May 20, 2024  
2023 - 2024 College Catalog 
  
2023 - 2024 College Catalog

Course Descriptions


Interpreting Course Listings

Example:

ENGL 320. The Victorian Period (4AS) indicates an English course at the junior level, earning four credit-hours, offered in alternate years, usually in the spring. Class time of four hours per week may be scheduled in several different ways: for example, on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for periods of one hour and 10 minutes each; on Tuesdays and Thursdays for periods of one hour and 50 minutes each; or any equivalent plan. The online “Schedule of Classes” for the semester in which the course is offered lists class hours, size limit, location, and instructor. The phrase “May be repeated for credit” means that the course usually varies in content each time it is offered. A student may register for such a course more than once, earning credit each time, provided that the topics are different. A student may repeat such a course for a better grade only if the topic is the same as the topic of the original course.

The following paragraphs provide keys to understanding the codes used.

Course Numbers.

The number of the course indicates the level of instruction: that is, 100-level courses are appropriate for first-year students, most 200-level courses are appropriate for sophomores, 300-level for juniors, and 400-level for seniors. 500-700 level courses are designated for the Master of Arts in Teaching Program. A student who does not have the stated prerequisite for a course may register for that course only with the consent of the instructor.

Credit hours.

The number in the parentheses following the title of each course identifies the credit hours the course will earn. Most courses carry four credit hours. Some offer varying credits, depending upon the exact content determined by the instructor.

Frequency of Offerings.

The letter(s) appearing in the parenthetical entry following the title of each course indicates the frequency with which the course is offered.

  • A: Offered in alternate years
  • AF: Offered in alternate years, usually in the fall semester
  • AS: Offered in alternate years, usually in the spring semester
  • E: Offered in each semester
  • F: Offered annually in the fall semester
  • S: Offered annually in the spring semester
  • Su: Offered annually in the summer

Courses are of one-semester duration unless otherwise described. This information is provided to assist the student in making tentative four-year plans when he or she enrolls in St. Mary’s, even though changes in academic needs and faculty resources may require that a department deviate from the anticipated frequency of offerings. If no letter appears after the credit-hours number, a student can consult the appropriate department about its calendar offerings. Courses being offered in any given semester are listed in the online “Schedule of Classes,” a web publication distributed well in advance of the beginning of each semester.

Class Time.

Except where course descriptions show both lecture and laboratory hours, courses are conducted primarily by the lecture or discussion method, and classes meet for the same number of total hours each week as there are credit hours for the course.

Experimental Courses

Occasionally, a department may offer a course that is not listed in the catalog. Designated as experimental, such courses may be offered twice before being formally approved and incorporated into the curriculum or dropped from the College’s offerings. Such courses carry credit on the same basis as courses listed in the catalog. Experimental courses may not be used to satisfy any Core Curriculum requirements.

 

Art

  
  • ART 197 - Directed Research in Art


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Under the direct supervision of a faculty member, a student participates in creative research. A learning contract that specifies the creative research goals and methodology must be filed with the Office of the Registrar. A maximum of four credit hours of directed research in chemistry or biochemistry (ART 397  or ART 497  only) may be applied to major requirements in chemistry. May be repeated for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): Learning contract filed in the Office of the Registrar.
  
  • ART 199 - Independent Study


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    This course consists of an independent creative or research project designed by the student and supervised by an art faculty member. The nature of the project, the schedule for accomplishment, and the means of evaluation must be formalized in a learning contract prior to registration.

  
  • ART 204 - Introduction to Drawing


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    An introduction to the fundamental issues, materials, and techniques of drawing. Drawing skills and visual awareness are addressed through formal exercises and creative projects. Emphasis is given to developing an understanding of the basic principles of two-dimensional design and the depiction of form and space.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 205 - Introduction to Visual Thinking


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    This course serves as a broad introduction to visual literacy, and introduces students to the complex process of visual communication, from the mechanics of sensation and perception to the interaction of symbols, subject matter, and context. Through a series of lectures, hands-on visual projects, visiting artist presentations, and readings, students learn that their ability to derive meaning from what they see is essential in a world suffused with composed objects. By the completion of this course, students will develop their visual intelligence and begin to observe, decode, recognize, dissect, identify, experience, and understand the visual world. Counts for Arts in Core Exploration.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): No Prerequisites.
  
