4.341
4.342

Introduction to Photography and Related Media

4.341 U / 4.342 G

Introduction to Photography & Related Media offers an overview of the photographic medium and related media as tools for artistic expression. The word ‘photography’ was created from the Greek roots φωτός (phōtos), genitive of φως (phōs) and γραφή (graphé), together meaning ‘drawing with light.’ Since its invention, photography has constantly evolved technically as its role in society has become more impactful. Through readings, lectures, workshops, in class discussions and critic sessions, the course introduces students to the history of photography and the use of images in contemporary art practices. It fosters, both theoretically and practically, visual literacy and an understanding of photography from analog to digital imaging technologies. Throughout the semester, students receive practical instructions for various camera formats and instructions in digital imaging (essentially Photoshop). Readings, film screenings and assignments addressing specific topics challenge students to experiment with a range of techniques while discovering iconic visual artworks. Students explore the photographic medium and other related media while developing critical awareness of the cultural and technological production of images. Assignments are continuously discussed in a critical forum. Students present a topic at the end of the semester. Students from various disciplines welcome however enrollment is limited to 15. 

Additional work required of students taking the graduate version. 

4.341/4.342 Syllabus (Baladi) — MIT Certificate Required
4.341/4.342 Syllabus (Membreno-Canales) — MIT Certificate Required

Lara Baladi
Hector Rene Membreno-Canales
Fall
2022
3-3-6
U
3-3-3
G
Schedule
Sec. 1: MW 9:30-12:30
Sec. 2: MW 2-5
Location
Sec. 1: E15-054
Sec. 2: E15-283A
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Restricted Elective
BSA, BSAD, D minor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
HASS
A/E
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.322
4.323

Introduction to Three-Dimensional Art Work

Cancelled

Subjects canceled for Fall 2022.

Fall
2022
3-3-6
U
3-3-3
G
Restricted Elective
BSAD, Architecture and Design minors
Enrollment
Limited to 20
HASS
A/E
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.314
4.315

Advanced Workshop in Artistic Practice and Transdisciplinary Research

4.314 U / 4.315 G

Examines artistic practice as a form of critical inquiry and knowledge production. Offers opportunity to develop art as a means for addressing the social, cultural, and ecological consequences of technology, to build bridges between industry and culture, and to challenge the boundaries between public and private, and human and non-human. Provides instruction in evaluating models of experimentation, individual research, and collaboration with other disciplines in the arts, culture, science, and technology. Supports the development of individual and collective artistic research projects. Additional work required of students taking the graduate version.

4.314/4.315 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Fall
2022
3-3-6
U
3-3-3
G
Schedule
TR 7-10
Location
E15-001
Prerequisites
4.301 or 4.302 or permission of instructor
Restricted Elective
Architecture minor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
HASS
A/E
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.301

Introduction to Artistic Experimentation

Introduces artistic practice and critical visual thinking through three studio-based projects using different scales and media, for instance, "Body Extension," "Shaping Time," "Public Making," and/or "Networked Cultures." Each project concludes with a final presentation and critique. Students explore sculptural, architectural, performative artistic methods; video and sound art; site interventions and strategies for artistic engagement in the public realm. Lectures, screenings, guest presentations, field trips, readings, and debates supplement studio practice. Also introduces students to the historic, cultural, and environmental forces affecting both the development of an artistic vision and the reception of a work of art.

4.301 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Jesus Ocampo Aguilar
Fall
2022
3-3-6
U
Schedule
TR 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
None
Required Of
Restricted elective for BSAD, A Minor, D Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
HASS
A
Open Only To
Undergraduates
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Art and Agriculture

Annexation, greenwashing, and destructive notions of progress have all but wiped out the memory of an indigenous mythology once deeply rooted in an embodied, balanced stewardship of nature. How can the merging of artistic methodologies with agricultural practices address this loss of cultural capital?

Common Ground is a transdisciplinary experiment in learning from the land, seeking to develop a new field of inquiry at the intersection of art, science and agriculture. The history of art is also a history of agriculture, marking humanity’s complex relationship with the environment. This course will examine historic typologies of indigenous architectural and agrarian technologies, bringing them into conversation with contemporary techno-scientific and artistic discourses. Through this synthesis, our class will explore artistic methods to decolonize the social, political, economic and narrative structures that govern our relationship to nature. Following the semester, project documentation and research developed over the semester will contribute to a publication.

Applicants from across artistic and scientific disciplines are highly encouraged. Interested students should attend the first class. Undergraduates are welcome to enroll.

Spring
2022
2-3-4
G
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-001
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Artist, Tinkerer, Architect, Engineer

Seminar connecting the arts and sciences by exploring methodological similarities and differences across disciplines: arts/architecture, humanities/social sciences, engineering, natural and material sciences et al. Aimed at fostering student collaborations across research interests: students develop their ideas for projects through targeted analysis of their disciplinary and interdisciplinary  interests. Each student will either enter with a project in mind, or develop their project ideas within the class. Students can choose to work individually or in groups.

