theory and Criticism (4)    A seminar on an advanced topic of special interest in art theory, art criticism, or the history of literature on art. Prerequisites: VIS 112 or two upper-division courses in art history (VIS 113AN-129F).

129G. Art History Honors Seminar (4)    This research seminar, centered on a series of critical, thematic, theoretical, and/or historical issues that cut across subdisciplinary specializations, provides outstanding advanced students with the opportunity to undertake graduate-level research. The first part of a two-part sequence completed by Art History Honors Directed Group Study (VIS 129H). Prerequisite: consent of instructor or art history faculty advisor, department stamp required. Note: The Art History Honors Seminar and the attached Art History Honors Directed Group Study counts as one course towards the fulfillment of the Group III requirement.

129H. Art History Honors Directed Group Study (4)    The second part of the honors program sequence, this course provides a forum for students engaged in research and writing to develop their ideas with the help of a faculty advisor and in conjunction with similarly engaged students. Prerequisite: consent of instructor or art history faculty advisor, department stamp required.

130. Special Projects in Visual Arts (4)    Specific content will vary each quarter. Areas will cover expertise of visiting faculty. May be repeated twice for credit. Prerequisite: two from (VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN, and 147B) or one from (VIS 180A, 180B, 183A, and 183B) or consent of instructor/department stamp required. Visual arts/media, studio, ICAM majors only.

131. Special Projects in Media (4)    Specific content will vary each quarter. Areas will cover expertise of visiting faculty. May be repeated twice for credit. Prerequisites: two from (VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN, or 147B) or one from (VIS 180A, 180B, 183A, and 183B) or consent of instructor. Open to studio, visual arts/media, and ICAM majors only.

132. Installation Production and Studio (4)    Through discussions and readings, the class will examine the issues and aesthetics of installation art-making. Using media familiar to them, students will produce several projects. May be repeated once for credit. Studio and visual arts/media majors only. Prerequisites: two from (VIS 104CN, 105C, 106C, 107CN, or 147B) or one from (VIS 180A, 180B, 183A, and 183B) or consent of instructor. Open to studio, media majors only.

140. Digital Imaging: Image and Interactivity (4)    (Cross-listed with ICAM 101.) Introduction to digital image involving images, texts, and interactive display and operates both within computer-mediated space (i.e., Web site) and in physical space (i.e., artist book). Interactive narrative and computer programming are explored. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 40 or ICAM 40. Open to media, ICAM, and studio majors; computing and ICAM minors only. Two production course limitation.

141A. Computer Programming for the Arts I (4)    Introduces external API’s currently of interest in the arts (example: OpenGL, J2ME, Servlet/JSP, Java3D) extending a common programming language such as C++ or Java. Students gain API fluency through planning and coding software or software mediated art projects. CSE 11 or equivalent recommended. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: (VIS 40 or ICAM 40) and (VIS 140 or ICAM 101). Open to ICAM majors and minors only. Two production-course limitation.

141B. Computer Programming for the Arts II (4)    Students extend their programming capabilities to include the creation of reusable software libraries, packages, database API’s, tools, utilities, and applications intended to be publishable and useful to other practicing artists, or as preparatory work for the student’s senior thesis sequence. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 141A. Open to ICAM majors and minors only. Two production-course limitation.

145A. Time- and Process-Based Digital Media I (4)    (Cross-listed with ICAM 102.) Introduces time- and process-based digital media artmaking. Contemporary and historical works across time- and process-based media will be studied and projects produced. Topics may include software art, software and hardware interfacing, interaction, and installation in an art context. CSE 5A or equivalent programming experience recommended. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: (VIS 40 or ICAM 40) and (VIS 140 or ICAM 101). Open to media and ICAM majors and ICAM minors only. Two production-course limitation.

145B.Time- and Process-Based Digital Media II (4)    Students will implement time- and process-based projects under direction of faculty. Projects such as software and hardware interfacing, computer mediated performance, software art, installation, interactive environments, data visualization and sonification will be produced as advanced study and portfolio project. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 145A or ICAM 102. Open to media and ICAM majors; ICAM minors only. Two production course limitation.

