Who are art and design magazines actually for?
Come to this workshop led by Contributors Inc. and let's figure that one out together.
Monday, March 12, 2:00-4:00 pm
Macaulay Room, Fleet Library
Contributors Inc. (Phoebe Stubbs and Mimi Cabell) is a collective that works with art and culture magazines as material, engaging them as both archives of the art world and sites highlighting shifting commercial and political trends. Contributors Inc. creates interventions, publishing projects, artwork, and workshops exploring the relationship between a publication’s history and its present.
For this workshop, participants will critically engage with several magazines of art and design. Looking at evidence in their pages and on the internet, we will examine content, contributors, structure, and funding and annotate what we find. We will then discuss our findings as a group, including issues raised by the exercise and thoughts on the relevance of such publications to participants’ practices.
Spring English Language Support
Facilitated by Assistant Director for Multilingual Learning, Maya Krinsky, the following workshops are designed to improve English language skills in our context of art, design, and liberal arts education. Please contact multilingual@risd.edu with questions or to RSVP (appreciated but not required).
Academic Skills Series for Multilingual Learners
Sundays, 10 am–12 pm, Center for Arts & Language (CB 240)
February 18, 25, March 4, 11, 18
Critique Group for Multilingual Learners
Mondays, 6:30–8 pm, Center for Arts & Language (CB 240)
March 5 – May 14
English Language Support Drop-in Hours
Tuesdays, 12–1 pm, Carr House conference room
February 20–May 15
Fridays, 12–1 pm, CIT 102 (Grad Lounge)
February 16 – May 11
Publishing and Practice: A Conversation
Publishing and Practice: A Conversation
Thursday, March 1, 6:30-8:30 PM, Old Library (College Building 521)
Andre Bradley's Dark Archives (interior pages)
Editing journals, essaying on art, design, and events, experimenting with “publishing as artistic practice” … artists and designers are contributing to public discourse like never before. Come hear from three RISD alumni working in and around publishing about their
experiences—and share your own.
6:30-7:30 Presentations and Q&A
Andre Bradley (MFA Photography, 2015)
Philadelphia-based artist and author of Dark Archives,
an “autobiography in fragments” published by Image
Text Ithaca Press
Rachel Ossip (BRDD Comp. Lit./Graphic Design, 2015)
Artist, designer, and writer living in New York; manager,
Paper Monument; production manager, art editor, and contributor to n+1
Phoebe Stubbs (MFA Glass, 2011)
London-based artist and art writer; co-editor of
Pink Jacket; managing editor of the Journal for Artistic
Research; former editor at Black Dog Publishing
7:30-8:30 Dinner and Conversation
Bring your own publications to share.
***RSVP to jliese@risd.edu by Friday, February 23
Grad Thesis Book Design Workshop
Grad Thesis Book Design Workshop
Sunday, February 18, 3-6 PM, Fleet Library, Macaulay Room
This Sunday, take a break from writing your thesis to plan the book's design.
Marcus Peabody, grad in GD and grad assistant in the Center for Arts & Language, will guide you step by step through the elements of thesis book design, from overall aesthetic to format to grid to typography to image strategies. He will share thesis book samples along the way, lead short exploratory exercises, and point you toward paper, printing, and binding resources.
RSVP appreciated but not required: jliese@risd.edu.
Below: spreads from Jennifer Garza-Cuen (MFA Photography 2011), Wandering in Place
Unbound Is Back!
One of our favorite events is fast approaching: Unbound, RISD's annual art book fair. Mark your calendars for April 7, and if you're interested in exhibiting, jump on it: as of this AM, there are only 10 tables left! Register here.
Spontaneous Statements
Artist statements are so often labored over for weeks, months, years even. Last fall, we noticed a couple of very public examples of what we'd like to call "spontaneous statements."
Exhibit A: Kara Walker's much noted statement (scroll down in this link) accompanying her fall New York show, which puts off all pretense of describing her work but expresses with the very power of her work the intertwined exhaustion and fury of standing against racism. Maybe she labored over this statement, but it feels like it came out in a single breathless burst.
