Exchanges between painting and drawing, meditations on materiality and wider aesthetic questions are but a few of the foundations for a course that fosters an idea of painting and drawing as fields of experience made of autonomous research and an awareness of the context, adventurous formal explorations and fruitful dialogues.
Moving from specific interrogatives raised by each student’s initial output, lessons advance through the presentation of opposite stances, antithetical notions and recent debates that typify today’s multifaceted panorama. Topics include: painting as image and object; process vs. storytelling; seriality as explorative tool; influence and appropriation; medium-specificity and the expanded field; painting and drawing as ghostly media; painting/drawing and the digital. Each aspect is explored and discussed through seminars, assignments and group critiques in which students are encouraged to take ownership of their own positions within current narratives and critical frameworks, reflecting on and testing the limits and possibilities of their own expressiveness.
For Hons student the objective is to sustain an actual studio routine and plan a solo show of their work. The final body of work will be therefore aimed at a cohesive presentation. The portfolio will ideally witness a variety of experimentations and approaches demonstrating an understanding of current visual culture and a personal response to its historical, conceptual and material resources. Students are expected to improve communication skills in debates, group crits and individual tutorials; as well as to write statements about their own practice and a short text on a topic emerged during lessons.
*Technical workshops and tutorials will be arranged and given according to students’ interests.
**Students buy their materials according to the exigencies of their work. A list of suppliers will be provided at the beginning.
***Visits to relevant shows (with or without entry cost) will be encouraged or organized.
Texts
Excerpts from books and articles will be provided throughout the semester. Individual texts will be given to students according to their interests.
Essential Bibliography:
Bell, J., What is Painting? Representation and Mondern Art, London: Thames&Hudson 1999
Davidson, M., Contemporary Drawing: Key Concepts and Techniques, Watson-Guptill
Dexter, E., Vitamin D, London: Phaidon Press 2005
Elkins, J., What Painting Is, New York: Routledge 2000
James, M. Painting per se, New York: Cooper Union 2002
Schwabsky, B., The Observer Effect: On Contemporary Painting, Sternberg Press, 2019