Course Description

This course will investigate the ways in which artists have presented narratives in the public realm and the organizations that have made the presentation of those works central to their curatorial practices over the last 40 years. Focusing on recent works presented in New York’s public spaces by Creative Time, The Public Art Fund, the Percent for Art Program, Arts for Transit and other non-profits organizations, this course will look at what it meant to tell stories and open discourses that challenged or interrogated widely-held value systems, the events and the politics of their time. In addition to the specifics of current and other key works and projects, we will discuss the conditions that governed the development of public performance, temporary and permanent installations, the ways in which those works were influenced by public approval processes and governmental agencies, media coverage and community response. Each student’s final project will be an on-line proposal for an exhibition that conveys a “narrative“ developed in the context of this course, referencing other relevant works .

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Classwork Response: Mischa, Sena, Janine, Patrick

Issue: Gender 


QUESTIONS

What is equality?
What do you imagine equality feels like?  
What do you think is the appropriate job of a man and a woman? 
When jobs are scarce, should man have more right to a job than women? 
Who do you think education is more important to? 

INDIVIDUAL IDEALIZATIONS

Patrick

1. Having a role reversal situation where men and women switch jobs for a set duration of time to see how different is their responsibilities really. 
2. A social experiment in which a man and a woman (strangers) ask each other about what they think their role is in their daily life as their gender. Seeing how the person of the opposite gender responds to what you think is your role in society. 
3. Interviewing people who have broken the stereotypical taboos of genders. They can talk to those who feel bound they those gender-biased roles. 

Mischa

1. Creating design that focuses on individual rather then dividing between male or female
2. Educating women and girls in the areas that are male dominant. Transforming STEM into STEAM (science, tech, engineering, art and math)
3. 

Sena

1. Being ethical in garment making (not using real fur, etc.)
2. Unisex clothing
3. Having a gender neutral aesthetic in Photography, for example, woman being able to dress and pose like a man in my photographs.

Janine

1. Design products that makes the user realize that we are all the same. 
2. Design products that are unisex
3. 

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