Untitled - Pratt Institute
Transcription
Untitled - Pratt Institute
PRATT INSTITUTE Graduate Bulletin 2015-2016 Visit Pratt All prospective students are encouraged to visit Pratt. Here’s how: Contents Guided Tours of Brooklyn Campus Web 1 About Pratt Institute 105 School of Design Guided campus tours are scheduled Visit Pratt online at 11 The History of Pratt 109 Communications Design Monday and Friday at 10 AM, 12 PM, and www.pratt.edu/admissions. 22 How a Pratt Education Works 109 Communications Design 112 Package Design 2 PM and Tuesday through Thursday at 10 AM and 2 PM. Follow us on Twitter at 27 twitter.com/prattadmissions. 31Graduate Architecture Schedule a tour online at School of Architecture 119 Industrial Design 127 Interior Design and Urban Design 135School of Information and Contact the Office of Admissions at 33 Architecture 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 for 41 more information. 47Programs for Sustainable Office of Admissions 51 Questions? Call us at 718.636.3514 The Office of Admissions is open 55 S ustainable Environmental or 800.331.0834 or email us at weekdays from 9 AM to 5 PM from [email protected]. September through May and from 9 AM to 59 Historic Preservation 157 Media Studies 4 PM during June, July, and August. 63 Facilities Management 161Performance and Pratt Institute 67 School of Art 165Writing 169 Classes in the Liberal Arts www.pratt.edu/visit Arrange an appointment with your department chair. Urban Design Planning and Development to schedule a visit. 142 Library Media Specialist City and Regional Planning Systems 151 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences 153 History of Art and Design Performance Studies Manhattan Campus Please contact your department Library Science 139 Library and Information Science Office of Graduate Admissions 71 Art and Design Education Myrtle Hall, 2nd Floor 75 Arts and Cultural Management 200 Willoughby Avenue 79 Creative Arts Therapy 173 Academic Degrees Overview Brooklyn, NY 11205 80 A rt Therapy and Creativity 174Curricula Development 190Faculty tel: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 80 Dance/Movement Therapy 251 Graduate Admissions fax: 718.399.4242 80 A rt Therapy with Special 263 Financial Aid Needs Children 281 Tuition and Fees 83 Design Management 289 Registration and Academic Policies 87 Digital Arts 305 Student Affairs 95 Fine Arts 317Libraries 319 Library Faculty 321 Board of Trustees 323Administration 325 Academic Calendar Produced by the Pratt Institute Office of Communications. Unless otherwise indicated, all images of art, design, and architecture are of work created by students while studying at Pratt. © 2015 Pratt Institute. Campus photography: © William Abranowicz; additional photography by Josh Gerritsen, Peter Tannenbaum, Paul Mpagi Sepuya, or provided by the departments and individual artists. This publication has been edited for accuracy at the time of publication. Information contained herein is subject to change. Printed by Conceptual Litho Reproductions. 333 How to Get to Pratt Opening Page: Students sketch in the Sculpture Park Previous Page: Students walk through Pratt’s Brooklyn campus 335Index 1 Brooklyn, New York—home to more artists than any other city in the world and home to one of the best art, architecture, and design schools in the world. Founded in 1887, Pratt Institute As one of the world’s multicultural prepares its 3,144 undergraduate and epicenters for arts, culture, design, 1,479 graduate students for rewarding technological innovation, and and successful careers in art, design, business, New York City provides Pratt architecture, information and library students with an exceptional learning science, and liberal arts and sciences. environment that extends beyond the With a 25-acre landscaped campus Pratt campuses. From design firms in the historic Clinton Hill neighborhood and art galleries where students may See Page 22 for an overview of of Brooklyn, a creative community in the intern to museums and concert halls Graduate Programs including location. midst of a renaissance, and a campus where they enjoy all of the city’s cultural in Manhattan, students are fortunate to offerings, Pratt’s New York City location have access to the resources of both— is unparalleled. museums, galleries, restaurants, vintage shops and more. Graduate programs are located on both campuses. Pratt’s programs are consistently ranked among the best in the country; its faculty and alumni include the most renowned artists, designers, architects, and scholars in their fields. Its programs encourage collaboration and the development of creative strategies for design thinking. Previous Spread: Students walk through Pratt’s Brooklyn campus Opposite: Students walking to class on Brooklyn campus 3 Why Pratt? #1Fine Art and Studio Programs (USA Today, 2015) #1Interior Design (U.S. News & World Report, 2013) #2Interior Design (DesignIntelligence, 2014) #5Industrial Design (U.S. News & World Report, 2014) #3Industrial Design (DesignIntelligence, 2014) #12Communications Design (U.S. News & World Report, 2013) #2Digital Arts (Animation Career Review, 2013, Regional Rankings) #11Archives and Preservation, Library Science (U.S. News & World Report, 2014) #6City and Regional Planning (Planetizen Guide to Graduate Urban Planning Programs) #15Fine Arts (U.S. News & World Report, 2014) Consistently High Rankings Where Creative Minds are Inspired Ranked among the top design schools Brooklyn Campus by Bloomberg Businessweek, Pratt’s undergraduate and graduate programs are consistently ranked among the top 10 or 20 in the country and the world. In 2013-14, U.S. News and World Report’s Best Graduate Schools included four of Pratt’s programs, with Interior Design ranked #1 and Industrial Design ranked #5. Library and Information Science was ranked #11 in the Archives and Preservation category, while Communications and Package Design was ranked #12 and Fine Arts was ranked #15. In 2014, DesignIntelligence ranked Pratt’s graduate Interior Design program #2 in the nation. Pratt’s graduate Industrial Design program ranked #3. The School of Architecture was ranked among the top schools in the world by Archifund, and the M.Arch. first professional degree was ranked eighth regionally by DesignIntelligence. The Institute was ranked #20 in U.S. News & World Report’s 2013 Guide to America’s Best Colleges in the Regional Universities North category. For 2013, Pratt was ranked #1 in New York City and #2 in the country in Global Language Monitor in the Art, Design, and Music School category. Pratt was also recognized as one of the country’s most environmentally responsible colleges in The Princeton Review’s 2013 Guide to 322 Green Colleges. Located just 25 minutes from Manhattan, Pratt’s main Brooklyn location is the only New York City art and design school with a traditional campus. A 25-acre landscaped oasis, Pratt provides a visual respite in a busy city. Ryerson Walk draws a path through green lawns and mature trees surrounded by 125 years of architectural history. Many of the Institute’s 19thcentury buildings have been designated national landmarks, including the 1897 Renaissance Revival-style Caroline Ladd Pratt House, which serves as the official house of the Pratt president and several students. The Pratt Library, which was built in 1896 in a similar style, boasts an interior designed by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Co. Beyond this rich heritage, Pratt also has several distinctly modern buildings that have been constructed in the past decade. The 26,000-square-foot Higgins Hall Center Section, designed by Steven Holl Architects and Rogers Marvel Architects for the School of Architecture, opened in 2006. In 2007, the 160,000-square-foot Juliana Curran Terian Design Center opened—designed by Hanrahan Meyers Architects, the firm led by Thomas Hanrahan, dean of the School of Architecture. Why Pratt? 4 Myrtle Hall, a LEED Gold-certified building designed by the firm WASA/ Studio A, was completed in 2010 and is home to the digital arts programs. The 120,000-square-foot building is a testament to Pratt’s commitment to sustainability. The entire 25-acre campus also comprises the celebrated Pratt Sculpture Park, the largest in New York City, with sculptures by artists including internationally renowned Richard Serra and Mark di Suvero. According to Public Art Review it is one of the 10 best campus art collections in the United States. Pratt’s tree-lined neighborhood, Clinton Hill, has a history that is intimately interwined with the Institute. A century ago, it was home to the elite of Brooklyn. The expansive mansions lining Clinton Avenue belonged to the shipping magnates and mercantile princes of the Gilded Age. Charles Pratt, whose fortune derived from his partnership with John D. Rockefeller in Standard Oil, started his Institute on family land just a few blocks from the family mansion. Clinton Hill is one of New York’s Manhattan Campus Pratt’s Manhattan campus is located at 144 West 14th Street, walking distance to Union Square, Chelsea’s art district, and many other leading educational and cultural institutions. The sevenstory, 80,000-square-foot property offers state-of-the-art facilities within a distinctive, turn-of-the-century Romanesque Revival building. Pratt’s Manhattan-based programs benefit from the new campus’s cutting-edge technology and its prime location. The Manhattan campus houses the School of Information and Library Science, the Center for Continuing and Professional Studies, the Associate Degree programs, the graduate programs in Design Management, Arts and Cultural Management, Communications Design, and the School of Architecture’s undergraduate Construction Management program and graduate program in Facilities Management. The library, exhibition space, and stateof-the-art computer labs support the academic programs. Ways to Get to Know Pratt Request information at www.pratt.edu/ request, and we’ll send you information about events, deadlines, and programs based on your interests. Visit: www.pratt.edu/visit Email: [email protected] Call: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 Twitter: @prattadmissions Facebook: Pratt Institute Admissions Visit us, ask questions, and find out why Pratt is the first choice for so many students. Campus tours are available daily. Schedule your campus tour of the Brooklyn campus online at www.pratt. edu/visit. Manhattan tours must be scheduled through the department you are applying to. Most graduate departments welcome prospective students who wish to visit. Please contact your graduate department for an appointment. Pratt Institute Office of Admissions Myrtle Hall, 2nd Floor premier Victorian-era neighborhoods 200 Willoughby Avenue and is listed on the National Register Brooklyn, NY 11205 of Historic Places. In part because of Pratt, it boasts an extraordinary number of creative artists, architects, designers, illustrators, and sculptors among its residents. Page 2: Students relaxing on Brooklyn campus Opposite: Brooklyn campus Where faculty and students are at the center of creative exploration and innovation. Why Pratt? 7 Professional Faculty • At the Center for Sustainable Design Pratt’s nearly 1,000 faculty members are Studies (CSDS), green design principles award-winning scholars who mentor their are integrated into the curricula. talented students to achieve comparable The Design Incubator for Sustainable success. They are also working Innovation, a project of CSDS, professionals in the city’s creative supports several graduating students sector, who bring to the classroom their each year as they develop design ideas experience designing buildings, creating into marketable products. ad campaigns, and building furniture. • In Corporate-Sponsored Studios and The faculty represents leaders in the art, Projects, faculty members explore new design, architectural, technology, and approaches to a design or business business communities. problem while students gain real-world These faculty members impart to experience. Partners have included students the same high standards upheld Barnes and Noble, Colgate-Palmolive, in their professional work. With different General Mills, and West Elm. views, methods, and perspectives, they • At the Pratt Center for Community all share a common desire to develop Development, faculty, staff, and fellows each student’s potential and creativity to work for a more just, equitable, and the fullest—to turn out competent and sustainable city for all New Yorkers by creative professionals who will shape the empowering communities to plan for world to come. Faculty members serve and realize their futures. as critical connections when students are ready for employment or internships. Academic Initiatives Students and faculty move effortlessly between traditional age-old techniques and more contemporary digital software, taking advantage of Pratt’s extensive range of facilities from shops in metals, wood, ceramics, and jewelry to labs for animation, motion arts, and interactive arts. From state-of-the-art facilities to research initiatives, the Institute is committed to providing students with the best education possible. A Faculty Innovation Fund allows faculty to initiate new areas of investigation. A few academic initiatives where faculty and students collaborate: Opposite: Student at work in the metal shop 8 Why Pratt? Tools for Tomorrow State-of-the-Art Technology Libraries Pratt’s computer labs and digital The Pratt Library on the Brooklyn The Center for Career and Professional output centers have the most current campus is located in an 1896 landmark Development inspires, supports, and equipment available. Computer labs offer building with interiors by the Tiffany educates students and alumni. The computer workstations, color scanners, Glass and Decorating Co. Collections Center offers career and internship color and black-and-white printers and services are focused on the visual counseling, resume and portfolio and plotters, digital and analog output arts, architecture, design, creative assistance, industry mentoring, centers, digital photography, video and writing, and allied fields. Additional professional development, workshops, sound bays, multimedia video projection, materials support the general education entrepreneurial support, and a lifelong and multiple servers. From film editing curriculum. The library houses more job search support system. and digital animation to two- and three- than 200,000 volumes of print materials, dimensional rendering, all workstations including more than 600 periodicals, provides a distinct advantage for students feature the latest software for the rare books, and the college archives. The looking for internships or job experience. departments using them. Those working library also includes a multimedia center Qualified students are offered challenging in the three-dimensional realm have housing nearly 3,000 film and video titles on-the-job experiences in top art access to 3-D printers, laser cutters, and as well as the Visual Resources Center, galleries, publishers, architecture, and CNC milling machines. Pratt continually a collection of more than 120,000 design firms in both Manhattan and upgrades lab equipment as industry circulating architecture, art, and design Brooklyn, giving them firsthand work standards change. digital images. Exhibitions supports the Pratt community as well Internship and Career Support Pratt’s New York City location The Pratt Manhattan Center Library experience as well as credit toward their professional degree. Six months after graduation, 89 percent of Pratt’s graduates are employed and 84 percent of those are employed in their field. Preparing for a fulfilling, meaningful, and productive career and understanding emerging trends and the global job market is an essential activity for Pratt students. Gallery space, both on the Brooklyn campus and at Pratt Manhattan, is extensive, showing the work of students, alumni, faculty, staff, and other wellknown artists, architects, and designers throughout the academic year. Pratt Manhattan Gallery is a public art gallery that strives to present significant work from around the world in the fields of art, architecture, fashion, and design. The Rubelle and Norman Schafler Gallery on the Brooklyn campus mounts faculty and student exhibitions as well as thematic shows featuring the work of unaffiliated artists. In addition, Pratt has more than 15 other galleries located on its Brooklyn and Manhattan campuses. Opposite: Students at work as visiting researchers. The library has a growing collection of monographs, serials, and multimedia, as well as stock photography. It offers a wide range of electronic resources, including general and subject-specific databases, all of which are available off-site. 11 The History of Pratt On October 17, 1887, 12 young people climbed the stairs of the new “Main” building and began to fulfill the dream of Charles Pratt as the first students at Pratt Institute. Charles Pratt, one of 11 children, was born The Institute’s success is based the son of a Massachusetts carpenter in largely on Charles Pratt’s philosophy of 1830. In Boston, he joined a company education, which revolutionized teaching specializing in paints and whale oil by challenging the traditional concept of products. When he came to New York, academia as a purely intellectual exercise. he founded a petroleum business He created a school where applied which would become Charles Pratt and knowledge was emphasized and specific Company. The concern eventually merged skills were taught to meet the needs of with Standard Oil, the company that a growing industrial economy. Pratt has made John D. Rockefeller his millions. been a pioneer in education since its Pratt’s fortunes increased and he inception. Today, Pratt offers students became a leading figure in Brooklyn, more than 27 undergraduate majors and serving his community and his profession. concentrations—more than most other A philanthropist and visionary, he art and design schools in the country— supported many of Brooklyn’s major and 26 master’s degree programs. institutions. He always regretted, The energy, foresight, and spirit however, his own limited education and Charles Pratt gave to his dream remains dreamed of founding an institution where even today. Inscribed on the seal of the pupils could learn trades through the Institute is his motto: Be True to Your skillful use of their hands. This dream was Work, and Your Work Will Be True to You. realized when Pratt Institute opened its doors more than 125 years ago. To this day, members of the Pratt family are leading supporters of the Institute. Opposite: Charles Pratt, founder of the Institute 13 Pratt Students Although Pratt students come from Student Life Athletics and Recreation all over the world, they share several Pratt students regularly attend films, The Activities Resource Center has a characteristics. First, many have known plays, lectures, art openings, and 200-meter indoor track, five indoor since childhood that they enjoy creating concerts—both on campus and around tennis courts, basketball and volleyball things. Second, most enjoy inventive New York City. Recreational classes are courts, a weight room, dance/exercise problem solving both in and out of the held at the Athletic Resource Center, rooms, and saunas. classroom. Finally, most share a deep which has extensive workout facilities desire to change the world and leave including a 200-meter indoor track, Living on Campus their imprint. five indoor tennis courts, basketball and Pratt provides some apartment-style volleyball courts, a weight room, dance/ graduate housing in Brooklyn, but most applications for its graduate class of 464, exercise rooms, and sauna. These graduate students live off-campus enabling the admissions committees to cultural outings play an essential role in in a variety of housing options from select a student body with a wide variety the Pratt experience. apartments to brownstones and lofts, Pratt receives approximately 3,000 of backgrounds. Thiry-four percent of the new graduate class comes from other countries, including China, Taiwan, India, South Korea, Mexico, Canada, Thailand, and Turkey. Thirty-seven percent of the graduate enrollment comes from states other than New York, giving Pratt a truly national and international student body. Although it is possible to attend Pratt part time, 87 percent of graduate students choose to study full time, reflecting a high degree of commitment. In addition to the wealth of opportunities for exploration in the city, on the Brooklyn campus, students often socialize in the residence halls and cafeteria and cafes or at the Student Union, the Library, the Schafler Gallery, and the Activities Resource Center, where most sports and wellness activities take place. In warm weather, students often meet and sit on the lawns amid the contemporary sculptures that dot the campus. The Institute’s entire student body is composed of 4,623 undergraduate and graduate students—33 percent men and 67 percent women. Opposite: Students relaxing on the Brooklyn Campus sharing with other students. Many opportunities are listed through the Office of Residential Life. Various meal plans are available for residential students. 