Projects in Photography: Fall 2012. A Private University in the Public Service



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New York University A Private University in the Public Service Class Title Projects in Photography: Art in Translation Listed as ART-UE 9380 4 Points Instructor Contact Name: Jian-Jun Zhang Information Email: jjz1@nyu.edu Phone: 159.219.70005 Office Hours: 12:00-1:00 PM Class Time 1:00-4:00 PM Course Description Photography is a rubbing of the world. Talbot, the English inventor in 1836, thought of photography as a drawing which makes itself. This class provides an introduction to the techniques of photography and ink impression as dual lenses to study contemporary Chinese society. Shanghai s sprawling metropolis and interspersing antiquity offer a unique opportunity to document a foreign and fast-changing society. As a modern tool, photography has been the traditional medium that captures moment-to-moment insights, and will be heavily studied as an art form. Less known as a documentary tool, but no less powerful than photography, is the technique of ink impression. This traditional Chinese art form provides a new way of capturing the city by using Chinese ink to create impressions of solid objects. In the studio, students are required to critique the works of peers, works of their own, and images sourced from current exhibitions of Chinese contemporary photography. Outside the studio, the group will examine major historical movements in contemporary photography. The works of iconic photographers who explored the city are selected to provide framework and vocabulary to articulate students own photographic investigations. Students will take on personal projects using photography, ink impression, or a combination of both media. Course Objectives Grading Components Grading Expectations This unit is subject to adjustments depending on the availability of guest speakers and other factors. Obtain an understanding of the aesthetics and basic technical and theoretical processes that are involved in photography and ink impression. Class Discussion and Participation: 20% Assignments: 40% Final Project: 40% A: Excellent performance showing a thorough knowledge and understanding of the topics of the course; all work includes clear, logical explanations,

Required Activities Suggested Activities Instructor Introduction Attendance Policy insight, and original thought and reasoning. B: Good performance with general knowledge and understanding of the topics; all work includes general analysis and coherent explanations showing some independent reasoning, reading and research. C: Satisfactory performance with some broad explanation and reasoning; the work will typically demonstrate an understanding of the course on a basic level. D: Passable performance showing a general and superficial understanding of the course s topics; work lacks satisfactory insight, analysis or reasoned explanations. F: Unsatisfactory performance in all assessed criteria. Field trips conducted during class times, and well as gallery & museum visits and other field trips out of class as required. Optional and suggested trips and events will be discussed throughout the semester. Jian-Jun Zhang is an artist that lives and works in both New York and Shanghai, and has been teaching art at NYU since 1997. He exhibits worldwide, with recent museum shows in the United States, Europe, Beijing and Shanghai. Zhang utilizes his experience living in Chinese and Western cultures to create multimedia artwork that integrates this unique outlook. His art class has the ability to negotiate cultural differences and therefore creates a pan-global outcome. He has been an Assistant Director & Head of the Curatorial Department of the Shanghai Art Museum, and participated in the International Curatorial Program at MoMA in NY. has a strict policy about course attendance that allows no unexcused absences. Each unexcused absence will result in the deduction of three percentage points from the final grade. More than two unexcused absences will result in failure of the course. Students should contact their instructors to catch up on missed work but should not approach them for excused absences. All absence requests and excuses must follow the application procedure directions here: https://wikis.nyu.edu/pages/viewpage.action?pageid=30017155 Students are expected to arrive to class promptly both at the start of class and after breaks. Arriving more than 10 minutes late or leaving more than 10 minutes early can be considered an unexcused absence. Unexcused absences from exams are not permitted and will result in failure of the exam. If you are granted an excused absence from an exam by administration, your instructor will decide how you will make up the exam. This attendance policy also applies for classes involving a field trip or other offcampus visit. It is the student s responsibility to arrive at the agreed meeting point on time. There will be no adjustment of attendance records after the end of the semester. If you wish to contest a marked absence, you must do so before you leave Shanghai; if you think that there may be a discrepancy about your attendance in class on a given day, ask the academic staff to let you look at the

