2022-2023 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
    May 15, 2024  
2022-2023 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


The undergraduate course numbering system is as follows:

0100 - Lower Level Courses
0200 - Upper Level Courses
0300 - Upper Level Courses
 

Not every course listed in this Bulletin is offered annually. Definitive information about course offerings and class hours is available at the time of registration through the Office of the Registrar. Insufficient enrollment or changing conditions may occasionally necessitate the withdrawal of scheduled courses. Please check with appropriate departments to determine if the courses sought are being offered and when they are scheduled.

 

Accounting

  
  • ACCT 0104 - Principles of Accounting I


    Credits: 3

    Development of a framework of concepts underlying the preparation of corporate financial statements which are useful to investors, economists, the general public, and other interested external parties. The balance sheet and income statement as conventionally reported by American corporations are studied as to methodology for their preparation, their interpretation, and their strengths and limitations.

    Prerequisites: MGMT 0107 .
    (formerly MGMT 0104)
  
  • ACCT 0105 - Principles of Accounting II


    Credits: 3

    Continuation of the emphasis in Principles of Accounting I upon corporate financial reporting to external parties. An introduction to the concepts underlying the preparation of accounting information which is useful to management in the planning and control of business operations.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0104 .
    (formerly MGMT 0105)
  
  • ACCT 0205 - Fund Accounting


    Credits: 3

    Concerns the accounting theory applied to nonprofit entities such as municipalities, universities, hospitals, and churches. Content constitutes a significant portion of the Uniform Certified Public Accountant examination.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0104 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0205)
  
  • ACCT 0310 - Federal Income Taxation


    Credits: 3

    A first course in Federal Taxation which provides an overview of past and present Internal Revenue Codes. Emphasis is on personal and business income tax procedures and preparation. Exclusions, deductions, and income from proprietorships, partnerships, rental units, trusts and estates, dividends and interest are included.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0310)
  
  • ACCT 0311 - Auditing


    Credits: 3

    Covers the principles of auditing, using accounting principles as criteria. Current auditing theories, standards, procedures, and techniques are studied. Auditing procedures and analysis of supporting documentation materials are emphasized to ascertain how they lead to the development of an audit opinion. The course studies the legal, ethical, and technical environment in which the auditor works. A practice case study is required.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0311)
  
  • ACCT 0315 - Financial Reporting I


    Credits: 3

    Advances the depth of accounting concepts pursued in the accounting principles courses. The course begins with an overall review of basic financial concepts and the essentials of the accounting process. It continues with a more in-depth view of income recognition and measurement, accounting changes and errors, and a detailed look at various asset accounts and their relationship to the income statement. Balance sheet accounts covered include cash, receivables, and inventory.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0315)
  
  • ACCT 0316 - Financial Reporting II


    Credits: 3

    Continues the advanced study of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) guiding the preparation of corporate financial statements. The topics addressed include: property, plant and equipment; depreciation; intangibles; liabilities; investments; stockholders’ equity; and earnings per share.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0315 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0316)
  
  • ACCT 0317 - Cost Accounting


    Credits: 3

    This course provides a strong conceptual foundation in the preparation of information for use by management in the planning and control of business operations. Topics covered will include cost-volume-profit analysis, job costing, activity-based costing, process costing, master budgets, flexible budgets, and variance analysis. Students will be required to use spreadsheet software extensively in several case studies.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0317)
  
  • ACCT 0318 - Financial Reporting III


    Credits: 3

    Continues the advanced study of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) guiding the preparation of corporate financial statement. The topics addressed include: leases, pensions and other post-retirement benefits, deferred taxes, an introduction to accounting for business combinations, and other advanced financial reporting issues.

    Prerequisites:  ; Junior or Senior status is required.
  
  • ACCT 0322 - Corporate Taxation: Planning and Practice


    Credits: 3

    A planning approach to the taxation of corporations and formation of investment and business decisions by managers. Collapsible Corporations, capital gains treatment, charitable contributions, net operating loss, dividends-received deductions, alternatives minimum tax, and reconciliation of tax and book income will be examined.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0104  and ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
    (formerly MGMT 0322)
  
  • ACCT 0345 - Accounting Information Systems


    Credits: 3

    Study of factors considered in the design, development, and implementation of accounting related information systems. Topics may include computer feasibility studies, business processes and transaction cycles, general ledger and financial reporting, proper system documentation, internal controls and audit trails, implementation issues, the impact of the accounting function on various elements of the organization, and implications of the Internet on accounting information systems.

    Prerequisites: ACCT 0105 ; Junior or Senior status is required.
  
