Landscape: The Garden

General

Course Long Title

Landscape: The Garden

Subject Code

APHM

Course Number

440G

Department(s)

Academic Level

UG - Undergraduate

Description

Open to Art School BFA2 and above. This course
may be open to students at other year levels, and
in other Schools, by Permission of Instructor.
Practice Courses within the Photography and Media
program focus on making work and developing the
shape of students' practices. While each course
under this category may offer a particular theme
or subject matter, its primary organization and
outcomes will center around making. This category
will include, but not be limited to, modes of
production fundamental to photographic and
media-based practice, including film-based and
digital photography, video and moving image
production, sound production, performance and
book-making, and will sometimes include a focus
on the primary genres and categories of
production common to media and photography.

The English word "paradise" comes from an ancient
Persian word for garden and from that time the
Persians have been know as the creators of the
closed gardens of the arid eco-cultures of the
middle east. Imported to Europe through Moorish
Spain the concept of the walled garden as a
trans-dimensional slice out of the world of the
imagination transformed over the centuries. The
relationship of nature and art is a historically
realized into these utopian, privileged and often
sacred sites. In the second of a two semester
investigation into the Landscape, we will examine
the historical models and their relation to
contemporary art practices utilize multiple or
disrupted points of view in contrast to the
paradigm of a universalized and natural.
Rehearsed against the backdrop of global
politics, environmentalism, or the economics of
food distribution, we will look at the garden as
a theatrical backdrop that shapes a culturally
determined social space.

Registration Restrictions

RGART - Art School Only