ARTS 160

Beginning Sculpture

Welcome to the home page and syllabus for ARTS 160 Beginning Sculpture. Here you will find all the resources you’ll need to immerse yourself in thinking and making this semester.

This course acquaints students with a set of materials, texts, and critical discourses that articulate the historical and contemporary concerns of sculpture. Guided by formal and conceptual considerations, students generate sculptural objects and installations in a variety of media. Lectures, readings, discussions and critiques surround and foster the hands-on making process.

Office Hours: Wednesdays 1-4pm Pacific Time, email to schedule or log onto Zoom.

Zoom link: https://whitman.zoom.us/j/2208648525

Cell: (319) 594-2173

Much has happened technologically and culturally in the course of the late 20th and early 21st centuries to alter the traditional parameters of art making. Together we will examine crucial pivots and revisions, endeavoring to understand “extra-artistic” and internal forces that shape the landscape in which contemporary sculptural gestures are made.   

Artists are engaged in some of the most exciting research around--research into what it means to be alive and human right here and right now.  Art, if you let it, will blow your hair back, get your heart revving, and even make your skin tingle. My teaching celebrates this through experimentation and exploration; it’s not art if there isn’t risk-taking, trial, error, revision, frustration, failure and epiphany. My classroom is dynamic space, virtual or otherwise. That said, it is a collective space, where we all benefit, support, encourage and challenge each others’ endeavors. A spirit of cooperation befits this and I exhort you to contribute to it.  The quality of your presence and attention to course content is indispensable. Now, in this virtual space, these forces of attention and commitment are critical in entirely new ways and foundational to every thing that we do.

I have conceived an overall architecture for the course, but I am also excited to tailor our investigations to our interests and needs as they evolve and present themselves. I expect you to make a serious and sustained effort to wrestle with the ideas proffered, to take notes during lectures, to come prepared to actively discuss readings or assigned videos, and to spend time at least twice during the week to further your projects between classes. It will be important to develop habits of mind that keeps you moving forward and connected to the course goals at regular intervals, rather than making binge-y, spastic, all-or-nothing gestures constrained heavily by time, i.e. “cramming” an art work into being.

Please feel free to be in contact with me as much as you need: in class, during office hours, via email. You may even text me or call my cell phone if you’re really struggling with something. Like most folks, I can get overwhelmed by email and therefore need to practice good boundaries with it, so please give me 24 hours to respond in that way. Also, I’ll expect you to check your email once every 24 hours or so, because I’ll occasionally want to communicate via this medium (about assignments, materials, etc.) and need to rely upon the certainty of your being on the other end of these electronic missives. Thank you, in advance!

Last but not least, this syllabus functions contractually, and as such delineates course objectives, expectations and obligations. You are responsible for the information herein, so please take time to read through this document carefully.

SOME THOUGHTS ON VIRTUAL LEARNING: This course will be driven by a relationship-centered pedagogy. That means we will privilege the relationships we have with each other, strive to make connections between course content, materials and larger intellectual themes, and consider this virtual space as just one of many materials we can intentionally sculpt during our time together. We will do this across and despite vast geographic and experiential space. We will do this under very unusual and often stressful circumstance. I sincerely commit to honoring the strangeness of this time with all of its possibilities, limitations and unknowns.

GOALS AND OBJECTIVES:

- Develop 3-D visual thinking and making skills. The hand knows things that the mind does not!

- Understand the techniques and processes related to individual media. Get into a complicated relationship with matter!

- Hone your ability to assess and interpret 3-D forms, conceptually and formally. Cultivate intuitive, irrational, emotional, embodied intelligence!

- Develop an aesthetic vocabulary informed by the Visual Elements and Principles of Design. Duh.

- Become acquainted with the critical discourses that articulate the historical and contemporary concerns of sculpture. Whut.

- Take creative risks, experiment, fail, succeed, and repeat. Yes, THIS!

- Think divergently. Make radically. Please!!!

EVALUATION: In this course I value process equal to product. I will look at (and thus grade) the process and the product in all the work you produce throughout the semester; this includes actual projects and material studies made in the brainstorming stages.  A lot of this will be less visible to me through the online format, still, let’s struggle together to make this manifest.

Process (everything that leads up to a work)  = 50% of grade

Process is paramount in artmaking. Dedicated development of your ideas, exploration of a variety of options, and patient consideration will yield the most extraordinary results. By “process,” I mean the development of your ideas in sketches, maquettes and in concept. As a general rule, persistence and deep attention offer ample pay-off. At other times, you will need to submit to the irrational forces of intuition and madness, heeding the unique screech of sirens and muses.

Product  (design, craft, imagination manifest in the final piece)  = 50% of grade

The formal choices that you make about size, scale, shape, color, material, etc. ARE the content of your work. Close attention to the Visual Elements and Principles of Design will yield the greatest synthesis between FORM and CONTENT. By “product” I mean the final work, its formal success and achieved meanings as delineated by the assignments, and in conversation with the fundamental concerns of sculpture, historical and contemporary. 

The relationship you build with sculptural materials generates the knowledge and skill that allow you to transform raw matter into sculpture. Craft is both the physical and intellectual skill you bring to the work.

Many aspects of art cannot be taught. That said, we will work to tap into places of intuition, creativity and mystery that fuel great human achievements, which sometimes take the form of art.

I’m as interested in thinking as I am in making and particularly in the intersections between the two. (Ultimately, they are not distinct!) In light of this, I will grade you on your ability to articulate ideas in both materials and words.  In addition to presenting a variety of physical/creative problems to solve, course content will include discussion of influential technological, social and cultural forces that have impacted artists and art making over the last 100 years. Your work AND the discussion of said work should evidence engagement with these ideas.

All assigned activities must be completed in order to pass this course. Activities completed with high degrees of attention, persistence, passion, and creativity will warrant high marks.

GRADES: I keep a running log of your performance in this class re: participation, attendance, process and product. I will also give you both written and in-person (Zoom?) feedback at mid-semester at which time we will schedule a one-on-one meeting to discuss your progress in the course and to answer any questions you might have.

OFFICE HOURS: I’ll hold regular Zoom office hours each week (see times at top of the syllabus). During these hours, you don’t need an appointment to talk to me – just stop by my virtual office by using the Zoom link (it’s always the same). You can come ask me for assistance with course content/assignments, or you can merely chat with me about the course, college more generally, careers, current events or whatever. Do not feel like you need a so-called “good” question – you can even just say “hello”! If you can’t make these times, I am happy to meet other times – just make an appointment.

CLASSROOM CITIZENSHIP: I use the term Citizenship normally to indicate your performance in the studios with regard to participation, work ethic, cleanup, organization, and safety, in addition to a measure of the quality of your engagement with the meat and bones of this course’s intellectual content. In an online setting your attentiveness to the larger learning environment/culture and collective intelligence that we generate (or thwart) together takes on a totally new dimension, while the proverbial dust and debris typically associated with sculptural processes fades from consciousness almost completely. Sculpture still requires a particular kind of mindfulness, presence, and an ability to execute from places of intuition/embodied intelligence. We will cultivate these throughout our time together.

THOUGHTS ON POWER, REPRESENTATION AND HISTORY: I believe art and artists are indispensable to a well-functioning democracy. Democracy requires imagination and flourishes when the imaginative life of a society is cultivated and nurtured. We can only create that which we can imagine, whether our creations are works of art, engineering, public policy, etc. I therefore strive to maintain a classroom that is deeply respectful of differences in ideas, opinions, strategies, and experience. Yet the history of art is affected by the same historical operations of power that play out in the world at large. Cognizance of the ways race, class, gender, sex, ethnicity, religion, age, ability, national origin, and sexual orientation inform our making and interpreting is crucial to our intellectual inquiry. I seek to know and carefully navigate the ways artistic representation makes power and privilege visible. This can be tricky, but again, I endeavor to build a community in which we ask hard questions about how the history of images and objects shapes our experiences, desires and sense of the possible. Building this awareness will assist the effort to decolonize the curriculum.

I would be remiss to fail to acknowledge that the forces of empire in their different guises (genocide, slavery, white supremacy and misogyny) have conspired to allow us to inhabit this room on this campus on this land, even virtually. I do so with the hope that consciousness of these agents can lead us away from their perpetuation.

CRITIQUES: Critique is a format for discussing work in a more or less public way. Critiques can take many forms, including group-wide scenarios, peer/partner critiques and written reviews. Often they utilize free-association, but they function best when the criteria for analyses are clear. You will be on both ends of the critique, giving and receiving feedback. At the most basic level our interest will be in learning how visual language functions, and how to wield it for certain effect. All artworks make arguments and utilize visual rhetoric to do so. But art also traffics in language that is spatious, historically situated and slippery, permitting meanings to function in ways that are not rational or literal but instead oblique, associative and evocative. Interpretation happens best at the deep end of the pool and we will spend a good amount of time there.

LATE WORK: Projects unfinished by the designated time are extremely discouraged and will--excepting rare cases of serious personal crisis, famine, war, acts of God and/or economic collapse--suffer commensurate reduction in grade. I advise you to communicate with me asap if you anticipate not being able to complete an assignment on time.

