Integrative Studio / Seminar 1
Integrative Studio 1 and Integrative Seminar 1 are two separate but paired courses taken in the fall semester. In the studio, you explore research, prototyping, and the creative process. You'll work on cross-disciplinary projects, both independently and collaboratively, and gain a range of visual, analytical, and making skills. In the seminar, you learn and familiarize yourself with the skills necessary for artists and designers to articulate and understand their creations and contexts. These skills include critical thinking and analysis, presentation and discussion, reading strategies, and the application of various writing styles. At various times in the semester, the two classes share concepts and assignments, bringing together reading, writing, and making in a way that is essential to the creative work of professional artists and designers.
Avatar has two meanings. In Hinduism and Buddhism, it is the physical appearance of a god. Online, it is a picture of a person or animal that represents a particular user. How can we describe identity as being distinct from the original and yet intensely connected to it at the same time?
Fake describes something that is not what it appears to be. Counterfeit bags, forged money, stage names, mockumentaries, pranking, the list goes on. But how do we define what is real and what is fake? Could something fake actually be more powerful, more authentic, than truth?
Memory is an action or process of commemorating, recollecting, or remembering a person, object, or event. How do these actions and processes shape identity and our understanding of the world?
To migrate means to move from one place to another. Many of us have firsthand experience with this movement. What is it like to move from one city to another to attend school? What, if any, are your own family's migration stories?
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Integrative Studio / Seminar 2
Integrative Studio 2 and Integrative Seminar 2 are two separate but paired courses; this pairing follows Integrative Studio/Seminar 1 and is taken in the spring semester. The focus of these courses is on research, which often requires moving out into the world through field work, experimentation, failure, and creative problem solving. In Integrative Studio 2, you explore all types of discovery and documentation by fact-finding individually and in groups. In Integrative Seminar 2, you continue building the reading, writing, presentation, and analysis skills you developed in the fall seminar, this time through fact-finding and the filter of research. What is the best way to present a well-researched argument? How can you defend a design by showing its relationship to contemporary practice? Both courses will focus on the approaches to research used within the schools of Parsons.
How do we experience design? What does it mean to engage in a community—in a city, with a group, in shaping an organization, in reconfiguring a service—as a designer? Under this theme students will begin to unearth the complex systems that connect design to behaviors.
How does the built environment shape our contexts and, by extension, our understanding? What potential lies in an interior's design? How does a product instruct a user? When does a building determine action? Students will explore the interconnectedness of large-scale thinking with on-the-ground user experience to explore the complexity of a designer's engagement.
How does fashion speak? What information do we derive from a seemingly simple, yet utterly complex system of material, image, body, history, and site within the social and global sphere? Students will engage with such complexities while interrogating new ways to approach topics such as form, beauty, and sustainability.
How are messages embedded in visual culture? How, in turn, are photographs, videos, illustrations, performances, graphic novels, sculptures, and technological innovations, for instance, used to communicate an idea or position? What might it mean to make something that doesn't fit into any one category as we know it? Students will explore interdisciplinarity, collaborative making, the productivity of creative failures, and more.
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Sustainable Systems
Complexity, diversity, and adaptability are key aspects of all natural systems, but human society has created complex systems that are not sustainable. Designers today are challenged by problems that make it crucial to understand the scientific process, from lab and field work to policy formulation. This course combines lectures and field trips to locations around New York City with studio-based labs. Through discussions, field work, and scientific methods, you develop a foundational understanding of the scientific and social issues affecting the design of resilient urban futures.
Note: One version of this course is offered, and BBA students should plan to take this course in the fall semester.
Quantitative Reasoning 1
This course is designed to help you gain an understanding of fundamental numerical and quantitative skills and their application to everyday life. Topics include problem-solving and back-of-the-envelope calculations, unit conversions and estimation, percentages and compound interest, linear and other models, data interpretation, analysis and visualization, basic principles of probability, and an introduction to quantitative research. The focus is on applying basic mathematical concepts to solve real-world problems, as well as developing skills in interpreting and working with data.
Note: This course is taken by BBA students in the fall semester.
Understanding Global Economies
This course introduces students to macroeconomics and microeconomics through analysis of the institutions, history, and crises of today's world economy. Focus is placed on the globalization of the real economy (production and labor) and finance. The course begins with a discussion of variations in capitalist economies and an overview of the institutions and dynamics of growth in the post-WWII period, their breakdown in the 1960s, the spread of international crisis in the 1970s, and the rise of neoliberalism that ensued in the 1980s to the present. The course structure is built around case studies and student projects but also involves a survey of fundamental principles of economics. You will gain cogency and fluency in economic matters, including the debt level and its significance, debates about immigration, and international banking regulations.
Note: This course is taken by BBA students in the spring semester.
