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This
undergraduate degree prepares students for entrance into professional
visual art fields. Once students meet the freshman foundations
requirements, they are designated art students. In addition to
satisfying the core curriculum, art students select studio courses
from both 2D and 3D disciplines, take required art history courses,
choose studio electives, and begin satisfying the requirements
of their declared concentration.
Beginning in the fall 2005 semester, upper level
students within specific program areas in the Department of Visual
Art (Art Education, Graphic Design, Photography, Printmaking) will
be required to have an Apple PowerBook laptop computer for their
course work by the first day of class. Click here for more information.
For further information:
Allison B. Cooke, Visual Art Advisor
414-229-6755
abcooke@uwm.edu
Mitchell Hall 323
Choose from the following submajors:
Ceramics
Fiber
Graphic Design
Jewelry and Metalsmithing
Painting and Drawing
Photography
Printmaking
Sculpture
Ceramics top
The ceramics sub-major is structured to provide a broad technical
and aesthetic background for undergraduate students. Beginning
and intermediate level courses introduce students to a variety
of ceramic
processes and concerns including hand building, wheel construction,
glaze technology and ceramics in world cultures.
Intensive 1 and 2 credit workshops focus on specific topics such
as mold making, kiln firing, specialized ceramic construction and
the history of ceramics. Advanced level courses emphasize the development
of a personal aesthetic in ceramics, and encourage relationships
of ideas and concepts with other studio disciplines of the students'
interest.
Fiber top
The Fiber program provides students with an opportunity to develop
technical skills and conceptual knowledge of weaving, fiber construction,
and surface design process.
Courses unique to the fiber area include weaving, sculptural
fiber construction, surface techniques including tie-dye, batik,
and
hand printing and screen printing on fabric). The fiber curriculum
includes
a study of the multi-cultural history of textiles, contemporary
fiber artists, and the integration of traditional techniques
with digital
media (such as computer-designed weaving and image generation).
Cross-disciplinary work within other studio areas and media is
encouraged, while students
develop individual creative direction focused on the qualities
inherent in the history and materiality of fiber.
Graphic Design top
The Graphic Design program prepares students to enter the expanding
arena of traditional and digital design. The curriculum balances
design theory with commercial practice, where students learn
basic design principles, digital and traditional design skills,
typography,
communication theories, social and cultural issues, and the
history of graphic design. The curriculum includes an internship
program
that places advanced students, in local design studios and
agencies for semester-long, real life experience.
Jewelry and Metalsmithing top
The Metals area offers undergraduate students courses that
balance the functional and expressive aspects of this artform.
An environment
for learning has been established which combines excellent
facilities with a diversity of technical and aesthetic viewpoints.
The Metals
program has had substantial success in training students
for professional work in the community, or preparation for
graduate
work.
Painting and Drawing top
The Painting and Drawing program provides students with an
intensive opportunity for developing their skills and interests
within
painting's traditions and possibilities. The program is
a balance of studio
investigations. Students can concentrate on the disciplines
of painting and drawing, or pursue a curriculum integrating
other
disciplines
and media. The painting and drawing faculty represent in
their studio work and philosophies a spectrum of contemporary
techniques
and concepts.
As working artists of varied interests they celebrate variety
within the teaching studios.
Photography top
The Photography area offers students an intensive environment
in which they can develop the aesthetic, conceptual and
technical skills needed to pursue careers as professional
studio artists
who use photography
as their medium. Courses focus on black-and-white and
color photography, aesthetics, critical thought, digital and
alternative photographic
processes. The photography area's teaching specialties
include black-and-white, color, digital imaging, alternative
processes,
book making, history
of photography, theory and criticism.
Printmaking top
Students are introduced to traditional printmaking techniques
in the media of intaglio, lithography, screen printing,
and relief printing, as well as experimental processes
in photo
printmaking,
monoprint
and digital print media. The program includes experimental
courses that encourage interdisciplinary work, community
projects and
collaborative
research.
Sculpture top
The Sculpture area offers students experience in traditional
and conceptual sculpture. The sculpture curriculum
includes courses in welding, foundry, wood carving/construction,
stone carving,
clay
modeling, casting and mold making, and mixed-media
assemblage.
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