ATTENDANCE/TARDINESS: Prompt and consistent attendance is crucial and your success in this class will depend largely upon it. I take attendance daily and the quality and quantity of your attendance will be reflected in your Classroom Citizenship grade. I always require an email from the Dean of Students in order for an absence to be considered Excused. Often, at the beginning of class I make important announcements and set up the schedule of activities, answer questions, or reflect on our direction and progress. Routinely missing the first 5-10 minutes is unacceptable and will severely impact your Classroom Citizenship grade.

WORKLOAD: A modicum of success in this class will typically require 5-6 hours of work outside of class time per week; this includes working on class projects, readings/videos, attending exhibitions and lectures, etc.

Art making is not a linear process, and artworks cannot be crammed overnight; this dictum applies especially to material based works, which are supremely subject to laws of physics, skill and the functions of time and space.

CLASS STRUCTURE: Our time together will be structured by short video lectures, group and individual Zoom interactions, critiques, and thinking through/together: writing and discussing art, artists and ideas online and via Zoom. Outside of class you will have time to make and post your work to our class Instagram.

INSTAGRAM: whitmanbeginningsculpture2020

COURSE FEE: The typical course fee for this course of $150 has been removed.

SAFETY: Works involving bio-hazardous materials, body fluids, egregious physical or emotional pain, or weapons will NOT be permitted in class. If you have ANY concerns regarding the safety of a material or process or project, you are required to consult beforehand with me. Let your guiding principle be to “do no harm,” physically to the building, yourself, grounds, facilities, etc. or emotionally to yourself/others. While some actions may be intellectually defensible within the history of art, there are limits to what I will allow to happen in my classroom, virtual or otherwise, for both your and my emotional safety.

CHANGE: I reserve the right to alter or modify this syllabus as we proceed through the weeks of the semester.

ACCOMMODATIONS:  If you are a student with a disability who will need accommodations in this course, please meet with Julia Dunn, Associate Dean of Students (Mem. 205, X5213, dunnjl@whitman.edu) for assistance in developing a plan to address your academic needs. All information about disabilities is considered private; if I receive notification from Ms. Dunn that you are eligible to receive an accommodation, I will provide it in as discrete a manner as possible.


 

Week 1

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

WATCH: course intro video

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://whitman.zoom.us/j/2208648525

ACTIVITY: Do the Object Translations activity with the materials you received in the mail. Post some reflections and observations here.

WATCH: Damian Ortega Art 21

WRITE + DISCUSS: Google Doc

MAKE: The Tool Makes the Teacher Start on this project, go back to it throughout the weekend, posting TWICE to the Instagram before class on Thursday AND Tuesday.

Thursday, August 27, 2020

AGENDA: Sculpthink

ZOOM: Thursday 10am https://whitman.zoom.us/j/2208648525, reflections on Object Translations, check in around technology, discussion of Damian Ortega’s work, etc.

WATCH: Jessica Stockholder Art 21

WRITE + DISCUSS: Google Doc

MAKE: color wheel (see samples below) with 50+ random objects, post to Instagram by 10pm Monday. Keep working The Tool Makes the Teacher project, which should be finished before class on Tuesday.

Week 2

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

WATCH (before class):

Jessica Stockholder Art 21

WRITE + DISCUSS: Google Doc

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: finish up The Tool Makes the Teacher and post three color wheels to Instagram.

Thursday, September 3, 2020

WATCH (before class): Janine Antoni Art 21

DISCUSS: Google Doc

ZOOM: Thursday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: Be prepared to share your Screen Intervention with the class.

HW: Watch the Allora & Calzadilla Art 21 Art 21, and work on Umbilicus over the weekend, posting your project to Instagram before class on Tuesday.

 Week 3

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

WATCH: Allora & Calzadilla Art 21

WRITE + DISCUSS: Google Doc

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

PRESENT: Umbilicus projects

Thursday, September 10, 2020

PRESENT and DISCUSS: Tuesday’s material

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

HW: spend time with Erwin Wurm’s website and watch Gabriel Orozco Art 21

MAKE: Post your favorite Erwin Wurm work to our Insta, do the Body + Object Gestures project and post before class on Tuesday.

 Week 4

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

WATCH: Gabriel Orozco Art 21 (view only 21:00-36:00) + Erwin Wurm’s website

WRITE + DISCUSS: Google Doc

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE:

Thursday, September 17, 2020

ASSIGNMENT: Google Doc Levelling Up

ZOOM: Thursday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: Levelling Up + make a plaster shell cast of a banana or other piece of fruit.