147A. Electronic Technologies for Art I (4)    Develop artworks and installations that utilize digital electronics. Techniques in digital electronic construction and computer interfacing for interactive control of sound, lighting, and electromechanics. Construction of devices which responsively adapt artworks to conditions involving viewer participation, space activation, machine intelligence. Purchase of components kit required. Prerequisite: VIS 1. Open to media, studio, and ICAM majors; ICAM minors only. Two production course limitation.

147B. Electronic Technologies for Art II (4)    Continuation of the electronics curriculum. Design of programmable microcontroller systems for creating artworks that are able to respond to complex sets of input conditions, perform algorithmic and procedural processing, and generate real time output. Purchase of components kit required. Prerequisite: VIS 147A. Open to media, studio, and ICAM majors; computing and ICAM minors only. Two production course limitation.

149. Seminar in Contemporary Computer Topics (4)    (Cross-listed with ICAM 130.) Topics relevant to computer-based art- and music-making, such as computer methods for making art/music, design of interactive systems, spatialization of visual/musical elements, critical studies. Topics will vary. May be repeated twice. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 140 or ICAM 101, VIS 145A or ICAM 102, and MUS 170 or ICAM 103 recommended. Open to media and ICAM majors; ICAM minors only. Two production course limitation.

150. History of Silent Cinema (4)      An investigation of silent films from early cinema to the development of a classical style in the twenties, exploring issues of spectatorship, analyzing differences between American and European cinema, and highlighting the interaction between film and other arts. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 84 or consent of instructor.

151. History of the Experimental Film (4)    An inquiry into a specialized alternative history of film, consisting of experimental works made outside the conventions of the movie industry and which in their style and nature are closer to modernist painting, poetry, etc., than to the mainstream theatrical cinema. Works by such film artists as Man Ray, Salvador Dali, Maya Deren, Stan Brakhage, and Michael Snow will be examined in depth. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 84 or consent of instructor.

152. Film in Social Context (4)    This collection of courses gathers, under one cover, films that are strongly marked by period, geography, and the culture within which they received their dominating local quality. These courses pay particular attention to the stamp of place—climate, dress, habitation, language, music, politics—as well as the filmic moves that helped color such works as environmental. The series takes in the following subjects: Third World films, the Munich films (the new wave of Germans who made their first features in Munich following 1967), Japanese movies, films of the American thirties and their relationship to current thought, American Westerns, Ethnographic Film, Brazil’s Cinema Novo, etc. Specific topics to be covered will vary with the instructor. May be repeated twice for credit. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 84 or consent of instructor.

153. The Genre Series (4)    A group of related courses exploring the conventions within such generic and mythic forms as the cowboy, shamus, chorus girls, and vampire films. May be repeated twice for credit. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: none; VIS 84 recommended.

154. Hard Look at the Movies (4)    Examines a choice of films, selected along different lines of analysis, coherent within the particular premise of the course. Films are selected from different periods and genres among Hollywood, European, and Third World films. May be repeated once for credit. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 84 or consent of instructor.

155. The Director Series (4)    A course that describes the experiences, looks, and structure of director-dominated films. A different director will be studied each quarter. The student will be required to attend the lecture in the course and to meet with the instructor at least once each week. May be repeated three times for credit. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: VIS 84 or consent of instructor.

156N. Special Problems in Film History and Theory (4)    Seminar on an advanced topic in the history and theory of film. Content will vary from quarter to quarter. Prerequisite: VIS 84 or consent of instructor. Note: Materials fee required.

157. Video History and Criticism (4)    A lecture course that examines video as an art form, its relationship to the development from television and other art forms, and surveys current work in the medium. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 22, 84, and 111.

158. Histories of Photography (4)    Photography is so ubiquitous a part of our culture that it seems to defy any simple historical definition. Accordingly, this course presents a doubled account of the medium; it explores both the historical and cultural specificity of a singular photography as well as some of the multitude of photographies that inhabit our world. Will examine a number of the most important photographic themes from the past 200 years. Prerequisite: none.

159. History of Art and Technology (4)    (Cross-listed with ICAM 150.) Aims to provide historical context for computer arts by examining the interaction between the arts, media technologies, and sciences in different historical periods. Topics vary (e.g., Renaissance perspective, futurism and technology, and computer art of the 1950s and 1960s). Prerequisite: none. Note: Materials fee required.