  • ART 206 - Introduction to Painting


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the fall semester

    An introduction to the principles of painting and basic oil painting methods. Formal and expressive problems are explored through creative projects featuring a variety of techniques and subjects. Critiques and discussions of issues in art history and in contemporary art.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 207 - Illustration


    Credit Hours: 4
    Need Course Description

  
  • ART 211 - Portrait Photography: Identity and Social Justice


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This course is a comprehensive exploration of portraiture through photography. Students will learn how to create portraits both in the studio and on location with professional strobe lights and digital retouching tools. Through studio projects, assigned readings, and critiques, students will examine how portrait photographs not just record one’s likeness, but also communicate critical issues of identity, such as gender, politics, class, and race. The course will also examine how portraiture photography has been used to perpetuate biases and social injustices through history, and in turn, students will explore using the same medium to advocate for a more equitable and just future.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): No Prerequisites.
  
  • ART 212 - Introduction to Photography


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    An introduction to the principles of photography and basic photographic processes. Creative problems are explored through the use of a variety of subjects and techniques, including experiments with paper and film, manual exposure, roll-film processing, darkroom printing, and digital retouching. Critiques and discussions of issues in art history and contemporary art.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 213 - Book Arts: Text, Image, and Design


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This course is ideal for students with interdisciplinary interests who want to create books and explore self-publishing ideas with diverse subjects related to any major and minor at the College. No previous art experience is needed. Students will learn basic book design techniques and principles that can be applied to create print media documentation for use in future capstone and other independent projects. All students are encouraged to explore their own poetry, prose, original and printed artwork, autobiography, and many other subjects. This course explores the art and function of the book by focusing on the integrated relationship between form and content using traditional and non-traditional structures and art materials. Emphasis is placed on the book as a communicative medium, the integration of text and image, and the creation of sequence, narrative and meaning through visual and textual means. The course introduces bookbinding techniques, typography and communication design and basic printmaking using relief and transfer techniques. Studio sessions, lecture and discussion, group and individual feedback and critiques.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): No Prerequisites.
  
  • ART 214 - Introduction to Digital Media Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    An introduction to the fundamental issues, tools and techniques of digital art. Formal and creative problems are explored through the use of a variety of computer software and hardware, including screen, audio and physical media projects. Critiques of digital art and discussion of issues in contemporary digital media.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 223 - Printmaking I: Traditional and Contemporary Techniques


    Credit Hours: 4
    This course is designed to give students first exposure to the print studio and to the exploration of printmaking. Print methods include relief, monotype and how to use every day recycled materials in stencil and collage-based works. Survey of historical and current approaches to the art of printmaking. Students learn how to create drawings and designs that will effectively translate into black and white and color print images. Assigned readings, lectures, and discussion, technical demonstration with experimentation and practice. Students develop studio projects that explore a diversity of subject matters using the visual languages of representation to abstraction.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the LEAD Curriculum requirement in the Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): No Prerequisites.
  
  • ART 224 - Printmaking II: The Matrix and the Painterly Print


    Credit Hours: 4
    This course is designed to give students a first exposure to the print studio and to the exploration of printmaking and its intermedia relationship to drawing and painting. Traditional and contemporary print methods covered include those that combine a printmaking plate (the matrix) that can be printed multiple times with unique additions in painting and drawing. Print processes include intaglio, relief/woodcut and monotype. Students learn how to create drawings and designs that will effectively translate into black and white and color print images. Survey of historical and current approaches to the art of printmaking. Assigned readings, lectures and discussion, technical demonstration with experimentation and practice. Students develop studio projects that explore a diversity of subject matters using the visual languages of representation to abstraction. 

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the LEAD Curriculum requirement in the Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): No Prerequisites.
  