  • ACCT 0350 - Special Topics in Accounting


    Credits: 3

    Examines current issues within the accounting profession and/or topics that require advanced treatment within an accounting specialty area. May be repeated if course content differs.

    Prerequisites: Permission of Instructor; Junior or Senior status is required.
  
  • ACCT 0399 - Independent Study: Accounting


    Credits: 1-6

    A course by special arrangement in a specific theoretical or applied area under careful faculty supervision. It is intended to broaden students’ concentration in accounting or to gain depth in a particular area of interest within this field of study. A student may be assigned a series of readings and discussions or engage in an applied project in an area agreed upon by the student and instructor and approved by the Chair of the Department. Arrangements must be made with the instructor and Chair before registering for this course.

    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor and department chair; Junior or Senior status is required.

Anthropology

  
  • ANTH 0101 - Introduction to Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    This course is a survey introduction to all of the major fields of anthropology and human adaptation, cultural learning, and endeavor. Students will learn that anthropology and the study of cultural knowledge is inherently holistic, comparative, and interdisciplinary. In this course we use the broad and current definition of the discipline as a five field program of study that recognizes global development and post-colonial economic and political forces at work in the world today. The five fields that students will be introduced to in their introductory coursework and can develop beyond the requirements include: 1) cultural anthropology, 2) archaeology, 3) biological/medical anthropology, 4) linguistics, and 5) applied anthropology. There is no pre-requisite to this course; first-year students are encouraged to take this course.

  
  • ANTH 0200 - Methods of Ethnography from 1900-Present


    Credits: 3

    This course will create a historical and cultural context for understanding the basic qualitative research in anthropology since 1900, with a focus on American monographs (with examples from British, French, and German works and ethnographic styles and formats).

  
  • ANTH 0201 - Cultural Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    Crosslisted: SOCI 0200 .

    An overview of cultural anthropology as a discipline and to the concepts and techniques essential for understanding different cultures, both contemporary and past. Includes analysis of universal aspects of human experience, including the family, economic, political, religious, artistic, and linguistic systems, examined in a cross-cultural perspective. A brief examination of hunters and gatherers, tribal and peasant peoples, among others and an introduction to the dynamics of cultural contact, cultural evolution, and change.

  
  • ANTH 0217 - Culture and Personality


    Credits: 3

    Crosslisted: EGST 0217 .

    An introduction to a variety of cultures from the perspective of the “culture and personality” school of cultural anthropology often referred to as the Columbia School. These anthropologists, starting with Boas, Mead, Benedict, Sapir and others, developed a variety of skills involving the study of culture and language, gender, emotion/psychology, and visual and behavioral cues to study the personalities that cultures encourage and/or stigmatize. This course traces these anthropological insights in a series of studies from early models of study to exploring present day “culture and personality” ethnographic research which focus on culture’s role in identity and power construction. This course addresses the complicated relationship that anthropologists have had as “natives” of the colonizing country who are in many cases attempting to advocate for the indigenous “other” they are studying.

  
  • ANTH 0250 - Special Topics in Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    An intermediate treatment of a specialized area within Anthropology.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101 .
  
  • ANTH 0260 - Introduction to Medical Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    Crosslisted: EGST 0260 .

    This course is a case-study introduction to medical anthropology as practiced today. We will study how a variety of non-Western cultures interpret and treat what we in the West think of as universal health concerns such as birth, sickness, death and dying, and mental illness. We will study how healing and the body can be understood in a variety of cultural ways, in different worldviews, languages, and symbol systems that are the context for often very complex health care and prevention models. Students will learn how a variety of different practitioners and health specialists across the globe such as midwives, “medicine” people, shaman, religious practitioners, and our own medically licensed doctors and nurses symbolize and treat illness to improve health and vitality.

    Prerequisites: EGST 0101 EGST 0102 , or ANTH 0101 .
  
  • ANTH 0282 - Introduction to Archeology


    Credits: 3

    Crosslisted: HIST 0253 .

    A basic introduction to the history, methods, practices, and major theories that have shaped and continue to shape the field of archeology. The primary geographical focus is on the archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean world (particularly but not limited to Egyptian, Biblical, Greek, Roman, and underwater archaeology). The course also covers exemplary sites and discoveries throughout the world. Topics such as the politics of archaeology, legal issues, preservation, antiquities theft, and forgeries/fraud are also addressed. Upon completion, students should be knowledgeable in the basic methods and issues of archaeology applicable to most regions and time periods and be prepared to attend a field school or join an expedition.

