4.301

Introduction to Artistic Experimentation: Transdisciplinary Approaches

This course introduces artistic practice and critical visual thinking through studio-based projects that explore diverse media, scales, and contexts. Through hands-on experimentation, perceptual games, and creative exercises, students activate their artistic curiosity—reimagining materials, objects, and everyday environments. Projects may incorporate sculptural construction, drawing and painting, weaving, performance, theater-based methods, sound and video, and/or site-specific interventions. Studio practice is complemented by lectures, screenings, field trips, readings, guest presentations, and discussions that examine the historical, cultural, and environmental forces shaping both the development of artistic vision and the reception of a work of art. Project themes such as Body Extensions / Embodied Knowledge, Public Making / Collaborative Practices, and Networked Cultres / Interdisciplinary Exchanges invite students to develop an expansive, interdisciplinary approach to art-making. Each project culminates in a final presentation and group critique. 

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2025
3-3-6
U
Schedule
TW 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-235
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
4.614

Introduction to Islamic Architecture

This course offers a wide review of the history of Islamic architecture, tracing fifteen centuries of development across three continents — Asia, Africa, and Europe. Beginning with the House of the Prophet in Medina in the 7th century and culminating with the skyline of contemporary Dubai, the course presents architecture as both a material record and a cultural expression of the historical conditions in which Islam was formed, practiced, and continually reinterpreted.

Each session centers on a city, monument, or building type, while keeping sight of the larger narrative that links diverse regions and periods into a coherent story.  Lectures analyze form, construction techniques, materials, style, ornament, and decoration, as well as the social, religious, political, and cultural frameworks that shaped architectural production.  Particular emphasis is placed on the role of patronage and on the ways architecture served as a stage for identity, power, and community.

Cross-cultural exchanges are examined throughout, from the absorption of Late Antique traditions in early Islam to encounters with the West during the colonial and postcolonial eras. The course concludes by exploring the revival and reinvention of Islamic architecture in the modern age of nation-building, globalization, and rapid urban development.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2025
3-0-9
U
Schedule
TR 11-12:30
Location
5-216
Required Of
BSA
Restricted Elective
Architecture minor
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.603
4.604

Understanding Modern Architecture

4.603 UG / 4.604 G

Examines modern architecture, art, and design in the context of the political, economic, aesthetic, and cultural changes that occurred in the twentieth century. Presents foundational debates about social and technological aspects of modern architecture and the continuation of those debates into contemporary architecture. Incorporates varied techniques of historical and theoretical analysis to interpret exemplary objects, buildings, and cities of modernity.

Additional work required of students taking the graduate version.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

James Graham
Fall
2025
3-0-9
U
3-0-6
G
Schedule
TR 11-12:30
Location
1-150
Prerequisites
4.604: permission of instructor
Required Of
4.603: BSA
Restricted Elective
Architecture minor
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.601

Introduction to Art History

Introduction to the history and interpretation of western art in a global context that explores painting, graphic arts and sculpture from the 15th century to the present. Engages diverse methodological perspectives to examine changing conceptions of art and the artist, and to investigate the plural meaning of artworks within the larger contexts of culture and history.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2025
4-0-8
U
Schedule
TR 2-3:30
Location
3-133
Restricted Elective
BSA, Architecture minor
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.021

Design Studio: How to Design

Introduces fundamental design principles as a way to demystify design and provide a basic introduction to all aspects of the process. Stimulates creativity, abstract thinking, representation, iteration, and design development. Equips students with skills to have more effective communication with designers, and develops their ability to apply the foundations of design to any discipline.

Fall
2025
3-3-6
U
Schedule
MW 2-5
Location
N52-337
Prerequisites
None
Required Of
BSA, BSAD and Architecture Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 25
HASS
A
Preference Given To
BSA, BSAD, Arch minor; 1st- and 2nd-year students
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.02A

Design Studio: How to Design Intensive

Introduces fundamental design principles as a way to demystify design and provide a basic introduction to all aspects of the process. Stimulates creativity, abstract thinking, representation, iteration, and design development. Equips students with skills to have more effective communication with designers, and develops their ability to apply the foundations of design to any discipline.