This seminar’s goal to provide blueprints for developing interdisciplinary projects: final is a paper/ plan with goals/outcomes forming the basis for collaborative interdisciplinary projects.  Examples of such projects: artwork that makes use of cross-species communication, (Tomás Saraceno); project engaging the natural sciences, composed of material that endlessly transform, simultaneously functioning as an artwork, (Neri Oxman).

First half semester is targeted reading (articles) across disciplines – based in student interests – alongside discussion of case studies of successful collaborations in these disciplines. Analyzing case studies plus reading will enable an understanding of methodological specificities in different disciplines in relation to aesthetics and fabrication issues, and directly in context of the particular disciplines under consideration. Together this fosters reciprocal knowledge of the strengths and differences across disciplines. Case studies drawn from MIT’s history: CAST and CAVS, and from across the global ‘artworld’. Second half semester will be geared toward aiding students in better connecting across disciplines at MIT (and possibly beyond). This is trial and error, of course. However, final project, as a working plan for interdisciplinary collaboration, will provide the knowledge base and research skills applicable to future projects.

Spring
2022
2-3-4
G
Schedule
W 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.390

Art, Culture, and Technology Studio

Explores the theory and criticism of intersections between art, culture, and technology in relation to contemporary artistic practice, critical design, and media. Students consider methods of investigation, documentation, and display and explore modes of communication across disciplines. Students develop projects in which they organize research methods and goals, engage in production, cultivate a context for their practice, and explore how to compellingly communicate, display, and document their work. Regular presentation and peer-critique sessions, as well as reviews involving ACT faculty and fellows, and external guest reviewers provide students with ample feedback as their projects develop.

Spring
2022
3-3-12
G
Schedule
MF 2-5
Location
E15-001
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Required Of
SMACT
Open Only To
SMACT
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.388

Thesis II: SMACT Thesis Preparation

Aids students in the selection of a thesis topic, development of an approach method, preparation of a proposal that includes an outline for their thesis. Explores artistic practice as a method of critical inquiry and knowledge production/dissemination. Students examine artist writings and consider academic formats and standards. Regular group meetings, including peer reviews, are supplemented by independent study and individual conferences with faculty. 

Mario Caro
Spring
2022
3-0-6
G
Schedule
F 10:30-12
Location
E15-207
Required Of
SMACT
Open Only To
First-Year SMACT
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.368
4.369

Studio Seminar in Art and the Public Sphere — Choreographing the City

How can insights from choreography inform more just and equitable ways of urban planning? In what ways can choreography help us to decolonize the urban landscape? How can choreography make us attentive to a community’s emotional, cultural and corporeal memory? How can dance, as a three-dimensional bodily practice, help us to move beyond scripted spaces and codified routes? These are the questions we tackle in Choreographing the City, a course developed with Theatrum Mundi, prof. Richard Sennett and CAST-supported MIT visiting artist and choreographer Dr. Adesola Akinleye.

Both choreography and planning organize time and space to shape movement; both emerge through practice and experience; and both have physical and social outputs as well as constraints. Looking at the interdependencies of these terms, this class will generate an interdisciplinary dialogue between choreographic and spatial practices. Through readings, group discussions and creative practices, the class participants will mobilize choreography as an epistemological tool in order to 1) expose the colonial remnants on which the city rests, 2) emphasize the climate-induced changing structures of the city, and 3) open up pathways towards a decolonized and fair urban commonwealth.

Additional work required of students taking graduate version.

Spring
2022
3-3-6
U/G
3-3-3
G
Schedule
TR 7-10
Location
E15-001
Prerequisites
UG: 4.301 or 4.302; 4.307; 4.312 or permission of instructor; G: 4.307; 4.312 or permission of instructor
Restricted Elective
BSA
Enrollment
Limited to 12
HASS
A/E
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.359

Synchronizations of Senses

Focused on the practices of varied practitioners — film directors, artists, musicians, composers, architects, designers — whose writings relay a process of thinking and feeling integral to their forms of material production. Testing various ways aesthetic forms and their shifts — historic and contemporary — have relations to still emerging contemporary subjectivities (felt emotion in a human body), the class studies productions created by participants and case studies of varied producers, and generates new work individually and/or collaboratively via diverse media explorations. Includes reading, writing, drawing, and publishing, as well as photographic, cinematic, spatial, and audio operations productions. Activities include screenings, listening assignments, and guest visits, in addition to readings, discussions, and presentations.

Spring
2022
3-0-6
G
Schedule
M 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-001
Enrollment
Limited to 12
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No