This class will introduce basic tools and resources required to pursue a career as a practicing artist. Students will learn to frame their creative practices as art by completing tasks such as writing critically about their own work, drafting grant proposals, and planning the business administration of their studios. By the end of class, students will complete their artist portfolio website and apply for an artist residency.
Offered at the School for Poetic Computation, Fall 2018
Teacher: Taeyoon Choi taeyoon@sfpc.io
T.A.: Celine Katzman celine.katzman@gmail.com
- Writing an Artist statement
- Applying to Artist residencies
- Grants, budgeting, logistics, promotion
- Friday September 28, Class 1: Artist Statement and CV for portfolio site.
- Friday October 12, Class 2: Dance and movement class by Cori Kresge
- October, Whitney Museum: Programmed: Rules, Codes, and Choreographies in Art, 1965–2018
- Friday October 19, Class 3: Applying to Artist Residencies, Field trip to Future Space and Dave and Gabe
- Friday November 2, Class 4: Field trip to MoMA Library at 10 am. 4 W 54th St, New York, NY 10019
- Tuesday November 13, Class 5: Crit
- Wednesday November 14, Class 6 Grant application, budgeting, logistics, promotion. Offsite at the Data & Society
- Wednesday Oct 3, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
- Wednesday Oct 10, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
- Wednesday Oct 17, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
- Wednesday Oct 24, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
- Wednesday Oct 31, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
- Wednesday Nov 7, Office Hours at SFPC 2-6pm
Original syllabus https://github.com/tchoi8/ArtistToolKit
- Where are you from? Where do you live now?
- What media do you work with?
- What do you spend time doing that influences your practice?
- Who are some artists that inspire your practice?
- What are some artist movements that inspire your practice?
- Who do you make work for, who is your primary audience?
- Are there any values that are important to your practice? What are they?
- What do you hope your work will accomplish aesthetically, conceptually?
I make paintings, performances, books, and installations. I make unique computational objects, as in my Handmade Computer series and Distributed Network of Care, a new generation of secure, non-commercial and censorship-free networks. I explore the discourse of technology with a critical perspective towards ethics, agency, justice and sensitivity to minority issues. I consider technology as means of effecting power and seek to make tools and resources accessible to those excluded in consumerist technology’s concept of personhood. As a social practice artist, I’m inspired by art as a form of care. I draw from the work of Lygia Clark and Suzanne Lacy, whose social practices prompt direct action, participation and educational engagement. Through my work and teaching, I attempt to practice soft care, an implicit, nuanced form of care between people and within oneself that prioritize one’s personhood and integrity as well as their security and privacy. I investigate how technological innovation is not an inherent good for the people, because care cannot be entirely automated.