IAP
2025
2-5-2
U
Schedule
Jan. 13-31, 2025:
Lecture: MTWRF 10-12
Lab: MTWRF 1-5
Location
studio 7 (7-434)
Required Of
BSA, BSAD, A Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 30
HASS
A
Preference Given To
BSA, BSAD, A Minor, D Minor
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.341
4.342

Introduction to Photography and Related Media

4.341 UG | 4.342 G

Introduces history and contemporary practices in artistic photography through projects, lectures, artist visits, group discussions, readings, and field trips. Fosters visual literacy and aesthetic appreciation of photography/digital imaging, as well as critical awareness of how images in our culture are produced and constructed. Provides instruction in the fundamentals of different camera formats, film exposure and development, lighting, black and white darkroom printing, and digital imaging. Assignments allow for incorporation of a range of traditional and experimental techniques, development of technical skills, and personal exploration. Throughout the term, present and discuss projects in a critical forum. 

Additional work required of students taking the graduate version. Lab fee required. Limited to 20.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Spring
2026
3-3-6
U
Arranged
G
Schedule
MW 2-5
Location
E15-054
Restricted Elective
UG: BSA, BSAD, Arch Minor, Design Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
HASS
A
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.657

Design: The History of Making Things

Examines themes in the history of design, with emphasis on Euro-American theory and practice in their global contexts. Addresses the historical design of communications, objects, and environments as meaningful processes of decision-making, adaptation, and innovation. Critically assesses the dynamic interaction of design with politics, economics, technology, and culture in the past and at present. 


 

Spring
2025
5-0-7
U
Schedule
TR 2-3:30
Recitation 1: W 10-11
Recitation 2: F 12-1
Location
Lecture: 3-133
Recitations: 5-231
Required Of
BSAD
Restricted Elective
BSA, Arch Minor, Design Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 36
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.608
4.609

Seminar in the History of Art, Architecture, and Design — Material Histories of Art and Design

Examination of historical method in art, design, and/or architecture, focusing on periods and problems determined by the research interest of the faculty member leading the seminar. Emphasizes critical reading and viewing and direct tutorial guidance. 

Additional work required of students taking the graduate version. 

This seminar examines episodes in the history of art and design from the perspective of the materials used in their production. Engaging a variety of organic and modern substances and examining selected case studies of their manipulation across diverse geographies from the ancient world to the mid twentieth century, the class asks how materials have historically conditioned the conception and meanings of artworks and how a focus on matter can bring into view the environmental impacts and the human costs of design. What meanings, for example, did metals or minerals mined from the earth or imported from distant parts of the world hold for early modern viewers? How can the study of furniture inlaid with ivory from Southeast Asia or made from mahogany sourced in the eighteenth-century Caribbean expose the blind spots attending the global systems of labor and transportation that moved such materials? Conversely, how might the uses of wood veneer reveal historical ideologies and/or period imaginaries of nature, time, and a nascent ecological awareness? What can the material attractions of porcelain, of plate glass, and plastics reveal about cultural and political imaginaries in Asia, in Europe and beyond? And what does clay have to do with the styling and planned obsolescence for which the twentieth-century American automobile industry was renowned?


 

Spring
2025
TBA (4.608)
G
3-0-9 (4.609)
U
Schedule
F 2-5
Location
5-216
Prerequisites
Permission of Instructor
Restricted Elective
4.609: BSA, Architecture Minor
Enrollment
Limited to 15
HASS
A
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.110
MAS.s60

Design Across Scales and Disciplines

UG: 4.110 | G: 4.111

MAS.S60 is open to graduates and undergraduate students.

**TIME CHANGE: Lecture is now 3-5pm on Tuesdays**

Inspired by Charles and Ray Eames' canonical Powers of Ten, explores the relationship between science and engineering through the lens of design. Examines how transformations in science and technology have influenced design thinking and vice versa. Provides interdisciplinary skills and methods to represent, model, design and fabricate objects, machines, and systems using new computational and fabrication tools. Aims to develop methodologies for design research of interdisciplinary problems.

Additional work required of students taking the graduate version.

Spring
2026
2-2-8
U/G
Schedule
Lecture: T 3-5
Recitation: W 7-9
Location
N52-337
Required Of
BSAD
Restricted Elective
Design Minor (4.110)
Enrollment
Limited
HASS
A
Preference Given To
Course 4 majors and minors (for 4.110)
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No