2023-2024 Undergraduate Bulletin [Archived Bulletin]
Digital + Studio Art Department
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The Digital + Studio Arts major focuses on the development of creative, technical, formal and critical skills in digital, analog and hybridized art forms. The major offers three concentrations which guide students toward building high level skills in a medium: Graphic & Interactive Design, Media Arts(Video, Audio, Photography, VR/AR), and Fine Arts (Sculpture, Printmaking, Painting, Digital Fabrication). The courses offered through the Digital + Studio Art department provide opportunities for artists and designers to develop the formal and technical skills that will enable them to create works that engage and challenge a changing society while maintaining a commitment to traditional making within a contemporary art practice. These areas are broadly defined and will commonly overlap, corresponding to students’ specific skills, interests, and goals. The courses in this discipline emphasize the integration of theory and practice.
D+SA coursework is based on hands-on learning experiences, creative challenges, along with abundant peer and faculty feedback. The major builds on the broad critical skills central to the liberal arts. Students will be introduced to a diverse range of artists and designers and develop the ability to frame their work in historical and critical contexts.
D+SA curriculum culminates in a Capstone Senior Seminar course in which students apply what they have learned to produce a final project for the Senior Exhibition.
To help students achieve their creative and professional goals, special emphasis is placed on developing effective project development skills and a robust portfolio. Students will integrate pre-professional work experiences and refine professional writing skills. D+SA students are encouraged to pursue an off campus internship experience to further develop their skills and networks that will prepare them for careers after graduation. Student professional development experiences and off campus travel experiences are supported through generous, competitive departmental grants and scholarships.
Hamline’s D+SA major is ideal for future artists, designers, makers, and professionals who will become immersed in the vanguard of current and developing media arts practices, such as audio-visual installation, net art, interactive media design, performance, 3D printing, sound art, physical computing, graphic design, film making, and sound design as well as traditional modes of drawing, painting, sculpture, and illustration. Department faculty are engaged with emerging digital media forms and theory, which positions students on the leading edge of a rapidly evolving media arts landscape and actively seek interdisciplinary work between faculty, students, and the greater university institution.
Internship, Research, and Work Study Opportunities
D+SA has generous funding to provide students with high impact learning experiences off campus and to support internship experiences through competitive funding and grants. Through the generous travel funding D+SA students have traveled internationally to attend conferences, attended workshops at prestigious art centers such as Anderson Ranch, relocated for the summer to New York and Boston to work for arts organizations, among others. The department values and cultivates internship experiences working closely with students to aggressively place students in transformative experiences that propel their careers forward after graduation.
D+SA Faculty are active participants in the Summer Collaborative Research Program and work with students to develop proposals for consideration.
The Department of Digital + Studio Art also has ample work study positions where students further their education and build applicable skills for the future job market working closely with faculty in a wide range of positions: assistant gallery director, sculpture studio monitors, assistant shop technician, assistant print shop supervisor, equipment desk manager, social media manager, and video producer, among others. D+SA students can also gain professional design, marketing and communications experience through other on-campus work study positions on the HU Student Activities Programming Board, student publications, athletics, residence life, and HU Creative Services and Marketing offices.
Student Success After Graduation
D+SA majors enter the world after graduation with a breadth and depth of skills and the individual attention that helped students hone their skills and interests. Students have built successful careers in: web design, software engineering, video editing, film making, arts education, arts nonprofits, fine art fabrication, public sculpture, museum and curatorial practices, graphic design, arts management, among many, many others.
At Hamline the D+SA Department values preprofessional practices and skills development by embedding these skills into the curricula and bringing in panels of alumni to guide current students to success and assist in internship placement.
Facilities
Housed across several campus buildings, Digital + Studio Arts has recently updated facilities, studios, and lab spaces dedicated to student use for all students enrolled in the courses and additional support for majors and fosters interdisciplinary work across the department and the college.
Bush Media Lab - BML 21 - Bush Memorial Library Lower Level
20 iMac computers with Adobe CC Suite and a wide range of other software tools installed. The computers are organized into pods, with each pod sharing a large HD display for displaying group work.
Media Arts Lab - BSC 2 - Bush Student Center Lower Level
16 Windows computers laptops with Adobe CC Suite and a wide range of other software tools installed. This lab also houses seamless backdrops and photo-quality inkjet printing for digital photography courses.
MakerLab - BSC 6 and 6A - Bush Student Center Lower Level
15 Raspberry pi computer stations, two 3D printers, soldering stations, electronics tools, Arduino microcontrollers, and a wide range of electronic components for making hybrid digital/analog artwork.
