SPQ SEMINARS
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Every semester there is seminar that introduces students to the contemporary theory and methodologies emerging around social practice, as well as to develop their understanding of critical theory and how it relates to their future role as cultural producers.
SPQ seminars are often team-taught, partnering QC Art Department faculty experienced in social practice, with professors in adjacent disciplines, including the QC Urban Studies department, or with professionals outside the university system.
History and Theory or Social Practice Art by Gregory Sholette
In Spring 2018, Professor Gregory Sholette and guest instructor/SPQ coordinator Jeff Kasper led a itinerant course on The History & Theory of Social Practice. The course visited numerous influential figures in the field for guest lecturers and tutorials, including: Pablo Helguera, Tom Finkelpearl, Mark Read, Claire Bishop, More Art, among others. View the syllabi.
2020: http://www.sholetteseminars.com/arts-777-2020-spring/
2019: http://www.sholetteseminars.com/777-spring-2019-spq/
2018: http://www.sholetteseminars.com/history-and-theory-of-social-practice-art/
Public School by Claire Bishop and Paul Ramirez Jonas
PUBLIC SCHOOL is a course designed to encourage the making of, and reflection upon, art outside the gallery. Unlike a conventional CUNY seminar, we will never meet in the classroom, but instead use the five boroughs of New York as our campus—visiting sites, buildings, organizations, individuals, and situations that catalyze critical thinking about the public sphere.
Fall 2016
In Fall 2016, Professor Chloe Bass and Katherine Karl, curator of The James Gallery (CUNY Center for the Humanities) led a New Forms course on FLUXUS and the works of Allison Knowles. In discussion with Knowles and inflected by their pedagogical participation in the exhibit “House of Dust by Alison Knowles”, artists from Social Practice Queens developed their own distinct methods and forms to investigate human interaction. Variously personal, language-based, performative, or deeply labor-intensive, the projects propose artmaking as a method for navigation, reflection, and innovation in everyday life. Home of Practice extends the metaphor of the house: what does it mean to develop imaginary architectures into ways of being together? These expressions took the form of an exhibit at The James Gallery in Spring 2017. Learn more.
Spring 2016
In Spring 2016, Prerana Reddy, Jose Seranno-McClain, and Larissa Harris led a course on-site at the Queens Museum in development of the current Mierle Laderman Ukeles: Maintenance Art retrospective exhibition. Several SPQ students worked with museum Community Engagement and Curatorial staff on public programming around theories about the role of artists in city agencies, feminism, and sustainability, to name a few. Check out the upcoming events here.
Spring 2016
In Spring 2016 professor Tyrone Mitchell led a public art studio-based seminar that provided students with an opportunity to workshop public art concepts as well as an introduction to the partnership and permitting process surrounding public art. The class resulted in an online catalogue of both historical and contemporary works of public art on campus, on view here: https://qcpublicart.wordpress.com/