164. Photographic Strategies (4)    Introduction to the aesthetic problems in photography. Both historical and contemporary art practices will be examined. Students will create photo pieces to engage these conceptual issues. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 60 and consent of instructor. Open to media majors and photography minors only. Two production-course limitation.

165. Camera Techniques (4)    An intermediate course designed to teach students to develop fiber-based black and white printing skills, to introduce the fundamentals of digital photography, and to address the issues of text in relation to image in art practice. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 60 and consent of instructor. Open to media majors and photography minors only. Two production-course limitation.

166. Advanced Camera Techniques (4)    Advanced-level course working with refined techniques in traditional and digital photographic art practices. The student will also be instructed in the development of a portfolio for use in post-graduation career development. Materials fee required (photo lab). Prerequisites: VIS 164, 165, and consent of instructor. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

168. Color Techniques in Photography (4)    Instruction in color photography and printing. Lectures on theory and demonstration in shooting and printing color negatives. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 60, 164, 165. Open to media majors only. Note: Portfolio required for admission. Two production-course limitation.

171. Digital Cinema—Theory and Production (4)     A digital image is not a film image, and this reality and its technological and conceptual implications are what this course will attempt to map out, exploring its possibilities and the massive overhaul of media aesthetics it implies. Prerequisites: (VIS 40/ICAM 40), VIS 60, VIS 70N and VIS 174, plus one from VIS 1, VIS 2, VIS 3, VIS 22 or VIS 84. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

174. Media Sketchbook (4)    Video medium used both as production technology and as device to explore the fundamental character of film-making and time-based computer art practices. Students perform all aspects of production with attention to developing ideas and building analytical/critical skills. Prerequisite: VIS 70N. Open to media and ICAM majors only. Two production-course limitation.

175. Editing—Theory and Production (4)     The evolving aims and grammars of editing practice in film and digital media will be examined. These histories will create a context for exploring contemporary editing strategies. The production projects will be centered on digital editing practice. Prerequisites: (VIS 40/ICAM 40), VIS 60, VIS 70N, and VIS 174 plus one from VIS 1, VIS 2, VIS 3, VIS 22, or VIS 84. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

176. 16mm Filmmaking (4)     A technical foundation and creative theoretical context for film production will be provided. Students will produce a short film with post-synchronized sounds and final mixed-track. Prerequisites: (VIS 40/ICAM 40), 60, 70N and 174, plus one from VIS 1,VIS 2, VIS 3, VIS 22 or VIS 84. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

177. Scripting Strategies (4)     Script writing, reading, and analysis of traditional and experimental media productions. The emphasis will be on the structural character of the scripting process and its language. Students will write several short scripts along with analytical papers. Prerequisites: VIS 70N and VIS 174. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

178. Sound—Theory and Production (4)     Sound design plays an increasing role in media production and has opened up new structural possibilities for narrative strategies. A critical and historical review of sound design and a production methodology component. Critical papers and soundtracks for short film projects will be required. Prerequisites: VIS 70N and VIS 174. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

180A. Documentary Evidence and the Construction of Authenticity in Current Media Practices (4)    Exploration of concepts in representational artworks by critically examining “found” vs. “made” recorded material. Advanced film/video, photography, computing work. Issues of narrative and structure; attention to formal aspects of media work emphasized. Cannot be taken same quarter as VIS 180B. Prerequisites: VIS 174 and one from VIS 140/ICAM 101, 145A/ICAM 102, 145B, 164, 165, 172, 175, 176, 177; VIS 177 strongly recommended. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

180B. Fiction and Allegory in Current Media Practices (4)    Exploration of choices in invention, emphasizing “made” over “found.” Advanced film/video, photography, and computing. Issues of narrative and structure, and formal aspects of media work emphasized. Cannot be taken same quarter as VIS 180A. Prerequisites: VIS 174 and one from VIS 140/ICAM 101, 145A/ICAM 102, 145B, 164, 165, 172, 175, 176, 177; VIS 177 strongly recommended. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

