CRN

14403

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 105 A

Title

Photographic Seeing

Professor

An-My Lê

Schedule

Mon               6:00 pm -9:00 pm         Woods

Beyond the material technique of photography lies a visual technique. This involves learning to see the way a camera sees; learning how a photograph, by its nature, transforms the world in front of the camera. The first half of the semester is devoted to exploring this visual grammar of photography and how it clarifies a photograph's meaning and the photographer's intent. During the second half of the semester, students pursue independent projects, putting their visual understanding into practice.

Prerequisite: Photography 101 or 103.

 

CRN

14404

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 105 B

Title

Photographic Seeing

Professor

Tim Davis

Schedule

Th                 9:30 am - 12:30 pm      Woods

Beyond the material technique of photography lies a visual technique. This involves learning to see the way a camera sees; learning how a photograph, by its nature, transforms the world in front of the camera. The first half of the semester is devoted to exploring this visual grammar of photography and how it clarifies a photograph's meaning and the photographer's intent. During the second half of the semester, students pursue independent projects, putting their visual understanding into practice.

Prerequisite: Photography 101 or 103.

 

CRN

14405

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 106

Title

Light

Professor

Larry Fink

Schedule

Tu                 9:30 am - 12:30 pm      Woods

Light is the co-author of image. Light can be brazen or bland. It can dramatize or simply describe. This course deals with the exploration of found light or artificially detonated light - strobe. Each week the assignments alternate between real or natural light and artificial or created light. These exercises attempt to clarify the differences and the similarities between the two kinds and how light serves the vision of the light within. In the second half of the semester each student undertakes an individual project based on what has already been experienced. Learning how to control light broadens a photographer's perception of the ambient options it offers.

Prerequisite: Photography 101 or 103.

 

CRN

14165

Distribution

A

Course No.

ARTH / PHOT 113

Title

History of Photography

Professor

Laurie Dahlberg

Schedule

Mon Wed       11:30 am - 12:50 pm     OLIN 102

Cross-listed: Art History

The discovery of photography was announced in 1839, almost simultaneously by several inventors. Born of experiments in art and science, the medium combines vision and technology. It possess a uniquely intimate relation to reality, and for this reason has many applications outside the realm of fine art, but from its inception photography has been a vehicle for artistic aspirations. This survey of the history of photography from its earliest manifestations to the 1970s considers the medium’s applications as, among others, art, science, historical record, and document. The course is open to all students, and is a prerequisite for most other courses in the history of photography. Priority will be given to students in photography.

 

CRN

14406

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 201

Title

The View Camera

Professor

An-My Lê

Schedule

Tu                 1:30 pm -4:30 pm         Woods

View cameras were the first cameras and were the primary photographic tool for the first half of photography’s history. They offer unexcelled clarity, tonality, and image control. The operation of the view camera and advanced darkroom techniques are demonstrated in this course. The class explores the expressive potential of the conscious use of the camera’s precise control of the image. Students are supplied with 4" x 5" camera outfits. Admission by portfolio.

Prerequisite: Photography 105 or 106.

 

CRN

14407

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 203 A

Title

Color Photography

Professor

Barbara Ess

Schedule

Tu                 6:00 pm -9:00 pm         Woods

An introduction to the problem of rethinking photographic picture‑making through the medium of color photography. Transparencies, color negatives, and type C prints are the technical areas explored. Interested students should bear in mind the higher costs of color materials. Admission by portfolio.

 

CRN

14408

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 203 B

Title

Color Photography

Professor

Tim Davis

Schedule

Th                 1:30 pm -4:30 pm         Woods

An introduction to the problem of rethinking photographic picture‑making through the medium of color photography. Transparencies, color negatives, and type C prints are the technical areas explored. Interested students should bear in mind the higher costs of color materials. Admission by portfolio.

 

CRN

14410

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 302 A

Title

Advanced Photography

Professor

Larry Fink

Schedule

Mon               2:30 pm -5:30 pm         Woods

To prepare the student for ongoing independent work, this course emphasizes the exploration of visual problems. At the heart of this exploration is asking good questions of oneself and one's work, seeing how other photographers and artists in other media have dealt with such questions, and "answering" the questions for oneself through individual projects.

 

CRN

14411

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 302 B

Title

Advanced Photography

Professor

An-My Lê

Schedule

Wed               9:00 am - 12:00 pm      Woods

To prepare the student for ongoing independent work, this course emphasizes the exploration of visual problems. At the heart of this exploration is asking good questions of oneself and one's work, seeing how other photographers and artists in other media have dealt with such questions, and "answering" the questions for oneself through individual projects.

 

CRN

14409

Distribution

F

Course No.

PHOT 307

Title

Advanced Digital Imaging

Professor

John Pilson

Schedule

Fr                  1:30 pm -4:30 pm         Woods

This is a course designed for students with a basic understanding of the Adobe Photoshop software application. Emphasis will be placed on exploring digital photography from both a technical and theoretical perspective. In addition to learning various advanced imaging techniques, students will be encouraged to critically examine the ways in which digital imaging effects how we make and look at photographs. Through hands on practice and in-class critique and dialogue, the class will examine a variety of issues central to photography in the digital era, such as “What is the relationship of digital photography to traditional, analog photography? To what degree has our faith in the veracity of the photographic image been altered by the seamless editing capabilities of digital photography? How have issues of authorship, ownership, and copyright been effected? How might photographers best utilize the interactive arenas of multi-media and the internet? Students will be expected to bring work to class on a weekly basis and to participate in class critiques. Open to both photo and non-photo students.

Prerequisite: Digital Imaging 1, or permission of the instructor.

 

CRN

14179

Distribution

A

Course No.

ARTH / PHOT 324

Title

Photography and the Modernist Creed

Professor

Laurie Dahlberg

Schedule

Th                 10:30 am - 12:50 pm     OLIN 102

Cross-listed: Art History

In many ways, photography is held to be the medium that most perfectly represents the aims and principles of modernism. This seminar considers European and American photography in its “high modernist” era (1900-40) as a medium shaped by the key texts and events of modernism, such as the writings of Marx, Freud, and Bergson, and World War I. The course investigates some of the lesser-known figures in photography as well as the monoliths of the era, such as Stieglitz and Moholy-Nagy.

Prerequisite:  Any art history or history of photography class.

 

CRN

14412

 

 

Course No.

PHOT SEM

Title

Senior Seminar

Schedule

Th                 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm      Woods

The senior seminar is a requirement of all seniors majoring in photography. The seminar meets on a bi-weekly basis and carries no credit.