  • ART 233 - Topics in Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Various topics presented as introductory-level courses, each focusing on a particular studio art activity. Topics may be defined in terms of techniques, medium, or subject matter.This course may be repeated for credit if the topic is not repetitive. For a description of each course, see the current online Schedule of Classes.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 239 - Painting and Drawing from Life


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    The principles, practices, and history of painting and drawing from direct observation. Students learn beginning techniques of drawing and painting from direct observation and the conceptual framework for a variety of approaches to life painting and drawing. Subject matter relies heavily on the human figure, still life, and nature. Critique and discussion of traditional and contemporary observational drawing and painting. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Course Satisfies: Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
  
  • ART 240 - Landscape Drawing and Painting


    Credit Hours: 4
    This course introduces the principles, practices, and history of landscape painting and drawing. Students learn beginning techniques of drawing and painting from direct observation, and the conceptual framework for a variety of approaches to visual landscape theory. Critique, discussions center around skills, concepts, and context embedded in traditional and contemporary landscape painting and drawing. Students work primarily on-site, within the landscape of the College and surrounding community.

    Course Satisfies: Core Curriculum requirement for Arts. This course satisfies a Humanities Track elective for the ENST major and minor.
  
  • ART 247 - Introduction to Animation


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This studio course will introduce students to the tools of a contemporary animation workflow, through projects that incorporate traditional methods with digital imaging and software applications. Students will learn basic principles of animation, storyboarding, character creation, sound design, and more. The course emphasizes the development of an experimental art practice. Lectures, readings, and screenings will introduce students to the history and principles of animation, and facilitate the exploration of form, method, and content in the artistic use of technology.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): None
  
  • ART 269 - Community Arts


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This course explores the foundations of and current practices in community arts. Students will learn about pedagogical issues encompassed in community art outreach and how practitioners seek to provide meaningful art programs to diverse audiences. Students will learn about the mission, goals, and funding for arts organizations at the local, state, and national level. Students will participate in multiple art projects on and off campus that engage the community through a variety of media.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies the Core Exploration requirement in Arts.
    Prerequisite(s): There are no Prerequisites for this course.
  
  • ART 297 - Directed Research in Art


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Under the direct supervision of a faculty member, a student participates in research. A learning contract that specifies the research goals and methodology must be filed with the Office of the Registrar. A maximum of four credit hours of directed research in chemistry or biochemistry (ART 397  or ART 497  only) may be applied to major requirements in chemistry. May be repeated for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): Learning contract filed in the Office of the Registrar.
  
  • ART 299 - Independent Study


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    This course consists of an independent creative or research project designed by the student and supervised by an art faculty member. The nature of the project, the schedule for accomplishment, and the means of evaluation must be formalized in a learning contract prior to registration.

  
  • ART 304 - Advanced Drawing


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the fall semester

    An intensive studio practice in drawing. Emphasis is given to developing an understanding of the unique issues and concerns of drawing and how these may contribute to the expression of a personal vision. Projects are directed to develop the student’s ability to work independently. Studio projects, critiques, and discussions of issues in art history and contemporary art. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 204  or permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 306 - Advanced Painting


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the spring semester

    An intensive studio practice in painting. Emphasis is given to developing an understanding of the unique issues and concerns of painting and how these may contribute to the expression of a personal vision. Projects are directed to develop the student’s ability to work independently. Studio projects, critiques, and discussions of issues in art history and contemporary art. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 206  or permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 307 - Practicum in Art Instruction


    Credit Hours: 2
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Supervised experience in organizing, preparing, and teaching a studio art course and supervising studio lab sessions. Students are assigned to a specific art studio course and will assist the instructor. Grade evaluation will be based on attendance, preparation, teaching ability and specific tasks assigned by the instructor, such as designing a demonstration or presentation to illustrate art studio principles and practices. This course may be repeated once for credit. All expectations including the scope of student-instructor responsibilities and means of evaluation must be formalized in a learning contract prior to registration.

    Prerequisite(s): Students must be art majors and/or must obtain the consent of the instructor. Completion of ART 307 is highly recommended for any student preparing for graduate study in art education.
  
