The BFA in New Genres courses are cross-disciplinary laboratories for experimentation, discovery, and radical boundary-pushing. Through dialogue, critique, and practice, students learn to hone and better articulate their own visual language.
New Genres is a philosophical, interdisciplinary approach in which the artist’s concept and intentions determine the best means for actuating each individual work.
Drawing on its legacy as the country’s first Performance/Video Department, its application of rigorous dialogue and questioning parameters of art forms to time-based work, quickly expanded to include installation, social practice, site-specific work, and other trans-disciplinary media and approaches. No longer a medium-specific department, the New Genres Department was born.
Curriculum
Title | Units |
---|---|
Liberal Arts Requirements (Examples: Global Social Movements, Un/Natural Ideologies, Concepts of Creativity, Mathematics: A Visual History, Extinction) | 33 |
Studio & General Elective Requirements | 72 |
Art History Requirements | 15 |
Title | Units |
---|---|
Contemporary Practice | 3 |
New Genres I | 3 |
New Genres II | 3 |
Issues in Contemporary Art | 3 |
Installation Distribution | 3 |
Keeping Record | 3 |
New Genres Electives (Ex: Advanced Video, Experiments in Narrative, What's Cooking?) | 15 |
Senior Review Seminar | 3 |
Electives in any Studio Discipline (Ex: Bookbinding, Intaglio, Three Dimensional Collage) | 24 |
General Electives (Ex: Sacred and Profane, Sound Installation) | 9 |
BFA Graduate Exhibition | 0 |
Title | Units |
---|---|
Topics and Foundations in Global Visual Culture | 3 |
Topics and Foundations in Contemporary Art | 3 |
History of the Major | 3 |
Art History Elective | 3 |
Art History Elective | 3 |
Program Learning Outcomes
Past Courses