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Animation Still, Sang Heon Lee
New Site Announcement
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
The new Pratt website has gone live!
It can be accessed at the following addresses:
View new website: View Site
CMS for new website: CMS login
*Please do not link to any items on the old site, it should only be used for reference or to retreive information or files for the new site.
The mission of Pratt Institute is to educate artists and creative professionals to be responsible contributors to society.
Pratt seeks to instill in all graduates aesthetic judgment, professional knowledge, collaborative skills, and technical expertise.
With a firm grounding in the liberal arts and sciences, a Pratt education blends theory with creative application in preparing graduates to become leaders in their professions.
Pratt enrolls a diverse group of highly talented and dedicated students, challenging them to achieve their full potential.
Pratt Center for Continuing and Professional Studies (CCPS) Gallery will present “Courthouse Confessions – In Their Own Words,” a photography exhibition of work by CCPS instructor and longtime photojournalist Steven Hirsch. The exhibition, which is free and open to the public, runs from August 31 – September 29, 2009.
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Pratt Institute’s Media Arts Department has been renamed the Film/Video and Photography Department, effective July 1, 2009. The department, which is one of 15 degree programs within the Institute’s School of Art and Design, is located on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus.
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Pratt Center for Continuing and Professional Studies (CCPS) Gallery will present “Eye on the Strand,” a group exhibition that features the work of the three winners and 20 finalists of Pratt, the Aperture Foundation, and Strand Book Store’s first-ever photography contest. The exhibition, which is free and open to the public, will run from July 15 – August 26, 2009 and will include creative photo representations of the Strand Book Store.
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Pratt Institute President Thomas F. Schutte and The Board of Trustees of Pratt Institute will hold a dinner to celebrate the establishment of The Marc Rosen Distinguished Visiting Chair in Design on Tuesday, June 16, 2009 at The Gramercy Park Hotel Roof at Two Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. The event will include a cocktail reception at 7 p.m. followed by dinner, and will celebrate the first endowed professorship in the history of Pratt Institute.
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Pratt Institute department of fine arts graduate students Charlotte Meyer
and Kris Scheifele won 2009 Joan Mitchell Fellowship Awards for their accomplishments in sculpture and painting, respectively. Through this award program, Meyer and Scheifele will each receive a $15,000 grant and will also participate in a group exhibition at the Cue Art Foundation in Chelsea, New York in
spring of 2010.
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my.pratt.edu
Login with your OneKey to access advisement, registration, and billing academic tools, the learning management system (LMS), human resources data, email, faculty, staff and student directories, and FAQs.
This program provides the means to master the new technologies that are reshaping how people interact, communicate, and create new forms of expression.
Four specialized curricular options represent a specific area of interest that corresponds to an area of professional emphasis.
Digital Imaging
This option employs digital and traditional media in the creation of multiple media imagery. It addresses technological issues, procedures, and techniques in creation, design, imaging, printing, and presentation of image-based art. Recommended electives include advanced fine arts or design electives, advanced digital imaging, digital photography, and other imaging-oriented courses.
Digital Animation and Motion Arts
This option concerns itself with form and motion, time-based narrative, and 2- and 3-D animation techniques. Recommended electives include traditional animation, character design and rigging, lighting and rendering, audio and video, and advanced digital animation techniques.
Media
This option concentrates on the design of computer-human interfaces and interactions through digital media including online (Web) media. Students work with a variety of time-based media under computer control. Electives for this option include traditional design courses, programming, interactive, 3-D and advanced interactive media courses.
Emerging Arts
This option provides students with the opportunity to experiment in new forms and mixed media. Electives include interactive installation, robotics and physical computing, device control, as well as digital audio-video and interactive media.
