Film/Animation/Video Courses
FAV 5198-01
SENIOR STUDIO: LIVE ACTION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This is a year-long course of study, for which the student will complete a 10-20 minute live action work to final professional screening format. Students are free to choose genres and formats in which they want to work. Students have weekly meetings for screenings, guests, and technical workshops, and weekly small-group meetings to discuss their works-in-progress. Spring semester covers post-production, editing, sound mixing, color correction, outputting, and a series of professional practice workshops. A guest critic reviews work in early April. Final projects are screened at a public film festival in May, which is reviewed by the local media.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $2,000.00.
Deposit: $150.00
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Live Action
FAV 5200-101
EXPERIMENTS IN STOP MOTION ANIMATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This is a course demonstrating and exploring the basic techniques of Stop-Motion Animation, with the intent to provide students with hands-on creative experience in learning the potentials of the medium, and an introduction to filmic language. Conceptual skills are exercised through exploring intent, storytelling, storyboarding, editorial concepts, material manipulation, character performance, art direction, lighting and basic sound design. This class is based on process and experimentation. It is meant to provide a strong foundation in the basics of stop-motion animation filmmaking, as well as the confidence to experiment further in one's future work. The idea is to enjoy the process by understanding it; control is born of experimentation and experience.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $40.00
Elective
FAV 5201-01
REFLEXIVITY & SELVES IN FILM/VIDEO
SECTION DESCRIPTION
A video production course designed to supplement / stimulate / reinforce ideas and concepts learned in other media production courses. We will achieve this by focusing on how artists meditate on (or consider the process of) media creation, and how drawing attention to the fabrication and making of a work can manifest itself in a finished work. The only prerequisite is familiarity with some video editing software. Students will produce video projects to explore how reflecting on the process of filming and producing can offer a deeper understanding of media and our role as artists. Reflecting on the process of making has been explored by artists for hundreds of years. Film/Video is no exception. Through introductory exercises, as well as group and individual projects, students will explore and engage with the concept of the self-reflexivity in their artwork. In-class screenings of examples from the early cinema and video to the present will allow us to examine how makers have introduced an element of self- reflexivity in works of narrative, documentary and experimental media. Open to sophomore and above; permission of instructor required. Contact fav@risd.edu to register.
FAV 5291-01 / IDISC 5291-01
MEETING POINTS: OPEN MEDIA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this interdisciplinary critique-based class, advanced students take a rigorous look at the various ways time-based imagery functions in their work. With an emphasis on post-cinema, research- based, site-dependent, and performative practices, students in Meeting Points: Open Media examine their studio projects in-depth, through group critiques, a close analysis of critical concepts, and working with focus and discipline in their medium of choice. This course is required for FAV seniors in Open Media and is well-positioned to be a critical support for senior and graduate students looking for additional insight into the development and refinement of their work in the area of cross-disciplinary media art practice. Course work includes research, readings, critique sessions, group discussions, and visiting artist lectures. Fall semester includes a recommended field trip to a relevant exhibition or performance, and visits by related working artists and curators. Spring semester includes an emphasis on curatorial exhibition strategies, a recommended field trip to a relevant exhibition or performance, and visits by related working artists and curators.
Offered as FAV-5291 and IDISC-5291
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Open Media
FAV 5292-01 / IDISC 5292-01
MEETING POINTS: OPEN MEDIA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
In this interdisciplinary critique-based class, advanced students take a rigorous look at the various ways time-based imagery functions in their work. With an emphasis on post-cinema, research- based, site-dependent, and performative practices, students in Meeting Points: Open Media examine their studio projects in-depth, through group critiques, a close analysis of critical concepts, and working with focus and discipline in their medium of choice. This course is required for FAV seniors in Open Media and is well-positioned to be a critical support for senior and graduate students looking for additional insight into the development and refinement of their work in the area of cross-disciplinary media art practice. Course work includes research, readings, critique sessions, group discussions, and visiting artist lectures. Fall semester includes a recommended field trip to a relevant exhibition or performance, and visits by related working artists and curators. Spring semester includes an emphasis on curatorial exhibition strategies, a recommended field trip to a relevant exhibition or performance, and visits by related working artists and curators.
Offered as FAV-5292 and IDISC-5292.
