Studio of New Aesthetics 3
Code | Completion | Credits | Range | Language Instruction | Semester |
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307ESNA3 | exam | 4 | 24 exercise hours (45 min) of instruction per semester, 82 to 102 hours of self-study | English | winter |
Subject guarantor
Name of lecturer(s)
Contents
The Studio of New Aesthetics is an environment for sharing, discussing, searching, experimenting and developing thinking. The studio focuses on the confrontation of photography and new media, which means still and digital image, sound, installation in the context of contemporary art, with an emphasis on the full range of possibilities for the distribution of photography and art and the broadest social context. Students are encouraged to explore their own themes and refine their own artistic language using appropriate processes and technologies, but always with an emphasis on the contemporary, new issues and possibilities.
Main themes:
1 - 4/Each semester is defined by a theme, from which the composition of guests, workshops, and the content of discussions is determined. The theme helps to kick-start the semester, maintain focus, and motivate dialogue.
Man and technology, production, utopia, filter bubbles, educational turn, participatory practice, field trips, future of work
Assignments are consistently self-selected by each student. Defining one's own interests, authentic concerns, and unique sensibilities is the foundation of the artist's work; the art student is supported in this endeavor by the studio collective. A key moment in each semester is the awareness of a vacuum, the absence of an assignment, the necessity to trace one's own problem in one's experience or interest, which through further exploration becomes an assignment.
5-8/
Students are guided to artistic research as a source of topics and depth of understanding of a particular problem. Artistic research is based on finding sources of information and inspiration, tracing precise details and general connections. At the same time, artistic research is a working process based on continuous self-education; in a studio environment, this education is naturally applicable to the entire collective.
9 - 12/ Realization, adaptation and preparation of the presentation format for the clause
General studio principles:
The studio defines its composition. The arrival of each freshman or departure of each graduate transforms it. The essence of teaching is dialogue, sharing information, insights, feedback. Between teacher and students, between guests and students, between students themselves. The studio is a small social unit in which it is possible to look for analogies to social, political, economic events.
Student:
Participates in meetings and events in the studio.
He/she carefully searches for his/her own motivation.
Takes an interest in what interests him/her.
Is aware of his/her own responsibility.
Tries to name new things.
Educator:
Learns to teach others to learn.
Initiates dialogue.
Is critical, is able to face criticism.
Enables sharing, collaboration.
Encourages exploration.
Tries to name new things.
Guests:
Invited guests bring new impulses to the studio, while opening the studio towards artistic practice or a real social situation.
Learning outcomes
Each semester is defined by a theme, which determines the composition of guests, workshops and the content of discussions. The theme helps to kick-start the semester, maintain focus and motivate dialogue.
Man and technology, production, utopia, filter bubbles, educational turn, participatory practice, field trips, the future of work
Assignments are consistently self-selected by each student. Defining one's own interests, authentic concerns, and unique sensibilities is the foundation of the artist's work; the art student is supported in this endeavor by the studio collective. A key moment in each semester is the awareness of a vacuum, the absence of an assignment, the necessity to trace one's own problem in one's experience or interest, which through further exploration becomes the assignment.
Research, work and the cloud
Students are guided to artistic research as a source of both topics and depth of understanding of a particular problem. Artistic research is based on finding sources of information and inspiration, tracking down precise details and general context. At the same time, artistic research is a working process based on continuous self-education; in the studio environment, this education is naturally applicable to the whole collective.
In the studio we seek ways of becoming aware of and grasping the present. The process is more important in education than the partial result. The goal of studio debate is to teach students to talk about projects in progress, to allow themselves the opportunity to change parts of their work based on feedback, to not focus on a particular idea of the outcome.
Work is understood as active engagement with the current project. Work can take many forms: reading, writing, observing, thinking, collecting (textual, visual, physical) material, taking photographs, filming, working with a series of photographs, editing video, working in a 3d program, making phone calls, installing...
The cloud is the memory of the studio. Resources, literature, ideas, references that are heard in the studio meeting are recorded in the cloud where they remain accessible.
Prerequisites and other requirements
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Literature
Required:
David Graeber, The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity, Penguin Books, 2021
Keller Easterling, Medium Design: Knowing How to Work on the World, Verso, 2021
Timothy Morton, Hyperobjects, Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World, University of Minnesota Press, 2013
Recommended:
Laurent de Sutter, Narcocapitalism: Life in the Age of Anaesthesia (Theory Redux), Polity, 2018
Timothy Synder, On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century, Crown, 2017
Aaron Benanav, Automation and the future of work, Verso, 2020
Legacy Russell, Glitch Feminism, Veso, 2020
Adrianne Maree Brown, Pleasure Activism, AK Press, 2019
McKenzie Wark, Sensoria, Thinkers for the Twenty-first Century, Verso, 2020
Paul B. Preciado, Testo Junkie: Sex, Drugs, and Biopolitics in the Pharmacopornographic Era, The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2013
Evaluation methods and criteria
Realization of the exhibition project
Attendance at meetings (max 2 absences) 70%
Completion of partial assignments 20%
Participation in excursions and trips 10%
Note
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Schedule for winter semester 2023/2024:
06:00–08:0008:00–10:0010:00–12:0012:00–14:0014:00–16:0016:00–18:0018:00–20:0020:00–22:0022:00–24:00
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Date | Day | Time | Tutor | Location | Notes | No. of paralel |
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Tue | 09:00–17:00 | Hynek ALT | Studio No. 312 Tržiště 20, Praha 1 (vchod z Rektorátu AMU, Malostranské nám. 12) |
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Schedule for summer semester 2023/2024:
The schedule has not yet been prepared
The subject is a part of the following study plans
- Photography EN - Bachelor - 2022 (Required elective subjects)