  
  • ANTH 0313 - Chinese Culture and Society


    Credits: 3

    This course explores the basics of Chinese society and culture. It sets out to decode the mystery of the Chinese civilization, its past, its present, and its possible future. It examines how Chinese society’s basic characteristics have developed as a result of the interactions of historical, geographic, economic, philosophical, political, and religious factors. This course also considers how these factors are reflected in the contemporary dynamics of Chinese society and culture. The thematic overview of the course focuses on the development of a civilization, that is, how it has developed through the centuries and how it reveals itself in its contemporary form.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101 , POLS 0110 , or SOCI 0101 .
  
  • ANTH 0320 - Political Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    Using culture as a lens, this course focuses on political development. Specifically using anthropological tools, we will focus on the development and impact of the cultural origins on modern political processes and its institutions, both Western and non-Western; the meaning and courses of political identity in complex contemporary societies; and the prospects for democracy and Western-style political institutionalization among, and within, the world’s diverse civilizations.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101 .
  
  • ANTH 0350 - Special Topics in Anthropology


    Credits: 3

    An advanced in-depth treatment of a limited and/or specialized area within Anthropology.

    Prerequisites: ANTH 0101 .

Art Education

  
  • ART 0322 - Art Education Curriculum


    Credits: 3

    Curriculum development at either the elementary and secondary level. This course includes visits to area schools for the purpose of observations and art curriculum study. A 30-hour field experience is required.

  
  • ART 0323 - Introduction to Art Education


    Credits: 3

    A pre-practicum experience providing students with a working knowledge of the various levels within the public school structure. This experience will be translated into a choice of licensure level. A 30-hour field experience is required.

  
  • ART 0324 - Art Methods and Materials


    Credits: 3

    The methods, principles, and materials of Art Education. Areas included are stages of development, goals of Art Education, personal goals for teaching art, lesson planning and organization, and newer media in Art Education. This course includes a related pre-practicum experience. A 30-hour field experience is required.

  
  • ART 0326 - Practicum Seminar in Art Education


    Credits: 3

    The purpose of this course is to have students participating in the practicum (art teaching) share related student teaching problems and successes. Inter-relations between student teachers and pupils will be a prime focus.

  
  • ART 0331 - Practicum (Teaching Art, PreK-8)


    Credits: 12

    Teaching experience within a setting appropriate for the art licensure level chosen by the student.

  
  • ART 0351 - Practicum (Teaching Art, 5-12)


    Credits: 12

    Teaching experience within a setting appropriate for the art licensure level chosen by the student.


General Art

  
  • ART 0101 - First-Year Seminar


    Credits: 1

    This seminar art course will provide first-year art students an introduction to the department, its major, its concentrations, and programs and clubs. In addition, the class introduces students to the theory, concepts, and practice of inquiry into the visual arts. Students will examine the process of creation in the visual arts along with the critical thinking, literacy and communication skills required for the study and discipline of art.

  
  • ART 0109 - Writing for Art and the Artist


    Credits: 3

    This course is an exercise in writing about visual arts. The course is not about writing or about art, but rather will explore the intricacies of writing in the field of visual arts. Students will learn how to utilize descriptive language, persuasive writing, practical research, critique, analyzing, and interpretation across all mediums, with a special focus on self-promotion through various forms of media.

    Pre/co-requisite: ENGL 0204 .
  
  • ART 0224 - User Experience/User Interface Design


    Credits: 3

    Branding, spot color conversion, typography, animation, product mock-ups, and user interaction/experience are the hallmarks of what a modern artist or designer must know to compete in an age of digital communication. This course aims to present a ground-up approach, starting with basic technologies and integrating known art studio theory into web and user interface design. The class begins with understanding basic functions, design (operational and artistic), user journeys and flows, and operating systems of webpages. It shifts to wireframing and prototyping, hand-coding, and a final presentation of an UX/UI (user experience/user interface) driven webpage.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108 ART 0206 , and ART 0209 
  
  • ART 0299 - Selected Topics in Art


    Credits: 3

    An advanced course that explores a specialized topic in the discipline. Selected Topics courses may count toward one or more of the Art concentration requirements depending upon the particular course content. Students may take this course more than once.

  
  • ART 0399 - Independent Study


    Credits: 1-12

    Course work in Art History, Art Studio, and Art Education. This course is by arrangement only.


Graphic Design

  
  • ART 0108 - Computer Graphics for Art Applications I


    Credits: 3

    This introductory computer graphics course allows the student to explore the creative, visual and artistic possibilities which the microcomputer offers. Class work and lab time on the computer are supplemented with lectures on computer generated art and its potential. Lectures assume no previous knowledge of computers or programming. Students create a variety of projects in the form of slides, animations, and printouts.