Exhibit B: Huang Yong Ping's statement in response to the Guggenheim's pulling the live animals in his Theater of the World from the work, leaving just its armature (see here). This one is scribbled on an Air France air sickness bag—it doesn't get much more urgent than that.
Lately we've seen a few spontaneous statements around A&L, too. Here's one we love by Kathryn LaMontagne (Textiles), below. If you have an artist statement—spontaneous, refined, or anywhere in between—come on in; we'd love to hear about it.
Wintersession Workshops: English Language Support
English Language Support Workshops
Facilitated by Maya Krinsky, Assistant Director for Multilingual Learning
(send RSVPs or questions to mkrinsky01@risd.edu)
American Idioms (undergrads)
This workshop focuses on vocabulary and common expressions in American culture and the art/design classroom. Bring specific questions from your experience so far. Mondays, January 8th, January 29th, February 5th; 12:00 – 1:00 PM; Macaulay Room, Fleet Library
Critique Group (grads and undergrads)
This workshop helps prepare for critiques by improving speaking skills. We will look at work and practice making comments and asking questions. Bring a project, piece, or idea that you are working on, or come to respond to others’ work.
Mondays, January 8th, January 29th, February 5th; 6:30 – 8:00 PM; A&L, CB 240
Keywords (grads)
This workshop is for grad students working on artist statements, applications, presentations, studio visits, project titles, or any task where selecting the right keywords affects the understanding of one’s work. We will brainstorm vocabulary words for specific projects and discuss nuances of translation. We will also talk about keywords in each department to expand our accuracy with disciplinary terminology. Wednesdays, January 10th, January 31st; 10:00 – 11:00 AM; CIT Grad Lounge
Co-editing (grads and undergrads)
A collaborative group study session focused on improving accuracy in written English through group editing and discussion of common errors and grammatical structures. Students should bring an in-progress or finished writing project.
Wednesdays, January 10th, January 31st; 12:00 – 1:00 PM; A&L, CB 240
Pronunciation Lab (grads and undergrads)
An intensive practice session focused on American English pronunciation or “accent acquisition.” We’ll work on the sounds, melodies, and intonations common in American English, and you can request help with troublesome words or phrases.
Fridays, January 12th, February 2nd; 3:00 – 4:00 PM; CB 301
Wintersession Workshops: Grad Written Thesis
Thinking Through Thesis: A Series of Workshops for Grads
Sundays, 3:00-6:00 pm, Macaulay Conference Room, Fleet Library
These workshops are designed to break down the written thesis book process into approachable pieces, open up new avenues for expression, and align thesis writing with studio work. The series is also an opportunity to get feedback from a diverse group of peers across departments in a relaxed, open environment.
All graduate students are welcome. The first and last workshops are open. The middle three are a series requiring full attendance; maximum 10 students. Please RSVP to jliese@risd.edu.
January 7—A guided tour of exemplary thesis books, focusing on varieties of content, led by A&L grad assistant Aaron Simmons
January 14—Exercises that oscillate between talking and writing, designed to define core thesis ideas and a relationship with audi- ence, led by A&L faculty mentor Emily Cornell du Houx
January 21—Exercises that map sources, influences, and process, unearthing a structure for the thesis book, led by A&L faculty mentor Emily Cornell du Houx
January 28—Exercises that collect and transform existing writing—notes, poetry, essays, thesis drafts—through revision, led by A&L faculty mentor Emily Cornell du Houx
February 18—A guided tour of exemplary thesis books, focusing on elements of design, plus how-to exercises and printing resources, led by A&L grad assistant Marcus Peabody
Crit and Grammar Workshops for Multilingual Learning
Weekly drop-in workshops for English language support are open to all. You do not need to register and can join in any week. Email with any questions: mkrinsky01@risd.edu.