Drawing / Imaging
How is meaning constructed and communicated through visual images? In this studio course, you use traditional drawing and digital imaging methods to explore the conceptual, aesthetic, and formal qualities that inform how ideas and impressions are expressed on a two-dimensional plane. We will explore visual organization, representational and abstract forms, and engagement through observational drawing, photography, digital image creation, and the integration of a variety of media. The tools and methods acquired in this course form an introductory platform that you will build upon in your upper-level courses.
Note: As a BBA student, you will choose two of the three studio courses (Drawing/Imaging, Time, and Space/Materiality), taking one in the fall and one in the spring.
How do visual images enhance or create meaning? What can signs and symbols convey? In this class students will address these questions by using the concrete elements of design and observational drawing to explore and develop a visual language.
How do our bodies define us? What is a relational body? Can it be a neutral symbol? When is it a loaded message? These and more questions are addressed as we explore the singular and the collective through the lenses of communities, tribes, nations, and cultures.
Places can be personal, private, public, and historical. These considerations affect how we look at space, location, and uniqueness of place.
Our examination of things, for the purposes of this course, will focus on the tangible object and may include those that are found, crafted, mass-produced, or artifacts.
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Space / Materiality
Discover how materials and their uses shape meaning, and learn through firsthand experience in Parsons' modeling facilities and hybrid studio/shop classrooms. In this studio course, you explore concepts such as malleability, weight, texture, color, durability, smell, sound, taste, life cycle, and ecological impacts through a wide variety of projects that privilege the close relationship of making to thinking. Other areas of inquiry range from space formation to environmental psychology to object exploration. Discussion, critique, and written responses will help you to participate in idea sharing and understand your work in historical and cultural contexts.
Note: As a BBA student, you will choose two of the three studio courses (Drawing/Imaging, Time, and Space/Materiality), taking one in the fall and one in the spring.
The body has an impact on our surroundings and the objects within it. How do ergonomics, structure, and self-image correspond to the shape, movement, and impact of the human form? Using a range of methods, explore body coverings, functionality, and personal space.
How do our attitudes about what we wear, how we interact, and how we come together define both our personal space and our shared space? Explore the relationship between the shifting boundaries of community and the material nature of social and ecological space.
What is the effect of culture on the objects we use and spaces we inhabit? Investigate the relationship between beauty, utility, and the hand-made.
Habitats are natural environments that provide what is required to sustain life. What constitutes shelter, safety, and survival for humans? animals? plants? How do spaces and materials sustain and nurture, or adversely affect, different environments? Explore the relationship between the constructed environment and the natural world.
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Time
This studio course is an introduction to cultural and perceptual constructions of time. Learning to work with time involves more than simply editing video and sound into linear sequences. It entails the consideration of time as a designed idea that can function as a tool. How does this tool, in turn, affect how objects function, how environments are perceived, or how experiences are shared? Studio projects, readings, writing, and examples of many artists’ work are used to examine how ideas such as frame, duration, and speed have evolved to impact our understanding of time. Using a variety of methods and media—from digital video to drawing to performance—we will explore and represent different cross-disciplinary notions of time in the fields of art, design, science, and industry.
Note: As a BBA student, you will choose two of the three studio courses (Drawing/Imaging, Time, and Space/Materiality), taking one in the fall and one in the spring.
How do new audiovisual forms affect our perception, understanding, and representation of time? We will study variables such as rhythm and counterpoint, theme and variation, improvisation and scripting, silence and noise, to investigate practices from multimedia composition to experimental writing.
Time can be measured through the body in a number of ways: our kinetic movements, our physical aging, the performance of our everyday actions, even the changes in our outward personal style. Explore aspects of performance, ritual, identity, and live art, and the many ways that the body can impact our understanding of time.
We begin with a single frame: a moment in time. From this starting point you will work with variables such as movement, progression, or space to create experimental stories in a variety of forms such as graphic novel, montage, visual language, and book art.
Investigate the passage of time though the cycles of the city. How does the urban environment affect its inhabitants? How do we perceive its growth and decay? Through a variety of forms, from multimedia composition to dynamic drawing to spatial studies, we will examine the perpetual change of the city.
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Elective
First-year elective courses provide an opportunity for you to explore new methods and media, to advance skills, to experiment, and to explore disciplinary approaches to thinking and making. Most electives are offered in the spring semester; a small selection is available in the fall for students who have transfer credit. Listed below are the general categories of available electives, along with a few examples of elective courses offered in each category.
- Drawing: The Body
- Painting
- Intro to Printmaking
- Analog Photography
- Light
- Alternative Photo Processes
- Web Environments
- Explorations in Typography
- Digital Tools for Layout and Design
- 3D Modeling Techniques
- Product, Promotion and Packaging
- Soft Structures
- Basic Business Structure
- Business and Professional Communication
- NYC: Sculpture
- Foreign Languages
- NYC: Food
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