Monday, November 7, 2011

Introduction to Acrylic Painting - Syllabus


INTRODUCTION TO ACRYLIC PAINTING
Level 1

Class Frequency:
Three weekly hours with the instructor plus at least six weekly hours of independent work is expected.

Medium:
Students will work with acrylic paints and will explore the particular qualities of this medium on a variety of painting surfaces.

Objective:
The course is designed to introduce the basic elements of painting to those students of little or no experience with the medium. The course is designed to help the student “see”, the first step to visual understanding and communication with paint.
Students will work with acrylic colours and will explore the many ways in which this particular paint can be handled. Part of this process will entail instruction about the preparation of materials and palette. Specific exercises will help the students to learn about differing the quality of paint from transparent layers to the use of thick impasto. Colour and its infinite possibilities in paint will be explored so that by the end of the course students will have begun to understand the effects of light in changing the relative values of colour. Exercises become more complex as students work from initial sketches to more developed pieces. While working to attain an understanding of the painting medium emphasis is placed on composition. The student is challenged to translate concepts into visual images that work.
At each lesson the students will be presented with examples of work by diverse artists. Demonstrations will be given in order to introduce the students to various techniques. Assignments are given that are to be completed outside of class. These will be given on a weekly basis. At each class students will be critiqued on their work. Students will be encouraged to visit shows, galleries and museums. There will be two class visits to museums and an additional class with a talk given about the gardens of Villa La Pietra.Students must participate in a student show held at the end of the semester.

Course Evaluation:
Students will be evaluated by their discipline, enthusiasm and involvement with the course and in their work. There are two formal critiques per semester at which each student will present work. Students are responsible for creating a portfolio of work by the end of the semester.

INTRODUCTION TO PAINTING Materials List

Initial Kit Acrylic Paints:

Lemon Yellow 
Deep Yellow 
Yellow Ochre 
Raw Umber

Burnt Sienna 
Orange 

Red

Magenta 
Violet

Sky Blue 
Ultramarine Blue 


Light Green 
Sap Green 

White - Titanium - large tube 

Black

Brushes: 4-5 of varying sizes, such as #8, #12,#16. #24, #28, a mixture of round and flat brushes

Sketchbook - students are to choose a sketchbook that is not too small or too flimsy.

Masking tape 
Disposable Palette 
Primer/Gesso
Paper/Fabriano. 

5 sheets of rather heavy weight smooth and rough paper.

"Renaissance Apprentice" Syllabus


This course is designed to take place in Italy but with creativity can be adapted to take place anywhere with only a little bit of loss.

RENAISSANCE APPRENTICE
Level 1

COURSE DESCRIPTION:
Following the step-by-step process outlined in Cennino Cennini’s 14th century treatise on art, IL LIBRO DELL’ARTE, students will use the same materials and follow the same course of instruction, in abbreviated form, as Renaissance apprentices. After basic exercises in drawing, which include copying directly from the frescoes and sculptures in Florence as all apprentices were required to do as part of their studies, students will then be introduced to the Renaissance painting techniques of buon fresco and egg tempera to round out their artist’s education.

GENERAL COURSE OF STUDY:
1. Introduction to drawing techniques 
2. Copying from drawings 
3. Copying from frescoes 
4. Drawing from sculptures
5. Drawing from life 
6. Fresco painting 
7. Egg tempera painting/gold leafing

CLASS MEETINGS:
Class consists of 3 hours per week divided in the following manner: - in-class lectures, demonstrations, site visits, in-class drawing and painting

TEXTS (NOT REQUIRED):
Cennino Cennini, Il libro dell’arte Giorgio Vasari, On Technique Francis Ames-Lewis, Drawing in Early Renaissance Italy

ASSIGNMENTS/COURSE PACKETS
Students will be assigned drawings to copy from color photo-copies in course packet acquired at beginning of semester. Students will also be assigned to draw from frescoes and sculptures in various museums which are free of charge with museum card.

