Course Description

This course is meant to be a space for you to examine and deepen your relationship to the field and your own practice through readings, discussions, and presentations.  The readings are meant to expand your perspective on the field of jewelry and metalsmithing, to define its particularities and concerns in relation to the discourses of the contemporary art world.

Together we will explore a series of seminal theoretical texts, seeking ways to relate them to our own practice.  Through these texts we will encounter a series of themes and historical perspectives that are crucial to the field of jewelry, while also delving into fields and areas of inquiry, that have not commonly been related to our field, but perhaps should or could be.  Our aim is to get a historical and interdisciplinary perspective on where we are as artists/makers today, how we got here and where we could go from here. The course aims to bring up critical questions on why we make, whom we make for and the meaning of our practice beyond the studio and the jewelry and metals world.

This is a chance to practice your skills in connecting theory, reading and writing to your work and to build a vocabulary and ground of reference around your ideas, interests and intentions. It’s a chance to take part in an intense discourse around your field, which you might be asked to do many times in the future of your career.

The Wednesday meetings will adopt the form of a reading/talking circle. Your role in the group is important and the success of our conversations will be based on your participation and engagement. We will all take turns in presenting and leading the discussion and also examine what “research through practice” might mean for us, by exploring some ways of connecting theory and making. 

Oct 19, 2009

From The New Sins by David Byrne

'BEAUTY' taken from The New Sins by David Byrne, New York McSweeney's Publishing 2001 (p33):

"How can Beauty be a sin? IS BEAUTY NOT WHAT MAKES LIFE worth living?

I was walking in my garden the other day–actually I was walking on a street in Pensacola Florida–and the day was bright and the air was clear. I had an impulse to say the day was beautiful, but I knew better, for I have known the tricks and masks that Beauty Wears.

The sunny day, the blue sky and the brisk breeze created the illusion that all was well. That sewage treatment plan was no longer pumping its sludge and toxic wastes into the bay, that lawyer behind the door of his office was engaged in the pursuit of justice. That the tanker anchored down the street was loading and unloading goods that were honestly made. Beauty masks the Truth of the Matter. The rotting corpse lies waiting under an impressive work of funerary art.

Beauty is deception, falsification, deceit. Buyer Beware."


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