Abstract
I came to graduate school with a passion for producing ceramic sculpture, a love of the materiality of clay, and an interest in learning more about contemporary art. Upon arrival at the School for American Crafts, at the Rochester Institute of Technology, my work was primarily concerned with formal issues pertaining to objects, such as mass, visual weight, form, volume, and line. My journey throughout the two-year graduate program involved exploration of the ceramic processes, experimentation with methodologies of fabrication, and investigation into form and content. Academic classes, including Philosophy of Art and Aesthetics, Graduate Seminar, Forms of Inquiry, an independent study in Modern/Postmodern Theory, 20th Century Art (1945-1995), Art of the Last Decade, and Installation Art, were critical to expanding my modernist sensibility and increasing my awareness of the contemporary art world. With feedback from my professors and peers, I navigated through the trials and tribulations of discovering and producing a successful body of work.
Library of Congress Subject Headings
Ceramic sculpture--Themes, motives; Ceramic sculpture--Technique
Publication Date
2006
Document Type
Thesis
Advisor
Richard Hirsch
Advisor/Committee Member
Julia Galloway
Advisor/Committee Member
C. B. Sheffield
Recommended Citation
Clark, Tim, "Absence & Presence" (2006). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from
https://repository.rit.edu/theses/7925
Campus
RIT – Main Campus
Comments
Physical copy available from RIT's Wallace Library at NK4235 .C52 2006