UDIST-3000-13: Computational & Studio Practice
Spring 2020
- Subject: Upper Level Interdisciplinary Studio
- Type: Workshop
- Delivery Mode: In-Person
- Level: Undergraduate
- Campus: Oakland
- Course Dates: January 21, 2020 — May 08, 2020
- Meetings: Tue/Thu 7:15-10:15PM, Oakland - Founders - 304: Hybrid Lab
- Instructors: Barney Haynes, J.D. Zamfirescu-Pereira
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 5/16
J.D. Zamfirescu-Pereira
Assistant Professor, Critical Studies Program
Description:
Upper Division Interdisciplinary Studios extend a student's cross-school experience from Core Studio up into their upper division years. 3 units of Interdisciplinary Studio are required of all majors and must be completed in the junior or senior year. This advanced level studio is thematic in nature. Technical demonstrations are paired with thoughtful readings, seminar discussions and ambitious projects. Collaboration, experimentation and presentation skills are developed in concert with critical thinking.The discipline of creating with computational media, often called "computer science" or "software engineering", enables students to create new tools and reprogram others to further new thinking in their own major disciplines. Students in the Computational Practices minor develop a competency in creating with computational media; this course integrates that disciplinary competency with students’ own studio practice discipline. Intended to be a capstone for the minor, students are supported as they explore the possibilities and consequences of applying their skills in creating new technology to their work as artists and designers. Understanding and situating computational practice in the broader context of a particular artistic or design discipline is critical for producing work that eloquently blends the technological and the traditional. Case studies will examine how and why particular computational methods are chosen to create particular works and question established orthodoxies. Students will complete a final project that represents the culmination of their work in the minor, demonstrating technical sophistication as well as a deep understanding of the role and context of technology in their discipline. Assignments include a "literature review" that collects articles, prior works, etc., with research into what's been done and what are the opportunities and the pitfalls. The final project should take this research into substantial consideration to produce a novel piece. NB: Instructors may offer different versions of this course to provide additional focus on the integration of particular studio disciplines. Additional materials fee of $50 will be charged. This course has a prerequisite of SCIMA 2120 Computational Practices 1 and co-locates with UDIST 3120-1.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
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