181. Sound and Lighting (4)    Advanced course to gain sophisticated control of lighting and sound recording techniques with understanding of theoretical implications and interrelation between production values and subject matter. Interactions between sound and image in various works in film, video, or installation. Prerequisite: VIS 174, and three of the following courses depending on emphasis: VIS 164, 165, 172, 175, 176, 177. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

182. Advanced Editing (4)    Film/video editing and problems of editing from theoretical and practical points-of-view. Films and tapes analyzed on a frame-by-frame, shot-by-shot basis. Edit stock material and generate own materials for editing final project. Aesthetic and technical similarities/differences of film/video. Prerequisites: VIS 175 and two courses from the 180 and 183 series. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

183A. Strategies of Self (4)     Looks at the way that self-identity is reflected and produced through various media practices. Focus is on rhetorical strategies of biography and autobiography in media, comparing and contrasting these strategies with those drawn from related cultural forms. Cannot be taken the same quarter as VIS 183B. Prerequisites: VIS 174 and one from (VIS 140/ICAM 101), (VIS 145A/ICAM 102), VIS 147A, VIS 164, VIS 165, VIS 175, VIS 176, VIS 177; VIS 177 strongly recommended. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

183B. Strategies of Alterity (4)     Looks at difference as it is reflected and constructed in various media practices. Course will examine a wide range of forms and genres such as ethnography, science fiction, crime narratives, documentary film, political drama, and animated shorts. Cannot be taken same quarter as VIS 183A. Prerequisites: VIS 174 and one from (VIS 140/ICAM 101), (VIS 145A/ICAM 102), VIS 147A, VIS 164, VIS 165, VIS 175, VIS 176, VIS 177; VIS 177 strongly recommended. Open to media majors only. Two production course limitation.

184. Advanced Scripting (4)     Film/video production will be framed through the script writing process, focusing on the problems of longer duration, density, and adaptation from other media. Students will both read and analyze both historical and contemporary scripts and produce a thirty- to sixty-minute script. Prerequisites: VIS 177 and two courses from VIS 180A, VIS 180B, VIS 183A, VIS 183B. Open to media majors only. Two production-course limitation.

186. Advanced Filmmaking Strategies (4)    Presents techniques of sync sound recording, shooting, crew work, planning pre-production and production; links technical decisions with creative and theoretical understanding of film production. Prepare, produce, edit short 16mm film (3–5 minutes). Recommend fully developed script to enroll. Repeated once for credit. Prerequisites: VIS 176, 177, and consent of instructor. Open to media majors only. Two production course limitation.

194S. Fantasy in Film (4)    This course will explore the path of the deliberately “unreal” in movies. Fantasy in film will be considered both in terms of its psychological manifestations and also in terms of imaginary worlds created in such willfully anti-realistic genres as science-fiction, horror, and musical films. Materials fee required. Prerequisite: upper-division standing. Offered in summer session only.

197. Media Honors Thesis (4)    This advanced-level sequence coordinates three consecutive independent research courses to culminate in a completed thesis project in the third quarter of study. After the project’s public presentation, the faculty involved in the project will determine whether the student will graduate with departmental honors. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Note: Requires a written proposal, 3.5 GPA in the major, prior consent from all involved and approvals by the department chair and provost.

198. Directed Group Study (2-4)    Directed group study on a topic or in a group field not included in regular department curriculum, by special arrangement with a faculty member. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Note: Open only to upper-division students. Requires instructor’s, department chair’s, and provost’s approval. Pass/Not Pass grades only.

199. Special Studies in the Visual Arts (4)    Independent reading, research, or creative work under direction of a faculty member. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Note: Open only to upper-division students. Requires instructor’s, department chair’s, and provost’s approval. Pass/Not Pass grades only.

ICAM 103. Musical Acoustics (4)    (Cross-listed with MUS 170.) An introduction to the acoustics of music with particular emphasis on contemporary digital techniques for understanding and manipulating sound. Prerequisites: MUS 1A, 2A, or 4.

ICAM 110. Computing in the Arts: Current Practice (4)    Designed around the presentations by visiting artists, critics, and scientists involved with contemporary issues related to computer arts. Lectures by the instructor and contextual readings provide background material for the visitor presentations. Prerequisite: none. Note: Materials fee required.