  
  • ART 0121 - Electronic Design Workshop: Adobe Illustrator


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop is designed to provide greater student fluency in advanced graphic design software utilizing Adobe Illustrator, a computer-assisted illustration program.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0122 - Electronic Design Workshop: Adobe Photoshop


    Credits: 1

    This is a specialized workshop on learning digital processing, retouching and image manipulation techniques, through hands on experience. Adobe Photoshop software will be utilized in depth for this experience.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0123 - Electronic Design Workshop: Quark Express


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop is designed to provide greater student fluency in advanced graphic design software utilizing Quark Express page composition and layout software.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0124 - Electronic Design Workshop: Web Page Design on the Macintosh


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop is designed to provide greater student fluency in advanced graphic design software for Web Page Design on the Macintosh.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0125 - Electronic Design Workshop: Specialty Software


    Credits: 1

    This course integrates specialty programs such as Bryce, Kai’s Power Tools, Kai’s Power Goo, Morph, Fractal Poser and more to round out a computer artist’s tools and electronic portfolio.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0126 - Electronic Design Workshop: Computer 3-D Design


    Credits: 1

    This course provides an introduction to 3-D software programs and their application to such areas as computer animation.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0127 - Electronic Design Workshop: Fractal Painter


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop is designed to provide student fluency in advanced graphic design software utilizing Fractal Painter, an advanced, versatile painting program.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0128 - Electronic Design Workshop: Pre-Press and Printing


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop is designed to provide greater student fluency in advanced graphic design software for Pre-Press and Printing.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0129 - Electronic Design Workshop: Learning to Use Your Macintosh


    Credits: 1

    This specialized workshop on learning to use the Macintosh computer more effectively provides students the opportunity to learn, through hands-on experience, the essentials and fundamental procedures used in electronic design applications on a Macintosh platform. Systems management and utility software principles will be presented.

  
  • ART 0131 - Electronic Design Workshop: Multimedia


    Credits: 1

    This course introduces multimedia concepts available on a Macintosh platform. Special emphasis is placed on design aesthetics in multimedia production.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or ART 0129 .
  
  • ART 0210 - Typography I


    Credits: 3

    The communicative and aesthetic aspects of type faces are the focus for this course. Procedures in type specifications for catalogs, books and commercial advertisements are introduced. Assignments will involve using type as the primary element of design. The utilization of electronic publication equipment and software will be stressed.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  and ART 0206 .
  
  • ART 0212 - Computer Graphics for Art Applications II


    Credits: 3

    This course is designed to be a sequel to the first semester for computer graphics. The format is slide lectures, classroom, and studio lab time. As in the first semester of computer graphics, students have a hands-on experience with various microcomputers. Students also create images via the computer with programming and graphics software utilization in 2-D and 3-D designing.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0228 - Graphic Design I


    Credits: 3

    Introduces basic publication design utilizing industry standard software. Basic design skills for small ads and brochures as well as newsletter grid design in a digital environment, output and offset printing will be emphasized. Students will learn the history of graphic design, study typography, and the basics of design in different cultures to help them understand the creative process. Students evaluate works of art and leave with a wide range of art projects in order to understand the medium of digital publication. No prior computer experience necessary.

    (formerly ART 0328)
  
  • ART 0344 - Graphic Design II


    Credits: 3

    This studio course will focus on layout, typography, composition, color, printing, and graphic design history. Using these technical and theoretical aspects of graphic design, students will learn to take provided materials and hierarchically arrange them for better visual communication. The class projects will allow students to learn a multitude of methods from color theory to image formatting. The course will combine tactile and digital fundamentals of graphic design principles for the completion of print and digital deliverables in various forms.

    Prerequisites: ART 0104   and ART 0228  
  
  • ART 0356 - Multimedia for Artist and Designers


    Credits: 3

    Students will apply traditional graphic design techniques and media (i.e. text, graphics, photography) as well as additional considerations for video, animation, interactivity, sound, and music to produce interactive multimedia environments.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  and ART 0212 , or three 1-credit workshops in Graphic Design.
  
  • ART 0362 - Typography II


    Credits: 3

    This advanced course focuses on the structural form of typography incorporating historical knowledge and hand skills learned in ART 0210 . Students will expand their experimentation into handwritten forms, structural 3D typography, and typographic form for exhibition. This course embraces iteration as a process, as students prepare typographic work for presentation. The focus of this course takes the basic precepts of design (color, balance, composition, and communication), and challenges the students to solve complex visual problems. We will explore typography through anatomy, classification, typesetting, and their uses in advanced project work. An intermediate understanding of digital design software (Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign) is required to successfully complete each phase of the weekly projects, An intermediate to advanced comprehension of typography is needed for this course. An understanding of type history and the use of type rules in publishing is necessary.