  • ART 309 - Advanced Drawing and Printmaking


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the spring semester

    An intensive studio practice that explores the intersections between direct drawing techniques and indirect drawing as practiced in printmaking. Emphasis is given to skill building in both drawing and printmaking as this serves to expand the materials and techniques, processes, and conceptual approaches employed by artists to create 2D art works. Projects are directed to develop the student’s ability to work independently and explore subject matter drawn from observation and imagination in color and black and white media. Instruction provided in drawing using wet and dry media, the printmaking processes of drypoint, relief and monotype, and basic construction of books. Lecture and discussion, writing and research, studio projects and critiques. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): One of the following courses: ART 204 , ART 223 , ART 224 , ART 239 , ART 240 , or permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 311 - Advanced Portrait Photography: Identity and Social Justice


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This course is a comprehensive exploration of portraiture through photography. Students will learn how to create portraits both in the studio and on location with professional strobe lights and digital retouching tools. Through studio projects, assigned readings, and critiques, students will examine how portrait photographs not just record one’s likeness, but also communicate critical issues of identity, such as gender, politics, class, and race. The course will also examine how portraiture photography has been used to perpetuate biases and social injustices through history, and in turn, students will explore using the same medium to advocate for a more equitable and just future. Studio sessions, directed and self-proposed projects at the advanced level that build on previous art course experiences, lecture and discussion, group and individual feedback and critiques.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 212 , or ART 211  or by permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 312 - Advanced Photography


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the fall semester

    An intensive studio practice in photography. Emphasis is given to the issues and concerns of photography and how these may contribute to the realization of the student’s personal vision. Projects are directed to develop the student’s ability to work independently. Studio projects, critiques, and discussions of issues in art history and contemporary art. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 212  or permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 314 - Advanced Digital Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the spring semester

    An intensive studio practice in digital and time-based art (digital video, computer animation and web-based applications). Emphasis is given to developing an understanding of the unique issues and concerns of digital and time-based art and how these may contribute to the expression of a personal vision. Projects are designed to develop the student’s ability to work independently. Studio projects, critiques, and discussions of issues in art history and contemporary art. This course may be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 214  or permission of the instructor.
  
  • ART 333 - Advanced Topics in Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Various topics presented as advanced-level courses, each focusing in depth on a particular issue in studio art. Topics may be defined in terms of technique, medium, or subject matter. These courses are designed for students who have already completed introductory-level work in the area of each topic offering. This course may be repeated if the topic is not repetitive.

  
  • ART 339 - Advanced Painting and Drawing from Life


    Credit Hours: 4
    The principles, practices, and history of painting and drawing from direct observation. Students learn advanced techniques of drawing and painting from direct observation and the conceptual framework for a variety of approaches to life painting and drawing. Studio work from the model, still life, and landscape. Critique and discussion of traditional and contemporary observational drawing and painting.

    Prerequisite(s): One of the following art studio courses: ART 204 , ART 206 , ART 239 ART 240 ,  or consent of instructor.
  
  • ART 346 - Advanced Animation


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This course will build upon the skills and concepts introduced in Introduction to Animation, through an intensive, project-driven studio practice. Students will gain experience in advanced principles of animation, pre-production, and methods of aesthetic expression and communication in time-based art production. Lectures, readings, screenings, and discussions will deepen students’ understanding of the issues central to contemporary animation, and facilitate the exploration of form, method, and content in the artistic use of technology. (previously ART 233 - Topics in Art: Animation)

    Prerequisite(s): ART 214 - Introduction to Digital Media Art  or ART 246 - Introduction to Animation.
  
  • ART 347 - Advanced Book Arts: Text, Image, and Design


    Credit Hours: 4
    This course explores the art and function of the book by focusing on the integrated relationship between form and content using traditional and non-traditional structures and art materials. Emphasis is placed on the book as a communicative medium, the integration of text and image, and the creation of sequence, narrative and meaning through visual and textual means. Students are encouraged to explore their own poetry, prose, original and printed artwork, autobiography, and many other subjects. The course introduces bookbinding techniques, typography and communication design and basic printmaking using relief and transfer techniques. Directed and self-proposed projects, critiques and discussion.