RESEARCH PAPER
The research paper will be a two-page description of one drawing or painting process or technique. All information will be taken from Cennino Cennini, Giorgio Vasari, Leonardo, Ames-Lewis and class notes. Papers will follow the standard Art Bulletin format for style and are to include a step-by-step description of all aspects of the particular process or technique. Research papers will then be copied and bound to make a handbook of materials and techniques subsequently distributed to each student in class.

RENAISSANCE APPRENTICE: COURSE OUTLINE 

WEEK ONE: INTRODUCTION
- Intro to materials, techniques, trip to center to buy materials
WEEK TWO: MATERIALS AND TECHNIQUES
- Lecture on techniques, mounting drawings, first assignments
WEEK THREE: FIGURES, FACES AND HANDS
- Lecture on how to draw figures, faces and hands
WEEK FOUR: DRAWING FROM FRESCOES
- Santa Maria Novella
WEEK FIVE: DRAWING FROM SCULPTURES
- Opera del Duomo 
****TRIP TO ROME – VATICAN MUSEUMS**** 
WEEK SIX: DRAWING FROM SCULPTURES - Accademia Museum
WEEK SEVEN: ANATOMY
- Lecture on human anatomy
WEEK EIGHT: ANATOMICAL DRAWING
- La Specola Museum
WEEK NINE: FRESCO PAINTING
- Lecture on fresco painting
WEEK TEN: FRESCO PAINTING
WEEK ELEVEN: EGG TEMPERA PAINTING
- Lecture on egg tempera and gold leafing - Rough drafts of papers due
WEEK TWELVE: EGG TEMPERA PAINTING 
WEEK THIRTEEN: EGG TEMPERA PAINTING
WEEK FOURTEEN: LAST CLASS – GROUP DISCUSSION AND TECHNIQUES MANUAL

Sunday, March 6, 2011

"A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Introduction and Equipment

Difficulty level: 2

INTRODUCTION: 

"A Dimension of Mind: Film" is a facsimile of the "Sight and Sound: Film" course at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.  However, "A Dimenstion of Mind: Film" differs in some important ways because it can be replicated at home.

The End Result of this course will be five high-quality short films in black and white, and a deep understanding of the tactile process of making a film by hand. You will have done acting, cinematography, location scouting, production design, editing, and any other part of the process you can think of.

Work in groups of four. Everybody will make 5 short films of 1-4 minutes in length.  So as a group you will make 20 short films in total.

You rotate jobs so that you will each:
1.  Direct a film,
2.  Edit the film you directed while the rest of the group shoots the next film
3.  Act as Cameraman/Cinematographer on the following film
4.  Act as Continuity Manager.  Take notes on who is what and where, and maintain a checklist for the shots to make sure that nothing is missed.

For every film, the Director is expected to produce the following written materials:

Storyboard and/or Shot List:  A list of all the shots required for making this movie.  Drawing the shot list out in storyboard or comic form will prove very helpful to the cameraman.
Call Sheet:  A list of all the props, characters, actors, and special effects needed to make the movie.  It contains a schedule that explains who and what needs to be on set, and when.
"Production Notebook":  The director writes about his or her original vision or purpose for making the film (a bit like an artist statement).  Then the director writes about the process and notes any challenges, setbacks, or lessons learned on set.  Finally, the director draws a conclusion about the final product and whether it came out as he or she wanted it to.

After a movie has been produced, it is screened to your peers (upload it to youtube or play it on your computer to a room full of friends).  You also turn in all three of your written materials to receive evaluation on your success from your teacher (or in the case of Open Art School, your network of peers)

EQUIPMENT:

The ideal piece of equipment (the one used in the official film school environment) for this course would be a 16-mm film camera equipped with a wide-angle lens, a telephoto lens, and a normal lens. You would be able to change the focus and exposure on all three lenses manually. You would be able to run the film forwards and backwards, and change the speed of the film. You would each be given a budget of exactly 8 2-minute-and-40-second reels of black-and-white film (21 minutes total) and you would not be allowed to go beyond that budget. You would also get a light meter so that you could accurately pull exposure to the proper setting before shooting.  The film camera has no capacity for sound. You shoot your film MOS (Motor Only Shot) which means that you do not have a synchronized audio track. When you eventually need sound effects you must record them separately using a stand-alone microphone and recorder.