ICAM 120. Virtual Environments (4)    Students create virtual reality artworks. Projects may be done individually or in groups. Exploration of theoretical issues involved will underlie acquisition of techniques utilized in the construction of virtual realities. Materials fee required. Prerequisites: VIS 145A or ICAM 102; CSE 11 recommended. Open to ICAM majors and minors only. Two production course limitation.

ICAM 160A. Senior Project in Computer Arts I (4)   Students pursue projects of their own design over two quarters with support from faculty in a seminar environment. Project proposals are developed, informed by project development guidelines from real-world examples. Collaborations are possible. Portfolio required for admission. Prerequisites: VIS 141B or VIS 145B or VIS 147B or MUS 172. Open to ICAM majors only. Department stamp required.

ICAM 160B. Senior Project in Computer Arts II (4)    Continuation of ICAM 160A. Completion and presentation of independent projects along with documentation. Prerequisites: ICAM 160A. Open to ICAM majors only. Department stamp required.

ICAM 198. Directed Group Study (2-4)    Directed group study on a topic or in a group field not included in regular department curriculum by special arrangement with a faculty member. May be repeated twice for credit. Prerequisites: consent of instructor. Note: Only open to upper-division students. Requires instructor approval. Pass/Not Pass grades only.

ICAM 199. Special Studies (2/4)    Independent reading, research or creative work under direction of faculty member. Prerequisites: department stamp and upper-division standing and consent of instructor required.

Graduate

Core Seminars

200. Introduction to Graduate Studies in the Visual Arts (4)    Introduces incoming students to the work of art history, studio, and media faculty as it engages key common and comparative themes. Required of all first-year students in both the Ph.D. and M.F.A. programs. (Required, M.F.A., Ph.D.)

201. Contemporary Critical Issues (4)    An exploration of a range of issues important on the contemporary critical scene through readings and writing assignments. Topics will vary from year to year. Offered every fall. (Required, M.F.A.)

202. Art Practice (4)    A workshop/seminar devoted to a particular materials practice (e.g., media, painting, digital media, etc.) that engages with critical questions arising within that discipline. Content will vary from quarter to quarter. May be repeated once for credit. (Required, M.F.A.)

203. Working Critique (4)    Workshop in which students engage in an extensive evaluation of each others’ ongoing work in preparation for either the First Year Review or MFA Review. Offered every winter. May be repeated once for credit. (Required, M.F.A.)

204. Re-Thinking Art History (4)    Critical evaluation of the methods, practices, and disciplinary commitments of art history, encompassing both revisionist interventions of the late twentieth century and earlier paradigms, in order to envision new discipline-specific and interdisciplinary directions for the future of art history and visual culture. (Required, Ph.D.)

205. Introduction to Graduate Studies in Art Practice (4)    This seminar introduces art practice students to the graduate program in a workshop environment. Emphasis is on the production of new work and on situating that work in relation to a larger art context. (Required, M.F.A.) Offered every fall and required of all first-year M.F.A. students.

206. Seminar in Art Practice Research (4)     Seminar examines the interrelationship between theory and practice and the nature of artistic production as a form of research. Prerequisites: none. (Required for Ph.D. in art practice concentration.)

Art Practice/Theory

210. Narrative (4)    Examination of narrative issues in contemporary art-making. Traditional and experimental narrative practices in painting, drawing, sculpture, and performance are explored alongside narrative strategies in media and digital media.

211. Fact and Fiction (4)    This seminar addresses the space between narrative work generated from a factual base and that generated from a fictional one. Special attention will be given to discussing work that confounds the assumed gap between the two.

212. History and Memory (4)    This seminar will engage the space between personal and larger histories. How is one’s own past both intertwined with and determined by larger social histories?

213. Public Space (4)    An exploration of what public space is and how it operates, with a view toward an expanded context for considering how public artwork can operate within it. Included are areas such as mass media, activism, community action, computer networks, ecology, and alternative forums.

215. Human Interface (4)    Examines human interface as it informs or transforms how we read and participate in culture at large. Concepts such as subject/author/object relationships, abstraction, metaphor, analogy, visualization, and complexity are discussed to establish context.