15 Notable Alumni What do the Chrysler Building and Scrabble have in common? Both were designed by Pratt alumni. Pratt has approximately 26,000 active alumni, whose achievements are a testament to the soundness of the Institute’s educational philosophy. Pratt alumni have designed wellknown and award-winning furniture, clothing, buildings, and commercials, as well as artworks, which are regularly exhibited in major museums and galleries. William Boyer, Beverly Pepper, sculptor designer of the classic Thunderbird Charles Pollock, furniture designer Shawn Christensen, Paul Rand, Academy Award winner graphic designer, created IBM logo Tomie dePaola, Robert Redford, actor and director children’s book author and illustrator Robert Sabuda, illustrator Jules Feiffer, cartoonist and playwright Stefan Sagmeister, graphic designer Harvey Fierstein, David Sarnoff, playwright and actor, Torch Song Trilogy president, RCA Corporation Steve Frankfurt, advertising innovator Tony Schwartz, Bob Giraldi, film director creator, Alka-Seltzer commercial Felix Gonzalez-Torres, installation artist Annabelle Selldorf, Michael Gross, gallery and museum architect executive producer, Ghostbusters Robert Siegel, Bruce Hannah, furniture designer architect, Gwathmey Siegel Kaufman for Knoll, named Designer of the Pat Steir, Decade in 1990 contemporary painter and printmaker Eva Hesse, sculptor and painter William Van Alen, Betsey Johnson, fashion designer architect, Chrysler Building Ellsworth Kelly, minimalist painter Tucker Viemeister, Edward Koren, product designer, Oxo Good Grips cartoonist, The New Yorker Max Weber, modernist painter Naomi Leff, interior designer Robert Wilson, avant-garde stage George Lois, advertising designer director and playwright Robert Mapplethorpe, photographer Carlos Zapata, Peter Max, pop artist residential and commercial architect Norman Norell, fashion designer Peter Zumthor, Roxy Paine, conceptual artist Pritzker Prize-winning architect Sylvia Plachy, photographer Opposite: Chrysler Building by William Van Alen 16 About Pratt Institute Cultural Partnerships in New York City to stylized Shakespearean productions. region. Path methodology techniques will The Institute has created partnerships Pratt students can attend BAM events at be used to study topics including water with a number of major cultural discounted rates. institutions so students may take In Manhattan, Pratt students also About Pratt Institute 17 Trastevere district and includes course, “Surroundings”, is a writing instructors in the course and one of the travel to Florence, Siena, and Venice. seminar focused on encounters with two PSPD co-coordinators. All courses quality, aquatic life, water edge/coastline Financial aid is typically available. provocative settings. offer three credits. The courses involve study in configuration, waterfront programming/ This course seeks to mine these advantage of the vast opportunities enjoy visiting these institutions where land use, waterfront architecture, intensively designed environments for Architecture and Design in Brooklyn both before and after the in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Students admission fees are waived: the Cooper waterfront “practices of everyday life,” contemporary principles. While the Copenhagen Summer Program excursion element. In alternating participate in collaborative work as part Hewitt National Design Museum, the Frick land-cover, and urban form. course is fully engaged with the historical of their curriculum or simply have class Collection, Museum of Arts and Design, visits. On their own, Pratt students may the Museum of Modern Art, and the visit free of charge. Whitney Museum of American Art. Close to Pratt’s Brooklyn campus, the Brooklyn Museum has Study Abroad Programs an impressive permanent collection. Pratt’s study abroad programs combine The Egyptian art collection is one the Institute’s academic excellence with of the world’s finest. The museum’s firsthand exposure to some of the most Asian art collection, though modest vibrant international centers of art, in size, is one of the more diverse design, and architecture. and comprehensive in the New York metropolitan area. The museum puts on several contemporary—and often local—art exhibitions each year. The “First Saturday” of each month is a day of special events when the museum is free to the community. Open year-round, the adjacent Brooklyn Botanic Garden features one of the most impressive Japanese gardens outside Japan. It captures nature in miniature: trees and shrubs, carefully dwarfed and shaped by cloud pruning, are surrounded by hills and a pond. The Cranford Rose Garden features 5,000 bushes of 1,200 varieties of roses. The Brooklyn Academy of Music, popularly known as BAM, is at the vanguard of theater offerings. You can see productions ranging from performance art and independent films Architecture in Turkey Students visit and study urban conditions, historical monuments, and archaeological sites in Istanbul and surrounding regions. This course provides firsthand experience analyzing architecture, cultural forces, and site conditions through architectural investigations. The course focuses on international experience within the lens of two significant factors of the 21st-century metropolis: rapid change and heterogeneity in Istanbul. Students look at existing ecological, urban, and historical data in order to evaluate and represent information from the unique architectural perspective. This class will track systemic change and heterogeneity from past to present in order to understand the shifting heterogeneity that defines Istanbul and the surrounding significance of the material it presents, Florence Summer Program In partnership with Studio Art Centers International (SACI), students study Florentine art and culture, museum and library research, documentation, and cultural heritage conservation for four weeks. The program offers two 3-credit courses. London Summer Programs Students have the opportunity to study e-publishing and digital scholarship at Kings College London for two weeks in the early summer and, in a separate program, study museums’ use of digital media at Ravensbourne College of Design and Communication in London for two weeks in July. Students can apply for one or both programs, which each offer one 3-credit course. Architecture and Urban Design in Rome Summer Program This program gives graduate Architecture and Urban Design students the opportunity to earn three credits studying architecture, urbanism, and design during the month of June. The program is located in Rome’s famous it also finds excellent opportunities to study the relational dynamics, socio-political developments, technomaterial innovations, and manipulated ecologies out of which such incredibly concentrated cultural production emerges. Course content is delivered through lectures, discussions, tours, visiting scholars, and projects that perform a speculative mapping of the city of Rome in the form of graphics, diagrams, notation, and text. Pratt Summer in Paris The Architecture and Design in Copenhagen program gives Architecture, Communications Design, Fine Arts, Industrial Design, and Interior Design undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to earn seven credits studying cutting-edge Scandinavian design. The program lasts seven weeks, running between mid-June and early August. The curriculum combines interdisciplinary studio work with an investigation and analysis of contemporary society, politics, and environment. Teachers include masters in the fields of architecture, furniture design, graphic design, interior The Pratt Summer in Paris program gives architecture, and urban design. Students students the opportunity to earn six also travel to Sweden, Finland, Norway, elective credits studying literature and and western Denmark for field trips. writing. It is available to all Pratt students, but geared more toward undergraduate Sustainable Planning Development students. The program is housed at the International Workshops Cité International Universitaire de Paris, which is located within minutes of the Louvre, Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower, the Sacré Coeur, and countless other points of interest. The program includes two Humanities courses. The first course, “The American Writer in Paris”, focuses on works by the most prominent American writers living in or passing through Paris during the 20th century. The second The Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development (PSPD)—Planning, Sustainable Environmental Systems, Historic Preservation, and Facilities Management—offer six courses that include an international component. In addition to PSPD graduate students, these seven courses are open to other graduate students, fifth-year architects, and others with the permission of the summers, students can either travel to Tokyo, Japan, for intensive research on placemaking and urban design; or to Istanbul, Turkey, for a mini-studio addressing urban development topics. Every January, students can participate in a studio in and on behalf of a South India community, where the intention is to create a comprehensive sustainability, preservation, and land use plan over a period of years. Every spring break, students have the chance to travel to Sao Paolo, Brazil, in connection with work with graduate students there comparing conditions and best practices for a selected community sustainability topic. • Also in spring, students can travel to Rome, Italy, for an intensive introduction to Roman architecture and the city’s unique ability to meld architectural styles and time periods. • In addition, students can participate in a six-week study of Scandinavian urban design, which takes place at the Danish Institute for Study Abroad (DIS) in Copenhagen. About Pratt 19 Pratt in Venice Summer Program Commitment to Sustainability In Venice, students may register for six to eight credits, selecting from courses in: Printmaking/Drawing, Painting, Art History of Venice, and Materials Higher education has a unique role in America. No other institution in society has the influence, the critical mass, and the diversity of skills needed to and Techniques of Venetian Art. The successfully reverse global warming. program takes place in June and July. It Pratt Institute is taking a leadership is open to graduate and undergraduate role in sustainability for schools of art, students. Pratt’s program is conducted design, and architecture nationwide. in collaboration with the Università At this critical moment, when our Internazionale dell’Arte at the Villa environment and ways of life are at Heriott and the Scuola Internazionale risk, we have a responsibility to ensure di Grafica. With its rich artistic history that each of our graduates has a deep and visual appeal, Venice provides awareness of ecology, environmental inspiration for studio and on-site work. issues, and social justice. Art history classes are held at various In The Princeton Review’s 2013 sites and alternate with lectures that Guide to 322 Green Colleges, Pratt provide a historical context for the visits. was recognized as one of the country’s In the graduate course in Materials and most environmentally responsible Techniques students visit conservation colleges. As active participants in laboratories to learn from local experts the American College and University and research specific aspects of Presidents’ Climate Commitment materials and process. (ACUPCC), Pratt seeks to be a carbon- For more information on individual neutral campus. In 2010, Myrtle Hall, a programs, contact Dr. Marianthi LEED Gold-certified building designed Zikopoulos, Interim Director of Study by the firm WASA/Studio A, was Abroad and International Partnerships, at completed. The 120,000-square- [email protected] or go to www.pratt. foot building is a testament to Pratt’s edu/academics/academic-resources/ commitment to sustainability. study-abroad. Opposite: Students take advantage of the Institute’s many study abroad programs including the Florence Summer Program. About Pratt Regardless of discipline, our graduates must be able to integrate best sustainable practices into their professional lives. Within each program, Pratt students are offered an opportunity to learn to think in new ways about the relationship of designer to product, architect to built environment, and artist to creative expression. The Institute is continuously working to reduce our carbon footprint, “greening” our dorms, facilities, and classrooms and creating an ongoing, living laboratory from which our students can observe, participate, and experiment. The Institute’s Center for Sustainable Design Studies (CSDS) is an active and collaborative resource for sustainable design at Pratt’s Brooklyn campus. Under the umbrella of CSDS, the Pratt Design Incubator for Sustainable Innovation provides ambitious students and Pratt alumni with a stimulating place to launch sustainability-minded businesses, providing office space, planning support, and access to shop facilities. For more information, go to csds.pratt.edu/. 21 Accreditation Statement Pratt Institute is a coeducational undergraduate and graduate institution chartered and empowered to confer academic degrees by the State of New York. The certificates and degrees conferred are registered by the New York State Department of Education. Pratt is accredited by the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, 3624 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, 215.662.5606. The Commission on Higher Education is an institutional accrediting agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Commission on Recognition of Postsecondary Accreditation. Programs in art and design are accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). The School of Architecture’s Bachelor of Architecture program is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board. (For more information on NAAB accreditation, refer to the School of Architecture section, page 25.) Pratt is a charter member of and accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design. The Master in Library and Information Science program is accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of the American Library Association. The Master in Art Therapy is approved by the Education Approval Board of the American Art Therapy Association, Inc., and as such meets the education standards of the art therapy profession. The Graduate Dance/Movement Therapy program has been approved by the American Dance Therapy Association. Programs offered by Art and Design Education and the M.S. for Library Media Specialists (LMS) offered by the School of Information and Library Science are accredited by RATE. The B.F.A. offered by the Interior Design department is accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation (formerly FIDER). Opposite: Myrtle Hall, the Institute’s sustainably designed, LEED-certified administrative and academic building 22 23 How a Pratt Education Works Department Programs and Emphasis Study Abroad Campus Graduate Architecture and Urban Design M. Architecture (first professional) Architecture M.S. (post-professional) Architecture and Urban Design M.S. (post-professional) rchitecture and Urban Design in Rome, A Architecture in Turkey, , Architecture and Design in Copenhagen Brooklyn Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development City and Regional Planning M.S. City and Regional Planning M.S./J.D. (with Brooklyn Law School) Historic Preservation M.S. Sustainable Environmental Systems M.S. Facilities Management M.S. Urban Placemaking and Management M.S. Sustainable Planning Development International Workshops Brooklyn, except Facilities Management, which is based in Manhattan Art and Design Education M.S. in Art and Design Education (Initial/ Professional and Professional Certification) Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education Brooklyn Creative Arts Therapy Art Therapy and Creativity Development M.P.S. Art Therapy SP/SU M.P.S. Art Therapy with Special Needs Children M.P.S. Dance/Movement Therapy SP/SU M.S. Dance/Movement Therapy M.S. Brooklyn Arts and Cultural Management Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. Manhattan Communications/Package Design Communications Design M.F.A. Package Design M.S. Design Management Design Management M.P.S. Digital Arts Architecture and Design in Copenhagen Manhattan Digital Arts M.F.A. 3-D Animation and Motion Arts Digital Imaging Interactive Arts Combined Digital Arts/Library and Info Science M.F.A./M.S. Florence Summer Program Brooklyn Fine Arts Fine Arts M.F.A. Painting and Drawing Photography Printmaking New Forms Sculpture Architecture and Design in Copenhagen, Pratt in Venice Brooklyn History of Art and Design History of Art and Design M.S. Combined History of Art and Design/Fine Art M.S./M.F.A. Combined History of Art and Design/Library Science M.S./M.S. Pratt in Venice, Florence Summer Program Brooklyn Manhattan Humanities and Media Studies Media Studies M.A. Pratt Summer in Paris Brooklyn Industrial Design M.I.D. Architecture and Design in Copenhagen Brooklyn Interior Design Qualifying three-year M.F.A. Two-year M.F.A. Architecture and Design in Copenhagen Brooklyn Information and Library Science Library and Information Science M.S. Library and Information Science Library Media Specialist M.S. Combined Library and Information Science M.S./J.D. (with Brooklyn Law School) Library and Information Science Advanced Certificate Library Media Specialist Advanced Certificate Archives Advanced Certificate Museum Libraries Advanced Certificate London Publishing Summer School, Florence Summer Program Manhattan Performance and Performance Studies Performance and Performance Studies M.F.A. Writing Writing M.F.A. Brooklyn Pratt Institute has admirably filled a unique position in the American educational system… I am confident that Pratt will continue its traditions of excellence in the years ahead. 24 25 —President John F. Kennedy, from a telegram sent on the occasion of Pratt’s 75th anniversary in 1962 27 School of Architecture Architecture Historic Preservation Urban Design Facilities Management City and Regional Planning Urban Placemaking and Management Sustainable Environmental Systems Studies in the School of Architecture gather from the arts, sciences, and liberal arts to produce works of value that are sensitive to the realities of life in the cultures of the world. Graduates are imbued with strong ethics and an understanding of architects’ ability to improve the quality of life. As a result, they know how to build, what The post-professional Master of to build for whom, and how to enhance Architecture and Urban Design is a the surrounding environment, in the city 33-credit, three-semester (summer, or country, in a public works project or a fall, spring) program for those who hold private home. an accredited five-year Bachelor’s The Graduate Architecture and of Architecture or the equivalent. A Urban Design programs offer three culmination project is completed in the graduate degrees—one professional and final semester. two post-professional. The first-professional Master of Architecture (M. Arch.) degree is an 84-credit, three-year professional degree Students in the M.S. Arch. and the Urban Design programs are encouraged to develop specialized areas of research. The School of Architecture is program for students holding a four- dedicated to maintaining the connection year undergraduate degree in any field. between design theory and practice and This program prepares students to take to extending the range of knowledge the architectural licensing exam and to necessary to fully understand the built become practicing architects. Students environment. The diversity of programs may also receive advanced standing for within the school, and the accessibility pursuing further graduate studies. of other programs within the Institute, The post-professional Master of enables students to pursue a wide range Science in Architecture (M.S. Arch.) is of interests within the field. Architecture a 36-credit, three-semester (summer, students may take electives in fine arts, fall, spring) program for those who hold illustration, computer graphics, industrial an accredited five-year Bachelor’s of design, furniture design, interior design, Architecture or the equivalent. A thesis is and photography, as well as electives in completed in the final semester. advanced architectural theory, design, technology, and management. Dean Director of Production Technologies Office Thomas Hanrahan Mark Parsons Higgins Hall North, 1st floor Tel: 718.399.4304 | Fax: 718.399.4315 Assistants to the Dean [email protected] Kurt Everhart www.pratt.edu/architecture Pamela Gill 28 School of Architecture School of Architecture 29 by students and faculty that fill three learning is emphasized through studio- City allows students immediate and galleries on a regular basis; and the study based curricula and research-oriented graduate degrees in accredited and frequent access to the city’s resources. abroad programs in Italy and France. thesis programs. nonaccredited programs. The M. Arch. The graduate programs also have The school publication, InProcess, excellent internal resources: a strong documents student work throughout Highest Professional Standards three-year professional program. The faculty, good facilities, and a developing the year. In the United States, most state program was accredited by NAAB in registration boards require a degree 2010. The M.S. Arch. and Urban Design The school’s location in New York research network that connects the Pratt’s Center for Community The School of Architecture offers first professional degree program is a department and its students to serious Development, formerly PICCED, one from an accredited professional degree programs are post-professional and national and international work in the of the oldest community advocacy and program as a prerequisite for licensure. offer a three-semester Master’s degree field. This network brings distinguished technical assistance organizations in The National Architectural Accrediting in Architecture and Urban Design. Post- visitors to speak to graduate students in a the United States, gives students Board (NAAB), which is the sole agency professional programs in the United research forum; invites visiting faculty to additional opportunities to work on authorized to accredit U.S. professional States are not accredited by the NAAB. teach studios, workshops, and seminars; real-life projects. degree programs in architecture, Pratt’s Graduate Planning Program is recognizes two types of degrees: the accredited by the Planning Accreditation and forges extensive and thoughtful Students are further exposed to connections with international cities and the professional world through optional Bachelor of Architecture and the Master Board and offers a two-year Master of throughout the United States. internship programs that place them in of Architecture. A program may be Science degree in City and Regional outstanding New York architectural firms, granted a five-year, three-year, or two- Planning. The Facilities Management is also an exciting part of the educational public agencies, and nonprofit design year term of accreditation, depending program is non-accredited and offers experience at Pratt. Post-professional institutions, giving them firsthand work on its degree of conformance with a two-year Master of Science degree in degree students come from a wide range experience as well as credit toward their established educational standards. Facilities Management. of architectural practice, and first- professional degrees. The opportunity to learn from peers professional degree students come from The School of Architecture’s mission Master’s degree programs may consist of a pre-professional undergraduate Admission Requirements Please refer to the Admissions section. diverse fields of undergraduate study. is to educate the future leaders of the degree and a post-professional graduate The student body includes many design disciplines in the professional degree, which, when earned sequentially, international students, each of whom fields of architecture, urban design, constitute an accredited professional brings a different perspective to the study city and regional planning, construction education. The pre-professional degree is of architecture. The school encourages and facilities management, and historic not, by itself, recognized as an accredited transfer students to apply and will preservation. This effort builds upon a degree, however. evaluate credits from other colleges, strong context of professional education universities, or community colleges. within an art and design institute that to new programs that have developed stresses the relationship between viable plans for achieving initial demonstrates daily that learning does not intellectual development and creative accreditation. Candidacy status indicates occur solely within the classroom. This activity. The school provides a broad that a program should be accredited is reflected in the annual undergraduate cultural and intellectual base in the liberal within six years of achieving candidacy, if and graduate lecture series, which bring arts and sciences while providing the its plan is properly implemented. some of the most influential architects specialized knowledge unique to individual in the world to campus; the Center disciplines. The importance of lifelong The School of Architecture The NAAB grants candidacy status for Experimental Structures; exhibits Page 26: Work by Luke Cunnington (M.Arch. ’12) Student Work The School of Architecture reserves the right to temporarily retain during the academic year, for exhibition and classroom purposes, representative work of any student enrolled in its programs. 