If you can’t get access to this kind of equipment, try to mimic it as best you can. For example: Use a digital camera that lets you change the focus and exposure in real-time. If using a tape or memory card, make sure that you never shoot more than 21 minutes of footage DURING THE ENTIRE COURSE. Do not use the LCD screen on the digital camera, only use the eyepiece. Convert your footage to black-and-white, or shoot it natively that way if possible. Get special lenses for your digital camera.  Ignore (or even cover up) the microphone on your camera and shoot as if your video were silent. When you import the footage, delete the native sound.  Use your computer's microphone or foley effects from the web to acquire sound effects.  Or, you can use your digital camera as a sound recorder and go on an additional "sound scouting trip"

Or you might want to invest in a Super-8 camera if at all possible, because that way you still get to work with the physical film.

WHY THIS LIMITED/ARCHAIC EQUIPMENT?

Just so you know that I’m not making bizarre rules for “tradition’s sake,” the REASONING behind these rules is as follows:

Lenses:  Having three lenses allows you greater control over how a shot looks.  Wide angle lenses take in more of the space, and when used in close quarters, minimize motion.  Telephoto lenses act like telescopes and provide good close-ups from a distance and make motion look erratic.  Normal lenses are… normal.  There are numerous other effects yielded by the lenses, but we want YOU to figure out most of them on your own.

Film, Reversing, Speed-changing: These allow you to do all your special effects IN CAMERA. There will be no “adding things in post.”  This means that you really have to put thought into your movie magic tricks and make it actually appear to happen.

21 minute footage budget: This forces you to THINK, THINK, THINK about what you are going to shoot before you shoot it. To save on film, it’s recommended that you rehearse everything very well so that you can get the vast majority of your shots accomplished in 1-3 takes. You learn to make less mistakes, you learn to compose your shots carefully, you learn to be more frugal, you save resources, it is better in many ways. This is my favorite of the limitations.

Manual exposure and focus:  You want to be able to control these things, otherwise your picture will look like crap and you won't be able to change it.  You don’t want to just set these things up before you shoot, either. You want to be able to pull focus and exposure in real-time so that you can do things like fade-ins, fade-outs, overlaps, rack focus, blurry drunken hazes, lightning flashes, and all those other clever tricks in-camera. Being able to rack focus while filming is VERY important.

Black and White:  The world of color is a very confusing, chaotic place. Before you can master composing shots with intentionally brilliant color schemes, you need to make films with intentionally brilliant lighting schemes. Working in black and white forces you to think of light and dark, chiaro e oscuro

MOS (Silent) Camera:  Like the world of color, the world of sound is quite complex. If you want to be a good filmmaker, you ought to be a master of image (by doing silent films) before you learn to be a master of image WITH sound. Many beginning filmmakers treat sound like an afterthought, secondary to the images, but as movies like Star Wars have proven, the sounds DEFINE the film.  So we want to make you think, think, think about what choices you make with sound.  You will add sound to your last two projects in this course, but you will have to record this sound seperately from the image, so that the sound aural layer you create is as meticulously layered and planned as the visual layer.

ALSO, No sound from any built-in mic is allowed under any circumstances.  We want you to know what it's like to record and mix sound by hand.

With these rules in mind, it's time that you get to work on your movie magic experiments!  On to Part 1!

Saturday, March 5, 2011

"A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Part 1: Filmmaking Basics

"A Dimension of Mind: Film" is a facsimile of the "Sight and Sound: Film" course at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.  However, "A Dimenstion of Mind: Film" differs in some important ways because it can be replicated at home.

Difficulty level: 2

Round 1 – The Basics. 
Shoot only outdoors.   No sound or artificial lights allowed.