216. The Object (4)    An investigation of the world of artifacts (“works of art” and others) and how they function as agents of communication and modifiers of consciousness. Contemporary perspectives drawn from the fields of art theory, anthropology, contemporary art, and semiotics will be utilized.

218N. Imaging Selves and Others (4)    Explores various strategies exhibited in a wide range of contemporary art practices engaging in the representation of personality, spirituality, and the physical self.

219. Special Topics in Art Practice/Theory (4)    Examines a topic of special interest to permanent and visiting faculty that is not addressed in the regular curriculum. As in other Art Practice/Theory seminars, students will both produce work and read and write critically about the topic. Topics will vary.

HISTORY/THEORY/CRITICISM

Categories/Constructs

230. “Art” as Category (4)    Explores the complex and changing criteria by which certain (categories of) objects and practices are designated as “art” in culturally and historically diverse societies.

231N. Confronting the Object (4)    Investigates the nature and status of art objects and practices and the forms of engagement with them through topics such as the practice and metaphysics of description; phenomenological analysis; film analysis; and ekphrasis and visual analysis.

232. Artistic Identities (4)    Explores the historical, theoretical, and cross-cultural concepts of the artist/auteur and his/her varied and shifting identities as inscribed in works of art, recorded in biography and critical literature, and enacted through social roles.

233N. Frames of Production (4)    Critical and historical analysis of the institutions, social networks, and communicative media that enable the production of art, including particular institutions (art academies, workshops and studios, including film studios), artists’ communities, ritual frameworks, state and private patronage, etc. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

234N. Frames of View (4)    Critical and historical analysis of the institutions, social networks, and communicative media through which art is presented to its audiences. May also address theories of vision and visuality, spectatorship, public space, originality and reproduction, and public space.

235N. Frames of Analysis (4)    Historical critique and philosophical analysis of the central terminology and constructs of art history, theory, and criticism. May address such key terms as style, genre, and periodization or a topic such as theories of representation and narrative. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

Theories/New Visions

240. Histories of Theory and Criticism: Plato to Post-Modernism (4)    Historical and cross-cultural investigations of art theory and criticism, antiquity to the present. May be taught as an historical overview or focus on a particular topic, e.g., Critical Currents Since World War II, Renaissance Foundations, From Culture to Popular Culture.

241. Topics in Contemporary Critical Theory (4)    Focused studies, changing from year to year, in contemporary theoretical positions and perspectives (e.g., New Social Theory, Post-Colonialism, Gender Theory) and one or more leading theorists (e.g., Deleuze, C. S. Peirce, Steinberg).

242. Theories of Media and New Media (4)    Critical study of the ways in which media (film, video, photography) and new media have been theorized. May be taught from an historical or comparative perspective or focus on a single topic or theorist.

243. Aesthetic Theory (4)    Study of the philosophical concepts of the function of art and visual culture and the criteria for its evaluation in diverse epochs and cultures. May be taught as an historical overview or comparative study or focus a single topic or theorist.

244. Studies in the Relationship of Theory and Practice (4)    Investigations of one or more artist-theorists or movements, contemporary or historical, that put in issue the interface between theory and practice. May also focus on a topic such as perspective, color, or narrative, or genre such as film or new media.

Times/Terrains

250N. Seminar in Ancient Art (4)    The arts of Greece, Rome, and allied cultures in the ancient world. Topics will vary, e.g., Roman Portraiture: Self and Social Mask; The Invention of Perspective and Revolution in Two-Dimensional Representation; The “Modern” Art of Antiquity (late third to early fourth century A.D.). May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

251. Seminar in Medieval Art (4)    European art from late antiquity through the fourteenth century and the historical processes by which “medieval” art has been constructed as a category. Topics may include Devotional Vision and the Sacred Image; Medieval Comic Genres; Neo-Medievalisms, Fifteenth Century to Today. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

252. Seminar in Renaissance Art (4)    Concentrates on the art of the Renaissance in Italy and the North through a changing series of topics, e.g., Vision and Composition in Perspective; The Sistine Chapel; Envisioning Jan Van Eyck; Renaissance Print-Making; Leonardo da Vinci’s La Gioconda. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