Code for Digital Media
CG-584
This intermediate-level course explores the creation and control of digital media by custom- created computer code. Subjects covered include low-to-high-level programming, scripting, and mark-up languages. This course focuses primarily on one subject ar
1.00 - 3.00 credits
Creating Code for Digital Media
CG-583
This intermediate-level course explores the creation and control of digital media by custom-created computer code. The subjects covered include low-to-high-level programming, scripting and mark-up languages. This course focuses primarily on one subject ar
1.00 - 3.00 credits
Fundamental Computer Graphics Graphics
CG-610
Students are introduced to the primary concepts of computer graphics and the basic set-up and operation of a computer graphics system. Written assignments, a final exam and workshop projects are included. This course brings computer graphics majors of dif
3.00 credits
Digital Imaging Workshop
CG-612
This course provides computer graphics majors with their first exposure to hands-on two-dimensional paint and image processing techniques. It involves the use of a paint system with drawing, coloring, and video digitizing capabilities. Projects focus on t
3.00 credits
Three-Dimensional Computer Modeling Workshop
CG-614
The purpose of this course is to master the fundamental concepts of three-dimensional modeling with a computer graphics system. Topics include concepts of three-dimensional space and form, familiarity with hardware and software, three-dimensional modeling
3.00 credits
Thesis I
CG-660A
This is the first of two thesis courses for all MFA candidates in computer graphics. It is the second course in the computer graphics MFA thesis process, following the completion of CG-650 Thesis Research, and it is a pre- or co-requisite to CG-660B Thesi
6.00 credits
Thesis II
CG-660B
This is the culminating course for all MFA candidates in computer graphics. It is the third and final course in the computer graphics MFA thesis process, following the completion of CG-650 Thesis Research and CG-660A Thesis I. Students are expected to dev
3.00 credits
Creating Code for Digital Media
CG-581
This intermediate-level course explores the creation and control of digital media by custom-created computer code. The subjects covered include low-to-high-level programming, scripting and mark-up languages. This course focuses primarily on one subject ar
1.00 - 3.00 credits
Creating Code for Digital Media
CG-582
This intermediate-level course explores the creation and control of digital media by custom-created computer code. The subjects covered include low-to-high-level programming, scripting and mark-up languages. This course focuses primarily on one subject ar
1.00 - 3.00 credits
Design for Interactive Media
CG-616
This course provides computer graphics majors with their first experience in the design of computer- based interactivity. Students will learn about essential interactive design issues such as color, typography, layout, and navigation.
3.00 credits
3 Fundamental Computer Graphics CG-610
3 Digital Imaging CG-612
3 3-D Computer Modeling CG-614
3 Studio Elective Credits
12 CREDITS
3 Digital Arts in Context CG-600
3 Graphics Programming CG-620
6 Required CG Elective Credits
3 Studio Elective Credits
15 CREDITS
Interactive Media I
CG-622
This course introduces students to the principles of computer-based interactivity. Students combine two-dimensional imaging and graphics authoring as well as audio and visual technology for achieving interactivity from multiple source media. Interface des
3.00 credits
Design for Digital Media
CG-628
This course focuses on advanced CAD and rendering techniques. A popular CAD system is used for developing wireframe and surface models in three- dimensional space. Students learn to generate multi-view drawings, including orthogonal and perspective projec
3.00 credits
Audio for Digital Media
CG-626
Covers the aesthetic, conceptual, and technical aspects of using audio and music with various electronic media, such as 2-D/3-D animation, video, and the World Wide Web. The course includes lectures on the physical properties of sound, music instruments,
3.00 credits
Compositing & Special Effects
CG-590
This course focuses on the techniques required to integrate a variety of source materials seamlessly into a single unique image. Compositing is used to create unusual visual effects in motion pictures, television commercials, broadcast banding, and networ
3.00 credits
Motion Graphics
CG-595
This course focuses on the art of motion design and compositing, including limited 2-D animation and mixed media. Using images, graphics, video footage, and sound, students explore the relationships of motion, pacing, textures, transparency, transitions,
3.00 credits
Motion Dynamics
CG-635
Students explore motion dynamics animation using the Maya software package. Students will learn the principles and practice of rigid-body dynamics, particle systems, and cloth dynamics. Advanced undergraduates may enroll only by permission of the instruc
3.00 credits
Robotics & Physical Computing