Crit Group
This workshop is designed to help you improve your speaking skills in critique. We share work, learn new vocabulary and common expressions, practice together, and improve by giving one another feedback. Bring a project, piece, or idea to share, or come to respond to others’ work.
Monday nights 6:30–8:00 pm (Maya Krinsky)
Location: A&L, CB 240
Dates: 9/18–12/4
Grammar Group
This workshop is a facilitated group study session for you to improve your grammar. We focus on useful structures and forms in context, and expand with writing and speaking activities. Each workshop has a grammatical concept as its theme. Additionally, students are encouraged to bring specific questions and topics they would like to address.
Thursday 12:00 pm - 1:10 pm (Maya Krinsky)
Location: CB 301
Dates: 9/21 - 12/7
Stretch Your Pencils: Grad Thesis Writing Workshops
Stretch Your Pencils:
Grad Thesis Writing Workshops
Tuesdays from 7-8:30 pm this Fall, in CIT 304
Facilitated by A&L’s Faculty Grad Mentor, Emily Cornell du Houx
All grads welcome. Come together to examine your work in innovative and invigorating ways, stretching the limits of expressive practice and busting out of common writing ruts. We’ll approach writing as a mutable medium, one that can be built up, torn apart, cobbled together, patch-worked, polished, exploded, and constructed like a work itself.
The workshops are cumulative, but participants can drop in any week. Taken together, they provide material, methods, and inspiration for assembling the final written thesis and developing a rich language around visual work.
Each workshop revolves around a shared writing activity, for example:
—The List, The Map, and the Storm: create shapes for idea generation
—Go Ghost: take turns ghost-writing a part of someone else’s thesis
—Dictionary (De)construction: build your own word collection
—Mapping Makers: identify your influences
—Zoom In, Zoom Out: explore expansive and contractive research
—Tune In, Tune Up: practice editing as listening
We’ll also experiment with timed writing, writing to music, walking and writing, and writing using different modes and mediums.
Tonight! Jen Bervin's Silk Poems
H101 Formal Analysis: Overview and Q+A
with Jen Liese, Center for Arts & Language
in College Building, 434
Tues 9/26, 4:30-5:30
Wed 9/27, 12-1
(Choose one—no RSVP required.)
Your first H101 paper assignment—the formal analysis—is probably entirely new to you. Your H101 professor will guide you through its conventions, but you may want to learn more. In this workshop, we’ll review the essentials and the finer points of this cornerstone of art history and critical writing and share approaches to seeing, describing, and analyzing works of art and design. Feel free to bring assignment sheets, drafts, and specific questions, or just come and listen in.
H101 Formal Analysis Workshop
H101 Formal Analysis: Overview and Q+A
with Jen Liese, Center for Arts & Language
in College Building, 434
Tues 9/26, 4:30-5:30
Wed 9/27, 12-1
(Choose one—no RSVP required.)
Your first H101 paper assignment—the formal analysis—is probably entirely new to you. Your H101 professor will guide you through its conventions, but you may want to learn more. In this workshop, we’ll review the essentials and the finer points of this cornerstone of art history and critical writing and share approaches to seeing, describing, and analyzing works of art and design. Feel free to bring assignment sheets, drafts, and specific questions, or just come and listen in.
Patti Smith Fans: Why Do You Write?
On September 27, musician, poet, and artist Patti Smith will be reading at the RISD Museum from her book Devotion (Why I Write). Tickets have been sold out for weeks, but hope is not lost!
A&L is hosting a lottery and giving away 75 free tickets and copies of the book (courtesy the RISD Museum). All you have to do is:
Look for the submission boxes at right around campus (in A&L, Carr Haus, the Fleet Library, and at the RISD Museum reception desks). Grab a card and respond to the question "Why do you write?" in words or pictures. Drop the card in the box. (A few more instructions are on the box itself.)
The drawing is this Friday, 9/22. You have four days left. We've gotten lots of (beautiful) entries, but your odds are still amazing.
PS: This is Patti Smith, people!
New Name, Same Place, & ...