31 Graduate Architecture and Urban Design The mission of the Graduate Architecture and Urban Design (GAUD) programs is twofold. For the first-professional degree program, students develop expertise to engage and lead complex architectural projects in the professional practice of architecture through the exploration and development of substantive methods of design and inquiry across the discipline. For the post-professional programs both in architecture and in urban design, the mission is to expand a student’s established professional education into new forms of thinking, types of practices, and areas of expertise. In all cases, each program promotes a student’s lifelong relationship with his or her field. Opposite: Work by Victoria Maceira (M.Arch. ’13) and Michael Grieser (M.Arch. ’13) Students in GAUD are immersed in an both programs come from national and exploratory design-studio culture. The international backgrounds. three distinct degrees within the two A developing research area within programs—Architecture and Urban GAUD is the Network for Emerging Design—share coursework, students, Architectural Research (NEAR), which faculty, and events, thus allowing each connects the department to national program to draw upon the other’s and international work. Commensurate perspectives and expertise. This with the complexities of the 21st century, mix supports the ability to integrate NEAR expands beyond traditional diverse theoretical and technical limitations of academic research, and knowledge in speculative design work establishes a space for experimentation while emphasizing critical thinking/ and development in academia, critical making. Students and faculty are industries, and public institutions. engaged in the design of contemporary The Graduate Architecture programs experimental architectural projects and at Pratt Institute’s School of Architecture the integration of academically rigorous contribute to the progressive design seminar courses in history and theory, environment for advanced architectural computer media, and technology. research located in New York City. The The Graduate Architecture programs school’s New York City location provides have a diverse faculty of distinguished immediate and frequent access to educators and practicing architects, the city’s extensive range of creative excellent facilities, and trans-disciplinary opportunities. The international study connections with the well-known art and abroad programs extend the investigation design departments of Pratt Institute. of the city to Rome and Istanbul with Distinguished visitors present their concentrated seminars looking at both work to graduate students on a regular cities and their unique contributions to basis in research forums, guest studios, architecture and urbanity. and seminars. Faculty and students in www.pratt.edu/grad-architectureurban-design 33 Architecture Architecture is a cultural act. Both the first-professional and post-professional programs seek to formulate a contemporary approach to architecture that is “ecological” in the sense that it provides collective exchanges that are both trans-disciplinary and transcategorical. This ecological approach encourages feedback, theoretical studies, and exposure to myriad other categories and disciplines that are newly emerging in contemporary culture. It also helps students develop relationships with industry, manufacturing, and political agencies. This approach seeks to intensify heterogeneous interests and agencies. In addition, the programs see architectural innovations in both theory and practice of architecture and the interconnected phenomena out of which the discipline emerges. program that maintains a mission to train students as leaders in the professional practice of architecture with substantive methods of design and inquiry. The program is intended for students holding a four-year undergraduate, non-professonal degree in any field. This program aims to establish a student’s professional education with new forms of thinking and practice and to help students develop a lifelong relationship to their respective fields. Core design studios and seminars in history and theory, computer media, and building technologies in the first The Graduate Architecture program three semesters prepare students for offers two degrees: Master of the comprehensive architecture project Architecture (M. Arch.) (first- in the fourth semester. This combined professional), and Master of Science design and integrated building-systems (M.S.) in architecture (post-professional). course integrates all related disciplines into the single project. The final two Master of Architecture semesters are dedicated to advanced- (First-Professional) option studios and seminars where The Master of Architecture, a first- students can explore a range of options professional degree, is a NAAB within all four areas of the curriculum. accredited 84-credit, three-year Chair Program Coordinators Office William MacDonald Alexandra Barker, Master of Architecture Tel: 718.399.4314 | Fax: 718.399.4379 Jason Vigneri-Beane, [email protected] Assistant Chair Master of Science, Architecture www.pratt.edu/grad-architecture Philip Parker Maria Sieira, Architecture History/Theory Cristobal Correa, Technology Assistants to the Chair Erin Murphy Erika Schroeder Christopher Kroner, Media 34 Architecture Master of Science, Architecture (Post-Professional) The 36-credit, three-semester (summer, fall, spring) post-professional program aims to expand a student’s previously established professional education into new forms of thinking and practice. Open to students holding a five-year (B. Arch.) or equivalent (M. Arch.) degree in architecture, the program helps students develop a lifelong relationship to their specific interests in architecture. All students are exposed to relevant issues through rigorous history and theory electives, lectures by prominent scholars, computer-technology courses emphasizing critical thinking, and studios requiring integration of theoretical and technical knowledge. The program begins with an intensive summer semester concentrating in design, digital media, and theory. The second semester’s advanced option studios are integrated with those taken by the Master of Architecture (firstprofessional) students. The culmination of the program is a thesis research and design project in which students develop specialized approaches to contemporary architecture within year-long themes. Page 32: Work by James Maldonado (M.Arch. ’15) Opposite: Work by Asli Agirbas (M.S. Architecture ’13) Above from top: Work by Megan Hurford (M.S. Architecture ’14); Work by Katia Loizou (M.S. Architecture ’13); Work by Megan Hurford (M.S. Architecture ’14) Opposite from top: Work by Chang-Kuang Chao; Work by Megan Hurford (M.S. Architecture ’14); Work by Lauren Burdelsky (M.S. Architecture ’12), Alanna Kleine (M.S. Architecture ’12) and Mithila Poojari (M.S. Architecture ’12) Architecture Opposite from top: Work by Jon Bucholtz, Sana Iqbal (M.Arch. ’14) and Chris Yu (M.Arch. ’14); Work by Taesoo Kim (M.Arch. ’14); Work by Elle White (M.Arch. ’14) Above from top: Work by Jenna Steinbeck (M.Arch. ’14); Work by Eric Engdahl (M.Arch. ’12); Work by Ching-Tsung Huang (M.S. Architecture ’13) 41 Urban Design The Graduate Architecture and Urban Design program is a unique three-semester program for students who have already completed a professional degree in architecture. Preparing students to take leadership positions in the 21st century, the program takes into consideration the most urgent questions confronting the design of cities today. Guided by leading design professionals are designing civilization itself. Mirroring and scholars, students develop powerful the complexity of the contemporary contemporary design techniques and situation, the program is itself highly a sophisticated conceptual outlook international. From all corners of in order to advance new strategies the world, students converge on this and new possibilities. As of 2010, for program in New York City, a city that the first time in human history, the remains one of the great laboratories for majority of the global population now urban thought and innovation. Chair Coordinator Office William MacDonald David Ruy Tel: 718.399.4314 | Fax: 718.399.4379 Assistant chair Assistants to the Chair Philip Parker Erin Murphy lives in cities. As noted by the World Health Organization, seven out of 10 people will be living in cities by the year 2050. Given the astonishing scale at which urbanization is taking place today, how we are designing our cities is becoming synonymous with how we [email protected] Erika Schroeder www.pratt.edu/dept-urban-design Urban Design 42 Urban Design Intensive and ambitious in its scope, the program is structured around a single urban design project that is continuously developed by each student across three studio semesters. Each studio semester has a specific focus that is supplemented by advanced seminar topics in histories of urban design, urban planning and zoning policies, GIS, and digital design technologies. This year, the program continued its speculative investigation of producing new land masses within the New York City estuary. Students examined the spectacular and problematic opportunities that come with creating new land where none existed before. The geo-engineering scenarios considered how this problem might articulate a new kind of architectural ground leading to new urban typologies. Projects developed extensions of this premise into new real estate economies, new infrastructures, new zoning logics, and perhaps mostly importantly, new experiences. Examining as a precedent the astonishingly artificial geology of New York City itself, students were asked to consider the profound and paradoxical coherence of a city that is always changing. Page 40: Work by Michalis Skitsas (M.S.AUD ‘14) Above: Work by Francisco Patino (M.S. Urban Design ’13) Urban Design Opposite from top: Work by Ana Maria Perez Dobarro (M.S. Urban Design ’12), Niriti Porwal (M.S. Urban Design ’12), and Celina Scheidt (M.S.AUD ‘12); Work by Chun-Wen Chin, Achilleas Kakkavas, and Aayushya Patel (M.S.AUD ‘12) Above: Work by Michalis Skitsas (M.S.AUD ‘14) 47 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development (PSPD) is an alliance of five programs with a shared value placed on urban sustainability— defined by the “triple bottom line” of environment, equity, and economy. The five graduate Master of Science is to provide a professionally oriented • City and Regional Planning • Sustainable Environmental Systems • Historic Preservation • Urban Placemaking and Management • Facilities Management education to a student body with Each of the five graduate programs maintains its independence, degree, and depth of study. Yet with the advice of coordinators and department chairs, students can move between the five programs, with the further option to follow set tracks for specialized or multifaceted studies. Studios bring together students from all five graduate programs for interdisciplinary teamwork. PSPD also offers linkages to the undergraduate Construction Management program, with the opportunity to focus on real estate development; Brooklyn Law School, with the opportunity for a joint master’s/Juris Doctor; and to the Pratt Center for Community Development, with the opportunity to combine study and advocacy. Programs for Sustainable Planning The primary mission of the PSPD programs are: diverse cultural, educational, and professional backgrounds. The PSPD welcomes applicants with undergraduate degrees in a wide range of disciplines. In the application process, the PSPD values creativity, civic engagement, and depth of experience, in addition to intellectual capacity. Urbanism In this century as in the last, the major human force on our planet is migration to metropolitan areas, while the major challenge of the present and future is addressing global warming. Prior city planning values of aesthetics (as per the City Beautiful movement of the late 19th century) and new technology (as per the City Efficient movement of the mid-20th century) must now be augmented with a new City Sustainable movement. The PSPD is especially committed to realizing this paradigm on the community as well as the citywide basis. City and Regional Planning Sustainable Environmental Systems Historic Preservation Urban Placemaking and Management Facilities Management Chair Coordinator Coordinator Coordinator Chair Coordinator John Shapiro Jaime Stein Nadya K. Nenadich David Burney Regina Ford Cahill David Burney 718.399.4391 718.399.4328 718.399.4326 718.399.4340 212.647.7524 718.399.4323 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] and Development [email protected] Assistant to the Chair Assistant to the Chair Philip Ramus Adia Ware 212.647.7524 718.399.4340 [email protected] [email protected] 48 Programs for Sustainable Planning Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development and Development 49 Environmental Sustainability Professionalism and Internships are concentrated on two weekdays The Sustainable Environmental Systems Relevant employment and internships and evenings. This scheduling affords with the New York City Environmental as about providing opportunities for program is entirely devoted to urban are an important component of the students maximum flexibility to work Justice Alliance (NYC-EJA) and with students to study in foreign places. environmental policy, science, and PSPD’s educational approach. Students or intern, and affords the PSPD the Project for Public Spaces (PPS). NYC- For example, Pratt students have design. “Green development” and entering with work in a relevant field may ability to tap as faculty the region’s most EJA is the city’s leading advocate for traveled to Brazil to consider innovative LEED courses augment the Facilities earn credits through work experience/ accomplished professionals. These sustainability and resiliency for poor approaches to affordable housing; Management program curriculum. The portfolio credit. Unpaid and paid include the founders of community and working class neighborhoods studied climate change infastructure Historic Preservation program is already internships are available. The resulting organizations, executives in development of color. PPS is the nation’s leading with Dutch students and experts; “greened,” as the most sustainable action variety of professional experiences firms, New York City commissioners, proponent of placemaking, traffic and fleshed out the community details is to preserve and reuse. enriches seminar discussions and studio political leaders, and more. calming, public markets, and more, of a regional sustainability plan for with projects all around the world. Goa with Indian students. teamwork, provides students with a The PSPD also enjoys a relationship learning global innovations and practices Social Equity and Economic Viability wealth of contacts in the field, The Pratt Center Other internship placements include the True sustainability considers factors such and strengthens their job qualifications. The PSPD collaborates closely with the New York City Economic Development Joint Degree in Law Pratt Center for Community Development Corporation and other city agencies, the Pratt Institute and Brooklyn Law School as social justice and financial realities. Advocacy and participatory planning are Impact (www.prattcenter.net)—one of the nation’s Landmarks Conservancy and other civic (BLS) have created an open door allowing core principles, further propelled by Through internships, partnerships, foremost university-based research and organizations, and other environmental Pratt students to take selected courses the Livable Cities and the Environmental studios, demonstrations of professional technical assistance organizations in the groups, and community-based at BLS, and vice versa. Pratt and BLS Justice movements. Sustainability is competence, and directed research, service of disadvantaged communities. organizations throughout New York City. also sponsor a program leading to the not just a new set of technologies and students have ample opportunity to A number of courses relate to Pratt Center standards; it is also a value system. work on real-world and real-time issues. projects, many students intern at the Geographical Information Regional Planning and Juris Doctor (J.D.). Successes are illustrated in this catalog Pratt Center, Pratt Center senior staff Systems (GIS) Students can also participate in BLS’s and in the PSPD newsletter. (Check teach in the PSPD, and other faculty work With the graduate Communications Community Development Clinic, which the websites for each program.) New closely with the Pratt Center on research Design program, the PSPD founded SAVI— represents community development York’s history, diversity, and international and advocacy efforts. Pratt Center’s The Spatial Analysis and Visualization corporations, cultural institutions, and character offer a rich training ground for services include: Initiative. SAVI supports PSPD studios affordable housing providers that serve planners, preservationists, developers, • Visioning to identify community needs and research with depth in GIS analysis underrepresented communities. and sustainability practitioners. Students graduate equipped with the technical know-how, collaborative skills, and critical thinking necessary to pursue professional careers and plan for environmental and social justice in urban places. Alumni play leading roles in a broad spectrum of jobs in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. and workable strategies. • Testimony and events to inform degrees of Master of Science in City and with an added focus on how best to The joint degrees can be earned in represent data, e.g., infographics. SAVI four to five years of full-time study—less groups and officials about community is also a resource for community and time and cost than if the two degrees challenges and opportunities. civic organizations, and in 2014 launched were pursued independently. Students a certificate degree in GIS and data must apply and be accepted to both visualization. schools independently. Prospective law • Research, recommendations for action, and advocacy to advance students must take the LSAT. The joint community plans. • Neighborhood to regional Global Practice degree can be pursued simultaneously coalitions to advance specific The PSPD is responding to the challenges or sequentially so long as 15+ credits of policy recommendations. of the “global village” with courses that the Pratt master’s degree are completed the evenings, except for the Historic run partly or entirely abroad. These after matriculation at Brooklyn Law. Preservation program’s courses, which courses are as much about students PSPD courses are offered in Page 46: New York City is the PSPD’s laboratory for cross-disciplinary study and internships 51 City and Regional Planning Since its inception 50 years ago, the City and Regional Planning program, located in the School of Architecture on the Brooklyn Campus, has remained true to its emphasis on an education that stresses practice over theory, participatory planning over top-down policy making, and advocacy over technocracy. Pratt’s accredited Master of Science in City and Regional Planning requires 60 credits. The schedule of classes allows for prospective students to enter in fall or spring, and complete their studies in two or two-and-a-half years. To promote specialized or interdiscipli Community Development and nary study, half of the credits are in Participatory Planning elective seminars and studios. While by Students focus on asset-based no means required, students can focus approaches to strengthen healthy on one of six particular professional places and revitalize distressed ones. specializations, corresponding to the They learn how to regulate land use with program’s areas of strength. These are neighborhood quality of life in mind, described on the next two pages. develop affordable housing, strengthen businesses and retain jobs, and enhance Internships urban environments through design Virtually every student is assured an and amenities. The program’s alliance opportunity for an internship, and four with the Pratt Center for Community out of five students do so. Development provides the underpinning for this specialization. For more Studio Culture information, visit prattcenter.net/. All of the advanced planning studios are interdisciplinary, drawing students from Physical Planning the other PSPD programs: Sustainable Students develop an understanding of Environmental Systems, Facilities the interplay among physical, social, Management, Historic Preservation, and regulatory, cultural, and economic Urban Placemaking and Management. The considerations in creating viable studios tackle real planning challenges, physical patterns for diverse contexts— in connection with a project of the Pratt from large-scale development to Center for Community Development or neighborhoods and cities. The emphasis another advocacy organization. is on the experience of place and economic and social vitality, rather than on pure design or a particular design ideology. Chair Assistant to the Chair Office John Shapiro Adia Ware Tel: 718.399.4340 718.399.4391 718.399.4340 www.pratt.edu/planning [email protected] [email protected] 52 City and Regional Planning Placemaking and Alternative Preservation Planning Transportation Students learn to integrate historic In the past 10 years there has been preservation in the wider context of a paradigm shift in thinking about urbanism, real estate development, and urbanism, from a primary focus on sustainability. The National Council for buildings to one on the spaces between Preservation Education recognizes the buildings and public space. Students Preservation Planning specialization. learn to create and manage successful, (Refer