Submission of Late Work attendance record. Written work due in class must be submitted during class time. Late work should be submitted in person to the Academic Assistant during regular office hours (9:30-6:00, Monday-Friday). The Academic Assistant will mark down the date and time of submission in the presence of the student. In the absence of the Academic Assistant, another member of the administrative staff can accept the work in person, following the same protocol. Work submitted within five weekdays will be penalized one portion of a grade for every day that it is late (so if it is late by one day, an assignment marked an A will be changed to an A-, and so on). Work submitted more than five days after the due date without an agreed extension will be given a zero. Plagiarism Policy Required Text(s) Class 1 August 29th Please note that final essays must be submitted on time. The presentation of another person s words, ideas, judgment, images or data as though they were one s own, whether intentionally or unintentionally, constitutes an act of plagiarism. Students must retain an electronic copy of their work until final grades are posted on Albert. They must be prepared to supply an electronic copy if requested to do so by. Not submitting a copy of their work upon request will result in automatic failure in the assignment and possible failure in the class. Penalties for confirmed cases of plagiarism are set out in the Student Handbook. While there is no specific text for this unit, the following texts are strongly recommended: London, Stone, Upton. Photography. 9 th Ed. Prentice Hall, 2007 (or later edition). Adobe Creative Team. Adobe Photoshop Classroom in a Book. (for the CS version you have on your computer) Lecture: Introduction to the Unit Equipment requirements Digital or film? Ink impression Lecture: Photography and Ink Impression Available facilities / Resources Basic camera: Exposure/Aperture/Speed/Depth Discussion: First impressions of Shanghai Visual aspect Cultural aspects Light/design Explore and photograph Shanghai by looking at street scenes and people that highlight cultural differences between China and the West. Choose 5 images to show in class. Due in two classes.

Class 2 Saturday, September 8th Class 3 September 12th Class 4 September 19th Class 5 September 26th Class 6 October 10th Discussion: Discussion: Guest Lecture: Shanghai Contemporary Art Fair Choose a photographer from either MoMA.org, icp.org, metmuseum.org, or Aperture.org and select 2 of their works for discussion. Include the photographer s biography and relate his/her style to your own work. Due next week. Critique your images and those of your peers. Discuss how they represent people and places of Shanghai, including how the images convey the feeling of the scenes they capture. Simple Photoshop techniques will be demonstrated on these images. Talk about your chosen photographer and their images: why you selected this work, and give an introduction to the photographer and their work. Lights of Shanghai. Continue photographic exploration of street scenes and people as a reflection of the city and style. Pay attention to exposure, composition, color, etc. Choose 5 images to show in class. Due in two classes. Gallery visit at M50 area. Meet with photography gallerists. Continue Lights of Shanghai. Due next class. Group critique of Lights of Shanghai photo assignment. Basic Camera 2 Motion Motion: Take photographs considering Motion. Think of Motion as physical movement and as a reflection of society s movement. Choose 5 images to show in class. Due next class. Group critique of Motion photo assignment. Abstraction. Ms. MA, Nan. Photoshop demonstration. Abstraction: Take photographs considering Abstraction. Think of Abstraction as shape, line, and composition;

through reality to abstraction. Choose 5 images to show in class. Due next class. Class 7 October 17th Class 8 October 24th Guest Lecture: Guest Lecture: Group critique of Abstraction photo assignment. Ms. MA, Nan. Photoshop demonstration, and class work on Photoshop. Take your photographs from previous assignments and change the image with Photoshop. Choose 5 before and after images to show in class. Due next class. Group critique of Photoshop photo assignment. Ms. MA, Nan: Ink impression and demonstration. Create 2 ink impressions. Due in two classes. Class 9 October 31st Class 10 November 7th Class 11 November 14th Field trip: Lecture: Visit old Shanghai ShiKuMen housing complex, photography and ink impression on site with guest lecturer Ms. MA, Nan. Shoot 5 photographs and create 2 ink impressions of the site. Due next week. Prepare ideas for Final Project: Art in Translation: Shanghai. Due next class. Mr. LUO, Yong Jin, well-known photographer. Contemporary Photography and Techniques Group critique of ink impression and ShiKuMen photo assignment. Group discussion of final project. Work on Final Projects in class with individual help. Work on Final Project. Visit Museum for Shanghai Biennale. Continue Final Project.

Class 12 November 21st Work on Final Projects with individual help. Get ready to print. Arrange for professional printing studio during the week. Complete Final Project for installation/exhibition. Class 13 November 28th Class 14 December 5th Final Exam December 12th Exhibition: Installation of Final Projects and Exhibition Opening. Visit Museums and Galleries. There will be no exam for this unit. Take down exhibition. We will meet for final wrap-up of class during regularly scheduled class time.