| Tiffany Holmes
is an Associate Professor of Art and Technology
Studies
at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where she teaches courses
in interactivity and the history and theory of electronic media.
Please visit her course links. |
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ARTHI
3512 | NEW MEDIA EARTHWORKS: STICKS, STONES, BITS,
BYTES (Fall 2005)
This art history course surveys the impact of emerging technologies
on art works that ask questions about technology and nature. We
begin with an initial study of early earthworks that use nature
as material or setting such as Robert Smithson's "Spiral Jetty"
and move on to consider contemporary works that contain a social
or cultural message about the environment. Fusing technology with
earth art produces questions to be discussed in the course: How
can technology highlight environmental issues? What is technology's
role in preserving nature? |
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ARTHI
3511 | HISTORY OF ART AND TECHNOLOGY (Spring 2005)
This art history lecture provides an overview of post-WWII artists
and scientists who catalyzed the blurring of boundaries that exist
between the artistic and technological disciplines. The course will
survey the work and ideas of artists who explore new interactive
and interdisciplinary forms, as well as that of engineers and mathematicians
who develop software, hardware and philosophical ideologies that
influence the arts and culture at large. |
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MFA
5010 | GRADUATE SEMINAR | PERFORMING
INTERACTIVITY
In this graduate seminar, students will investigate the central
questions surrounding the notion of interactivity in our culture.
In particular, we will address the complex web of relationships
that evolve among artist, audience and environment in an interactive
art experience as well as the political, social, and cultural implications
of different models of interactivity. |
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ARTTECH
4125 | ART OF SURVEILLANCE
In this hybrid studio/seminar course, we will investigate how and
why artists have subverted traditional modes of surveillance for
creative and critical discourse. In the studio component of the
class, techniques such as video tracking, audio monitoring, data
tagging, and web camera maintenance will be demonstrated. |
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ARTTECH
3005 | PROGRAMMING FOR AUTOMATIC DRAWING (NEW
Spring 2005)
In this studio/seminar course, we will juxtapose traditional practices
of analog drawing with the process of sketching in code. We will
develop digital images starting from the level of the code that
defines them. Studio tutorials will be based in: Processing (JAVA-based
OOP shareware) and Lingo (Director). Studio demonstrations will
include: creating a drawing that responds to environmental changes
(temperature, oxygen, light), producing an animation that changes
based on viewer interaction, etc. |
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ARTTECH
2101 | CONTEMPORARY PRACTICES: ART AND TECHNOLOGY
Technically, this ten week course introduces the basic concepts,
strategies, and techniques associated with creating art using HTML,
the basic syntax for publishing on the world wide web. Conceptually,
we will create electronic sketches that deal in some way with a
common subject: comparing the fast food industry and the software
industry. Collectively students will work to create an online zine
based on artistic reactions to assigned readings and screened works.
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ARTTECH
3135 | INTERACTIVE MULTIMEDIA
This course introduces the concepts, strategies, and techniques
of interactive electronic media–this section will focus on
using Director as the primary authoring tool. Interactive multimedia
production involves goals and methods distinctly different from
more traditional practices of video, film, and computer graphics.
Special workshops/lectures will be presented around the topic of
games as art. |
OTHER TEACHING LINKS | FYP
CORE 2004: Teachers' Training | Professional
Practices for MFA PDF download |