As of today, September 8, 2017, the RISD Writing Center has a new name: the Center for Arts & Language (A&L). This name reflects our growth in mission and services and our spirit of openness—or perhaps, "&-ness." Today also happens to be National Ampersand Day (thank you, June Shin, for pointing out this amazing fortuity). Let us celebrate the occasions with a favorite quote:
"If the work is a boat, the artist-interlocutor is a sailor ... translating, annotating, mediating, criticizing, interpreting, and extending the contents of the different instances of articulation. ... The artist takes custody of what might have begun within his or her life, consciousness, and body, but the work is already on its way out into the world." —Raqs Media Collective, “How to Be an Artist by Night”
& Come visit. You can find us in the very same place: College Building 240.
& See preceding posts for a selected view into our past.
& Stay tuned for the future.
Serious Summer Fun
Had enough sun, sand, and surf? Love art and language? Whiling away the summer in Rhode Island or Brooklyn? Here are two events you won’t want to miss:
WORD: Text in Contemporary Art
Jamestown Art Center (up through August 13; curator's tour on July 25)
BOMB Small Press Flea
Brooklyn Public Library, Central Branch (July 29, 10am–4pm)
Writes of Passage
Yesterday we stopped by the Fleet Library to witness one of our favorite annual rituals—the submission of graduate students’ written theses to the Library’s permanent collection. The moment felt especially festive as library staff (including Marc Calhoun and Ariel Bordeaux, pictured below) greeted students with chocolate fortune cookies and hearty congratulations.
We can’t wait for this new set of thesis books to reach the shelves—lots of summer reading ahead! In the meantime, one book caught our eye, so recently compiled that the ink hadn’t yet dried …
Fresh off the press!
Poetry Workshop with CA Conrad — Join Us!
Open for Dialogue
In the past year or so, and especially since the election, we have noticed more students coming to the Writing Center with texts and speech expressing views about politics, social justice, and identity. Engaging with diverse and deeply held ideas and perspectives is a privilege we take seriously. Our ongoing research and approach to tutoring emphasizes respect for individual voices, experiences, goals, and learning styles. Last weekend we participated in a workshop led by Claudia Ford (Lecturer, HPSS), who helped us understand our role in fostering respectful, open dialogues, even, or especially, when they are difficult.
We’re still honing our skills in this work — in fact, we agreed that this practice requires perpetual reflection — but we want you to know that we’re here for you. We invite you to come in if you would like support in processing and articulating your thoughts or feelings about complex topics, whether that means practicing a speech for a rally, writing a cultural critique for class, or preparing for a Facebook conversation with a friend. All opinions and beliefs are welcome, because we believe that silencing opposing views is unfair and unproductive when we should be discussing them. However, we will stand against bigotry, whether in words or in actions, and put our skills toward building a more inclusive community.
We hope you will consider visiting us as a space for safe and open discussion.
We would also like to share some of the materials and tools we have found most helpful in exploring this topic and preparing for this work:
Suggested Ground Rules for Inclusive Dialogue
Nonviolent Communication Model, The Center for Nonviolent Communication
“Effective Dialogue Skills,” Kathy Obear
“How to DO Empathy,” Alan Seid
“You Talkin’ to Me?” John C. Cavanaugh
“Let’s Not Be Divided,” Trevor Noah
What’s Your Learning Style?
In a recent group meeting, the RISD Writing Center tutors answered the VARK questionnaire. VARK stands for the four different modes of learning: visual, aural, read/write, and kinesthetic. These styles affect not only how we learn but how we think, make, do, listen, speak, read, and write.
Some of us were surprised by the results—one person discovered that she is primarily kinesthetic, for example, when she thought she was firmly in the read and write camp. These surprises challenged our assumptions about others’ learning styles as well. We used our new awareness to think about tutoring methods that might best serve various learning styles, and about how these preferences come into play in the studio.
Here’s the questionnaire if you’re interested in taking it yourself. And next time you come to the Writing Center, feel free to share your style!
