Interdisciplinary Arts
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Interdisciplinary Arts was an academic department in the School of Media Arts at Columbia College Chicago in Chicago, Illinois, United States.[1][2]
Overview
[edit]As one of the earliest interdisciplinary arts programs in the United States, it was an incubator for new approaches towards art-making that has shaped the development of arts professionals for over thirty-three years.[citation needed] Guided by the principle that interdisciplinarity "is a defining characteristic of contemporary art practice"[3] and "a necessary prerequisite for those artists who will shape the future of creative practice",[4] the artists who work in the Interdisciplinary Arts department investigate new terrain.
Examining concepts, forms and techniques from across the fine, performing and media arts, students work with a diverse array of unique and experimental approaches that interrogate artist books, installations, gesture and movement, sound art, durational performance, interactive media, video, performance media, papermaking, letterpress, etching and offset printing, electronically controlled artworks, online artwork, performance in artificial spaces, democratic multiples, written, spoken and performed text, dramatic forms, DIY/DIT collaborative strategies and relational art forms.
History
[edit]Interdisciplinary Arts was formulated in Chicago in 1976, by Suzanne Cohan-Lange, Jean Unsworth, and Rebecca Ruben.[5] Originally accepted by the Chicago Consortium of Colleges as a program taught across several universities, in 1981, it was established as a department with a permanent home at Columbia College Chicago.[6] At that time, the Interdisciplinary Arts MA program was formalized within the context of the department. Since then, two MFA degrees were added: the Interdisciplinary Book & Paper Arts MFA, launched in 1994; and the Interdisciplinary Arts & Media MFA, launched in 2002. The founding of the Interdisciplinary Arts program is preceded by the undergraduate program in the Studio for Interrelated Media program founded by Harris Barron in 1969 at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston.
Programs
[edit]The Interdisciplinary Arts MA is for art teachers who want to expand their repertoire of techniques, as well as assist practicing artists in expanding their practice to include new media. It is immersed in the five traditional art media that make up the heart of the program: visual art, movement, sound, writing, and drama.[citation needed]
The Interdisciplinary Book & Paper Arts MFA program enables students to participate in the contemporary art world by encouraging them to consider book and paper as a site for interdisciplinary practice. It promotes the understanding of hand papermaking and the book arts as artistic media with applications in cultural discourse, community building, and collaborative practice.[citation needed]
The Interdisciplinary Arts & Media MFA fosters an innovative dialog between the fine, performing and media arts. It is a graduate program for traditional and performing artists who want to incorporate media into their artistic practice and for media artists who want to expand into areas such as performance, installation, interactive, and relational art forms.[citation needed]
Facilities
[edit]In the 916 S. Wabash building are housed the departmental offices, faculty offices, conference room, lecture hall, two smart classrooms, large computer lab, three installation labs and the media equipment center.[citation needed] Additionally, the Center for Book and Paper Arts is part of the Interdisciplinary Arts department. The Center for Book and Paper Arts occupies the entire second floor of the historic Ludington Building at 1104 South Wabash and includes a papermaking studio, a letterpress facility, a bookbindery, a gallery, a smart classroom, a multi-purpose space for performance and lectures, a computer laboratory, a critique room, studio space for artists, a resource room, and offices for the staff. Also at 1104 South Wabash are studio spaces for MFA students.[citation needed]
Notable faculty
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Academic Oup". academic.oup.com.
- ^ "School of Interdisciplinary Arts | Ohio University". www.ohio.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-26.
- ^ "Interdisciplinary Arts Department Mission Statement". Interdisciplinary Arts Department. Columbia College Chicago. Archived from the original on 3 February 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2009.
- ^ "Interdisciplinary Arts Department". Columbia College Chicago. Archived from the original on 3 February 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2009.
- ^ Watkins, Beverly T. (September 19, 1990). "In Non-Traditional, Interdisciplinary Study at Columbia College, Artists Get a Chance to Broaden Their Horizons, Hone Creativity". Chronicle of Higher Education. Vol. 37, no. 3. pp. 17, 20. ISSN 0009-5982. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
- ^ Columbia College Oral History Project, "Columbia College Oral History Project", Retrieved 9 November 2009. Archived 19 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
External links
[edit]- Interdisciplinary Arts Department website Archived 2007-02-03 at the Wayback Machine