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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.
Photography Exhibition by Steven Hirsch on View August 31
Media Arts Renamed Film/Video and Photography
Pratt to Present "Eye on the Strand" Photo Exhibition
Pratt to Celebrate its First Ever Endowed Professorship
2009 Fine Arts Graduates Win Joan Mitchell Fellowship Awards
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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5 AIA/CES LUs, 5 PDHs. The Romans were the first great bridge-building civilization. Their stonearch bridgesmany still in use today, literally tied their empire together. Centuries would pass until a new material, cast-iron, would be introduced in the 18th century as a lightweight substitute for masonry. With the introduction of railroads in the 19th century, cast-iron bridges were tested to their limits and failed. The introduction of wrought-iron and steel for all types of bridges steel arch, cantilever, suspension, bascule, etc.would allow bridge-building to evolve into a science rather than an art in the 20th and 21st centuries. In the 1890s, the much-needed Tower Bridge joined the two halves of London together while allowing the busiest port in the world to remain open to trade. In post-WWII Japan, a national program to stitch the island-nation together culminated with the opening of the longest bridge in the world: Akashi-Kaikyo. To link Paris with the Mediterranean, the French constructed the tallest bridge in the world: Millau Viaduct, and to relieve the burden on the original 1938 Blue Water Bridge, linking Ontario with Michigan, a new tied-arch bridge was constructed. The proposed Bering-Strait Bridge would literally "Bridge the World" linking North America, Asia and Europe. Topics include: Bridge History/Development; Tower Bridge, London; Akashi Kaikyo: The Longest Bridge in the World; Millau Viaduct: The Tallest Bridge in the World; The New Blue Water Bridge; and Bridging the Bering Strait.
Pro Stud Manh Non-Credit Tuiti: $244.00
Pro Stud Manh Reg Fee: $10.00
There are no sections at this time. For more information on the next available offerings, contact: prostudy@pratt.edu