M.A. Studio Art – Summer in Venice, Italy
the program
The M.A. in Studio Art: Summer Program in Venice, Italy and New York program provides artists, students of art, and current and prospective art teachers an opportunity to do serious creative studio work in the areas of painting and drawing for university credit within a rich artistic milieu. Venice is a cosmopolitan city where students are able to meet artists, critics, and curators from all over the world. The city’s artistic resources are endlessly varied, and students develop their studio practice enriched by the enjoyment of masterpieces of Italian art in their original context. Course-related assignments take students to museums and important sites such as the Palladian villas, Modena, Padova, Parma, Vicenza, Ferrara, Verona, and Mantova.
A required core sequence engages students and faculty in a dynamic dialogue about contemporary art issues and serves as the foundation upon which students build their studio concentration during two intensive summer sessions in Venice. The third summer session is spent in New York, and students exhibit in an M.A. Graduate Exhibition at 80 Washington Square East Galleries.
enrollment
This course of study requires 36 points and can be completed in three full-time summer semesters, with a minimum of 12 points per semester. The program welcomes approximately 25 students each summer from diverse cultural backgrounds. This rich mix of perspectives provides an important stimulus toward establishing an interactive creative environment. A limited number of non-degree special students are accepted depending upon space availability.
admission prerequisites
To be considered for admission to the program, applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution, with a minimum GPA of 3.0. (International applicants are expected to have a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent.) An undergraduate major in studio art, including several courses in art history, is preferred but not required.
Students who hold a master’s degree in studio art may apply to the M.A. Program in Studio Art only if the area of specialization is significantly different from the area of their first master’s degree (e.g., painting vs. sculpture).
Applicants interested in a new medium must provide visual documentation, in slide form, of work in both the earlier medium and that which they would now like to study. A statement explaining what the student hopes to accomplish by pursuing a second master’s degree in studio art must accompany the application. Faculty will review applications based on the quality of work in the new area and not on the work done in the previous one.
the curriculum
The M.A. Program in Studio Art: Summer Program in Venice/New York provides the flexibility to develop strength and depth in the areas of painting or drawing. Students are able, with faculty advisement, to combine requirements and electives for the optimal mix of studio and critical studies courses to achieve their goals.
degree requirements
Required Core (15 points)
Graduate Studio Critique I and II (6 points), taken during the first two summers
Graduate Studio Critique is structured primarily around individual and group critiques of students’ artwork with emphasis on expanding their critical vocabulary, identifying key concerns, and building the foundation for a cohesive body of work that will form the basis of their thesis exhibition. Each student will be expected to provide a context for the discussion of his or her work including its formal, theoretical, and historical background.
During the second summer of Graduate Studio Critique, students present a body of work and an artist’s statement to the Studio Faculty Review Committee for evaluation. Students must successfully complete the review process in order to enroll in the Final Project course taken during the third summer.
Graduate Projects (9 points), taken each summer
Graduate Projects is based on a specific theme or issue in which students focus on formal strategies they have identified as central to their work and develop these ideas and methods in projects in their particular medium.
Through group discussions, assigned readings, lectures, and individual meetings with instructors and visitors, students prepare for the intellectual and artistic challenges of the professional art world.
Studio Component (9 points)
Three courses in student’s studio area
Theory, Aesthetics, Criticism (6 points)
E90.2456 Seminar in Art: Artist in Venice and one other course in the critical studies area
Elective (3 points)
Elective/by advisement
Final Project (3 points)
This course prepares students for the final group exhibition at 80 Washington Square East Galleries; it is designed to assist with the development of concept, design, and presentation of the work that will be included. Professional development and career planning, including an artist’s statement, slide portfolio, and letters to prospective exhibition venues, is also an integral component of this class.
Program Total: 36 points
application procedures
The application deadline is March 1, 2008. Follow the instructions outlined by The NYU Steinhardt Office of Graduate Admissions for filing your application form. The following is a list of all items that must accompany the completed application form:
- Transcripts: Must be obtained from undergraduate and graduate institutions, if applicable.
- Two (2) letters of recommendation: Should be obtained from academic and professional sources.
- Current résumé
- Statement of purpose (300-500 words): Must describe your interest in the field and the direction you wish to pursue in the graduate studio program of your choice. The statement of purpose is to be submitted in lieu of the personal statement requested on the application form.
- Portfolio: All portfolios must be on a Mac OS-formatted CD-ROM or DVD.
20 images of recent work submitted on a Mac OS-formatted CD-ROM (standard size, not 3”) or DVD in jpeg format only, sized at 1280 x 1024 pixels for viewing on a Macintosh computer via video projection. Please do NOT submit PowerPoint or Keynote presentations.
Each image must be numbered (corresponding to the order of viewing), and include title, if any, and your name.
Quicktime or DVD-formatted videos can be submitted in addition to, but not in place of digital images. Videos can be a compilation of various works, but the total running time cannot exceed five minutes. Genres appropriate to video documentation include video art, performance, and kinetic art, NOT documentation of sculptures or exhibitions.
We do not accept VHS-formatted videos.
Submit a digital image inventory with your name in the top right hand corner. List the images in order of viewing, file name, dimensions of work, date of work, medium, and title, if any. Please do not submit text files with your images.
Legibly print your name on all disks, sleeves, and/or cases and inlcude a self-addressed stamped envelope for return of your portfolio.
Send application materials to The Steinhardt School's Graduate Admissions Office. For general information pertaining to admission and financial aid, and/or to download an application (PDF file), visit the Graduate Admission Office's Web site.
for further information
Prof. Maurizio Pellegrin
212 998-5754
Email: mp29@nyu.edu
program administration
Prof. Maurizio Pellegrin, Director
Prof. Angiola Churchill, Director Emerita
