Anther Kiley

Assistant Professor
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MFA, Rhode Island School of Design

Anther Kiley is a Providence-based designer and educator. He holds a BA in history from Princeton University and an MFA in Graphic Design from RISD. He has taught courses in the Graphic Design department at RISD since 2013 and co-directed the program in graphic design at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) from 2014–18. Kiley’s commissioned design work includes exhibition, print and web design, often in collaboration with Colin Frazer as the Service Bureau. He is currently developing a line of toy kits, Cardkits, in addition to commissioned design work and an intermittent artistic practice that explores aesthetics and mythologies of function, production and the design process.

Courses

Fall 2024 Courses

GRAPH 3210-05 - DESIGN STUDIO 1
Level Undergraduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 3
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 3210-05

DESIGN STUDIO 1

Level Undergraduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 3
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2024-09-04 to 2024-12-11
Times: T | 1:10 PM - 6:10 PM Instructor(s): Anther Kiley Location(s): Design Center, Room 210 Enrolled / Capacity: 14 Status: Open

SECTION DESCRIPTION

In the first two semesters of a two-year studio track, students will come into contact with issues and questions that face the contemporary designer. Students will engage with and develop methods to take on these questions: search (formal and intellectual), research, analysis, ideation, and prototyping. Projects will increase in complexity over time, sequenced to evolve from guided inquiry to more open, self-generated methodologies. Some examples of the questions students might work with are: What is graphic? or How are tools shaped by contemporary culture, technology, and convention? or How is a spatial or dimensional experience plotted and communicated? These questions will be accompanied by a mix of precedents, theoretical contexts, readings and presentations, technical and/or formal exercises and working methods.

Please contact the department for permission to register. 

Major Requirement | BFA Graphic Design

GRAPH 321G-01 - GRADUATE SEMINAR I
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 3
Format Seminar
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 321G-01

GRADUATE SEMINAR I

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 3
Format Seminar
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2024-09-04 to 2024-12-11
Times: M | 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM Instructor(s): Anther Kiley Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 15 Status: Closed

SECTION DESCRIPTION

This seminar will present a forum for discussion on critical issues in graphic design, including: design's context within culture and experience; theory and its relation to practice; and current practice and its models. The course will combine formats of lecture, discussion, small groups, and collaboration to explore the porous borders of graphic design thought and making.

Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Enrollment is limited to Graduate Graphic Design Students.


Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design

GRAPH 327G-01 - GRADUATE THESIS I
Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start date
End date

GRAPH 327G-01

GRADUATE THESIS I

Level Graduate
Unit Graphic Design
Subject Graphic Design
Period Fall 2024
Credits 6
Format Studio
Mode In-Person
Start and End 2024-09-04 to 2024-12-11
Times: W | 11:20 AM - 4:20 PM Instructor(s): Anther Kiley, Bethany Johns Location(s): Center for Integrative Technologies, Room 502 Enrolled / Capacity: 15 Status: Closed

SECTION DESCRIPTION

The MFA degree requires completion of a graduate thesis. The thesis, as a major undertaking for advanced study and personal development, also assists the student to direct a program of study for an experience that best serves that individual's interests and needs. The thesis is an inquiry into the process, expression and function of the visual in graphic design. Visual search is the primary means by which to develop and substantiate original work which provides proof of concept for the thesis argument, critique, or point of view. The graduate student is encouraged to go beyond established models and to project his/her unique character in the thesis rather than to evidence vocational training, which is implicit. The productions can involve any medium suitable to need and content. Ultimately the thesis is submitted as a written document supported by a body of visual work that is a meaningful synthesis of the visual and verbal, and a lasting contribution to the field of graphic design. Two copies of the document remain, one for the Library and one for the department. Completion is required before graduation as stipulated by the College.


Major Requirement | MFA Graphic Design

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MFA, Rhode Island School of Design