Movie 1. Location and shots:
  • Find a cool location by scouting around for a little bit.  Shoot a short sequence there that feautes an impressive establishing shot, and also uses several different kinds of shots to show off the space.
Movie 2. Continuity
  • Develop a sequence where the camera follows a person, place, or thing through a more complex series of events. Try to make sure that the direction that things are going on screen stays consistent and never jumps or flips. Consider it as if the audience’s eye has to travel in a consistent path regardless of the cutting rhythm of the film.  There is a rule called the 180 degree rule, and it mandates that if you want to keep continuity, you should not flip the composition 180 degrees in any one cut.
Here is a video in which a storyboard artist does his best to explain screen direction and the 180 degree rule:


Movie 3. Chase Scene
  • Keeping in mind what you know about location and continuity, show us a story involving some kind of a chase through multiple locations while keeping continuity.
Movie 4. Parallel Action
  • Tell a story where 2 things are going on at once, in different places. Then the two things cross paths in some sense.
    This scene from The Silence of the Lambs (stretching from the 7 minute, 30 second mark, to the 10 minute and 40 second mark) is a good example of Parallel Action.

    Friday, March 4, 2011

    "A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Part 2: Character Development

    "A Dimension of Mind: Film" is a facsimile of the "Sight and Sound: Film" course at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.  However, "A Dimension of Mind: Film" differs in some important ways because it can be replicated at home.

    Difficulty level: 2
    Round 2 – Character Development.
    Still shooting outside. Still no sound.

    Movie 5.  Character portrait.
    • Create a character and, through a series of individual personal choices, show us what this character is really like.
















    In the opening to Saturday Night Fever, See how Travolta makes specific choices and does specific little things to let us figure out who his character is?
     


    Movie 6.  Character interaction
    • Tell the story of what happens when two human beings meet. What do they want? How do they treat each other? Let’s see some real drama unfold.

    This is a pretty effective use of silent character interaction, made using digital video:



    Movie 7.  Close-up
    • Make a short where the majority of shots are close-ups. Most of the meaning should come through the close-ups of things.



    Movie 8.  Dream Sequence
    • Manipulate location, continuity, characters and events to create some kind of surreal mindscrew. Use in-camera special effects like fades and focus changes and double exposures, as well as creative art direction decisions, to drive the dream home.

     Dream sequence from 8 1/2 by Federico Fellini




    Click here to watch the dream sequence from Spellbound, a collaboration between Alfred Hitchcock and Salvador Dalí:

    Thursday, March 3, 2011

    "A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Part 3: Lighting

    "A Dimension of Mind: Film" is a facsimile of the "Sight and Sound: Film" course at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.  However, "A Dimenstion of Mind: Film" differs in some important ways because it can be replicated at home.

    Difficulty level: 2

    Round 3 – Light. 
    It’s time to learn lighting techniques. Get a bunch of big electric lamps. Now you can shoot inside. Still no sound allowed.

    Movie 9 — 3-point lighting.
    • Use the lamps to create a scene that uses a basic 3-point portraiture lighting scheme. This consists of a key-light to light the figure, a fill-light to dilute hard shadows, and a back-light to create a slight highlight or shine on the figure.
    This video is a very clear (if slightly hokey) explanation of how 3-point lighting works.


    Movie 10 — Soft Lighting
    • Use diffused and bounced light to create a soft, glowing, radiant, magical texture with the light.
    This scene from the Baz Luhrmann interpretation of "Romeo + Juliet" features some diffused, soft lighting bounced/reflected off of the "water" (which of course, is a filmmaker's trick, you know).


    Movie 11 — Moving Through Light.
    • Create a scene that features an environment of mixed hard-lit areas and starkly shaded areas, and have a character or object move through this environment for dramatic effect.
    Click Here to watch a perfect example of lighting for movement in Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull 


















      Movie 12 — Using light for special effects
      • Light can be used for all sorts of cool things: Flashes, explosions, double-exposures, magical/scientific/supernatural light-sources, narrow illuminated beams for puppetry, contrived shadows —the world is yours! Use your imagination and your lamps to come up with some real-life magic tricks to shock and amaze your audience.
      This is just one of the many successful special effects lighting projects made by NYU students under the "real" Sight and Sound: Film program:



        Wednesday, March 2, 2011

        "A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Part 4: Sound

        "A Dimension of Mind: Film" is a facsimile of the "Sight and Sound: Film" course at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.  However, "A Dimenstion of Mind: Film" differs in some important ways because it can be replicated at home.