    Prerequisite(s): One of the following art studio courses: ART 204 , ART 205 ART 206 , ART 211 ,  ART 212  , ART 213  , ART 223  , ART 224  , ART 233  , ART 239  , ART 240  , ART 247  , ART 269  , or consent of instructor.
  
  • ART 367 - Color


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years, usually in the spring semester

    This applied studio-based theory course explores the history of and motivations behind our use of color as it relates to art objects. It is an intermediate studio art class that integrates historical and contemporary color theory with studio art projects. Working with a variety of mixed media, students will apply what they learn to a series of studio projects. Group discussions, critiques, and written assignments will reflect class readings, fieldtrips, and lectures.

    Prerequisite(s): Any 200-level studio art course, or consent of the instructor.
  
  • ART 369 - Art for Educators


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in alternate years

    This applied theory course explores the foundations of and current practices in art education. Students investigate the philosophies, historical movements, social issues, and curriculum foundations and their influences on the teaching of art in American educational settings including public schools, private schools, museum education, and community arts programs. Completion of Art 307 is highly recommended for any student preparing for graduate study in art education.

    Prerequisite(s): ART 269   or consent of the instructor
  
  • ART 390 - The Artist Naturalist


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the spring semester

    This course explores the world of nature from the perspective of the artist naturalist in history and in studio practice. Key figures such as Aristotle, Pliny, Robert Hooke, John James Audubon, Mark Catesby, Ernst Haeckel, Maria Sybilla Merian, and Charles Darwin provide examples of the diverse approaches to documenting and studying the natural world. In studio projects students learn drawing and painting techniques that have direct applications to illustration including the use of pencil, pen and ink, and watercolor painting. Throughout the semester each student keeps a nature journal of writing and art. Lecture and discussion, writing and research, studio projects and fieldwork.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies a Humanities Track elective in the Environmental Studies major and minor.
  
  • ART 397 - Directed Research in Art


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Under the direct supervision of a faculty member, a student participates in creative research. A learning contract that specifies the creative research goals and methodology must be filed with the Office of the Registrar. A maximum of four credit hours of directed research in chemistry or biochemistry (ART 397 or ART 497  only) may be applied to major requirements in chemistry. May be repeated for credit.

     

     

    Prerequisite(s): Learning contract filed in the Office of the Registrar.

  
  • ART 398 - Off-Campus Internship


    Credit Hours: 4-16
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Off-campus experiential learning opportunity. A variety of internships can be arranged through the Career Development Center, subject to the approval of the art faculty. The off-campus internship is an individually designed experience that allows the student to explore the relationship between learning and everyday work situations. Credit/no credit grading.

    Course Satisfies: This course satisfies an art theory requirement for art majors with a concentration in studio art. This course replaces ARTH 425, therefore, students who have taken ARTH 425 may not take ART 425  for credit.
    Prerequisite(s): Admission to the internship program and approval of the department chair.
  
  • ART 399 - Independent Study


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    This course consists of an independent creative or research project designed by the student and supervised by an art faculty member. The nature of the project, the schedule for accomplishment, and the means of evaluation must be formalized in a learning contract prior to registration.

  
  • ART 430 - Capstone 1: Creative Practices in Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Capstone 1 is the culminating advanced-level studio art course in the Art major in which students create and present a cohesive body of independent, self-proposed and self-generated studio art work carried out within a seminar context. Throughout the course, students also produce reflective and research-based writing that analyzes, synthesizes and articulates knowledge of the field of art and art making that contextualizes the student’s creative art works. The seminar’s collaborative framework and integrated set of experiences directs the student’s production of creative art work, which includes assigned readings and discussion, research and writing, oral presentation, and group and individual critiques with faculty and visiting artists. The skills and abilities needed to successfully engage in the self-reflective and self-generating art making for this course have been introduced and practiced through assignments in previous courses taken at the 200 and 300-levels in the Art major. Personal accountability and effective work habits are developed through the effective combination of process and product in each student’s self-proposed studio art works. The semester culminates in a group gallery exhibition and related written materials through which process students show evidence of their learned skills to leverage the strengths of others to achieve common goals, and organize, prioritize and delegate work. In order to accomplish these course goals, students are expected to show good progress throughout the semester, maintain regular studio work schedule outside of seminar meeting times and fully participate in all seminar meetings. To facilitate the ambition and focus required of advanced-level work, each student will be provided with and will be expected to effectively make use of assigned studio spaces in the department’s communal senior studios in the Art Annex.