to the Historic Preservation vibrant, and equitable public spaces program for additional electives.) from a bottom-up, people-centric approach. (Refer to the Urban Public Purpose Real Estate Development Placemaking and Management program Students can gain the full range of for additional electives.) knowledge associated with expertise in real estate development, but with an Sustainability and Resiliency emphasis on green development, In considering urban air, water, waste, affordable housing, adaptive reuse, and and brownfield problems and best public/private partnerships. (Refer to practices, students learn how to the Facilities Management program for promote sustainable communities additional electives). and environmental justice. With the creation of Recovery Adaptation Joint Degree in Law Mitigation Planning (RAMP), students can Pratt Institute and Brooklyn Law School focus on climate change and disaster sponsor a program leading to the planning. RAMP links multiple studios, degrees of Master of Science in City and seminars, and workshops directed at Regional Planning and Juris Doctor (J.D.). one neighborhood each semester, and (Refer to the earlier PSPD section for in cooperation with local, research, more details.) and advocacy organizations. (Refer to the Sustainable Environmental Systems program for additional electives.) Page 50: Student plan for retaining industry while addressing climate change in Brooklyn Opposite: International courses and studios run in Copenhagen, São Paolo, Tokyo, and India 55 Sustainable Environmental Systems The Master of Science in Sustainable Environmental Systems is one of the nation’s most innovative, interdisciplinary, systemsbased sustainability programs. The Master of Science in Sustainable mini-courses, the program offers a Environmental Systems (SES), offered uniquely comprehensive curriculum on Pratt’s School of Architecture on that fosters exposure to cutting-edge the Brooklyn Campus, is designed to practicing professionals. The program meet today’s increasing demand for encourages students to closely environmental professionals. Students examine the relationships between the learn the interdisciplinary skills needed environment, policy, and systems design. to assess contemporary environmental issues; catalyze innovative environmental The Sustainable Environmental Systems problem solving; uphold environmental Program Is Unique in Its Emphasis on the and social justice; and engage diverse Urban Environment. stakeholders in designing and developing As integral members of the Programs for sustainable plans, policies, and Sustainable Planning and Development communities. Graduates are prepared to (PSPD), students are exposed to land take on a range of roles as environmental use, transportation, preservation, designers, policy analysts, sustainability development, and economic planning consultants, low-impact developers, strategies. Through this exploration, researchers, and advocates, collaborating students understand the complexities with environmental scientists, of the urban context and can analyze policymakers, and communities. global, federal, state, and local policies accordingly. Students learn the The Sustainable Environmental Systems skills needed to build and preserve Program Is Unique in Its Combination of sustainable urban communities. Through Science, Design, and Policy. the Recovery, Adaptation, Mitigation, By uniting a foundation of theoretical and and Planning initiative (RAMP) the SES technical core courses with innovative program has formed an interdisciplinary Coordinator Assistant to the Chair Office Jaime Stein Adia Ware www.pratt.edu/ses 718.399.4328 718.399.4340 [email protected] [email protected] 56 Sustainable Environmental Systems suite of studio courses and workshops Internships Career in which students and faculty from the Virtually every student is assured Bringing cutting-edge New York City School of Architecture work with local an internship with an organization, sustainability practitioners into the community leaders from the region’s agency, or professional practice. In classroom gives students access to an most vulnerable coastal communities. the past, interns have been placed invaluable network as they enter the The collaborative approach of RAMP with the Mayor’s Office of Long Term professional world. enables focused, interdisciplinary Planning and Sustainability, Metropolitan The Sustainable Environmental study and implementation of resiliency Waterfront Alliance, New York Industrial Systems program is integrated with other strategies for sustainable coastal Retention Network, and Pratt’s Center PSPD programs, with the option for communities. for Sustainable Design. Internship extended study beyond the 40-credit examples include modeling energy Master of Science in SES, as follows: The Sustainable Environmental Sustainable Environmental Systems Courses in the City and Regional Systems program welcomes students efficiency efforts in Bedford-Stuyvesant with a variety of undergraduate degrees, with the Pratt Center for Community Planning program expose students to recognizing that sustainability is most Development; working with local land use, transportation, and economic effective when integrating a number businesses to develop sustainability development planning strategies. Joint of disciplines. Students entering the plans; and working on LEED-certified studios deal with sustainability plans for program with relevant professional projects. (Refer to the earlier section on development sites, neighborhoods, and experience, or with a Bachelor of the PSPD for details.) businesses. Courses in the Facilities Architecture or a B.S./B.E. in civil engineering or environmental science Design + Build Management program allow for a focus degree, may receive up to 10 credits of Working alongside professionals, and on green development and property advanced standing. using New York City as a laboratory, management practices. students learn a sustainability concept Courses in the Historic Preservation Diversity and its implementation. This experience program allow for a focus on livability Students learn from each other as is reflected in our Green Infrastructure and the recognition that often the well as from faculty. Most students Design + Build studio as well as our Green “least carbon footprint” approach is to have had (or in the course of study Infrastructure fellowships. preserve and reuse. will gain) work experience in the Courses within the Center for environmental or related fields—as Continuing and Professional studies architects, engineers, community allow for an Advanced Certificate in organizers, and entrepreneurs. As Green Infrastructure, a 21-credit hour the degree is particularly rewarding professional training in urban green for those seeking professional infrastructure (www.pratt.edu/ccps). development, many students have existing professional experience. Page 54: Students attend a climate march Above: Segments from final student presentations focused on sustainability indicators and energy systems 59 Historic Preservation Located on Pratt’s historic Brooklyn campus, the M.S. degree program in Historic Preservation builds on the energy of New York City and Brooklyn as the place of origin of historic preservation in the United States and as a place of innovation and civic engagement. Historic Preservation at Pratt uniquely further relationships with Pratt’s Interior addresses both the physical aspects of Design program, Pratt’s new geographic preservation and the role our discipline information systems lab (SAVI), and plays within a larger context of design, Brooklyn Law School – allowing students community revitalization, redevelopment free access to the full range of urbanism- and adaptive reuse, and sustainability. related electives. The Historic Preservation program The PSPD’s mission is to create and resides within the Programs for sustain a learning community of students, Sustainable Planning and Development faculty, and alumni that is characterized (PSPD) in the School of Architecture. by studio-based learning and the wealth The PSPD is an alliance of programs of internship opportunities that only including City and Regional Planning, New York City has to offer. The program Construction/Facility Management attracts a “who’s who” of preservation (including real estate development), and urbanism practitioners as faculty. The Sustainable Environmental Systems, and coursework places equal emphasis on Urban Placemaking and Management theory, knowledge, and best practices. (including aspects of urban design); with Academic Coordinator Assistant to the Chair Office Nadya K. Nenadich Adia Ware www.pratt.edu/historic-preservation 718.399.4326 718.399.4340 [email protected] [email protected] 60 Students spend their first year in intensive coursework focused on the core elements of historic preservation practice, and their second year specializing in a particular aspect of urban preservation and built environment management. For some students this might mean focusing on preservation-related Design, Conservation, and Technology or Historic Resource Management, while others might decide to explore the other PSPD programs through a preservation-related focus in community planning, Main Street revitalization, adaptive reuse and preservation development, or the nexus of preservation and sustainability. A required internship in the field of historic preservation rounds out the program and ensures that students leave Pratt with relevant real-world experience as well as a network of professionals in preservation. Upon the successful completion of the Historic Preservation program, students are fully qualified preservation practitioners with a focus that at once deepens their expertise and broadens their knowledge base—thus enhancing their skills and the range of work that they are equipped to handle as they enter this trans-disciplinary field. Page 58 and above: The M.S. degree in Historic Preservation builds on the energy of New York City as an important epicenter of historic preservation in the United States; the program is located in Brooklyn, a longtime bastion of civic engagement, creativity and innovation. Dumbo, Domino Sugar Factory, Hamptons Place, and Masonic Temple shown. 63 Facilities Management The Master of Science program in Facilities Management (FM) prepares graduates as professionals and problem solvers to assume executive responsibilities in the management of facilities. Facilities management executive Applicants must submit a statement of responsibilities include: assurance of purpose in essay format to support the a quality environment, cost-effective application for advanced studies. capital and operating investments, The essay should indicate an interest in economically and environmentally or an awareness of issues addressed in sensitive operations and the management the Facilities Management program. of facilities and equipment as assets. Pratt’s Facilities Management Interviews are recommended and may be scheduled by contacting the Program teaches innovative approaches department at [email protected]. Students to emerging technologies, sustainable are eligible for graduate assistantships practices, and instills ethical values, and tuition scholarships upon which distinguish Pratt’s Facilities acceptance into the program. Management alumni as they lead the Facilities management has field’s efforts to advance the quality of emerged as a new area of expertise the built environment. as communities, corporations, and institutions systematically plan for Special Admission Requirements fiscal and ecological stewardship of Undergraduate degrees in business, the built environment. architecture, construction management, The Executive Facilities Management and engineering fields are preferred function consists of a distinct set of for admission. Applicants receiving a responsibilities that have proven their bachelor’s degree in other fields are also value to the “C” Suite. These include: eligible but may be required to take non- • Strategic planning. • Financial forecasting and budgeting. • Real-estate acquisition credit courses in technical subjects prior to registering for required courses. and disposal. • Architectural and engineering planning and design. Chair Assistant to the Chair Office Regina Ford Cahill, M.S. Philip Ramus Tel: 212.647.7524 | Fax: 212.367.2497 [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/facilities-management Facilities Management 64 • Construction management, • Manage the process of facility Facilities Management Planning and Development maintenance, and sustainable development to complete projects Further real estate development operations management. on schedule and within budget to a expertise can be garnered through specified standard of quality. a combination of construction • The integration of new technologies into existing and planned facilities. • Direct and lead the specialists, management, facilities management, consultants, and in-house staff, as and other PSPD electives dealing Managing these areas of responsibility well as outsourcing organizations with zoning, public approvals, market requires the integration of business that perform specific aspects of the studies, adaptive reuse, real estate law, facilities management function. environmental law, historic preservation skills and technical expertise. With this paradigm in mind, graduates of the • Coordinate development activities compliance, and more. Facilities Management Program will with ongoing operations to minimize be able to: disruptions and maintain the Preservation • Understand the planning, continuity of facilities functions and Electives can be taken in PSPD economic viability. programs to provide extra knowledge of construction, and operations framework architectural history, adaptive reuse, and in which facilities are managed at local, landmark approvals of buildings. regional, national, and international The faculty consists of professionals levels; and act as liaison between the actively engaged in facilities management owner and professional service agents in the public and private sectors as well Work and Study on building teams. as in the various areas of specialization. The Facilities Management courses • Synthesize interdisciplinary efforts and This combination of actively practicing are offered in the evening at the Pratt act across traditional administrative, faculty and students working in the Manhattan Center, affording students planning, and operational boundaries to field brings a dynamic vitality to Pratt’s the maximum flexibility to combine work organize, coordinate, and control diverse Facilities Management program. and study. Refer to the earlier PSPD facilities and management activities. • Perceive design requirements, Part of Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development (PSPD), Pratt’s their impact on quality of life and Facilities Management Program is unique environmental issues, and their value in in its opportunity for enriched study, the engineering of facilities. potentially leading to careers in real- • Analyze facilities needs and develop planning initiatives and effective section for more information on these opportunities. estate development, as well as expertise in sustainability and preservation. implementation strategies that are responsive to specific current and Sustainability projected facilities issues. Electives can be taken in PSPD programs to provide depth as to a variety of sustainability practices: LEED certification, green roofs, energy conservation, alternative energy sources, construction innovation, and more. Page 62: Site visits expose students to the typical New York City rooftop HVAC system Above: Students explore the architecture of New York City in a summer course 67 The mission of the School of Art is to educate those who will make and shape our built and mediated environment, our aesthetic surroundings, and our collective future. School of Art Art and Design Education Art Therapy and Special Needs Children Arts and Cultural Management Design Management Art Therapy and Creativity Development Digital Arts Dance Movement Therapy Fine Arts The School of Art’s graduate programs The School of Art has two parallel are dedicated to the primacy of objectives that guide every department. a professional standard and the One is the emphasis on professional transformative power of creativity. skills development where students gain We educate leaders in the creative the techniques, skills, methodologies, professions to identify, understand, and vocabulary required for success as and benefit from the challenges of a productive artists, filmmakers, cultural rapidly changing world. The School of leaders, educators, and therapists. Art is dedicated to developing creative The second objective—intertwined leadership in a world that requires it. with the first—recognizes that this The School of Art’s innovative technical experience only takes root graduate programs bring together within a complex cultural context. exceptional students who flourish in an Therefore, students in the School of Art environment that encourages autonomy also develop the critical judgment and and growth. historical perspective needed to become An internationally recognized faculty known for its excellence in teaching creative problem solvers and leaders in their respective professions. leads the graduate programs. The faculty works individually with students and in small seminar classes to maximize their graduate experience. Dean Assistant Dean Office Gerry Snyder Dianne Bellino Main Building, Fourth Floor Tel: 718.636.3619 | Fax: 718.636.3410 Assistant to the Dean Director of Finance and Administration [email protected] Katherine Morris Daisy Rivera www.pratt.edu/soa School of Art 68 School of Art Programs and degrees in the School of Art include: Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) • Digital Arts Interactive Arts Digital Animation & Motion Graphics Digital Imaging • Fine Arts New Forms and Integrated Practices Painting and Drawing Photography Sculpture Printmaking Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) • Art Therapy and Creativity Development • Art Therapy with Special Needs Children • Arts and Cultural Management • Design Management Master of Science (M.S.) • Art and Design Education • Dance/Movement Therapy • Dance/Movement Therapy (Low Residency) Page 66: Work by Trudy Benson (M.F.A. ’10) Above: Work by Jean Paul Gomez (M.F.A. ’13) 71 Art and Design Education In 1994, Pratt inaugurated the Master of Science in Art and Design Education, drawing students from the worlds of art, design, and architecture. The curriculum expands upon the philosophy and practices of our continuing undergraduate and post-baccalaureate programs and was one of the first in the country to include design education. We endeavor to be progressive and Saturday classes were used as a vehicle dynamic and at the forefront of our field for art teacher training. The Saturday while providing a stimulating, challenging, Art School became a laboratory where and supportive environment for our learning how to teach and researching students, faculty, and staff. Our students issues of pedagogy are modeled are passionate teachers and learners upon artistic practice. Students test engaged in creative individual and ideas, develop a personal teaching community practice as artists, educators, style, and explore research questions and researchers. through participation and observation. The earliest incarnation of the current Department of Art and Design Education was in the late 19th century, when Pratt Institute opened its doors in Brooklyn, New York. Opportunities to combine theory and practice have been an integral part of the program ever since. Now, as then, teaching is viewed as a creative process with studio work enhancing and complementing instruction rather than competing with it. The seminars following the Saturday classes are forums for reflection upon both unfinished and completed projects. Students thus get opportunities to work collaboratively with their peers, community members, and professionals in the field, while they learn to develop lessons and construct environments that promote critical inquiry and creative practice. The department’s conception of art has broadened considerably from In 1897, art classes for children those first classes in the 19th century. were offered in cast drawing; sketching A range of art practices is presented in outline, color, light, and shade; and and explored, from traditional forms to freehand perspective. This was to contemporary multidisciplinary works. be the genesis of a unique student Our approach to art and design teaching experience and resource for education is distinguished by a the community. Beginning in 1902, the willingness to look to other disciplines Director, Center for Art, Design, Assistant to the Chair Youth Programs Coordinator and Community Engagement K-12 Lia Wilson Tara Kopp Aileen Wilson [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 718.636.3681 718.636.3654 Art and Design Education Office Youth Programs Office Acting Chair Tel: 718.636.3637 | Fax: 718.230.6817 Tel: 718.636.3654 | Fax: 718.230.6876 Heather Lewis [email protected] www.pratt.edu/youth [email protected] www.pratt.edu/art-design-education 718.687.5602 718.636.3637 72 Art and Design Education for inspiration. In recent years, we The Program’s Structure are contacted for a Skype interview when have drawn upon the work of artists, M.S. in Art and Design Education with all materials have been received. A TOEFL educators, and scholars in the fields Initial Teacher Certification in Visual of 600 (250 computer or 100 Internet) of literature, folklore, philosophy, Arts, Pre-K–12 (Brooklyn campus, is required for international students. All and anthropology. Narrative and a 38-credit-hour degree) applicants are encouraged to schedule a autobiography, play and performance, meaning and memory are threads that play an important role in our classroom Applicants must have completed a four-year undergraduate program with conversations and research. We ask our students to go beyond textbook vocabulary and style. Their plans, essays, and research papers are developed from their own stories and personal knowledge. Reflective practitioners, a minimum of 25 credit hours in the they are prepared to work effectively in diverse cultural contexts and to apply interdisciplinary perspectives in a variety of educational settings. Education, or with the equivalent of the Through a combination of individual appropriate courses in studio art and/ or the history of art from a regionally accredited institution of higher education, or one that is approved by the New York State Department of bachelor’s degree from an international institution of acceptable standards. M.S. in Art and Design Education study, observation, and reflection, along Professional Certification (Brooklyn with collaborative and interactive experi campus, a 34-credit-hour degree) ences, students learn how to articulate the inexpressible, imagine the invisible, and convey a sense of the aesthetic in their art classrooms as well as in their own lives and in the community at large. The study of art and design education leads us back to our own creativity. Applicants must have received their Initial Certification as a teacher of Visual Arts and have prior teaching experience. Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education (Brooklyn Campus) Art and Design Education visit to the department or attend one of our open houses. Certification Requirements In order to be recommended for NYSED Initial/Professional Certification in Visual Arts, Pre-K–12, candidates must also have completed the following: A 3-credit course in child and adolescent psychology and a 3-credit course in a foreign language are pre- or corequisites. These courses may be taken at Pratt or transferred from another post-secondary school. Workshops • Child Abuse Identification Workshop • School Violence Prevention and Intervention Workshop • Training in Harassment, Bullying, Cyberbullying, and Discrimination in Schools: Prevention and Intervention This 23-credit-hour program is open to individuals with an M.F.A. degree, or those These workshops must be taken with a currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program provider approved by NYSED. at Pratt. For those applicants already holding an M.F.A. degree, the program Passing Scores on the Following may be completed in two semesters. Tests and Assessments: All applicants must submit a portfolio of 15 images of work (submit online at pratt.slideroom.com). The required written statement of purpose is given significant consideration. All applicants • Educating All Students (EAS) • Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST) • Content Specialty Test (CST) • Education Teacher Performance Assesment (EdTPA) Page 70: Saturday Art School’s Sculpture Class, Ages 9-12, with graduate student teacher Caitlin Reller. Photo by Kevin Wick Above: Pratt’s Saturday Art School classes 75 Arts and Cultural Management The mission of the Arts and Cultural Management (ACM) graduate program is to build on Pratt Institute’s international reputation for developing creative leaders. Our program’s mission is to develop leaders able to use their creativity strategically to foster creative expression, build creative community, and shape a commerce of ideas and images in an increasingly challenged and mediated world. ACM prepares participants to lead and manage in a changing cultural landscape that includes new challenges, new media, and new forms of cultural expression. Based in experiential learning, the program creates a collaborative learning community that sharpens critical thinking, deepens reflective practice, and develops strategic leadership skills. Chair Office Mary McBride, Ph.D. Tel: 212.647.7560 objective is to develop reflective leaders who can collaborate to create sustainable strategic advantages using our Triple Bottom Line by Design plus Culture (TBLD+C) strategic framework. By expanding the coursework to include nonprofit management The program encourages participants practices, public policy, and other to consider their role in society and contemporary issues, ACM stresses their respective communities as cultural the importance of simultaneously arbiters and educators. This approach developing business acumen and a sense yields arts and cultural leaders who are of social responsibility. These goals are equipped with the necessary theoretical, accomplished by: analytical, and practical skills to respond • Stretching each participant’s ability to creatively to the changing cultural, deal with a wide range of critical artistic, economic, and social environments in institutional, and business problems in which they work. The two-year Arts and Cultural Management (ACM) Program, practical and theoretical terms. • Increasing the individual’s ability to created to bridge the creative disciplines manage complex, cross-disciplinary, with the strategic disciplines, provides and competing problems and tensions a leadership education more focused that are inherent in arts and cultural than an M.B.A. on the special needs of cultural leaders managing 21stcentury creative enterprises across the boundaries of private, nonprofit, and government sectors. Our program [email protected] www.pratt.edu/arts-culturalmanagement business environments. • Utilizing technology and new media to advance strategic goals. • Providing practical skills for negotiating organizational and artistic conflicts. Arts and Cultural Management 76 • Broadening outlooks on the social, The ACM program provides Arts and Cultural Management Classes are offered on alternating economic, and political climate and participants with the opportunity to: weekends in Manhattan to accommodate the role of arts and cultural institutions • Join a creative learning working professionals and those who may in society. • Sharpening personal capacities for understanding and solving organizational and human relations problems. • Developing communications skills for the effective exchange of ideas and information. • Sharpening the individual’s capacities to anticipate and effectively manage change fueled by external forces. • Developing the leadership capabilities of each participant. • Sharing the ideas and experiences of a diverse group of promising arts and cultural managers. community of professionals with wish to pursue full-time internships. diverse expertise. • Develop a strategic skill set The Program’s Structure that bridges public, for-profit, and The Arts and Cultural Management nonprofit sectors. Program is a two-year, cohort-based • Explore the role of art, culture, and program. Participants are required meaning-making in shaping equity, to take 42 credits to complete the economy, and ecology of place. program and receive a Master of • Create and expand professional networks worldwide. • Examine trends and global challenges. • Use technology to advance dialogue and engagement. • Refine communication, collaboration, and conflict-management skills. Professional Studies (M.P.S.) in Arts and Cultural Management. The program has five required semesters—fall, spring, summer, fall, spring. Each semester is divided into two terms and participants enroll in two courses per term, with the exception of semesters three and five. Courses are taken in order as listed The ACM program prepares participants Lead the development of thriving cultures in the program curriculum. Two five- for a rapidly shifting cultural, economic, and creative economies. Leadership day intensives—at the beginning and and social environment and political coaching is a key component of the Arts middle of the program—provide the context. It provides the skills necessary to and Cultural Management program. It opportunity for several brief, intensive lead and manage in a changing world and provides participants with an opportunity courses, including behavioral simulation an increasingly challenged ecosystem. to reflect on their leadership style and negotiating modules. and identify strengths and stretch Coursework is concentrated in steps. Coaches work one-on-one and these sessions and moves at a fast pace. with participant teams and serve as Class attendance is critical, since each catalysts for positive change and ongoing alternating weekend of classes is one- development related to career needs. tenth of the entire course. Students are Coaches enable and support participants. required to complete the 42 credit hours They assist in conducting assessments, of the program to graduate. Entrance Requirements Applicants should demonstrate substantial experience in a related field or activity and an interest in leading cultural enterprises. The required statement of purpose should reflect the applicant’s personal vision of how this program fits in with his or her personal and professional goals, including how the applicant hopes to use the skills he or she acquires in this program. The statement should be no more than 500 words or two pages. In some cases, volunteer experience will be an acceptable demonstration of interest in the field. An interview (in person, by phone, or by email) with the program director is required for admission. For international students, a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 is required. Course enrollment is available to fully matriculated Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management students only. enabling participants to develop specific personal and professional development action plans, and enabling teams to deepen their skill in managing conflict and encouraging innovation. Page 74 and Above: Students make site visits to the city’s cultural institutions 79 Creative Arts Therapy Established in 1970, Pratt’s Graduate Department of is one of the oldest graduate creative arts therapy training programs in the country. Pratt offers a Master of Professional use a complex and open theoretical Studies in Art Therapy and Creativity framework that makes it possible for Development, a Master of Professional them to respond to a multitude of clinical Studies in Art Therapy with Special situations. They learn to use themselves Needs Children, and a Master of in the most creative ways possible, while Science in Dance/Movement Therapy. being grounded in developmental and Students learn creative arts therapy diagnostic skills, group, and individual skills as applied to a wide variety dynamics. Each student is encouraged of patient populations, including to develop his or her own unique style, psychiatric inpatient and outpatient, informed by an experiential process. substance abuse, geriatric, special Our philosophy stems from the education, therapeutic nurseries, understanding of art therapy and dance/ after-school programs, families, movement therapy as experiential medical rehabilitation, Child Life, eating therapies. Experiential learning and disorders, AIDS, the homeless, and process orientation are the cornerstones traumatized populations, as well as work of our curriculum. Every course includes in prevention and wellness. At the end some experiential components, and the of their training, students are prepared department maintains an environment for entry work in a broad continuum that supports and encourages the of settings, ranging from institutions to students’ involvement in that process. creative work in the community. Accordingly, we are committed to Our students learn to combine maintaining small class sizes, to enhancing personal artistry with clinical acumen communication between students and through the integration of experiential, faculty, and to encouraging discussion of theoretical, and practical learning. Our the learning process itself. goal is to help students to be able to Chair Administrative Secretary Office Julie Miller Jean Simmons Tel: 718.636.3428 | Fax: 718.636.3597 [email protected] www.pratt.edu/creative-arts-therapy Creative Arts Therapy 80 Creative Arts Therapy are given the option of a range of The Program’s Structure of our program is the synthesis of research methods, including quantitative M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity the theoretical and the practical. and qualitative. The latter may include Development and M.S. in Dance/ Our program combines practicum/ a case study, a project implemented in Movement Therapy internship assignments with coursework the community, or descriptive methods from beginning to end, providing investigating the experience of a graduates with a firm grounding in phenomenon or therapeutic process. One of the strongest elements the actual practice of art and dance/ The American Art Therapy movement therapy upon graduation. Association has approved both art Students attend two days of practicum/ therapy degrees. The Dance Therapy internship weekly. They must complete program is approved by the American one practicum/internship in each of Dance Therapy Association. All two years. They receive weekly on-site programs are licensure-qualifying supervision. In addition, they engage in and graduates automatically satisfy weekly group and bi-monthly individual educational requirements for licensure supervision with one of our faculty. in New York State. For those considering Because Pratt is located in a large a career in art or dance therapy or who urban center, there is a wide variety want a basic introduction, we offer the of practicum sites with a range of Spring Institute, which is a three- populations. Our internship coordinators day set of courses in various areas of assist students in finding an appropriate creative arts therapy. clinical placement based on the learning needs of the student. There is richness to be gained from The Creative Arts Therapy program offers its degrees in two formats. The Academic Year format offers classes in including both art therapy and dance/ a traditional manner, with classes in fall movement therapy students in the and spring semesters, for 15 weeks each department. Students can learn about semester. The Low Residency format the nature of creative arts therapy in is an innovative educational program general and the particular strengths and based on a low residency adult learning limitations of their chosen modality. A model. The program is designed for majority of the courses are discipline those students who do not live near specific, although many of the classes or are otherwise unable to engage in a are taken with art and dance therapists traditional master’s degree format. combined. Graduates receive discrete degrees, in either art or dance therapy. Knowledge of research and professional writing skills are developed through completion of a thesis. Students Admission Requirements (for all degrees) A bachelor’s degree is required for admission. For the Art Therapy program, a degree in art or psychology before starting the program. Psychology when courses are being held in New start of the second year. York. Courses in New Hampshire take Students in the academic year Students rent resort condominiums, only. Students in the low residency at reasonable prices, for the duration format are admitted for the spring of their stay. The low residency format semester only. is offered to both art and dance/ of creative, aesthetic, and program, a degree in dance or psychotherapeutic theory. Courses psychology is preferred. The following offer a thorough theoretical framework prerequisites are required for all that is then translated into personal programs: 12 credits in psychology and practical application through an (to include coursework in general, experiential process. Artwork and/or developmental, and abnormal psychology The cycle of classes is as follows: movement is done in every course and is and theories of personality). students take courses and practicum/ focus on a wide variety of populations 18 credits in studio art (to include and are required to work with a different coursework in drawing, painting, and 3-D population for each of the two years of to include ceramics). internship/practicum. Both programs are For the Dance/Movement Therapy for students who want a broad program only: coursework in anatomy/ body of skills, balanced with a strong kinesiology; extensive experience in at theoretical framework. least two idioms of dance, one of which must be modern dance; and experience M.P.S. in Art Therapy with Special in mind/body modalities, such as Needs Children meditation, yoga, body therapy, etc. The program is intended to train art therapists who want to work with special education populations, not as art teachers. The degree does not qualify students for a teaching license. Classes are the same as for other art therapy students. The main differences are: • In both years of the practicum experience students must work with special education populations. • Distinct readings are given in some classes. • Papers and case presentations center on a special education population. All prerequisite courses may be taken on an undergraduate level but must be taken from an accredited institution to receive academic credit. Studio classes will be accepted for movement experience. For the Art Therapy program, students may start classes with half of the psychology and half of the studio art credits but must complete all prerequisites before the start of the second year. For the Dance Therapy program, students may start classes with half of the psychology credits, but all other prerequisites must be completed place in Lincoln, in the White Mountains. format are admitted for the fall semester is preferred. For the Dance Therapy For the Art Therapy program only: Housing is available on campus credits must be completed before the These programs provide a synthesis used to learn therapeutic skills. Students 81 movement therapy students. Academic Year Format internship from September through May for two consecutive years. Low Residency Format The cycle of classes is as follows: students take one class (9 days) in midMarch in New York. During the last week of June, they take another class (8 days), also in New York. During the first three weeks of July, students take courses (over three weeks) in New Hampshire. Students complete reading assignments before classes and then complete their papers after classes are over, giving them a chance to integrate class experience with readings and practicum/internship experience. Two years of practicum/internship are done from September through May following the first and second year of summer classes. Supervision is completed through weekly phone, video, and online contacts that keep low residency students consistently in touch with Pratt faculty. Page 78: Dance/Art Therapy presentation The low residency program is not considered full-time. Therefore international students will be ineligible for F-1 Visas. 83 Design Management Design education imparts many things, but it does not typically provide training in the leadership, team building, strategy, finance, marketing, and operations skills necessary to effectively lead a design department or to run a design business. Similarly, M.B.A.s who are selected to lead design functions often lack the design experience necessary to guide design decisions or to lead creative people. The Design Management (DM) program The mission of the Design was created to bridge the disciplines Management (DM) graduate program is of design and business management. to build on Pratt Institute’s international Since its launch in 1995, the two-year reputation for developing creative program has been providing an executive leaders and to provide an educational education more focused than an M.B.A. experience that can help shape 21st- on the special needs of design leaders century strategic leaders who are able managing design firms or managing to bridge the disciplines of design and design teams in creative industries. business to catalyze innovation. Our Design Management classes are program objective is to develop reflective designed for working professionals leaders who can collaborate to create and delivered by working professionals sustainable strategic advantage using our from the worlds of business and Triple Bottom Line by Design plus Culture design. Participants come from a variety (TBLD+C) strategic framework. of disciplines, including industrial The program provides designers design, interior design, graphic design, with the opportunity to: fashion design, communication and • Join a learning community of information design, interactive media design, and architecture, engineering and material science. The program’s academic calendar is modeled after successful executive M.B.A. programs. Its schedule of alternating weekends (Saturdays and Sundays) allows participants to carry their full job responsibilities while they study. Chair Office Mary McBride, Ph.D. Tel: 212.647.7538 [email protected] www.pratt.edu/design-management professionals with diverse professional and cultural backgrounds. • Develop a strong skill set in the discipline of business and the management of design. Design Management 84 • Explore emerging trends and draw Design Management development related to career needs. experience provides the opportunity for from new ideas converging across Coaches enable and support participants. several brief, intensive courses, including design disciplines. They assist in conducting assessments, behavioral simulation and negotiating enabling participants to develop specific modules. These weeks establish and personal and professional development maintain relationships among students action plans, and enabling teams to in each class, which many participants in Design plus Culture (TBLD+C) to create deepen their skill in managing conflict and executive programs consider especially strategic and sustainable advantage encouraging innovation. valuable. The program has five required • Learn to identify and manage critical business challenges strategically. • Practice using Triple Bottom Line by and social innovation. • Analyze key global social, economic, Graduates are prepared for semesters—fall, spring, summer, fall, leadership roles in strategic design and spring. Each semester is divided into environmental, technological, and strategic management. They are able two terms and participants enroll in two political challenges. to use design to create sustainable courses per term, with the exception strategic advantage and social innovation of semesters four and five. Courses are and to shape the way business is taken in order as listed in the program designed worldwide. curriculum. Participants are required • Meet the challenge of managing in team-based organizations. • Develop leadership capabilities. • Refine communication, negotiation, and conflict management skills. • Learn techniques for leading and managing innovation. • Use technology to aid design in creating advantage. • Sharpen skills in operations and to complete 42 credit hours in order to The Program’s Structure receive the accredited academic degree The Design Management program Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) in curriculum is designed to develop Design Management. strategic management skills in five areas related to design management: operations management, financial project management, finance, and management, marketing management, budgeting. organization and human resource • Apply strategic thinking to marketing, management, and management of new product development, and brand innovation and change. Courses are management. relevant and offer active learning • Create and extend professional networks worldwide. experiences that provide participants with an integrated focus on the role of design in the creation and management Leadership coaching is a key component of strategic and sustainable advantage of the Design Management program. It and social innovation. provides participants with an opportunity Offered at Pratt’s West 14th Street to reflect on their leadership