Course Title: Sculpture Advanced Studio 3B1
Part A: Course Overview
Course Title: Sculpture Advanced Studio 3B1
Credit Points: 12
Course Code |
Campus |
Career |
School |
Learning Mode |
Teaching Period(s) |
VART2919 |
Hong Kong Arts Centre |
Undergraduate |
340H Art |
Face-to-Face |
Offsh 3 11,
Offsh3 12 |
Course Coordinator: Don Gore
Course Coordinator Phone: +61 3 9925 3625
Course Coordinator Email:don.gore@rmit.edu.au
Course Coordinator Availability: Via appointment by email
Pre-requisite Courses and Assumed Knowledge and Capabilities
Students are required to have significant studio experience (192 credit points within BP201) prior to enrolling in Advanced Studios.
Course Description
In Sculpture Advanced Studio 3B2 students are given the opportunity to extend upon aspects of previous studio courses. Students negotiate a Studio Proposal with their lecturer focused around achieving specific material and conceptual objectives. A student’s course of study is structured around developmental supervision on a one to one basis with their lecturer as well as undergoing constructive and critical analysis in a forum context with other staff and students. Students are able to develop material skills, reflexive and research facilities in specialised aspects of their practice, facilitating transition to self-supervised art practice and/or post graduate research. Students will produce a major work to be exhibited as part of the RMIT Sculpture Graduate Exhibition.
This course is a Work Integrated Learning course (WIL). The Key feature of WIL courses is that the learning experiences simulate the working life of professional practitioners. As such this course introduces students to a research based approach to Sculpture and related spatial practices by working as a practicing artist in a studio based learning context.
Objectives/Learning Outcomes/Capability Development
This course allows students to gain the capabilities related to:
* Developing a critically reflective arts practice that enables students to continually develop, change and plan for a future that is both informed by and improved by arts practice.
* Developing a practical and intellectual basis for articulating formal, conceptual and aesthetic concerns as they relate to fine art practice at a year 3 level
At the completion of this course students will be able to:
1. Develop an art practice by using a variety of visual and spatial strategies to investigate concepts and instigate independent works of art through appropriate selection.
2. Test ideas through the creation of experimental works which will enable you to have a more developed understanding of the significance of visual and spatial research. Analyze visual material in relation to ideas.
3. Produce preliminary and resolved works and understand their relationship
4. Implement and document independent thinking and critical analysis, in projects and tutorials and feedback sessions. Reflect on this activity using a journal.
5. Identify and develop meaningful conceptual frameworks and cultural reference points for studio practice.
6. Write a studio work proposal.
7. Have an established ability to work independently and refine strategies and techniques within work practice.
8. Produce a Work Integrated Learning document and presentation that demonstrates an experience of exhibition practice as it relates to the arts industry.
9. Produce resolved and professional work for exhibition.
Specific criteria for these outcomes will be discussed in relation to different activities during the course.
Overview of Learning Activities
In consultation with their supervising lecturer students formulate a studio proposal. From this proposal key technical and conceptual milestones are identified and placed within a time line for the project’s successful completion and a plan is developed to facilitate these objectives.
Students are instructed in skills as dictated by the parameters of the studio proposal, directed to appropriate resources and encouraged to undertake independent research in the area suggested by the focus of their project. All aspects of the Project are reviewed and may be refined over the course of the semester.
Other learning activities include: lectures by visiting arts professionals and alumni, gallery visits, trial exhibition installation, student presentations, individual tutorials, group feedback sessions Work Integrated Learning activities and a comprehensive process journal.
Overview of Learning Resources
Students will have access to a reference bibliography, specific texts and technical workshops, lectures from professional artists and contemporary exhibitions. Students will require familiarity with Blackboard, the RMIT on-line learning application and RMIT library research facilities. Other learning resources include trial exhibition installation, student presentations, individual tutorials, group feedback sessions Work Integrated Learning activities and a comprehensive process journal.
Overview of Assessment
Students will be required to submit a completed project at the end of the semester and accompanying documentation should give a detailed account of their methodology and its conceptual and thematic underpinning. The project is reviewed throughout the semester; taking in all phases of the project from proposal, development, execution and completion.
Students’ work and accompanying documentation should clearly demonstrate the learning objectives of this course and may comprise objects, spatial works, drawings, sketches, diagrams, maquettes, photographs, digital works, books, videos and journals which reflect your visual, conceptual and technical research. This folio will be assessed by professional artists and art industry experts to the level of third year standards.