        Difficulty level: 2

        Round 4 – Sound. 

        Sound totally changes our perception of an image. In most of these exercises, you are to record background sounds on-location using a microphone, or find sound effects on the internet for free, or create your own foley sound effects. Remember that the keys to creating realistic sounds include room tone (the basic ambience or white noise in a room at any given moment) diagetic sound (sound that takes place in the story world, like sound effects, dialogue, or a musician’s fiddle) and non-diagetic sound (out-of-world “commentary” music, like voice-overs or soundtrack music)

        Move 13 — Music.
        • Create a film with a single piece of music as its soundtrack. Practice cutting the movie to the sound. (Cutting images to sound is called "mickey-mousing" because it migrated to film from the world of animation)
        This scene from The Social Network makes good use of music.  It's not choreography, it's just using a soundtrack.




          Movie 14 — Voice-over
          • Create a film that utilizes some form of recorded voice-over.

          Look to films like Fight Club, or some film-noir classic, for examples of internal monologues. Look at documentary films like March of the Penguins for educational-style voice-overs. Sometimes a story is told in-media-res and is narrated by the main character from the middle or even the end. Voice-over is so versatile that the sky's the limit.

          Movie 15 — Offscreen sound-effects
          • You’re not quite ready to show things making noise on screen, instead, imply the environment and the action off-screen with use of sound effects.

          Movie 16 — Sound effects.

          Tuesday, March 1, 2011

          "A Dimension of Mind: Film" - Part 5: Finals

          Round 5 – Finals

          No explicit instructions here. Take what remains of your individual film budgets and use it up on this. Combine all that you’ve learned about storytelling, character, lighting, and sound to create a film with a story or an idea in it that YOU really want to tell —for your own sake, not for the assignment’s. The final film should approach four minutes in length, and needs to have some character, some sound and some lighting (you can’t just revert to the easier assignments and count it as your final)

          Thursday, February 3, 2011

          Narrative Photography Workshop: 1 - Camera Mechanics.

          Narrative Photography Workshop from KCAI (The Kansas City Arts Institute) - Level 1

          This workshop deals with staged photography. From it you will learn to tell stories through the use of props, sets, costumes, and acting. You will also learn to operate a digital camera. Though this is a photography course these lessons apply to the moving image as well as the still image.


          EQUIPMENT:

          All that is necessary for this class is a digital camera with a manual focus setting and an adjustable shutter speed.

          Assignment 1 - Camera Mechanics

          Terms:

          ISO - The speed with which the film exposes. A smaller number represents a slower exposure and a crisper image. A large number means represents a faster exposure and a grainier image.

          Shutter Speed-The amount of time that the shutter opens and the film exposes. A smaller fraction means less time and less light.

          Aperture - The size of the opening for light. A larger number means a smaller hole and less light.

          Part 1 - Depth of Field

          Find a subject to photograph with a distinct foreground middle ground and background. Fist set your aperture to it's lowest setting so that you have a narrow depth of field and adjust ISO (film speed) or shutter speed appropriately to compensate. Photograph your subject first with the fore ground in focus then with the middle ground in focus and finally with the background in focus. Next set your aperture to it's highest setting and adjust the ISO or shutter speed. With your aperture at it's highest setting photograph your subject so that all parts are in focus.

          Part 2 - Shutter Speed

          Take three photos to experiment with the effect of shutter speed. First photograph an action with a highs shutter speed in order to freeze the motion. Next photograph that same action or a different action with a slow shutter speed in order to blur the motion. Last Take a photo a night or in dark space with a very long exposure, if your camera has the a bulb setting (marked with a B) use that.