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register. Open non-major Senior or Graduate Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Open Media
FAV 5341-01
ANIMATION PRE-PRODUCTION METHODS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course examines pre-production methods for animation, including storytelling and cinematic language particular to the animation medium. Emphasizing practical approaches to research and concept development, the course will introduce structural tools including storyboards, writing, color scripts, animatics, and preliminary soundtracks. We will ask the central question "Why Animation?" as we cover topics such as point-of-view, expressive scale, use of metaphor, and transformation.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $50.00
Deposit: $150.00
Elective
FAV W502-101
INTRODUCTION TO ANIMATION TECHNIQUES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is designed to explore different animation techniques and materials, including working directly on film, drawing on paper, painting under the camera, object animation, cut-outs, and pixilation. It also teaches the fundamentals of animated movement and timing. Students in this course each make six short animations, with separate, synchronized sound tracks. At the end of the course, students create a DVD compilation of all their projects. A wide range of independent animated films are screened to demonstrate different techniques and approaches to animation.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $65.00
Elective
FAV W507-101
SENIOR STUDIO: LIVE ACTION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This is a year-long course of study, for which the student will complete a 10-20 minute live action work to final professional screening format. Students are free to choose genres and formats in which they want to work. Students have weekly meetings for screenings, guests, and technical workshops, and weekly small-group meetings to discuss their works-in-progress. During Wintersession, the students perform production work in video and film, organize crews for filmmaking, review rushes and do initial editing and sound work on their degree projects.
Deposit: $150.00
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Live Action
FAV W517-101
SENIOR STUDIO: ANIMATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
During the senior year, students synthesize and apply what they have learned in their previous studies to the creation of a year-long project. Students develop, design, animate, direct, and produce these projects independently. Students receive weekly individual guidance from instructors and two critiques by established professionals from the world animation community. Class meetings are devoted to film screenings, group critique, and specialized technical workshops.
Deposit: $150.00
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Animation
FAV W517-102
SENIOR STUDIO: ANIMATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
During the senior year, students synthesize and apply what they have learned in their previous studies to the creation of a year-long project. Students develop, design, animate, direct, and produce these projects independently. Students receive weekly individual guidance from instructors and two critiques by established professionals from the world animation community. Class meetings are devoted to film screenings, group critique, and specialized technical workshops.
Deposit: $150.00
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Animation
FAV W517-103
SENIOR STUDIO: ANIMATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
During the senior year, students synthesize and apply what they have learned in their previous studies to the creation of a year-long project. Students develop, design, animate, direct, and produce these projects independently. Students receive weekly individual guidance from instructors and two critiques by established professionals from the world animation community. Class meetings are devoted to film screenings, group critique, and specialized technical workshops.
Deposit: $150.00
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Animation
FAV W521-101
INTRO TO COMPUTER ANIMATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is designed to teach students how to utilize the computer to create animation. Special emphasis is placed on exploration and experimentation as it applies to computer-generated or computer-assisted animation. The class covers hand drawn non-computer originated animation, cut out animation, computer generated drawn animation, painting under the camera, rotoscoping, and an introduction to the concepts used in 3D animation. Additionally, an introduction to sound design and editing will be explored in the final animation project.
Estimated Cost of Materials: $40.00
Elective
FAV W527-101
SENIOR STUDIO: OPEN MEDIA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Over the course of a year, senior students integrate their media skills through a cross-disciplinary approach with time-based media practice, resulting in a developed work or a series of smaller related works meant for exhibition or performance. This path is for students that wish to engage with time-based media in non-traditional ways, such as through installation, performance, public art, interactivity, intervention, networked/collaborative production, activism, etc.. Students research, develop, design, prototype, direct and produce these works independently. Students receive weekly individual guidance from the instructor and partnered peers. Class meetings are devoted to lectures, informational workshops, student presentations of related research, individual meetings and group critique. During Wintersession, students perform production work, test and analyze parameters and results. Students have weekly meetings for lectures, guests, technical workshops, and weekly small-group meetings to discuss their works-in-progress.
Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video | Open Media
LAEL 1054-01
TIME, LIGHT AND SOUND
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course is designed as an introduction to the 113-year history of the projected moving image (film, animation, and video). Artistic expression in these forms will be emphasized. Students discover new areas of interest while watching carefully selected examples of films and videos. During all classes, students will view films representing different styles and periods of filmmaking. About half of the classes are devoted to contemporary films. Critical thinking will be encouraged and fostered during classroom discussions. Clear expression of these thoughts will be developed through assigned readings and weekly writing assignments. During the semester, students learn about specific artists, schools of filmmaking, genres, and fields within the history of the film, animation, and video. Students also develop a common language by learning the meaning and proper usage of a glossary of common film terms. At select classes, film artists are present to introduce and discuss their work. Other guests include improvisational musicians who accompany silent films.
Department permission is required to register for this course; this course is not available via web registration. Please contact fav@risd.edu for permission to register.
Major Requirement | BFA Film/Animation/Video