HW: watch video on Zeuxis and Parrahasius

 Week 5

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

VIEW: plaster object

WRITE + DISCUSS: design, visual thinking, mold information: undercuts, dealing with hair, etc.

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

Thursday, September 24, 2020

DISCUSS: Levelling Up projects due

ZOOM: Thursday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

HW: Watch Gift, do EROS project, NO CLASS NEXT WEEK!!!!!

Week 6

Tuesday, September 29, 2020 + Thursday, October 1, 2020

NO CLASS THIS WEEK, instead, watch the GIFT film and contribute to this Google document. Work on your plaster pieces for EROS.

 Week 7

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

DISCUSS: Gift film. We will also address/critique Levelling Up Projects from the previous week.

ZOOM:  Tuesday 10am https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: Keep working on EROS projects, that are due Thursday before class!!!!

Thursday, October 8, 2020

DISCUSS/CRITIQUES: EROS projects.

ZOOM: Thursday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

 

Gift

Inspired by Lewis Hyde’s beloved classic “The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World”, GIFT is a tribute to something that can’t be measured or counted, bought or sold. An intimate exploration of real-life gift economies, it’s a reflection on the creative process, the reasons we labor in service of our gifts, and a celebration of the imagination.

http://www.giftitforwardproject.com/the-film/

 
 
OPENING IN CINEMAS OCT 11 ACROSS THE US! http://www.giftitforwardproject.com/the-film/screenings/ NYC at the Quad Cinema https://quadcinema.com/film/gift/ LA...

Week 8

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

MID-SEMESTER CONVERSATIONS:

10:00am Leo

10:15am Sylvie

10:30am Audrey

10:45am Brit

11:00am Whitney

11:15am Bridget 

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

Thursday, October 15, 2020

MID-SEMESTER CONVERSATIONS:

10:00am ALL CLASS MEETING New project: Art & Nature

10:30am Ben

10:45am Shiji

11:00 Chloe

ZOOM: Thursday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE:

 Week 9

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

DISCUSS: Mark Dion + map projects

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525


Thursday, October 22, 2020

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

HW: Project #nature

Experiment with a material you find within your home environment, a material you wouldn’t normally consider an art material. Try to discover something about it. This discovery could be related to how it behaves, its own special properties or expressiveness or color or texture. Whatever you make, reflect upon how it embodies ideas of the natural (or not). Document your exploration on the Insta before class Tuesday.


 

 Week 10

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

WATCH: Wolfgang Laib Art 21video

DISCUSS: Art + Nature + #nature projects

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: #nature Experiment with a material you find within your home environment, a material you wouldn’t normally consider an art material. Try to discover something about it. This discovery could be related to how it behaves, its own special properties or expressiveness or color or texture. Whatever you make, reflect upon how it embodies ideas of the natural (or not). Document your exploration on the Insta before class Tuesday.

Thursday, October 29, 2020

ZOOM: Tuesday 10am  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

HW: watch Jes Fan Art 21 and start thinking about a project in which you explore your gender as a material.

 Week 11

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

WATCH + DISCUSS: Jes Fan Art 21 + Mother is a Woman

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: come prepared to discuss the video and your preliminary ideas about gender (see Art & nature Google doc)

Thursday, November 5, 2020

WORK DAY!!!!

MAKE: post your project #gender on Insta before class.

Week 12

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

DISCUSS: #genderpossibility projects

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

MAKE: Finalize/develop one of your #genderposibility sketches, post to Insta before class.

Thursday, November 12, 2020

WATCH + DISCUSS: Diana Thater Art 21 video and extended play

GOOGLE DOC: Art + Nature

FINAL PROJECT: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1btYxYtnLuz73aq98TvwiN82WBoXZ_NLuvzUWhVzmtS8/edit?usp=sharing

Week 13

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

INDIVIDUAL MEETINGS!!!

10:00am Sylvie

10:20am Leo

10:40am Shiji

11:00am Audrey

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

FINAL PROJECT: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1btYxYtnLuz73aq98TvwiN82WBoXZ_NLuvzUWhVzmtS8/edit?usp=sharing

Thursday, November 19, 2020

INDIVIDUAL MEETINGS!!!!!

10:00am Whitney

10:20am Brit

10:40am Ben

11:00am Bridget

11:20am Chloe

ZOOM:   https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

FINAL PROJECT: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1btYxYtnLuz73aq98TvwiN82WBoXZ_NLuvzUWhVzmtS8/edit?usp=sharing

 Week 14

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Course wrap-up, presentation and critique of final works!!!!

ZOOM:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2208648525

 

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