253. Seminar in Early Modern Art (4)    European and American art, 1580s to 1850. Topics might include Deconstructing the Enlightenment: Images of Disorder; Escaping History: Genre Painting, Rococo to Impressionism; Politics and Love in the Art of Jacques-Louis David; Art and Urbanism in Baroque Rome. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

254. Seminar in Modern Art (4)    European and American art, ca. 1850 to 1960. Questions in Impressionism and Post-Impressionism; The Cubist Revolution: Marcel Duchamp and the Anti-Formalist Tradition; American Modernism; Reckoning with Abstract Art; Issues in Dada and Surrealism; Soviet Avant-Gardes. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

255. Seminar in Contemporary Art (4)    Thematic and critical discussions of recent U.S. and international art, 1960s to the present. Art/Text; Mixed Media Practices; Conceptual Art; Art After Appropriation; Global Art at the Millennium; New Genres of Public Art; Mike Kelly and the Conceptual Vernacular: Art and Activism. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

256. Seminar in Media and New Media (4)    Topics in media (photography, film, video) and new media, contemporary or historical. Coverage may be broad or addressed to a particular topic such as Film Remakes; Silent Cinema; Photography and American Social Movements; The Language of New Media. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

257. Seminar in Meso-American Art (4)    Topics relating to the art and civilizations of Precolumbian Mexico and Central America, either specifically art historical (such as iconographic, formal, and stylistic analysis) or encompassing a spectrum of interdisciplinary and cultural/historical problems. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

258. Seminar in Chinese Art (4)    Advanced studies in the secular and religious art traditions of China. From year to year, the seminar may focus on early China (Neolithic to the end of the T’ang dynasty), on later dynasties (Sung, Yuan, Ming) or on art of the People’s Republic. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

259. Seminar in Latin American Art (4)    Historical and theoretical problems in the art of Mexico, Central, and South America art from the colonial period to today, as well as from the Hispanic traditions of the American Southwest. May be taken three times for credit. Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.

260. Seminar in North American Indian Art (4)    Topics for this seminar concern Native American art history from ancient to contemporary times. Seminars may focus on archaeological and art historical approaches, philosophy and aesthetics, archaeoastronomy, and cultural contexts. Issues of globalization and transculturation may be examined as well.  

269. Contextual Studies: Special Topics (4)    Studies in the art of cultures and time periods not covered in the currently published curriculum (e.g., African Art, Japanese Art, Byzantine Art, Islamic Art) or of issues and genres crossing epochal, cultural, and media boundaries.

OTHER

280. Workshop in Critical Writing (4)    Practice in writing about art (both one’s own and others) accompanied by analysis of selected contemporary critical writings.

281. Curatorial Practice (4)    Methodological investigation of and training in the practices of art museums, galleries, film and digital environments, public arts organizations, and the like. Instruction by museum and gallery curators and opportunities for participation in ongoing programs at local art institutions.

282. Special Projects in Art Practice (4)    Advanced workshop in specialized areas of art practice (e.g., Sound and Lighting, Editing).

295. Individual Studies for Graduate Students (1-12)    Individual research with the student’s individual faculty advisor in preparation for their comprehensive exhibitions for the M.F.A. degree or qualifying exam for the Ph.D. These units are intended to be with the chair of the student’s review committee. For the M.F.A. degree, these units can only be taken after completing the First Year Review. (Required, M.F.A., Ph.D.)

298. Directed Group Study (1-12)    Directed group study on specific topics not covered at present in the normal curriculum. Used as an experimental testing of courses that may be given regular course numbers if proved successful. Special arrangement with faculty member. Prerequisite: consent of department.

299. Graduate Research (1-4)    Graduate-level research under the direct guidance of a faculty member. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.

500. Apprentice Teaching (1-4)    Apprentice teaching in undergraduate courses given by the Department of Visual Arts. Graduate students are required to teach a minimum of one quarter (four units) within the department to fulfill degree requirements.

501. Apprentice Teaching in Culture, Art, and Technology (CAT) (4)    Consideration and development of pedagogical methods appropriate to undergraduate teaching in the interdisciplinary Sixth College Core Sequence, Culture, Art and Technology. Supervised by the Core Program faculty, director and associate directors for the Writing and Thematic Programs. Prerequisites: graduate student and consent of instructor.