TypeLab - BSC 6B - Bush Student Center Lower Level
The TypeLab offers access to tools and resources to further D+SA students’ engagement with typography. The lab includes letterpress printmaking equipment, a wide variety of antique wood and metal movable type, screenprinting equipment, a vinyl plotter, a zine library, and a typography research library with several hundred hard-to-find titles.
Audio Suite - BSC 2B - Bush Student Center Lower Level
iMac computer with Reaper, Ableton Live, Waves, and iZotope RX software installed, Genelec 8030C monitors, Focusrite 8PreX audio interface, rolling monitor for Foley and SFX design, and a range of Foley props for audio post production projects.
Video Suite - BSC 3C - Bush Student Center Lower Level
27” iMac installed in a separate room for a quiet editing space, outfitted with a high capacity external hard drive, reference monitor for color correction work, and audio monitors.
Painting and Drawing - Drew Fine Arts
The 2,000-square-foot painting studio and 1,500 square foot drawing studio each has almost 1,000 square feet of north light.
It is equipped with ventilation for acrylic and oil paint and is equipped with professional easels and tables for each student. Students enrolled in painting and drawing have access to the studio seven days a week.
Printmaking - Drew Fine Arts
The printmaking studio provides a creative environment for students to explore cross disciplinary concepts with intaglio, relief and digital printmaking techniques. It has two presses including a large format Takach press, with accompanying acid room, rosin box and large work tables. Students enrolled in printmaking have access to the studio seven days a week.
Sculpture - Studio A/B
Housed in separate buildings are over 3000 square feet of large studio spaces to allow students maximum flexibility and production of large scale work. The sculpture studios house an active foundry for casting bronze and aluminum as well as a fully equipped metal shop for steel fabrication. The metal shop has multiple MIG welders, torch cutting rigs, drill press, plasma cutter, horizontal bandsaw, sand blaster, a plethora of hand tools, and a bridge crane to move monumental scale work. The sculpture studio building also houses a flexible working space for students to work on various projects in a multitude of media. Students enrolled in sculpture have access to the studios seven days a week.
Sculpture and New Media - Drew Residence Hall
The sculpture studios also house a separate fully outfitted wood shop with the safest saw-stop table saw; band saw; compound miter saw; thickness planer; drill press; large disk and belt sander; scroll saw; joiner; router table; a plethora of hand tools for shaping, carving, drilling, and sanding; and a new CNC router to bridge traditional making with new media and computer aided design.
Art Foundations, Textiles, and Art Clubs – Studio C
The large building houses a flexible working space for students in foundations as well as project space for students to use and a documentation booth for students to build their portfolio and document their work with high quality studio lighting as well as a new soft sculpture/textiles/fiber studio.
Faculty
Faculty in the Digital + Studio Arts program include internationally recognized artist-practitioners in a range of fields as well as scholars engaged in analyzing the ways art and digital media are changing society.
Joshua Gumiela, associate professor. BA 2003, MFA 2011, Southern Illinois University. Josh Gumiela is a new media artist and maker whose work explores themes of time and displacement using media including sound design, performance, installation, and digital fabrication. Gumiela has performed at venues including Nashville’s Centennial Black Box Theatre and his sound design work has screened at venues including Ethnografilm, Paris. His past exhibitions include New Adventures in Sound Art’s Deep Wireless Festival, Currents New Media Festival, and ISEA International.
Curt Lund, associate professor. BFA 2001, Iowa State University; MFA 2015 and Ph.D. 2020, University of Minnesota College of Design. Curt Lund (he/him) is an educator, designer, collector-curator, historian, writer-performer, and mixed media artist – all reflections of his passion for connecting words, images, and objects in nerdy and satisfying ways. Lund’s art and design work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, at venues including the Minnesota Museum of American Art, Eden Theological Seminary, Plains Art Center, Sangre de Cristo Arts Center, Goldstein Museum of Design, Marin Society of Artists, University of the West of England (Bristol, UK), and the Mall Of America. His research in the areas of design history, marketing, and museum studies has resulted in numerous national and international presentations, publications, and exhibitions.
John-Mark T. Schlink, senior lecturer, Director of Exhibitions, Soeffker Gallery and Permanent Collection. BA 1991, Hamline University; MFA 2000, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. His areas of expertise are Printmaking and Drawing. His work has been selected for national and international printmaking juried exhibitions including Immersed in Images: Krakow International Print Triennial, Poland, the 2nd International Triennial of Graphic Arts, Livno, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the International Print Center in New York. Schlink’s prints have been included in several academic and museum collections including the China Printmaking Museum in Beijing, Museum of Texas Tech University and the Pacific Rim International Print Collection in New Zealand. He has been an Artist in Residence at Kloster Bentlage in Rheine, Germany and Constellation Studios in Lincoln NE. He received an Artist Initiative Grant from the MN State Arts Board in 2020.
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