College of Mount St. Joseph Course # & Section & credit
hours _Art 562 06__
Department of ___Art
Sem. S1 Year 07
Course Name Sculpture
Workshop: Figure Modeling
Prerequisites: None
Instructor: Daniel
E. Mader
513-244-4420
Course Meets: Thursday
evenings, 6:30 – 9:20 p.m.
Required Text: A. Williams. The Sculpture Reference: Illustrated. Gulfport: Sculpture Books Publishing, 2005. Bring to every class.
|
Review of Readings (Bring notes on, and questions on
text) |
Regular
Group Critique
|
Journals Due |
Field
Trips |
|
1.
Sept.
14 Sections N through Z |
1. Sept 21 |
1. Nov 16 |
1. Sept Sat
16, 11a, Pyramid Hill, Hamilton |
Sections A through M |
2. Nov 30 |
|
2. TBA, for
journal, on-site choice of figurative subject |
|
|
|
|
3. TBA, for journal, on-site choice of
figurative subject |
REFERENCE:
R. ColemanŐs Sculpture, 3rd Ed., 1990
200 Years of American Sculpture, 1976
J. U. KellyŐs The Sculptural Idea, 1974
W. VerhelstŐs Sculpture: Tools, Materials, Techniques, 1987
A Century of Modern Sculpture, 1987
D. ReynoldsŐ Masters of American Sculpture, 1993
C. RubinsteinŐs American Women Sculptors, 1990
J. KoplosŐ Contemporary Japanese Sculpture, 1991
A. WilliamsŐ Sculpture: Technique, Form, Content, 1995
Course
Description:
Creation of plastic
castings from clay model. The
subject will be exclusively the nude model.
MSJ Undergraduate Learning Outcomes and Performance
Indicators (LO/PIs)
The purpose of the Liberal Arts and Science curriculum at the Mount is to provide you with a broader academic context for your learning in and outside of your major. It is to further provide you with a learning perspective for a lifetime of study in a diverse and complex world. By graduation with your Baccalaureate Degree, you will demonstrate your comprehension in the areas below—the areas of your e-portfolio, in which you will archive examples of work.
A. Global/Citizenship:
Understand and appreciate the interdependence and interrelatedness of all
people as well as of people and their environment
1. Document
and reflect on participation in a service or leadership experience during your
College years
2. Demonstrate
knowledge about global issues confronting persons in the contemporary world
3. Explain aspects of the Judeo-Christian tradition as they intersect with other religions, philosophical ideologies, and global issues
4. Reflect critically on personal and professional development during the college years in the context of global citizenship
B. Ethics:
Understand the Judeo-Christian ethical tradition and recognize ethical
responsibility in your personal and professional life
C. Interdependence/Interdisciplinarity:
Draw on disciplinary perspectives and integrate your insights through
construction of a more comprehensive perspective
1. Demonstrate a capacity for inclusive, not dualistic thinking, recognizing the presence of ambiguity
2. Compare and contrast viewpoints from different disciplines and perspectives (multidisciplinarity)
3. Integrate knowledge and concepts across disciplines (interdisciplinarity)
4. Explain the global
interconnectedness of social and natural systems
D. Sociocultural Relationships:
Understand social and cultural influences on behavior
E. Communication: Construct and
interpret various forms of communication including written, oral, and visual
effectively and ethically
F. Critical/Creative Thinking:
Reason in an open-ended manner to evaluate a situation, generates multiple
solutions, and supports the reasoning behind a solution
Course Objectives within the framework of MSJ
Undergraduate LO/PI: (At the conclusion of this course, the
student will be able to):
E-Portfolio
During your senior LA&S capstone course(s) - thesis and senior seminar, you will be asked for an electronic file containing examples of your work throughout your college experience. Although not required at this time, and although the precise form of the e-portfolio is not clear yet, I suggest you keep a file for each class and/or term with examples of writing and visual pieces. The visual pieces may be jpeg images. This action now will save you last minute research in your senior year.
Teaching
Methodology (Learning Strategies):
Studio demonstrations of technical processes, work sessions, group critiques, and final individual critique review of class readings
Method of Evaluating Achievement of Outcomes:
During
the final individual critique, performance will be determined, based on: student self-evaluation of art; and
teacher evaluation of the complexity of problems set, and the resultant design
maturity and craftsmanship of selected solutions. In general, the final grade will be weighted as follows:
á Outside studio time qualifier, quantity/quality of projects 80%
á Quantity/quality of reflections in journal 10%
á
Quantity/quality of photographs of project
10%
Attendance
Policy:
Attendance at all class sessions is required. One exception may be made in extreme circumstances at the discretion of the instructor; however, instructor must be notified of the need to be absent prior to the beginning of the class session. Students are expected to arrive on time and remain the entire class session.