          Narrative Photography Workshop: 4-9

          Narrative Photography Workshop from KCAI (The Kansas City Arts Institute) - Level 1

          This workshop deals with staged photography. From it you will learn to tell stories through the use of props, sets, costumes, and acting. You will also learn to operate a digital camera. Though this is a photography course these lessons apply to the moving image as well as the still image.

          EQUIPMENT:

          All that is necessary for this class is a digital camera with a manual focus setting and an adjustable shutter speed.

          Assignments 4-9 have only one step apiece

          Assignment 4 - Narrative Tableau
          For this project produce one photograph of a scene from a story. Use costumes sets and props to communicate the story clearly. A viewer should be able to “read” the information in the photograph to figure out the story.

          Assignment - 5 Miniature
          Create a scene using miniature objects. You can play with scale by including life scale objects. Photo manipulation is allowed.

          Assignment 6 - Sequence
          Tell a simple narrative in a sequence of photographs. Can be anywhere from 3 photos to 12 photos.

          Assignment 7 - Character
          Do a series of five portraits of the same person as five different characters. Try to choose characters along a theme. Communicate the characters using costumes or makeup as well as through their actions and body language.

          Assignment 8 - Childhood Photo
          Find some photographs from your childhood. Do something with these photographs to recontextualize them. You could manipulate the originals or stage a photograph in someway based on the originals.

          Assignment 9 - Final
          For your final project take what you've learned about set, characters, costume, props, lighting, and narrative and produce a final photograph or series. You may use photoshop, you may do a series of any size, stretch the boundaries of “photography” and “narrative.”

          Wednesday, February 2, 2011

          Narrative Photography Workshop: 2 - Faces

          Narrative Photography Workshop from KCAI (The Kansas City Arts Institute) - Level 1

          This workshop deals with staged photography.  From it you will learn to tell stories through the use of props, sets, costumes, and acting.  You will also learn to operate a digital camera.  Though this is a photography course these lessons apply to the moving image as well as the still image.

          EQUIPMENT:

          All that is necessary for this class is a digital camera with a manual focus setting and an adjustable shutter speed.

          Assignment 2 - Faces

          Part 1
          Capture a series of portraits of a person expressing 10 emotions.  Include only their shoulders and up in the photographs.  The focus of this study is facial expression so do not include hand or body language in these photos.

          Part 2
          Similar to part 1, however this time do a series of 10 self portraits showing how you express emotions.

          Tuesday, February 1, 2011

          Narrative Photography Workshop: 3 - Body Language

          Narrative Photography Workshop from KCAI (The Kansas City Arts Institute) - Level 1

          This workshop deals with staged photography.  From it you will learn to tell stories through the use of props, sets, costumes, and acting.  You will also learn to operate a digital camera.  Though this is a photography course these lessons apply to the moving image as well as the still image.
          EQUIPMENT:

          All that is necessary for this class is a digital camera with a manual focus setting and an adjustable shutter speed. 

          Assignment 3 - Body Language 

          Part 1
          Find a location from which you can covertly photograph people interacting.  Take at least 10 photos to study how people behave when the are not aware that they are being observed.  You must photograph the from the same location looking at the same space between all 10 photographs.  Find a place where you know people will be passing through and wait for subjects to come into frame.

          Part 2
          Go to place with many people interacting.  Try to capture people behaving naturally.  Unlike part 1 you may move about.  In this set of 10 photographs you should practice capturing events spontaneously as well as how to compose photographs quickly based on you environment and what is happening.

          Part 3
          Hang a sheet and an set up a single light source such that a person behind the sheet will cast a crisp silhouette onto the sheet.  Capture as series of 10 photographs of a model's silhouette expressing 10 different emotions only through their body language.

          Part 4
          With the same set up as part 3 study the body language of a pair of people.  Capture a series of 10 photographs experimenting with the body language of couples using the silhouettes of two people.