style campus in Manhattan, classes meet and identify strengths and stretch every other weekend for two full days steps. Coaches work one-on-one and or 12 hours. In addition, students attend with participant teams and serve as for a full week at the beginning and catalysts for positive change and ongoing middle of the program. This integrative Admissions Requirements Design Management program applicants should ideally have an undergraduate degree in one of the design disciplines and a minimum of three years’ professional experience prior to admission. Qualified applicants without design degrees will also be considered. All applicants must follow the standard rules for admission to a graduate program at Pratt and meet those requirements. See www.pratt.edu/apply. Course enrollment is available to fully matriculated Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management students only. Page 82: Join our online conversation at www.catalystreview.net Above: Students at work 87 Digital Arts Imagine you’re an artist who knows how to use every piece of hardware and software in the world…now what? Students in the M.F.A in Digital Arts advantage of exhibition opportunities program at Pratt are immediately that exist nowhere else in the country. engaged in the creation of artwork Graduates become leading contributors utilizing digital technologies. These artists to the digital arts with a commitment to come together to study interactive arts, the cultural enrichment of their world. digital animation and motion arts, and digital imaging. Within a context of new The Program’s Structure media, students use critical thinking, Students are able to follow one of three creative problem solving, technical tracks: interactive arts, digital animation facility, and conceptual skills to develop a and motion arts, and digital imaging. sophisticated body of work. This 60-credit, full-time program is to Studio practice is essential for be completed in two calendar years. students of interactive art and imaging. Students complete required coursework Students working in these areas of study in their primary area of emphasis and one are provided with studio space for the year of work on a thesis, which culminates completion of their theses. This intensive in a thesis paper, exhibition, or screen- course of study is augmented by ing of the completed work. Additional internships, special topics courses, and degree requirements include completing lectures and critiques by visiting artists. six credits of extra-departmental studio Students create work with the guidance electives, one course in art history, and of a faculty of professional practicing one course in liberal studies. artists and scholars, who serve as models in the pursuit of artistic excellence. Digital art students become part of the thriving New York art scene, establishing a professional network and taking Chair Assistant to the Chair Office Peter Patchen Deidre Carney Tel: 718.636.3411 | Fax: 718.399.4494 Assistant Chair Lab Managers Carla Gannis Igor Molochevski [email protected] Phillip Allen www.pratt.edu/digital-arts-grad 88 Digital Arts Interactive Arts Admissions Requirements Facilities Imaging Center Applicants must have an undergraduate • 9 digital studios • Imaging center • Audio room • Gallery/test space • Graduate studios The Digital Arts Imaging Center has Students use computer-human interaction to convey meaning in the form of physical installations, interactive objects, and online artworks. This includes the combination of video, animation, text, audio, and imagery in an interactive environment. Recommended electives include courses in history of new media, sculpture, creating exhibitions, prototyping, programming, interactive degree in art, design, or animation and should submit a strong visual portfolio demonstrating a conceptual and aesthetic focus. A pplicants whose first language is not English must achieve a English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). Additional Resources In addition to the TOEFL requirement, all • B/W laser printers • 3-D printer (ABS) • 3-D scanner • Color laser and inkjet printers • DVD and CD-ROM duplicator • Flatbed scanners • Slide scanner • RAID file storage and transfer system • Plasma screen • Render farm • Laser cutter enrolling students whose first language is not English will be tested for English proficiency unless they have a TOEFL physical computing, electronic music, score of 600. Pending the outcome of and sound. this test, individuals may be assigned to ESL courses. For more information, Digital Animation and Motion Arts contact the Office of Admissions at Students create evocative narrative and [email protected] or the department nonnarrative films and installations using chair at 718.636.3411. niques, live action, and motion graphics. Recommended electives include history of animation, film criticism, traditional animation, character design and rigging, lighting and rendering, audio and video, compositing and special effects, and advanced digital animation techniques. Digital Imaging This area of study employs digital and traditional processes in the creation of large-format digital prints, installations, artist books, and other tactile media. It addresses critical issues and techniques in the development, printing, and presentation of digitally based art. Recommended electives include critical history of photography, etching, silkscreen, lithography, (by concentration) minimum score of 550 on the Test of installation, online media, robotics and 2-D and 3-D digital animation tech- Digital Arts Digital Arts Graduate Assistantships are available beginning in the first semester of attendance. Positions Software range from assisting faculty research to • Adobe Photoshop • Adobe Illustrator • Adobe InDesign • Adobe After Effects • Apple Aperture • AutoDesk Maya • Apple Final Cut Pro • Apple Logic • Adobe Dreamweaver • Adobe Flash • Adobe Director • Max/Msp/Jitter • Mental Ray • Processing • Quicktime Pro • Syflex creative or technical support. Graduate Assistantships are awarded based on individual skills or degree goals and are available throughout the Digital Arts M.F.A. degree program. |class-related equipment and other services available only to registered Digital Arts students. Services include: • Wide format 2-D printing • 3-D printing (ABS) • 3-D scanning • Flatbed and slide scanning Equipment for checkout includes • HD digital video cameras • Digital still cameras • Portable lighting kits • Digital audio recorders • Headphones • Microphones • 11’ × 12’ portable green screen • 35mm projector • Portable video projection screens • Video tripods with three-way fluid head • Wacom tablets • Installation computers • Digital projectors (normal and wide throw) • DVD players and recorders • Wide array of tutorials and much more and much more and digital photography. Page 86: Eleftherios Benetos (M.F.A. ’14), digital print Above: Jing Bao (M.F.A. ’14), interactive performance Page 90: Heidi Peelen (M.F.A. ’14), digital imaging Digital Arts Digital Arts Opposite from top: Jun Chen (M.F.A. ’14), animation still; Jing Bao (M.F.A. ’14), interactive performance Above: Li Zheng (M.F.A. ’14), interactive wearable 95 Fine Arts The primary goal of the M.F.A. program is to provide an advanced education for artists. To this end, we emphasize the development of students as thinkers, makers, and professionals. Centrally located in Brooklyn’s thriving programs (M.S./M.F.A.) are offered in art community, Pratt’s M.F.A. program the History of Art and in Art and Design in Fine Arts immerses students in the Education. culture of contemporary art, supported Students work in individual studios by a faculty of working artists and peers. and have access to shared shops and The graduate curriculum is both rigorous labs, including a fully equipped wood and flexible, allowing wide latitude shop, metal shop, print shop, ceramics for interdisciplinary exploration while studios, darkrooms, digital labs with fostering critical perspectives and a high-resolution scanners and printers, deeper understanding of the histories, as well as dedicated campus galleries. issues, and cultural contexts that inform There are many opportunities to show artmaking today. work in a variety of traditional and non- Pratt’s M.F.A. degree is in Fine traditional spaces on campus. Each Arts rather than in a specific discipline. semester, students open their studios Students build their program of study to the public and second-year students in consultation with a Thesis Advisor mount individual thesis shows that are and departmental faculty. Graduate also open to the public. In addition to instruction is offered in a wide range a regular schedule of studio visits by of media, including painting, drawing, faculty members, the department’s printmaking, photography, video, Visiting Artist Lecture Series (VALS) sculpture, and integrated practices (i.e. brings internationally renowned artists installation, public art, performance). and critics to give public lectures Beyond departmental courses, M.F.A. and have individual studio visits with students may choose graduate-level graduate students. Pratt Artists League electives in any department in Pratt (PAL), the graduate student club, Institute and concurrent dual degree invites visiting artists and critics for Chair Assistants to the Chair Jason Segall Deborah Bright Lisa Banke-Humann Christopher Verstegen Assistant Chairs Technicians Office Dina Weiss Adam Apostolos Tel: 718.636.3634 Nat Meade Alexia Cohen www.pratt.edu/fine-arts-grad Yasu Izaki Caitlin Riordan 96 Fine Arts Fine Arts 97 studio visits and funds other student- elective credits may be used for a wide Art and Design Education Advanced Application Guidelines generated programming and exhibitions. variety of interdisciplinary, studio, or Certificate (Fall and Spring) An interdisciplinary five-week summer technics courses across the Institute. A course in Rome, City as Studio, offers minimum of 60 credits and two years of students the opportunity to research and study are required for the Master of Fine create work in an international context. Arts degree. The time and number of Pratt’s faculty members in Fine Arts credits may not be reduced but may be are distinguished by their achievements, extended. All work for the degree must exhibiting internationally, as well as be completed within seven calendar receiving major awards from the years after initial registration as a Guggenheim Foundation, National graduate student. Endowment for the Arts, Tiffany M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate (Certificate Skowhegan, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, in Art and Design Education) graduate students in Fine Arts come from around the world and are selected for their promise and readiness for the intensive, self-directed experience of graduate study. The Program’s Structure The Master of Fine Arts program at Pratt Institute offers the following areas of emphasis: painting/drawing, printmaking, sculpture, photography, and integrated practices (nontraditional investigations). M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate (Certificate in Art and Design Education) is designed for M.F.A. students desiring eligibility for a Pre-K–12 teaching certificate. Students take 20 credits in Art and Design Education. With one additional studio elective credit, students can qualify for their provisional New York State Certification to teach Fine Arts, Pre-K–12, a certification that is reciprocated in more than 35 states. For specific courses, see the Art and Design Education section of this Bulletin. Students complete two semesters of coursework in their area of emphasis and one year of work on a Master of Fine Arts thesis, including a written thesis statement and a solo exhibition in the graduate galleries. Degree requirements include 27 studio elective credits, nine credits in art criticism/history, and six credits in the liberal arts. The 27 This 23-credit-hour program is open to admissions requirements, applicants individuals with an M.F.A. degree, or those to the Fine Arts M.F.A. program must currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program upload the following materials to pratt. at Pratt. For those applicants already slideroom.com: holding an M.F.A. degree, the program 1. A portfolio of up to 20 well-selected may be completed in two semesters, and images (including detail views) of works the application requirements are the made in the last 2-3 years. same as those listed for the M.S. in Art and Design Education. 2.Information for each image including the work’s title, dimensions, materials used, and date of completion. For Foundation, Joan Mitchell Foundation, Creative Capital, and Art Matters. Pratt’s In addition to Pratt’s general graduate M.S./M.F.A. in Fine Arts/History of Art Admissions Requirements Applicants for admission to the M.F.A. degree program in Fine Arts must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited international applicants whose first language is not English, a minimum TOEFL score of 80 (Internet) is required. Applicants who are notified that they have reached the semi-finalist U.S. college, university or art/design stage of the admissions process will be school or the equivalent degree from interviewed on Skype. a recognized international institution. It is not required that applicants have The Graduate Admissions Committee majored in studio art as undergraduates, is looking for work that shows the only that they demonstrate their artist’s conceptual and aesthetic readiness for the challenges of M.F.A. direction as well as the potential for studies. The 60-credit M.F.A. program successful growth over the two years in Fine Arts comprises four consecutive of the program. Candidates whose 15-week fall/spring semesters and begins applications are completed and in the fall. We welcome visits to Pratt submitted by the January 5 deadline will at any time and interested applicants be given priority consideration for merit (or potential applicants) should contact scholarships. Students will complete the normal Nat Meade, Assistant Chair of Fine Arts, requirements for the M.F.A. (15 credits of to schedule an appointment and tour History of Art courses), plus 30 additional of facilities/studios (tel. 718.636.3792, credits of art history, including the email: [email protected]). distribution requirements and required courses specified for the master’s degree in art history. Students must be accepted by both departments and complete a total of 75 credits. Page 94: Work by Jessica Adams, M.F.A. ’14 Page 98: M.F.A. Exhibition at The Boiler, Williamsburg Fine Arts Above from top: Work by YiPei Wen (M.F.A. ’14); Work by Jean Paul Gomez (M.F.A. ’13) Opposite: Work by Yasunari Izaki (M.F.A. ’14) former Pratt faculty member Internationally renowned sculptor and —John Pai, M.F.A. ’64, world; studying in New York at Pratt was a very special experience. I can’t overemphasize the importance of New York as the center of the art and design 105 School of Design Communications Design Industrial Design Package Design Interior Design Two major objectives guide every The faculty’s works, projects, and program. The first is an emphasis on publications are recognized and professional skills development. Students respected around the world. NEED HIGH-RES IMAGE The School of Design is home to the most comprehensive design education available. gain the techniques, skills, methodology, The School of Design offers graduate and vocabulary required for success degree programs in Communications as productive artists, designers, and Design, Industrial Design, Interior scholars. The second objective— Design, and Package Design. Exceptional imperative so that the professional technical and studio resources support expertise is not simply technical all programs. Pratt’s distinguished training—is development of the critical programs in the School of Art and the judgment and historical perspective School of Architecture also enrich the needed to become a problem solver. Art School of Design programs. and design history, melded with studies Perhaps best of all, the school’s in the liberal arts and sciences, provides disciplines are taught in the broader the context for stimulating intellectual cultural context of New York City. The and creative inquiry. main campus is located in Brooklyn, the Gifted students from across the city’s epicenter of design and culture, United States and the world collaborate and provides inspiration and opportunity and learn at Pratt, weaving creative to learn from, and interact with, the energy and opportunity into an multitude of creatives who make this unmatched educational experience. borough their home. The faculty consists of professional artists, designers, and practitioners, including numerous recipients of prestigious awards such as the Tiffany, Fulbright, and Guggenheim fellowships. Dean Acting Assistant Dean Office Anita Cooney Shannon Price Juliana Curran Terian Design Center Assistant to the Dean Director of Finance Tel: 718.687.5744 | Fax: 718.687.5722 Donna Gorsline Jerry Risner [email protected] Steuben 304 www.pratt.edu/sod School of Design 106 School of Design The mission of the School of Design is to educate those who will make and shape our built and mediated environment, our aesthetic surroundings, and our collective future. We are dedicated to the primacy of studio practice and the transformative power of creativity. We educate leaders in the creative professions to identify, understand, shape, and benefit from the challenges of a rapidly changing world. Our courses are designed to develop critical thinking skills, deepen understanding, enable practice, and empower visionary action. The School of Design is dedicated to developing creative leadership in a world that requires it. Page 104: Work by Xiaoping Ma (M.F.A. ’14) Above: Work by Heidy Garay (M.I.D. ’12) 109 Communications Design Pratt Institute’s Graduate Communications Design Department has been educating graphic and package designers for over 40 years. In a survey of 10,000 design professionals by Graphic Design USA magazine, the program is recognized as one of the five most influential graphic design schools of the past 50 years and one of the top five graphic design schools today; the program is ranked in the top 12 of over 200 graduate design programs in the nation, as reported in U.S. News & World Report rankings. Pratt offers the Master of Fine Arts opportunity to talk and work with degree in Communications Design some of the best designers. (M.F.A., terminal degree) and the Master As a result, many students of Science degree in Package Design secure industry positions even before (M.S., initial master’s degree). their graduation. The department is located in the A diverse body of students from Manhattan neighborhood of Chelsea at different cultural, professional, and 144 West 14th Street, between Sixth and educational backgrounds—over 28 Seventh Avenues, and our student studios countries are represented—come to are four blocks north on West 18th Street. Pratt to further their careers in the The department’s faculty includes highly design industry, begin a journey towards regarded, award-winning professional becoming a design educator, or alter a designers, authors, and marketing and career course. Our graduate programs media specialists. The faculty serves as provide students the opportunity to important professional contacts for the develop and refine their design process, students—several have written pivotal design voice, and creative skills, leading to design books and articles, and many have professional competence and leadership. been honored with design awards from prestigious arts and design organizations. Our location in one of Manhattan’s M.F.A. in Communications Design Design plays a central and formative role most creative areas provides a wealth in shaping communities, technology, of opportunities available nowhere else. and business. Never have designers With access to world-famous design been expected to cultivate such a firms—and through the department’s diverse set of skills and knowledge. Our internship opportunities and professional M.F.A. program prepares individuals to faculty—the students have the pursue design with passion and cultural Chair Assistant to the Chair Office Santiago Piedrafita Lauren Davis Tel: 212.647.7573 | Fax: 212.367.2481 [email protected] Acting Assistant Chair www.pratt.edu/grad- Warren Bernard communications-design Communications Design Communications Design relevance. Our distinctive program Applicants who hold an 111 are invited to synthesize theory with emphasizes design as a means for undergraduate degree in graphic design, practice. These are intense studios communicating meaningful messages, visual communications, or the equivalent, taught by resident and visiting faculty, organizing information, creating and/or have professional graphic design sharing a common foundation with compelling experiences, and effecting experience, are typically able to complete the other studios offered in a given social change. the degree requirements within two years semester. Each student is encouraged to if attending full-time. Up to 12 credits of search for connections and relationships and successful designers are cultural qualifying courses may be required for between the studio projects and thesis, innovators who use media to inform, applicants who do not meet all entrance with an emphasis on discovering his persuade, and entertain. Our graduates standards but whose applications or her own design voice. A significant develop voices as authors and indicate a strong aptitude for graduate proportion of the work will be self- entrepreneurs engaged in identifying and study. This includes those who studied directed and independent, with solving design problems within cross- in fields such as industrial and interior collaborative and community-based disciplinary environments. We approach design, architecture, fine arts, media projects as well. Studios will consist of design as an agent of change—a strategy arts, communications and journalism, group discussions, critiques, student for transforming behaviors of individuals liberal arts, business, and the sciences. presentations, individual faculty in desirable and sustainable ways. Students required to take qualifying meetings, and visits with guest designers. We believe the most intriguing The program provides a framework courses can expect to complete the These core studios are supported for both professional practice and degree requirements within three years by study in design process and academic careers, while emphasizing if attending full-time. A portfolio review methodology, technology, history, full-time studio practice in graphic is required for admission. Classes are visual thinking, narrative strategy, social design—communications, identities, offered both day and evening, and part- interaction, visual identity systems, and objects, environments, and