Academic Integrity:
When we use the information and language of others to enrich our reflection and research papers we must:
á Tell the reader when we are quoting and indicate the source (person, book, article, etc.) of the quotation.
á Tell the reader when we are paraphrasing and indicate the source (person, book, article, etc.) of that information.
Quoting or paraphrasing the information and/or language of a course without naming the source is plagiarism. Plagiarism is unacceptable in an academic institution and is subject to penalty. Please consult the College Catalog and the Student Handbook for additional information and policies regarding academic honesty.
TENTATIVE
SESSION PLAN:
Aug. Thur. 31 Introduction to course; slide overview; Ode to a Grecian Urn
Sept. Thur. 7 Relief project: model*
Thur. 14 Relief project: model; readings**
Thur. 21 Relief project: model; group critique
Thur.
28 Relief
project; readings; make plaster mold
Oct. Thur. 5
Cast relief project in plastic
Thur. 12 Build 3 – D armature
Thur. 19 3 –D project; model
Thur. 26 3 –D project; model
Nov. Thur. 2
3 – D project; model
Thur. 9 3 – D project mold making
Thur. 16 Cast 3-D project; journal due
Thur. 23 (No Class -- Thanksgiving Recess)
Thur. 30 3-D project; group critique
Dec Thur. 7 Final individual critique; castings, photos, time sheets; studio clean up
Thur. 14 Course/Teacher Evaluation
* The word model indicates that a male or female model will be present.
** Although you bring the text
to every class as a handbook, on these days -- ŇreadingsÓ,
bring your text notes and questions to be discussed.
PROBLEM FORMAT:
Each student is expected to complete 1-2 projects using relief clay modeling/carving; modeling clay in 3-D on an armature. The finished projects consist of the clay originals, plaster molds and plastic castings from the clay, plus black and white photographs of the pieces. This work will be due Thursday, December 7**
** LATE PROJECTS ARE NOT ACCEPTED! NO POST FACTO (AFTER THE FACT) EXCUSES ARE ACCEPTED.
REQUIREMENTS:
1. Projects: Must be worked on time and critiqued in class. They should reflect outside studio time week to week.
2. Completion of course necessitates the successful finishing of projects begun. Intermediate critiques should reflect appropriate progress.
3. Mandatory class attendance.
4 Outside studio time: academic policy holds that the student may expect up to 2 hrs. Outside work for every credit hr. taken per week: You are expected to spend 6 hours outside of class per week on sculpture reading, research travel/purchase of materials, and actual studio work. For the 15 weeks of the semester, this equals 90 hours to qualify you for a minimal grade of "C". A log sheet is provided for you to record time. These totaled sheets will be examined on Thursday, December 2. In addition, any class miss adds 3 outside hours to the 90 hours of outside work required.
5. Journal: As part of your outside time requirement, you are to keep a journal containing your daily reflections about sculpture. You are to visit a minimum of two (2) different sites of your choice that may be on the street, in a park, in a museum, and/or in a gallery. As a group, we will also visit Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park in Hamilton. Sketch and notes on these visits should be developed in this record. This research material should give names of places, dates, and times. It all should be collected in a notebook that will become your personal sculpture handbook.
On Thursday, Nov. 16, this journal is due to be turned in for evaluation. It will be judged on the quality/quantity of the sketches/information and reflections on the work of the course/
6. Photographs: As part of your final critique on Thursday, Dec 7, you are to bring 4-6 black and white photographs of your pieces that present them effectively using dramatic lighting.
MATERIALS:
The art fee for sculpture class is used for the model, purchase and maintenance of hand tools and power tools, for purchase of clay, plaster, plastic, and for other related items. The student is expected to salvage or purchase all else, including plastic bags, wood base for clay, piping for armature, and finishing materials.
Suggested resources are as follows:
1. Lumber: Home Depot or Lowes
2.
Pipe, wire, paint,
screws, bolts: Big Lots, Home Depot, Lowes, K-Mart, Wal-Mart or Hader
Hardware
3. Special finishes (bronze, marble, granite etc.): Wal-mart, Michaels, CappelŐs, Hobby Lobby
(Check for used lumber in Art Room 18, and the wood closet there.)