          Part 5
          Cover two people in fabric sheets to conceal their bodies.  You could either have them under one sheet or two separate sheets.  Produce a set of 10 photographs of this pair interacting out is a space (Non studio). 

          Tuesday, January 18, 2011

          Submitting a Lesson Plan: Fun and Easy

          I am committed to seeing Open Art School get off the ground.  If you have taken an art class, then you have a lesson plan to share and I want to help you do so every step of the way.

          Even if you think you're no writer, and even if you don't know what kind of format to describe your class in, you can still submit a lesson plan.  There are several ways:

          1. If you have a lesson plan that you would like to share, or even just a vague notion of one that you'd like to suggest to me or another editor, I am inviting you to email me with whatever you'd care to give us.  Eventually a special email address is going to be made, but until then you can send an email to my "professional" email address — ThomasBoguszewski@gmail.com
          2. The Open Art School forum is now online thanks to my good friend Michael McConnell.  The forum is intended to be a place for the authors of this blog (myself and a few other editors) to re-post lesson plans that are posted here so that they can be discussed in an in-depth way.  We are going to make sure that a board on the forums especially for "lesson suggestions" is made, and if you suggest a lesson plan and we use it, you will be given full credit if you want it.
          I want to hear from anybody who has enjoyed a college art class.  If you enjoyed it, so will somebody else —let's bring it to them :)

          —Thomas Boguszewski

          Why Open Art School exists - Thomas' Story

          Let me tell you a bit about myself:

          All my life I've been an aspiring and practicing artist.  I was encouraged to be creative and draw and paint and act and make movies ever since I was a kid.

          However, Minnesota is full of some awful "normal" public schools and some amazing experimental public schools.  The first school I ever went to was not equipped to handle the arts and it didn't want to be (unless hockey could be considered an art), so when I was ten years old my parents pulled me out of the local school and found a very special public art and science school.  I'll admit that I was totally lucky, but there's something in this story that we all can learn:
          • You have to take your education into your own hands and fight for what you need, because not all educators are thinking hard about your best interest.   Look elsewhere than you are, don't accept "normal."
          From that point on, I had a great art education and eventually I went to the Perpich Arts High School in Minnesota, which is arguably a miniature art college.  There I studied Visual Arts, but I also had a passion for filmmaking, which was part of a different department in the school (called media arts).  Eventually I was able to run around, pull strings, make friends, and do other gregarious, proactive things so that I could make movies if I wanted to, and by the end of senior year I was given a $100 grant to make a movie *within* the visual arts department. 
          • Never tell yourself, "I can't." Never take "no" for an answer.
          • Just because you aren't enrolled in something, that doesn't mean you can't do it.
          • You will find people who want to help you, and you may even make friends out of foes.
          After I graduated High School I went off to New York City to study at certain a famous film school that will remain unnamed.  For the first year, I studied liberal arts and had no art classes at all.
          • There are people who would practically kill to take art classes, but don't get them.
          Then summer rolled around, and I finally began to take film classes.  I learned BOATLOADS during a crammed summer session that almost killed me.  Then when the next semester of school rolled around, normal-paced film school seemed almost boring by comparison, and after spending two years in high school fighting to squeeze film into a visual art setting, I found that the film setting was pretty much devoid of satisfactory visual arts classes.  The irony is palpable, hipsters rejoice, c'est la vie.  I decided to suck it up and do what I did last time - be proactive, pull strings, snoop around and fight for what I want.
          • If you have a LOT of artistic interests, you're NEVER going to be satisfied with a single course of action (especially if most people find your interests to be eclectic or conflicted in some way).
          • The only way you can get what you want is by looking for it on your own.
          I made it halfway through Sophomore year when the rug was pulled out from under me and my family's entire financial situation fell through.  Now I'm stuck taking a leave of absence and if I can't get a mysterious briefcase full of glowing currency by next fall I won't be going back to that school at all —for Visual art, Liberal Art, Media Art or otherwise.
          • You can blame capitalism, socialism, the government, the American post-secondary education system, the Bavarian Illuminati, your racial/ethnic out-group of choice, New York City itself, other countries, God, the Devil, or even the goddess Fortuna or Grand Ol' Discordia for your problems; but the fact is s*it happens and you gotta carry on.  
          • If you don't carry on, then you're letting "them" win, and the blame rests on your own shoulders.
          So then I went back to Minnesota to celebrate Christmas and plan my exit strategy.  At this point I had taken up a pair of generally uncreative projects because I needed cash.  I was web-chatting with a friend and moping about my situation.  I figured that I'd probably never take another film class again, and I knew that even if I did, I'd just be sending myself down a path that leads away from the lifestyle I want (which is filled, for some reason, with history, puppetry, animation, graphic novels, philosophy, painting, and a bunch of other creative, educational, poetic things) in favor of a lifestyle that leaves me editing trident gum commercials and drawing pigeons with capes forever —doing it all "for the money."

