Spring 2021
LS 25 001 - LEC 001
Thinking Through Art and Design @Berkeley
Thinking Through Art and Design@Berkeley: Time-based Media Art
Shannon Jackson
Jan 19, 2021 - May 07, 2021
Tu, Th
12:00 pm - 01:59 pm
Internet/Online
Class #:22520
Units: 3
Instruction Mode:
Pending Review
Offered through
Undergraduate Interdisciplinary Studies
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
46
Enrolled: 54
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 100
Waitlist Max: 20
No Reserved Seats
Hours & Workload
3 to 4 hours of instructor presentation of course materials per week, 5 hours of outside work hours per week, and 1 hours of the exchange of opinions or questions on course material per week.
Final Exam
THU, MAY 13TH
03:00 pm - 06:00 pm
Other classes by Shannon Jackson
Course Catalog Description
This course introduces students to key vocabularies, forms, and histories from the many arts and design disciplines represented at UC Berkeley. It is conceived each year around a central theme that responds to significant works and events on the campus, providing an introduction to the many art and design resources available to students on campus. Students will compare practices from across the fields of visual art, film, dance, theater, music, architecture, graphic design, new media, and creative writing, and explore how different artists respond formally to the central themes of the course, considering how similar questions and arguments are differently addressed in visual, material, embodied, sonic, spatial, and linguistic forms.
Class Description
This course introduces students to key vocabularies, forms, and histories from the many arts and design disciplines represented at UC Berkeley. It is conceived each year around a central theme that responds to significant works and events on the campus, providing an introduction to the many art and design resources available to students locally.
The spring course explores the history and future of time-based media art for students of all disciplines. Developed from the mixed media experiments of the 1960s through to new digital and virtual aesthetics of our current moment, time-based media art offers an opportunity to explore cross-pollination amongst many art forms—including cinema, photography, painting, sculpture, dance, theater, performance art, design, and even in literature. In addition to exploring these experiments in form, he course will introduce students to experiments in content, considering how media artists creatively address the pressing issues of our time, from climate change and globalization, to gender identity, racial inequality, and scientific and technological transformations. The course will be offered in Spring 2021 in conjunction with Berkeley Arts + Design’s highly successful public lecture series A+D Thursdays at BAMPFA. Through a series of lectures from leading media artists, curators, and thinkers, this course will use the most significant time-based media art of the last fifty years to address how art and technology intersect with the key social, aesthetic and educational questions of our culture.
This course is a no-experience-assumed immersion in innovation, creativity and critique in media art. Students in the course will be equipped not only to understand the work of individual artists, but also to connect their ideas and intentions to the broader political, social, technological and artistic contexts in which they intervene. Students will consider guiding questions such as: How do these artists challenge us to think differently about visual art and screen culture? How can we use new media artists to better understand our hyper-mediated environment? How and why have artists used different forms of visual media? What are the unique technological and economic challenges of preserving and disseminating this sort of art? What is the future of media art, and what can it tell us about the future of media more broadly?
Class Notes
Class will be taught remotely and synchronous.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Requirements class fulfills
Meets Arts & Literature, L&S Breadth
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
No Reserved Seats
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials