Faculty of Fine Arts JMI New Delhi
Source: en.wikipedia.org
Applied arts
The applied arts are the application of design and decoration to everyday objects to make them aesthetically pleasing.[1] The term is applied in distinction to the fine arts which aims to produce objects which are beautiful and/or provide intellectual stimulation. The fields of industrial design, graphic design, fashion de
sign, interior design and the decorative arts are considered applied arts. In a creative and/or abstract context, the fields of architecture and photography are also considered applied arts
Source: Concordia.ca/finearts
Art Education
As part of Concordia University’s internationally recognized Faculty of Fine Arts, the Department of Art Education provides excellent professional preparation in the visual arts and art teaching. Courses cover traditional visual media and digital technologies. Our professors are known internationally for their research in such areas as studio practice, cross-cultural aesthetics and education, adult education, the juvenile work of world-famous artists, built environment education, museum education, popular culture, digital technologies, community arts, and curriculum history and theory. Students are encouraged to develop individual artistic and teaching practices that integrate conceptual understanding, critical reflection, and practical experience. Our graduates have gone on to a wide range of professional positions, such as:
Art teachers in public and private schools throughout Quebec, Canada, the United States and abroad
Instructors and program directors in community art programs, working with at-risk youth, elderly adults, women’s shelters, hospitals, and long-term care facilities
Educators in computer graphics companies and corporate human resources departments
Self-employed artist-teachers
Art museum and gallery educators
Faculty members of colleges and universities in North America and Europe (graduates from our MA and PhD programs)
Source: art.colostate.eduPainting
The program: The undergraduate painting program gives students the ability to explore, develop, and gain personal understanding of the visual language and technical aspects of the painting medium. Additionally, it encourages the development of material experimentation and conceptual thinking in the upper level courses. Students begin by working from observation, developing CSU-Visual-Archive-Gavlick-3skills and proficiency in oils. As students gain skills and abilities with oil paints they are encouraged to challenge the very notion of what painting is by exploring alternative tools, methods and surfaces. Discipline and perseverance are strengthened as students develop a unique voice, conceptually and formally. In their senior year, students work closely with the painting faculty to develop a distinctive body of work that is sophisticated in its content and scope. Source: http://art.colostate.edu
The Sculpture studio is well equipped and recently updated. Sculpture encompasses 3800 square feet of studio space that has been divided into work spaces for wood working, metal working, wet materials, casting, general use, and a senior studio. Studio equipment includes: multiple bandsaws for wood and metal, sanders, grinders, drill presses, a metal cut-off saw, a table saw (Saw-stop technology), wood compound miter saw, metal shear and brake, 50” slip roller, oxy-acetylene welding and heating set-ups, a variety of welders (arc, MIG and TIG), two plasma cutters, a coal forge, a complete foundry, electric clay kilns in addition to numerous electric and pneumatic hand tools.