CG-587
This studio course covers the history and contemporary landscape of electronic art, concentrating on those artists that are invested in a physical or mechanical presence of technology within their work. Students will use various electronic and software l
3.00 credits
Digital Arts in Context
CG-600
Provides a critical investigation of the digital arts from both a design and fine art perspective. Students research, analyze, and present their findings on topics which may include the evolution of the field, the development of digital arts disciplines,
3.00 credits
Video Editing
CG-625
Introduces video editing as a creative tool for digital arts students interested in its application to motion graphics, animation, and interactive genres. It offers a thorough technical understanding of nonlinear editing on the Final Cut Pro system. Thr
3.00 credits
Interactive Installations
CG-585
This course covers the aesthetic, conceptual, and technical aspects of creating digital installations. Students use various software and hardware systems to enable the production of passive and interactive installations incorporating computer graphics, v
3.00 credits
Flash for Animators
CG-580
This course is an introduction to Flash, a powerful animation tool originally designed for the web, and now used for broadcast as well. Essential techniques such as special effects and camera moves are used for creating and executing animation for environ
3.00 credits
Advanced Interactive Media
CG-630
This course covers intermediate and advanced techniques in interactive media including a greater mastery of authoring tools and techniques, mixed media, high-level interface design and current trends in interactive media. Students are required to complete
3.00 credits
Advanced Digital Imaging Imaging
CG-632
This course expands the boundaries of two-dimensional computer imaging, exploring a variety of painting, drawing and image-making techniques on traditional and alternative media. The development of an individual style technique and visual "voice" is enc
3.00 credits
Advanced 3-D Computer Animation
CG-634
This course covers the concepts, tools and techniques employed in advanced three-dimensional computer animation. This includes hierarchical character animation, time curves and motion paths, color and light animation and advanced rendering techniques. Adv
3.00 credits
The Internet As Art Medium
CG-640
This course is aimed at those who wish to expand their artistic ambition and creative vision by exploring this new venue in the arts, and in turn, produce substantial projects through Internet technology. Its primary focus will be the aesthetics arising f
3.00 credits
Thesis Research
CG-650
Computer graphics MFA thesis candidates are required to define the objectives of their thesis/final project as well as the methodology they plan to use. Students work in close collaboration with their faculty advisor and are required to do all the researc
3.00 credits
Thesis in Progress
CG-700
"If the Thesis course is not completed in the initial semesters, students can continue working in CG-700 for no more than five semesters.
0 credits
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Melissa Barrett
Assistant Chairperson of Digital Arts
Activity Resource Center LL
(718) 399-4273
mbarrett@pratt.edu
Personal Biography
Melissa has taught at the School of Visual Arts and Pratt Institute, and has lectured at New York University's Steinhardt School of Education and the Baltimore School for the Arts. Her installations, sculptures, collages and prints have appeared in group exhibitions at The Wassaic Project, Repetti, Lehman College, Vox Populi Gallery, Jack the Pelican Presents, Nahcotta Gallery, New York Institute of Technology, 2005 AAF Contemporary Art Fair, New York City. Her work has been reviewed in The New York Times, The Brooklyn Rail, and WNYC.org.
view biography
Thomas Bone
Visiting Assistant Professor
Activity Resource Center LL
(718) 636-3411
tbone@pratt.edu
Personal Biography
Professional digital and traditional animator and cartoonist with over 14 years of professional work experience in varied works from film, television, illustrations, web, advertising and merchandising productions.
view biography
Liubomir Borissov
Assistant Professor
Activity Resource Center LL
(718) 636-3696
lborisso@pratt.edu
Personal Biography
Liubo Borissov received a doctorate in Physics from Columbia, where he also studied electro-acoustic music at the Columbia University Computer Music Center. He holds a masters in Interactive Telecommunications from NYU's Tisch School, where he was a Global Vilar Fellow in the performing arts.
In his works, he explores the interface between art, science and technology. His multimedia installations, performances and collaborations have been featured throughout Europe, Japan and North America.
view biography
Melanie Crean
Visiting Instructor
Activity Resource Center LL
(718) 636-3411
mcrean@pratt.edu
Marianna Ellenberg
Visiting Instructor
Activity Resource Center LL
(718) 636-3411
mellenbe@pratt.edu
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