    Prerequisite(s): Successful completion of all the following courses, as specified, with a C- or higher; Four courses - ART 205 , ARTH 100 , and at least TWO of the following upper-level courses: ART 304 , ART 306 ART 309 ART 311 ART 312 ART 314 ART 333 ART 339 ART 346 ART 347 ART 367 ART 369 ART 390 .
  
  • ART 431 - Capstone 2: Professional Practices in Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the spring semester

    Capstone 2 focuses on contemporary art issues in the context of a student’s studio artwork & interests in tandem with a broad exploration of diverse career and professional development in the arts. This course prioritizes contemporary art research, self-reflection, and documentation of a student’s creative art practice completed in Capstone 1 and other self-generated art works. Based on studio art-making completed in previous or other concurrent ART courses, this course does not require or expect the creation of new art works. The seminar is collaborative and cooperative, with topics, activities, and discussions geared to prepare for life and career after graduation. Students will learn to identify and articulate how the skills, strengths, knowledge, and experiences gained in the Capstone 1 and 2 are relevant to their career goals and professional growth. Capstone 2 culminates with a poster presentation with related web-based documentation, and the delivery of a coherent and creative oral presentation that explains, documents and contextualizes the student’s creative practice. Seminar activities focus on the practical application of short-term and long-term career goals and planning to include; photographic and written documentation of art works, development of written artist statements, understanding of intellectual property rights and the business of art, preparation of resumés and cover letters, portfolio development for careers in diverse art-related fields appropriate to exhibitions, websites, online registries, grants and residencies, internships, jobs, graduate school, and other arts opportunities including how to create artist communities at the College and after graduation. Invited seminar speakers include SMCM faculty, visiting artists and critics, representatives from graduate programs, and SMCM alumni working in the arts in many capacities to include some or all of the following; art education, marketing and communication design, nonprofit and for-profit arts organizations, museums, alternative spaces and galleries, self-owned businesses in art, and public and private commission work.

    Prerequisite(s) or Co-requisite(s): ART 430 - Capstone 1: Creative Practices in Art  with a C- or higher.
  
  • ART 493 - St. Mary’s Project in Art


    Credit Hours: 4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered annually in the fall semester

    The St. Mary’s Project in Art is a two-semester experience in which a student pursues sustained independent studio projects accompanied by written formulation of artistic concerns and research into related art and ideas. Students initiate the project, identify a clear focus in studio Art to be explored and propose a method of inquiry appropriate to the topic. A faculty mentor supervises the project research. The project must be shared with the College community through exhibition, poster presentation, or other means. Permission of the instructor.

  
  • ART 497 - Directed Research in Art


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Under the direct supervision of a faculty member, a student participates in creative research. A learning contract that specifies the creative research goals and methodology must be filed with the Office of the Registrar. A maximum of four credit hours of directed research in chemistry or biochemistry (ART 397  or ART 497 only) may be applied to major requirements in chemistry. May be repeated for credit.

    Prerequisite(s): Learning contract filed in the Office of the Registrar.
  
  • ART 498 - Off-Campus Internship


    Credit Hours: 4-16
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    Off-campus experiential learning opportunity. A variety of internships can be arranged through the Career Development Center, subject to the approval of the art faculty. The off-campus internship is an individually designed experience that allows the student to explore the relationship between learning and everyday work situations. Credit/no credit grading.

    Prerequisite(s): admission to the internship program and approval of the department chair.
  
  • ART 499 - Independent Study


    Credit Hours: 1-4
    Frequency of Offering: Offered in each semester

    This course consists of an independent creative or research project designed by the student and supervised by an art faculty member. The nature of the project, the schedule for accomplishment, and the means of evaluation must be formalized in a learning contract prior to registration.