          I thought, "wouldn't it be great if there were a way to take real, well thought-out illustration courses in my free time, while studying a different discipline elsewhere and/or working for a living?"

          Then it hit me.
          It WOULD be great, and it can happen

          Q:  Why don't people educate themselves?
          A:  Because one can't know what one doesn't know.  You always need a teacher!
          Q:  Why can't we be each other's teachers?
          A:  We can!

          I can say from experience that art college is expensive, often too expensive.  I can also say from experience that a lot of the courses you take in college are comprised of activities that you could have done at home with a few friends for critique and a small investment for materials.

          Q:  So why DON'T people just do all this "art school" stuff at home?  Why do we pay lots of money for it?
          A:  Because until today it's never been easy to take the experience and wisdom of teachers —the organization and insight of their lesson plans— and distribute it to students for free.

          But shucks, it's 2011 now.  The age of the internet has already arrived.  It's time to get busy.
          And those who are looking to open the world of education can do better than the vague instructions of WikiHow.  There are platforms available for posting art, holding meetings, giving demonstrations, combining text, images, video and sound into one place... and networking it all together.

          That's what this project is about:  taking the capabilities that have existed for years online and combining them into a network that allows us as self-driven students to take the capabilities that have existed for years IN US and nurturing them so that we can become better educated, more practiced artists.

          For those of you who read all this, thank you for listening to my story.  I hope you stick around and make the Open Art School a part of yours.

          —Thomas Boguszewski

          Thursday, January 13, 2011

          Welcome to Open Art School

          • Do you go to art school and want to know how other art schools teach the same discipline?
          • Are you majoring in one artistic discipline and wanting to try another, without having to waste credits?
          • Do you not go to art school, but wish you did?
          • Do you love your art school education and want to share your experience with others?

          If you have answered yes to one of these questions, then welcome!
          I have created this blog to be the starting point for a movement.

          My intention is to make art education just a little bit more open by giving art students and even teachers a place to post lesson plans that they believe are super-conducive to artistic development.  Obviously, you can't get a whole art school education on the internet, but you can see the skeleton of one and build your own at home, if art school is otherwise (for one reason or another) not a viable option.

          The goal is to change the world but the plan is simple:  Go to school.  Pay attention, do well.  Then at the end of the semester take an hour or so to type out a little paraphrasing, reteaching, or even complete restructuring of your favorite classes so that people who aren't in your school can follow in your footsteps.  Your reward is just as simple:  You get instant access to a library full of lesson plans from all sorts of disciplines provided by skilled students just like yourself.

          Disciplines covered range from drawing, painting, illustration, printmaking, filmmaking, animation, graphic design, dance, music, theater, creative writing, art education itself and anything else one can think of.

          Over time, this project will evolve into something much more user-friendly.  A free internet forum and/or a special email address will provide students like you with a chance to submit lesson plans, while a coordinated effort featuring a facebook group and a deviantart group will provide us all with a system for not only getting lesson plans, but actually TRYING THE LESSONS AND SUBMITTING THEM FOR CRITIQUE BY PEERS.

          Stay tuned, because this is going to become fun.

          —Thomas Boguszewski