    Prerequisites: ART 0210 
  
  • ART 0363 - Graphic Design III


    Credits: 3

    Graphic Design III continues the study of the graphic communicative forms used in the advertising media. Emphasis is on analyzing assigned problems and choosing appropriate media for final visual presentation.

    Prerequisites: ART 0344 
  
  • ART 0380 - Graphic Design Capstone


    Credits: 3

    This course prepares students to engage in the culmination of their graphic design pedagogy, and devise one design-related campaign of their own conception. Students are required to research and develop a project, which entails a creative brief, target demographics, process sketch books, and finished comps for presentation. Course materials will cover presentation of materials for potential employers, how to seek employment in the graphic arts, and how to create an online presence of their work.

    Prerequisites: ART 0344 .

Art History

  
  • ART 0106 - Art Survey: Prehistoric to Middle Ages


    Credits: 3

    Major representative works of western art and architecture from prehistoric times through the middle ages will be presented from a critical and historical viewpoint. The student will be introduced to the aesthetic and philosophical principles that underlie all art as well as to the relationship between the visual arts and the culture and society which produced them.

  
  • ART 0107 - Art Survey: Renaissance to Present


    Credits: 3

    The study of western art and architecture from the Renaissance to the present will be presented under the same format as ART 0106 .

  
  • ART 0230 - Politics of Art


    Credits: 3

    Focusing mainly on contemporary visual art and recent controversies, this course will explore a variety of topics where politics and art mix such as questions of repatriation of ancient art and generally where art belongs, museums practices, copyright, censorship and public funding, as well as gender, race and LGBTQ issues. This course will be a mix of lecture and discussion with an emphasis on student-directed research.

  
  • ART 0235 - Latin American Art


    Credits: 3

    This course provides a thematic survey of the art of Latin America of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with a focus on Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, and the Caribbean. An emphasis will be placed on the forces of nationalism and modernism as they relate to the creation of artistic styles, the interaction of high art and popular culture, and expressions of identity for local and international audiences.

  
  • ART 0241 - African Art: Ritual, Performance, and Theatre


    Credits: 3

    This course seeks to rethink the idea of traditional objects from the African continent as “art,” as defined in Western terms, and builds the argument that such objects are often connected to social theatre in the communities they represent. This course spans the continent of Africa, but also investigates black diaspora settlements around the world, to redefine our Western understanding of ritual and performance. Here, we will discover that “ritual” is not always cosmic or spiritual, but sometimes involves the intimate activity of body decoration, or hair-styling; that “performances” are a daily, central aspect of most black communities; that distinctly theatric elements of social performance are not only a part of masquerades, but also seen in traditional wrestling matches (and body design), ritual seclusion and fattening, and religious (or funerary) processions. This course is especially invested in addressing prevalent themes of performance in the African Diaspora (especially in the African-American culture), and understanding the many connections between diaspora performance and theatre to the visual arts of Africa.

  
  • ART 0316 - History of American Art


    Credits: 3

    A study of the painting, architecture and practical arts in the United States from the period after colonial times to the present.

  
  • ART 0317 - Classical Art


    Credits: 3

    The chief artistic accomplishments of ancient Greece and Rome. Extensive study into the realm of Greek and roman architecture, classical sculpture, building and portraiture, as well as the minor arts.

  
  • ART 0318 - Flemish Art


    Credits: 3

    Study of Netherlandish paintings of the 14th- through 16th-century works of art, from Jean Pucelle to Brueghel.

  
  • ART 0319 - Renaissance Art


    Credits: 3

    A study of the major artistic achievements of the Italian Renaissance from Giotto to Michelangelo with special emphasis on painting and sculpture.

  
  • ART 0321 - Contemporary Artists and Contemporary Art


    Credits: 3

    Students will be introduced to the works and ideas of modern contemporary American artists since 1950 with reference to the influence of selected European modern artists. Museum trips are included.

  
  • ART 0327 - History of Graphic Design


    Credits: 3

    This course will trace the history of graphic design from the invention of writing and alphabets through the origins of printing and typography, and various movements such as Victorian Art Nouveau, Post Modern, and the Computer Graphic revolution.

