Archives for posts with tag: academics

One of the great things about RIT is that there has been a concerted effort to bring in training resources for teachers. Over the last two months I’ve attended a number of wonderful sessions that have really gotten me to think about teaching methodologies.

The, well, problem is that once that door is opened, it’s not too easy to close. And right now I’m now I’m taking a hard look at my classes and trying to course correct for the final weeks. And I’m not always sure where to start. But I know that I really do need to make some changes — both in this quarter and in future ones. It’s exciting and scary at the same time.

Things are slowing here. Some of our creators have given in to sleep (I think our collection is going to have a number of Eastman Variations). We attribute it to this hunk of kryptonite we discovered in Vicky’s soda.

BTW, make sure to check out the offical blog/archive of 24 Hour Comic Day located here.

Signage

So, as usual, I’ve been blitzed. This is part of the reason: 24 Hour Comics Day. This was a idea dreamed up by Scott McCloud — create a 24 page comic in 24 hours. October 7th is the official 24 Hour Comic Day. RIT’s the only site in New York state and I’m one of the organizers. So that means I’ll be here at our library for 24 hours. That said, I’m not doing a comic :(. Instead I’m opting to document the event. The following is an entry I just uploaded to the 24 Hour Comic Blog.

We’re almost 10 hours in and going strong. The group has decreased to 14 artists, but the work is amazing! And the fun everyone is having is even better!

Here’s a breakdown of the work that’s going on:

The newly formed "Team Awesome" is cranking on the following:

  • Michael – Applesauce.
  • James – The chronicle of how drum major Dan became the drum major for Satan’s marching band.
  • Lindsey – Whether true love exists and the things that draw people together.
  • Alfie – BANG (the end of KILL)

Our other team, Vicky & Laela, are working on "A story that has nothing to do with anything but is really funny — Four characters meet their creators."

As for everyone else, we have:

  • Dan – Nightclaw: the beginning
  • Benjamin – Man on a Mission: One man’s quest to repair to the ozone layer aka hold on you 2 your layers aka deeper still, Ben’s not crazy.
  • Eric – A fantasy action story in search of a title.
  • Kurt – Deaf Buddha: the meaning of life.
  • Dorothy – An autobiographical comic.
  • Chuanshi – X-painters

Here are some random shots from the event. You can see the Flickr page for the event here.:

food and supplies
Pizza, soda (pop), and drawing supplies — all we need for a 24hr Comic Day!
teamAwesome at work
Team Awsome hard at work! Last heard around those parts:
Lindsey: This page, that is only one drawing, is taking a whole long amount of time.
Alfie: Can you be any more emo?
James: Please keep your amazing art over there for a few moments while the rest of us weep.
Comics!
Some of Lindsey’s work.


Dorothy’s autobiographical work that starts out in Marrakesh.


Dan and a page from Nightclaw

Workspaces
Benjamin’s work on one man’s quest to save the ozone layer.

Deaf Buddah
Kurt hard at work on Deaf Buddha.

Posing
Not only are Vikki and Laela a creative team, but they also serve as each other’s models. Laela uses Vikki as a model for a panel.

One of the committees that I’m currently serving on has been charged with coming up with an end of year event display event for School of Print Students. This type of event, in theme, if not form, is pretty common across the College of Imaging Arts and Sciences. For example, each year all the students and faculty members in the film department gather together and watch every student’s final project. Likewise most of the other arts have gallery exhibitions or studio walk throughs.

All of the above focus on an end product. But what is the end product of print? It’s easy to focus on the created artifact. But that often is reduced to concerns about the item’s graphic design. That focus is completely inappropriate for printing students – if for no other reasons that they are not training to be graphic designers. Arguably, the final products could be evaluated on choice of media and production aspects, but many of these factors are controlled by the assignments.

Frank Cost noted these problems with judging print production at the beginning of the chapter “The value of print” in his book The New Medium of Print (Cost, The New Medium of Print, 2005: pp95-7).  Cost reminds us that most printing industry awards are based on the quality of the final project rather than intangibles such as “was the job delivered on time? Was the customer please with the service? Did the product deliver the anticipated value to the customer?” (Cost: p95).

Cost goes on to suggest that while print quality is important, it’s also assumed. Thus, companies differentiate themselves on those other vectors. Likewise, our students are judged on far more vectors than simply “did the job print” and “is it pretty?” The challenge that we face is choosing a method of display that brings those intangibles to light.

The benefit, pedagogically, is that finding a method to display the intangibles serves to make the students more aware of their existence – that, as Martha says, “is a good thing.” The question is, what method is best?

Ok, since I still bleed yellow (and it’s not from jaundice), check out my Scott McCloud Lecture Kodak Gallery!