In a nutshell, this class addresses the question "what is art?" Since the answer is a bit more elusive than the answer to "2 + 2", this course will lead you through a semester's worth of images and ideas, and focuses on three main areas:
- Theory: the motivations and effects of art.
- Practice: how art is actually made.
- History: the kinds of art that have already been done.
The textbook for this semester is:
Evaluation:
- This is a 3-unit class.
- The final course grade will be based on the student's performance in class and in completing assignments. Grade weight will be specified for each project.
- Attendance is mandatory.
- An attendance sheet will be provided by the instructor every time the class meets. Make sure to sign in, since attendance records are entirely based on this sign-up sheet.
Contact info. To leave a message for the instructor, Sandro Corsi:
- Art Computer Graphics Lab: (714) 992-7000, press 1 at the prompt, dial ext. 28160
- Art Department Office: (714) 992-7317
- Class 01
- Class 02
- Class 03
- Class 04
- Class 05
- Class 06 catch up on computer lab activities.
- Class 07
- Class 08
- Class 09
- Class 10
- Class 11
- Class 12
- Class 13
- Class 14
- Class 15
- Class 16 make up computer lab activities missed.
- Finals
- Art Principles
- Introduction
- The Impulse for Art
- What do Artists do?
- Creativity
- Looking at Art
- Studying Art
- Visual Elements
- Line; Shape; Color; Texture; Pattern;
- Plane; Space; Mass; Time and Motion
- Principles of Design in Art
- Unity and Variety
- Balance
- Emphasis and Subordination
- Scale and Proportion
- Rhythm
- Themes and Purposes
- Art and Daily Life
- Art and the Sacred
- Art and the Social Order
- Art and Nature
- What is Art?
- Art and the Artist
- Art and Beauty
- Representational, Abstract, and Non-Representational Art
- Immediacy vs. Meaning
- Style, Form, Iconography
- Art Mediums
- Drawing
- Purposes of Drawing
- Dry Media
- Wet Media
- Painting
- Encaustic; Fresco; Tempera; Oil; Watercolor, Synthetic Mediums;
- Painting Related Techniques: Collage, Mosaics
- Printmaking
- Relief: Woodcut, Wood Engraving, Linocut
- Intaglio: Engraving, Drypoint, Etching, Aquatint
- Lithography
- Screenprinting
- Monotype
- Photo-Mechanical processes
- Photography
- Photography as Science and as Art
- Photographic genres
- Photojournalism
- Straight vs. Manipulated
- Graphic Design
- Signs and Symbols
- Typography and Layout
- Illustration
- Digital Realms
- Sculpture
- Methods and Materials
- Sculpture and the Human Figure
- Sculpture and the Environment
- Functional Art
- Clay
- Glass
- Wood
- Fiber
- Architecture
- Structural Systems
- Purposes of Architecture
- Environmental Design
- Time Arts
- Performance
- Installation
- Film and Video
- New Media
- Digital imaging: natural media simulation vs. algorithmic generation
- Digital 3D: simulated, realized, and virtually realized
- Network communications: telepresence and virtual identities
- Active and interactive works: artificial intelligence
- Impact on art consumption: no originals or copies, only instances
- World Art through Time
- Origins of the Impulse for Art
- The Oldest Art
- Prehistoric Art
- Ancient Mediterranean Worlds
- Mesopotamia
- Egypt
- The Aegean
- Greece and Rome
- Christian Art in Europe
- Rise of Christianity
- Byzantium
- The Middle Ages
- The Renaissance
- Early and High Renaissance
- The Renaissance in the North
- Late Renaissance in Italy
- The 17th and 18th Centuries
- Baroque Style in Europe
- The 18th Century
- Revolution
- Arts of Islam and of Africa
- Architecture: Mosques and Palaces
- Book Arts
- Decorative Arts
- Arts of Africa
- Arts of East Asia
- India
- China
- Japan
- America and the Pacific
- Pacific Cultures
- The Americas
- The Modern World: 1800-1945
- Neoclassicism, Romanticism, Realism
- Impressionism, Post-Impressionism
- Into the 20th Century: the Avant-garde; Fauvism, Cubism, Expressionism
- World War I and After: Dada and Surrealism
- Art Since 1945
- The New York School
- Sixties and Seventies Experimentation: Pop, Minimal, Earth, Conceptual, Feminist
- Art Since the Eighties: the Post-Modern World
- Painterly Image
- Issues and Identities
Students successful in this class will:
- Identify common themes and purposes that underlie the art of all cultures.
- Distinguish between representational, abstract, and non-representational art.
- Analyze formal elements in a work of art and explain how they function.
- Identify techniques and materials used to create various art forms.
- Identify styles of selected masterworks within the history of art.