  
  • ART 0332 - The Art History of The Black Body


    Credits: 3

    This course seeks to address areas of significant visual history that are largely left unearthed within the discipline of Art History: namely, the visual politics surrounding the black body in Western art and representation. Our study reaches into the murky history of black representation during the period of “European Enlightenment,” but also engages the intersections of the biological and social sciences with anthropological studies during the colonial era, which left the African continent divided up as property of various European entities, but also placed the black body in an uncomfortable state of “investigation”⁠-a state that winds up defining the survivors of the Atlantic Slave Trade into the American cultural space.

    From the famous “scientific” slave daguerreotypes of Harvard’s own Louis Agassiz, to children’s literature depicting black kids being devoured by large animals, to the horrific recordings of torture, mutilations, and slayings of black people into postcards for the marketplace, with the assistance of the students, this course seeks to arrive at a set of unique and useful questions about Europe’s and America’s historic visual history and representations of the black body.

  
  • ART 0333 - Early Twentieth Century Art


    Credits: 3

    A study of major movements in the art of the first half of the 20th century. The course will examine Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, and abstract art.

  
  • ART 0334 - Nineteenth Century Art in Europe


    Credits: 3

    A study of European painting and sculpture from the Romantic-Classical styles of David and Delacroix through the Post-Impressionism of Paul Gauguin.

  
  • ART 0341 - 17th Century Art


    Credits: 3

    A study of the formation and evolution of the Baroque movement in European architecture, sculpture, and painting. Emphasis will be given to the individual styles and artistic ideas, as shown in works and writings of selected major artists of the 17th century.

  
  • ART 0345 - Criticism


    Credits: 3

    Classical and contemporary theories of art with emphasis on concepts involved in the interpretation, evaluation, and criticism of works of art.

    Prerequisites: ART 0106  and ART 0107  or equivalent.
  
  • ART 0347 - Non-Western Tradition in Modern European and American Art


    Credits: 3

    A study of selected problems including: the meaning of Japanese color prints in development of Impressionism and Post-impressionism; Modern Primitivism and its relation to the African sculpture and the art of primitive peoples; and the significance of Japanese traditional architectural concept for Modern Japanese, European, and American architecture. Emphasis will be placed on the new relation between form and space developed under the condition of the crisis of the traditional western three-dimensional system of representation.

  
  • ART 0350 - Contemporary Art and Contemporary Beholder


    Credits: 3

    This seminar will examine the fundamental characteristic of Modern Art, i.e., its non-realistic nature. Students will study why it has proved difficult for viewers to accept and critics to explain that works of Modern Art are not descriptions or illusions of actuality. Main trends of Modern Art, such as Cubism, Abstractionism, and Abstract Expressionism will be investigated. The works of Picasso, Kandinsky, Malevich, Mondrian and others will be analyzed in relation to traditional Western European Art and the validity of its traditional criteria.

  
  • ART 0354 - Women Artists in the Western World


    Credits: 3

    This course will focus on the significant achievement of women in the arts, presented within a historical and cultural background. It is designed to integrate and redefine women’s roles in Western Art History, paying particular attention to specific examples from the 17th century to the modern era.

  
  • ART 0357 - Islamic Art


    Credits: 3

    This course focuses on art created by or for Islamic people, and/or produced in historically Muslim regions. An emphasis will be placed on understanding the cultural, political, and religious significance of the works. Topics may include architecture, painting, calligraphy, decorative arts, and film.

  
  • ART 0358 - African American Art


    Credits: 3

    This course serves as an introduction to the historical and social forces that shaped the works of artists of African ancestry. The course will examine the roots, themes, styles, content, aesthetics, and ideological dimensions of African American art, as well as the extent to which the art has embodied the spirit of the black experience. Topics may include folk art and slavery, art after emancipation, the Harlem Renaissance, and art and the Civil Rights Movement.

  
  • ART 0359 - World of Prints and Printmaking


    Credits: 3

    This course will explore the unique fine art of prints and printmaking from the 1400’s to contemporary prints of today. Students will see how prints are made by videos and diagrams, and will view prints electronically or in local museums’ collections to understand the extensive history of printmaking.


Art Internships

  
  • ART 0336 - Animation Internship


    Credits: 3

    The Animation Internship Program prepares students for work in the Animation, Illustration, and/or Multimedia fields of the visual arts. The internship can be a placement within an on-campus department that demonstrates a motion graphics or animation need, or an off-campus placement with an animator, illustrator, or multimedia production firm. This class can be taken twice.

    Prerequisites: ART 0265 ART 0325 , 3.0 GPA in the Art major, 3.0 GPA in the Animation concentration, a 2.8 overall Westfield GPA, and Junior standing. Application must be approved by the Art Department Chairperson, Internship Coordinator, and Westfield State Career Center.
  
  • ART 0337 - Graphic Design Internship


    Credits: 3

    The Graphic Design Internship program prepares students for work in the Graphic Design, Web Design, and/or Multimedia fields of visual arts. The internship can be a placement in a department on-campus that has projects for a graphic design intern or an off-campus placement at an advertising/marketing agency or graphic design firm.

    Prerequisites: ART 0228 , ART 0210 , 3.0 GPA in the Art major, 3.0 GPA in the Graphic Design Concentration, 2.8 overall Westfield GPA, and Junior standing. Application must be approved by the Art Department Chairperson, Internship Coordinator, and Westfield State Career Center.
  
  • ART 0340 - Art Internship


    Credits: 3 - 15

    The Art Internship prepares students for work in their chosen field of visual arts study. This internship prepares the student for daily worksite procedures and experiencing projects from development through completion in the many fields of the visual arts that assists in later job placements. This class can be taken twice.

    Prerequisites: Completion of four 0200-level Art Studio classes from the Art major, 3.0 GPA in the Art major, 2.8 overall Westfield GPA, and Junior standing. Application must be approved by the Art Department Chairperson, Internship Coordinator, and Westfield State Career Center.
  
  • ART 0342 - Illustration Internship


    Credits: 3

    The Illustration Internship prepares students for work in the Illustration, Animation, and/or Graphic Design fields of the visual arts. The internship can be a placement in a department on-campus that has projects for an illustration intern or an off-campus placement with an Illustrator or Graphic Design firm. This class can be taken twice.

    Prerequisites: ART 0225 ART 0229 , a 3.0 GPA in the Art major, 3.0 GPA in the Illustration concentration, a 2.8 overall Westfield GPA, and Junior standing. Application must be approved by the Art Department Chairperson, Internship Coordinator, and the Westfield State Career Center.

     


Art Studio

  
  • ART 0100 - Materials and Safeguards in Art


    Credits: 1

    This course is designed to outline the basic art media and materials used in studio art. Emphasis is placed on safeguards in utilizing art materials.

  
  • ART 0103 - Drawing I


    Credits: 3

    This course presents the study of structure in form and space through the creation of three-dimensional illusions on two-dimensional surfaces. Line, texture, value, and shape are introduced in addition to linear and atmospheric perspective, life drawing, and various media.

  
  • ART 0104 - Design Fundamentals


    Credits: 3

    This course explores the interaction of universal visual design elements, concepts, and media. Visual thinking through problem-solving exercises utilizing line, shape, form, texture, tone, color and space as well as the concepts of focal point, unity, variety, direction/movement, motif/pattern, and balance in a progressively complex format insures the understanding of compositional structures. The expressive possibilities of a variety of materials are also explored.

  
  • ART 0105 - Three-Dimensional Design


    Credits: 3

    This course will address the basic fundamentals of three-dimensional design including mass, volume, line, space, surface, and texture with basic materials. Students will learn a shared vocabulary of visual and verbal concepts as tools to design and construct three-dimensional objects. These concepts and theories will be investigated through projects that explore visual problem-solving exercises for uses in two-dimensional and three-dimensional art. Classes will be a combination of studio, lecture, and critique/discussion sessions.

  
  • ART 0201 - Printmaking I


    Credits: 3

    The basic techniques in intaglio and relief printmaking will be explored. The intaglio procedures of line etching, aquatint, sugarlift, and soft ground will be introduced. Collographs (a multimedia technique) and woodcuts (a relief printing process) will also be utilized. Students will create a series of prints in the various techniques and will develop an awareness of the visual and technical aspects of an original print.

    Prerequisites: ART 0103  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0203 - Works on/of Paper


    Credits: 3

    The intent of this course is to encourage students to develop skill in various techniques and materials applicable to a paper support or ground. This course is for both the Fine Arts major and those interested in furthering their illustration techniques. Working in and with paper will be examined through various aqueous media, collage, pastel and mixed media.

    Prerequisites: ART 0216  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0204 - Ceramics I


    Credits: 3

    This course is an introduction to methods and strategies for using ceramics as a sculptural medium. The course provides students with the basic knowledge of the process, vocabulary, and techniques involved in all the steps of hand-building, glazing, and firing. All clay-building techniques including pinch, slab, coil, slip casting, and wheel and hand throwing will be explored in the class.

    Formerly titled: Pottery 1
  
  • ART 0205 - Sculpture I


    Credits: 3

    This course provides an elementary consideration of sculpture through form and composition and includes studies in clay and plaster. There is some work from the human figure. Techniques include mature constructions, direct building in plaster, and casting into plaster and other materials.

  
  • ART 0207 - Watercolor


    Credits: 3

    This course will emphasize the visual dynamics of the watercolor medium: its transparency and ability to interact directly with the paper (ground) to produce colors, textures, and forms. Through a series of exercises, the student will have an opportunity to develop skills and master the techniques of the medium.

    Prerequisites: ART 0311 .
  
  • ART 0209 - Color Theory and Practice


    Credits: 3

    The study of interaction of color in theory and practice through experimentation with various color media.

  
  • ART 0214 - Drawing II


    Credits: 3

    This course is a continuation of ART 0103 . The focus is on the individual’s needs as they develop a basic understanding of drawing. Emphasis is placed on life drawing in various media.

    Prerequisites: ART 0103 .
  
  • ART 0215 - Introduction to Photography


    Credits: 3

    Crosslisted: COMM 0202 .

    Examines techniques and applications of photography. Areas of study include camera operation, film selection, lenses, filters, lighting, composition, and digital monochrome and color image processing and manipulation. The history of the medium and its communicative properties also are discussed.

  
  • ART 0216 - Painting I


    Credits: 3

    This course acquaints the student with the fundamental aspects of painting such as canvas preparation, preliminary drawing, color theory, and basic painting techniques. Emphasis is placed on understanding the tools, materials, concepts, and theories of painting.

    Prerequisites: ART 0103 .
    (formerly ART 0102)
  
  • ART 0225 - Animation Foundations


    Credits: 3

    This studio course is an introduction to the foundations of animation. The course explores the creative, visual and artistic possibilities of basic animation principals through problem solving based projects and historical animations. Course content will include formats of and concepts on animations such as flip-books, cell animation, story-boarding, digital still, story structure, sequence, time movement, and rendering of images.

    Prerequisites: ART 0108  and ART 0103 .
  
  • ART 0229 - Illustration I


    Credits: 3

    Illustration is a studio course that introduces the many facets of the illustration field. The class introduces the illustration basics, which includes editorial interpretation, compositional fundamentals, media, color, and stylization. This course will focus establishing creative solutions to visual problems. The process of sketching and its function in the illustrative process will be explored. The media used for the class projects will not be computer generated but will be done using traditional two-dimensional materials. Students will also explore methods of social media interaction, and posting projects on the web. Appropriate professional work-flow habits will be stressed with each project of the class.

    Prerequisites: ART 0103 ART 0214 , and ART 0216 .
  
  • ART 0265 - Animation II


    Credits: 3

    This studio course will transition away from traditional animation to work created with open source and licensed software in animation and computer graphics. Students will learn comprehension of digital software through lesson explorations and projects. Formats of story-boarding, character development, story structure, sequence, and motion will be expanded upon in this course. Proper workflow habits will be established to complete short animated films, and the use of a graphics tablet will be required. Concepts staging, visual hierarchy, the language of moving images, and audio will be understood in relation to current and historical animation. Students will also explore methods of social media interaction, and posting projects on the web.

    Prerequisites: ART 0225 .
  
  • ART 0270 - Gallery Management


    Credits: 3

    This course introduces all aspects of the workings of an art gallery. Students will be involved in curating and marketing art shows and auctions through a community and on-campus promotion.

  
  • ART 0275 - Marketing Your Art Work


    Credits: 3

    This course focuses on how artists market their work and reach audiences through different methods of exposure. Students will visit the Westfield State Art Gallery and meet with exhibiting artists. The course will culminate with a show created and promoted by students.

  
  • ART 0281 - Wheel Throwing


    Credits: 3

    An extensive introduction to working to the potter’s wheel as a tool for clay form-making. Students learn the basic techniques of centering, opening and raising the walls of pots. Once familiar with these techniques, students learn how to create such functional objects as individuals and sets of plates, bowls, and mugs along with teapots and other lidded vessels. The wheel is also considered as a tool for making nonfunctional works that are sculptural works. While being exposed to a full range of historical and contemporary pottery, students develop a personal sense of material, form, and design along with methods of glazing and firing.

    Prerequisites: ART 0204  or permission of instructor.
  
  • ART 0302 - Watercolor II


    Credits: 3

    A continuance of ART 0207  with mixed media, including gouache.

    Prerequisites: ART 0207 .
  
  • ART 0303 - Printmaking II


    Credits: 3

    A studio course which will further explore and develop the techniques of intaglio, relief, stencil and/or planographic printmaking. The emphasis will be on utilizing the various techniques introduced in ART 0201  and developing a deeper understanding of the visual and technical aspects of an original print. The use of color in the media of concentration will be explored.

    Prerequisites: ART 0201 .
 

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