systems. time attendance is optional. typographic and information design. Graduates enter the professional world The components of the 62-credit Elective opportunities include design with a confident design voice and an M.F.A. program include an emphasis management and marketing, typeface/ outstanding body of work, prepared on studio practice, research letterform design, color studio, to become innovative leaders in and scholarship, design teaching advertising, and illustration. Students may communications design areas—i.e. print methodologies, and academic studies also take electives in graduate programs media, typographics, identity systems of visual media such as history, theory, across the Institute. and branding, package design, design critical analysis, aesthetics, and related strategy, social media and interaction humanities and social sciences. There design, motion design, environmental are seven M.F.A. Studios—courses that design, data visualization and information investigate current practice and the design, and advertising design. future direction of communications design. Courses emphasize research, critical thinking, and design strategy, coupled with entrepreneurship and an iterative design process. Students Page 108: Work by Simone Simin Li (M.S. ’14) Opposite: Work by Kristin Myers (M.F.A. ’15) Communications Design 112 Seminars are offered as a forum Learning Outcomes of M.F.A. M.S. Package Design for critical analysis and discussions of Communications Design degree: The M.S. in Package Design, a degree theoretical, historical, and contemporary 1. The ability to identify a problem first offered in 1966, educates students issues in communications design. Design (problem seeking) and apply design from diverse cultural, professional, Writing will focus on core writing skills process and research methodology and educational backgrounds in design and effective methods for researching, towards a solution; thinking, technical skills, collaborative analyzing, evaluating, and chronicling 2.Advanced professional competence, design issues. Independent studies, demonstrating depth of knowledge special projects, internships, and portfolio development opportunities are all available. A Teaching Practicum is offered for those who desire to enter post-secondary teaching. M.F.A. candidates in Communications Design will be required to present a thesis and final body of work demonstrating professional competence, which must be approved by a thesis committee and the department chairperson in order to be eligible for degree conferral. The and achievement, in a well-developed, defendable, and significant body of work; 3.The ability to demonstrate knowledge of necessary theory and practice and the desire for a leadership position in the profession and academia; 4.Advanced capabilities with technologies, demonstrated in the creation, dissemination, presentation, documentation, and preservation of work. abilities, academic knowledge, and managerial competence. While focusing on creative problem solving, the curriculum is pragmatic and industry-oriented. Graduates enter the professional world with an outstanding body of work, prepared to become innovative leaders in the field of package design. The M.S. in Package Design is an initial master’s degree that offers students structured courses on the decision-making process for new product and package development, department will support students in featuring direction in package design, frequent opportunities to present their typography, brand development, work both publicly and in circumstances marketing, structural packaging, that develop connections with the packaging technology, fragrance communication design profession. packaging, and the business aspects of the package industry. Opposite: Work by Simone Simin Li (M.S. ’14) Communications Design A minimum of 48 credits, which can 115 The final stage of the curriculum is be completed within two to three years the thesis, which provides knowledge of study, is required for the M.S. Package of the problem-solving process Design degree program. Students through directed research and, over accepted into M.S. Package Design the succeeding two semesters, gives typically hold undergraduate degrees in students the opportunity to develop graphic design or related design fields an extensive, innovative project. The such as industrial or interior design, comprehensive thesis demonstrates architecture, fine arts, or media arts. We professional competence and welcome applicants from non-design fields as well, such as business, liberal arts, and the sciences. A qualifying program of up to an additional six credits of prerequisite classes may be required for applicants whose undergraduate backgrounds do not meet all entrance standards but whose applications indicate a strong aptitude for graduate study. For students with substantial graphic design experience, the program—with courses ranging from structural packaging to visual communications to marketing— includes extensive research, project formulation and production, and process documentation. Work on the thesis is done under the direction of a major discipline faculty advisor. Learning Outcomes of the M.S. Package Design degree: 1. Advanced professional competence, demonstrating depth of knowledge and achievement, in a welldeveloped, defendable, and significant body of work; 2.Advanced capabilities with technologies, demonstrated in the challenges their creativity to its furthest creation, dissemination, presentation, potential. A portfolio review is required documentation, and preservation for admission. Classes are offered of work; both day and evening, and part-time attendance is optional. 3.The ability to think and plan independently; 4.An awareness of current issues and developments in communications design and the basic desire, ability, and potential to contribute to the expansion of the field. Opposite from top: Works by Saana Hellsten, (M.S. ’14); Work by In-young Bae (M.S. ’14) Above from top: Work by Kristin Myers (M.F.A. ’15); Work by Miki Murata (M.S. ’15) Opposite from top: Work by Lillian Ling (M.F.A. ’15); Work by In-young Bae (M.S. ’14); Work by Kristin Myers (M.F.A. ’15) 119 Industrial Design Ultimately, design is about human beings, individually and collectively, supplying propulsion to idealistic, aesthetic, and practical ideas, and the passion of creating, understanding, and sharing the work we do. There are millions of people all over aviation, and music. We choose an the world waiting for the enlightened amazingly diverse group of students and and entrepreneurial participation of encourage them to exploit their previous designers, waiting to hear the insights academic pursuits and experience, that come from our years of work and and they do so while gaining a solid study—real interventions that can touch understanding of current design thinking. the lives of all citizens of the world Likewise, each faculty member via the language of design, showing within the program has his or her what’s possible in life. The Industrial particular path, and there is surely an Design Department at Pratt is united understanding that, in the expanding in a common, rigorous pursuit of design profession, disciplines often creativity, explored through projects cross lines. As such, Industrial Design large and small, and translating ideas students and faculty share an important into a wide variety of forms, systems and mission: to encourage individual structures. With this focus, the Pratt growth to its highest potential. Pratt Master’s program in Industrial Design also maintains strong ties to industry (MID) is consistently ranked in the top 10 through corporate-supported programs, nationally by U. S. News and World Report bringing essential industry knowledge and DesignIntelligence. into the classroom. Internships in design A strong legacy feature of the MID consultancies and corporate offices is that it welcomes students without are encouraged, and have proved to previous bachelors degrees in ID. These be valuable learning experiences students are talented not only in related that cannot be duplicated in a purely fields of architecture, engineering, and academic setting. interior design, but also fine art, biology, economics, neuroscience, dentistry, Chair Technical Coordinator Office Constantin Boym Melissa Skluzacek Tel: 718.636.3631 | Fax: 718.636.3553 Acting Assistant Chair Shop Technicians Audrey Lapiner Gary Hou [email protected] Alejandro Morales Acting Assistant to the Chair Ramona Allen Julia Wheeler www.pratt.edu/grad-industrial-design 122 Industrial Design Industrial Design The Program’s Structure and skills, in commercial, historical, global design and entrepreneurship The Master of Industrial Design degree societal and global contexts, they will that no single institution could consists of a six-semester, 60-credit need to become successful design conceivably provide. program for all students, regardless professionals. For a more on GID, visit http://globalinnovationdesign.org. of previous background, to promote collegiality and cohesion in each GID: Global Innovation Design Track incoming group of grad students. This (2nd year option abroad) M.I.D. Thesis cohesion is absolutely essential to a Beginning in the 2014-2015 academic The third-year thesis provides the program that creates an environment year, a select group of ID graduate greatest possible freedom and where “learning from each other” and students are offered the option to opportunity for investigating a selected teamwork happen, and where spend their entire second year abroad topic under the direction of a faculty the richness of the program is enhanced for full credit—the fall semester at Keio mentor. Candidates are expected to by a strong sense of community. University in Tokyo and spring semester demonstrate the full range of design skills While our M.I.D. is admittedly a at the Royal College of Art (RCA) and and methodology in their thesis projects. generalist, humanist scheme designed to Imperial College London—in the new Subjects range from consumer products support the varying skills and interests Global Innovation Design (GID) program. and packaging to systems and exhibition of the students, we recognize that This groundbreaking international study design, and to the impact of emerging professors and students alike need to be partnership will also allow students from philosophies, materials, and technologies able to comprehend and articulate the London and Tokyo to spend a semester in a global context. Students register for structure and content of the program. at Pratt. At Keio, studies will be devoted six credits of thesis over one year, which Therefore, we have clearly designated to media design and culture, utilizing the culminates in a formal presentation of these three years of study as: first school’s advanced facilities, including work at the conclusion of the program. year “core” (design thinking, ideation, prototyping and robotics. In London, process, skills); second year “research” the curriculum will focus on engineering be completed within seven calendar (methodology, topics, sources, electives, and invention. The Pratt component years after initial registration as a pre-thesis); and third year “thesis” will emphasize the core principles of graduate student. (major individual project). In addition, industrial design. Pratt GID students then and looking to integrate the future return to New York to complete their the Industrial Design Department’s areas of expertise of grads, we have final two semesters of thesis work and ID VIEWBOOK, an annual overview grouped courses in three general areas: required courses. In addition to their celebrating end-of-term presentations, “exploration” (studio, thesis, workshop); local studies, students at each location the range of projects produced in the “technology” (digital tools, form, will collaborate globally on a large-scale department, and some of the results of visualization, materials); and “context” project. By capitalizing on the expertise the hard work of amazing students and (seminar, special projects, business) to of each school and the distinct cultures professors. give them the professional knowledge of the three locations, the GID program All work for the degree must We invite you to have a look at will give students a rich academic program and unique perspective on Page 118: Work by Dana Oxiles (M.I.D. ’11) Page 120: Cappellini Showroom exhibition of Furniture Studio designs by grad students of Professor Mark Goetz Above: Work by David Steinvurz (M.I.D. ’10) Opposite: Work by Chris Richard (M.S. Interior Design ’13) Above from top: Work by Mahtab Pedrami (M.I.D. ’13); Work by David Hsu (M.I.D. ’13) 127 Interior Design Beginning with the fall 2015 semester, Pratt will offer a new Master of Fine Arts Degree in Interior Design to replace the current Master of Science Degree. Interior Design at Pratt provides the ultimate learning environment—New York City, an internationally recognized center of interior design—and a challenging course of study for students preparing themselves for a career in an expanding, dynamic field. The graduate Interior Design program by the diversity of students’ interests. was ranked first in the country by U.S. For instance, the designer who comes News & World Report and second by from a background in economics has a DesignIntelligence in 2014. Students are very different approach from one coming drawn from all parts of the world and, from dance, and each has something to by way of the Qualifying Program, from learn from the other. a variety of disciplines, which creates Our faculty members are practicing an intellectually and aesthetically professionals who bring real-world design stimulating environment in the studios. experience into play in their classroom These students are a select group who teaching. Their varied backgrounds and come to Pratt to work hard and prepare expertise allow students to explore many to enter a profession in which the avenues of design. designer must be multifaceted and able Building upon its reputation as to provide innovative design solutions. one of the top graduate programs An important part of Pratt’s mission is to in the country, the graduate Interior prepare graduates to become leaders in Design program seeks to expand its the profession; the M.F.A. will carry on leadership role, setting standards for this proud tradition and expand it, thus critical thought, exemplary expression, challenging and preparing our students professional aptitude, and responsible to develop to their fullest potential. The action in transforming the human new M.F.A. degree will focus attention environment. The curriculum brings the on the preparation of individuals who rigor as well as broad and deep thinking are ready to contribute to the academic of architectural study to focus on the discipline as well as the profession. Many scale, use, and materiality of the interior, come to the program for career change, connecting interior design to so classroom interchange is enhanced Acting Chair Assistant to the Chair Office Karin Tehve Aston Gibson Tel: 718.636.3630 | Fax: 718.399.4440 [email protected] Acting Assistant Chair T. Camile Martin www.pratt.edu/interior-design-grad Interior Design 128 larger issues of inhabitation, cities, and The new curriculum will allow architecture, but whose applications society. The program instills values in its for students to develop areas of indicate a strong aptitude for graduate students, not as mere competencies but specialization with concentration options study. These students complete 84 as opportunities for critical engagement and will encourage interdisciplinary credits in three years. It should be in the contemporary world. In support work and cross-disciplinary course noted that while applicants to the of this transformative responsibility, the registration. Concentrations will Qualifying Program are not required to program fosters an inquisitive dialogue include topics in emerging technology, submit a portfolio, we do encourage among its faculty and students, and open sustainability and exhibition design. applicants with academic or professional exchange with the world of designers, producers, and users of the built environment. We are equally committed to the application of current technology to the educational experience and the support of analysis and research that Students are encouraged to take experience to submit a portfolio of advantage of the many courses offered work from other disciplines such as at Pratt that will enable them to fully fine arts, fashion, industrial design, or develop their interests and talents. communications design. Electives may be chosen from any department in the Institute; an enormous Master of Fine Arts in Interior Design menu of courses is available for the The M.F.A. in Interior Design guides pursuit of individual interests. The new students in generating creative solutions M.F.A. establishes a platform that draws that integrate an understanding of content from existing electives across craft and making, material research, campus, which expands the graduate changing technologies, sustainable will continue to be an architecturally experience and enhances the student’s practice, current issues, and a critical oriented program with emphasis area of focus. understanding of the global cultural contributes to the body of knowledge in the discipline. The Program’s Structure The Graduate Interior Design Program at Pratt, like its undergraduate counterpart, on spatial design as well as surface The program culminates in a thesis history and context affecting the embellishment. All aspects of space— project. The thesis provides the greatest interior environment. The program scale, proportion, configuration, and light possible freedom and opportunity for prepares students with a high level of sources, as well as textures, materials, pursuit of a selected topic. Work is done critical inquiry and explorative capacity and colors—are studied in relation to under the direction of thesis advisors that will establish them as leaders and their effect on the human spirit. and is completed within one year. innovators in the field and, in turn, lead The new M.F.A. enriches the Applicants with an undergraduate academic experience through greater degree in interior design, architecture, emphasis on cultural and technological or other closely related design fields innovation, interdisciplinary may be eligible for the 60-credit two- collaboration, and theoretical and year graduate program. An application applied research. It is a degree program portfolio is required. A two-semester for students who wish to study interior Qualifying Program of an additional design as an academic discourse as well 24 credits is required for applicants as a professional endeavor. whose undergraduate backgrounds are unrelated to interior design or Page 126: Work by Mian Deng (M.S. Interiors ’14) Opposite: Work by Allen J. Kim (M.S. Interiors ’14) to an ongoing exploration of the larger potentials of interior design practice, education and research. Interior Design Opposite from top: Work by Allen J. Kim (M.S. Interiors ’14); Work by Marika Sorimachi (M.S. Interiors ’14); Work by Dana Suster (M.S. Interiors ’14) Above: Work by Cody Leung (M.S. Interiors ’14) Pratt was an amazing, amazing experience in my life. We had top faculty that inspired us. I use the foundation that I received at Pratt, but I take it in many different directions. 132 133 —Samuel Botero, B.F.A. Interior Design ’68, Renowned interior designer; principal, Samuel Botero Associates, Inc. 135 School of Information and Library Science Library and Information Science In our global digital world, the field of library and information science is at the heart of human culture and communication. Now, more than ever, the world relies on highly educated professionals to design and organize information using the latest technology and digital tools in ways that connect people with one another and to ideas and meaning. A Real Education for the Digital World A Global Education in Manhattan Pratt’s School of Information and Library SILS’s graduates are uniquely prepared Science (SILS) prepares students to for the many new and changing harness the latest digital technology to opportunities available to information design a more usable and understandable professionals across a wide range world. At the same time, SILS also of environments, including libraries, prepares students to be leaders in the archives, and museums, the IT sector, field of library and information science law, and health information. Our fall by imbuing them with the values 2013 survey of recent graduates of the profession and teaching them to showed 90 percent were working in uphold and advocate for intellectual professional positions obtained within freedom, equal access to information, a year of graduation. and lifelong learning. And, most important, students learn and participate with an outstanding, creative, and innovative faculty,each on the cutting edge of his/ her area of research and teaching and recognized internationally through their publications and conference papers and presentations. Dean Advisor for Academic Programs LMS Coordinator Tula Gianinni, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. Jessica Lee Hochman, Ph.D. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Assistant Office Administrative Services Katie Merlie, b.a. Tel: 212.647.7682 | Fax: 212.367.2492 Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/sils 136 SILS’s programs build on the School of Information School of Information and Library Science and Library Science Studying Library Science at a School theory and research of the LIS field of Art and Design and a pedagogy that offers students The history of SILS dates back to an unparalleled opportunity to engage 1887, the year Pratt Institute itself was in an immersive, hands-on educational founded. SILS takes pride in being experience. As the only LIS school the oldest library school in the United headquartered in Manhattan — a world States and in having our program capital of art and culture — we say continuously accredited by the American that Manhattan is our campus as our Library Association since 1924, when students participate in collaborative and accreditation was introduced. Since its interdisciplinary programs, partnerships, founding, Pratt has been a leading school and internships with New York’s great of design, art, and architecture, and SILS cultural institutions such as the Brooklyn complements and aligns with its mission. Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of By being part of Pratt, SILS brings Art, the Brooklyn Public Library, and innovation and creativity to information the New York Public Library. Students and library science while drawing on carry out internships and other work- Pratt’s many academic offerings in the study opportunities that can be found arts to offer unique programs blending nowhere else. the arts with library and information Students also have the unique science, such as our dual degree opportunity to learn from leaders in programs with the history of art and the information professions who hold design and with digital arts. key positions in academic, public, and research libraries, and New York’s premier cultural institutions. Finally, SILS’s international summer programs in Florence and London make the promise of a global education a reality for students. Page 134: SILS Annual Showcase Opposite: Students at work 139 Library and Information Science A Creative and Vibrant Community SILS Facilities are Designed for What Makes SILS Your First SILS attracts students from top Teaching and Learning Choice for a Library and Information universities who come to study with SILS features specialized learning Science Education? leading practitioners and researchers. environments to support our in-depth • An outstanding job-placement rate as Our full-time faculty members are leaders curriculum: we have labs for cultural in information research. Connecting informatics, user experience, and the their research and teaching, students iLab for Digital Culture and Information, benefit from a rich and immersive and the research/seminar lab. Each institutions providing students venues learning environment that challenges supports learning activities with for experiential learning, including the them intellectually and to think creatively. the latest technology and software New York Public Library, the Brooklyn Part-time faculty members are leaders for courses such as information Public Library, the Brooklyn Museum, in practice, holding key positions across architecture and interactive design, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art the information professions. Students can information visualization, research participate in a wide variety of student methods in the social sciences, and certificates in archives and in museum organizations to enhance their SILS knowledge organization. Our cutting- libraries within the M.S.L.I.S. degree experience. Among the organizations they edge seminar/lab classrooms are can join are: SILS Student Association designed for participatory hands-on within overarching program concepts: (SILSSA), and student chapters of the learning experiences. Cultural Informatics, Information Policy a result of strong relationships with the profession • Partnerships with major cultural • The chance to earn advanced • The opportunity to take courses American Library Association, Special and Society, LEO (Literacy Education Libraries Association, Association for and Outreach) for Library Media Information Science and Technology, and Specialist, and Children and Young the Society of American Archivists. Adult Librarianship • International summer partnership programs in Florence with Studio Art Centers International and in London with Kings College London, Department of Digital Humanities Dean Advisor for Academic Programs LMS Coordinator Tula Gianinni, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. Jessica Lee Hochman, Ph.D. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Asistant to the Dean for Administrative Assistant Office Administrative Services Katie Merlie, b.a. Tel: 212.647.7682 | Fax: 212.367.2492 Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/sils 140 Library and Information Science • The opportunity to earn dual degrees, including creation, storage and retrieval, Student Learning Assessment/Outcomes including the M.S.L.I.S. with: a master communication, description and access, and E-Portfolio with Outcomes of science in art history, a master of selection, acquisition, organization, Assessment Program fine arts in digital arts, and law degrees preservation, dissemination, use, and with Brooklyn Law School management. for immersive learning • Student advisement and mentoring by full-time faculty • Classrooms designed as seminar/labs to support hands-on learning, lecture, and discussion • Convenient class meeting times at 3:30 PM and 6:30 PM to accommodate working students • Courses feature teamwork, research, and projects The Master of Science in Library and Information Science (M.S.L.I.S.) Structure and Requirements The structure of the program supports student learning and career goals and is built around overarching areas of study that are at once interdisciplinary and converging. These are expressed through areas of concentration, advanced certificates, and dual-degree programs that offer students a rich array of choices and the opportunity to take a creative approach to planning their program. Through a wide variety of courses, the curriculum represents the information continuum in all media and formats, Some students enroll directly from their undergraduate degrees; others Entering students are required to create decide to change careers after having an e-portfolio and participate in SILS’s established themselves in other e-portfolio assessment program. Working professions such as law or teaching. with their faculty advisors, students select Among our entering students, about 30 Students must complete 36 credit three to five of their assignments that best percent hold subject master’s degrees hours with a B average or better and demonstrate mastery of the M.S.L.I.S. and some enter with a Ph.D. or J.D. meet other prescribed requirements of program-level learning objectives and the Institute. Students entering with a outcomes. Students must demonstrate Program Themes: Design Your Degree master’s degree complete 30 credits. that they can do the following: carry Program to Meet Your Interests and Needs All SILS courses are 3 credits. The out and apply research; communicate degree includes four core courses (12 effectively and create and convey credits) and eight elective courses (24 content; use information technology and credits). Students must complete degree digital tools effectively; apply concepts requirements within four years from the related to use and users of information date of registering for the first course. and user needs and perspectives; • Small classes averaging 15 students support participation and interaction Current SILS Students Course and Credit Requirements and perform within the framework of The Core Curriculum All students must take the four-course core curriculum that prepares them for more advanced courses and to pursue focused areas of study. Required courses: LIS-651 Information Professions LIS-652Information Services and Sources professional practice. E-portfolios at Pratt run on the Mahara platform, open source software, and are supported by the Office of Educational Technology and the Technology Advisory subcommittee on Teaching and Learning. We invite you to visit the e-portfolio website at http://eportfolio.pratt.edu/. Cultural Informatics: Information Studies at the Intersection of Culture, Digital Technology, and Information Science closely tied to digital culture across libraries, archives, and museums. Traditional library services in arts and humanities have been transformed through their convergence with digital technology. Pratt’s program reflects the field’s new directions and global reach, as represented in an array of courses with studies in academic, research, and museum libraries; archives and special collections; fine and performing arts; digital libraries; digital collections; exhibitions and catalogs; image LIS-653 Knowledge Organization databases; Web design; and preservation LIS-654 Information Technologies and conservation and digital humanities. Prior to enrolling in LIS-654 Information Technologies, students should possess baseline technology skills and be able to use the Microsoft Office suite, including Excel, Access, and PowerPoint, and various other Internet technologies. IPS (Information Policy and Society) Library and Information Science 141 that affect how we create, use, reuse, Student Learning Objectives and Outcomes repurpose, and share information. Students will gain expertise in the nature and use of information resources of the federal government and its agencies, as well as nonconventional NGO information opportunities such as bibliographic and statistical sources, online databases, technical report centers, public information facilities, and sources of technical assistance. You will be able to write policy briefs and reports for your Viewed through the lens of information studies in the digital age from digital libraries to global networks and social media, the SILS program in learning objectives represent what students learn and what skills they have acquired at the completion of their MSLIS degree program. 1. Research 2.Communication 3.Technology institution, make recommendations for 4.User-Centered Focus information policies, locate data from 5.LIS Practice international organizations such as the World Bank, and much more. Courses in E-Portfolio and Assessment: the IPS Concentration include: A Graduation Requirement LIS-607Digital Information Economics and Management LIS-611 Information Policy LIS-613 Government Information Sources LIS-616 Business Economics and Statistical Sources LIS-627 Online Databases: Business LIS-617 Legal Research Methods and Law LIS-626 Online Databases: Law LIS-684 Contemporary Issues in Law All students entering the MSLIS degree program are required to complete an e-portfolio that must be approved by their advisor before they will be permitted to graduate. The e-portfolio provides students with an opportunity to showcase their best work from the courses they have taken at SILS, and an opportunity to demonstrate they have met the learning objectives. LEO (Literacy, Education, and Outreach) For more information on the IPS program From public and school libraries to email Professor Debbie Rabina, program museums, this area of study is supported coordinator, at [email protected]. by our programs in Library Media The IPS concentration will give students Specialist and Children and Young Adult the theoretical knowledge and practical Librarianship. skills to work in today’s information environments. You will learn about the legal, economic, and social forces 142 Library and Information Science M.S.L.I.S. with Library Media Specialist To comply with the New York State (L.M.S.) Program Leading to NY State Education Department’s (NYSED) Teacher Certification requirements for certification, students LMS meets the needs of students who wish to become school librarians. Our LMS specialization, accredited by the NY State Regents, leads to NY State teacher certification. This 32-credit track, part of the 36-credit M.S.L.I.S. degree, prepares students for rewarding careers. Students holding an M.S.L.I.S. degree may complete the LMS track with the SILS Advanced Certificate. See below for details. Through scholarship, fieldwork and student teaching practice, LMS candidates prepare for careers in New York City school libraries. Completion of this program leads to New York State teacher certification in the area of LMS, which is one of two areas in which students at Pratt can earn teacher certification. To give students a richer experience through collaboration and interdisciplinary approaches, we work with Art and Design Education to meet program and certification requirements in the field of education. LMS students must fill out an additional application after acceptance to SILS. This application includes: must have the requisite background in liberal arts and sciences, which will be determined prior to admission. In some cases, students may be able to earn these credits as they complete their SILS degree. In addition, NYSED requires: • Pedagogical core in education (six credits of coursework, ED-608 Roots of Urban Education and ED-610 Child and Adolescent Development, LIS-691 Serving Students with Disabilities in the Library) • Two noncredit seminars: Child Abuse Recognition and Life Safety and Violence Prevention • Three examinations administered by New York State • edTPA video assessment (for students beginning in Fall) SILS Required coursework for LMS Library and Information Science Children and Young Adult Librarianship Students pursuing this program area find rewarding positions in public libraries and in museum education and outreach programs. They also take advantage of SILS’s strong partnerships with the New York and Brooklyn Public Libraries and the New York City public schools. Program Focus Areas In consultation with faculty advisers, students generally focus their elective coursework to meet individual career goals in the field of library and information science. Within this framework, we have developed areas of emphasis based on the strengths of our curriculum and faculty as well as disciplinary and collaborative connections with the Institute. These areas are described below. Digital Humanities Students includes: Reflecting the latest trends in LIS, • Four SILS Core Courses (LIS 651, 652, SILS introduced a digital humanities 653, 654) • Six LMS Required Courses (LIS 648, 676, 677, 680, 690, 692) • An interview with the LMS Coordinator • Two electives • A brief application form LMS Students must complete 100 hours • An additional brief essay of field observation in school libraries in • Three recommendation letters at least eight different schools. At least • Undergraduate GPA of 3.5 or above 15 hours must be in schools that serve • GRE scores, upon request concentration in 2011. Bringing focus to digital cultural heritage, data collection, data analysis, and visualization, as well as the changing natures of scholarship and publication in the digital age, its foundational courses are: LIS-657 Digital Humanities LIS-658 Information Visualization students with special needs. During LIS 690 and LIS 692, students will conduct 40 full days of student teaching. For more information on LMS, please visit www.pratt.edu/academics/ information-and-library-sciences/ degrees-and-certificates/advancedcertificate-program/lms/. Page 138: The Degrees of Bioethics by Amanda Favia and Chris Alen Sula Above: Student in Class 144 Library and Information Science Knowledge Organization and to the design and evaluation of Cultural Heritage interactive technologies. Recommended Growing out of traditional studies of cataloging and classification, database design, storage, and retrieval, this area has emerged as one central to the latest developments in Internet and Webbased information studies. It prepares students for careers in online services, digital collections and libraries, Web libraries, and information systems and networks. Recommended electives: LIS-608 Human Information Behavior LIS-630 Information Science Research LIS-662 Advanced Cataloging LIS-663 Metadata, Description and Access LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Description and Access electives: LIS-630Information Science Research LIS-643Information Architecture and Interaction Design LIS-681 Community Building and Engagement LIS-644 Usability Theory and Practice LIS-608 Human Information Behavior LIS-693 Digital Libraries LIS-658 Information Visualization LIS-645Management of Digital Content Preservation/Conservation Library and Information Science Research and Assessment Health Information LIS-634 Conservation Lab, Brooklyn College Archives LIS-697 Cultural Heritage Intellectual Property: Protection Arts and Information) of Digital Information The expanding role of technology in the process is valuable in many professional provision of health sciences and medical This three-year, 75-credit dual degree activities, including data management, information offers students new and prepares students to work at the academic and medical librarianship, challenging opportunities. Librarians in intersection of digital arts and leadership, grant writing, scholarly this field work in a wide range of settings, information. It offers students the communication, research, and usability. from medical schools and academic opportunity to develop high-level Involvement in research enables an libraries to pharmaceutical firms and knowledge and skills in using digital individual to be an effective professional hospitals. The program permits students tools creatively across media in such and leader, and strengthens an to take Pratt courses on site at Cornell emerging areas as virtual information organization’s status within the larger Medical Library, where they study the and learning environments for a wide professional community. latest theories and practices in the field. range of information settings. Recommended electives: LIS-608 Human Information Behavior LIS-685 Medical Librarianship Library and Information Science and LIS-605 Digital Resources and LIS-697 Contemporary Issues in Law (Two Dual-Degree Programs With User Interaction Health Information LIS-632 Preservation and Conservation M.S.L.I.S. and M.F.A. in Digital Arts (Digital A solid understanding of the research LIS-630 Information Science Research Law Librarianship Given the rapid growth of information services over the Internet and Web, Dual-Degree Programs M.S.L.I.S. and M.S. in History of Art, Design, and Architecture Brooklyn Law School) M.S.L.I.S. and J.D.: 104 credits; M.S.L.I.S. and L.L.M. (Law Master’s) in Information Law and Society: 45 credits In affiliation with Brooklyn Law School, this program as well as global contexts, information This program is especially designed for prepares students for careers in law policy and law have become a new students who wish to pursue careers librarianship and related fields. Today’s and demanding area of focus for legal in art-related fields—where art, employers often give preference to research, adding to the field’s scope and information, and technology converge. law librarians holding a J.D. as well as influence. Law schools, law firms, court Students will be prepared to work in an M.S.L.I.S. The joint degree requires (e.g., websites, mobile/tablet apps, etc.) system libraries, and corporations are any number of settings from academic completion of 86 credits for the law from a user-centered perspective. While typical places of work for law librarians. libraries and museums to galleries and degree and 36 credits for the M.S.L.I.S. UX is a field in its own right, UX skills are For recommended electives for this auction houses, as well as other cultural degree; nine of the 36 LIS credits becoming increasingly important within concentration, see the section under settings. The program requires 30 credits can be taken at Brooklyn Law School, the LIS profession as libraries, museums, dual-degree programs with Brooklyn at SILS and 30 credits in history of art, for subject to the approval of the dean of archives, and information organizations Law School. a total of 60 credits. Students must apply SILS. Students wishing to pursue the expand their digital offerings. Drawing to and be accepted as matriculated in M.S.L.I.S./L.L.M. must already hold a J.D. from the Human-Computer Interaction both programs. Application may be made Recommended courses: (HCI) discipline, students in the UX initially to the dual-degree program, or Accounting for Lawyers concentration will be trained in the to one of the two programs, with later Administrative Law methods used to understand users and application to the other, provided that American Legal History their contexts and apply that knowledge the student has not yet graduated from Comparative Law the first program entered. Copyright Law UX (User Experience) The User Experience (UX) concentration teaches students how to design usable, useful, and desirable digital interfaces Conservation, Florence, SACI School LIS-655 Digital Preservation and Curation 145 Information Privacy International and Foreign Law Research Similarly, nine of the 86 credits required for the J.D. may be taken at Pratt Recommended courses: LIS-613Government Information Sources LIS-616 Business, Economics and Statistical Sources LIS-617 Legal Research Methods and Law Literature LIS-619 International Information Sources LIS-626 Online Databases: Law LIS-627Online Databases: Business LIS-684 Law Librarianship: Contemporary Issues Library and Information Science Library and Information Science 147 This dual degree can be completed in Advanced Certificate in Archives (12 Advanced Certificate in Library three to four years of full-time study, Credits within the M.S.L.I.S. program Media Specialist Program Leading to or four to five years of part-time or Post-Graduate) New York State Teacher Certification study, including summers. To enter the program, a student must apply separately to Pratt and to Brooklyn Law School. Each school processes applications independently, without reference to the joint degree. Upon acceptance to both schools, a student follows the joint degree program leading to the conferring of both degrees. Students who have already earned a library science or law degree before applying to Pratt are not eligible for the joint degree program. To obtain a Brooklyn Law School application and catalog contact: Office of Admissions Brooklyn Law School This program can be taken within Pratt’s M.S.L.I.S. program. It can also To be eligible for this post-master’s be taken as a stand-alone program program, applicants must hold an M.L.S. by holders of an M.L.S. degree from an degree from an ALA-accredited program. ALA-accredited program. LIS-648 Library Media Centers LIS-625Management of Archives and LIS-676 Literature and Literacy Special Collections LIS-698Practicum/ Seminar Two electives from LIS-680 Instructional Technology LIS-690 Student Teaching I LIS-692 Student Teaching II Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries (12 credits within the M.S.L.I.S. Program or Post-Graduate) of library and information science to 718.780.0385 offer a museum libraries certificate program. Based on four pillars of SILS Certificate Programs knowledge—research/curatorial; digital SILS offers several certificate programs technology; education, outreach, and within the M.S.L.I.S. program, or for field experience—it prepares students people who already hold library science for careers not only in museums, but degrees and wish to earn a specialization. also research libraries, art libraries, and in digital archives and humanities. This Advanced Certificate Programs in program can be taken within Pratt’s Archives and in Museum Libraries M.S.L.I.S. program. It can also be taken the 36-credit master’s), as the program curricula are complementary within the contexts of cultural informatics and arts and humanities perspectives. Above:Maker Known: Data Quilt by Deimosa Webber-Bey (M.S. Library Science ’13) for Young Adults courses (6 credits) Brooklyn, NY 11201 (24 credits plus the 12-credit core for for Children LIS-677 Literature and Literacy recommended archives Pratt-SILS is the first and only school 12-credit certificates within the M.S.L.I.S. Required courses: Required courses: 250 Joralemon Street Students choose to complete one or both in LMS (18 credits) as a post-M.L.S. certificate by holders of an M.L.S. degree from an ALA-accredited L.I.S. school. Students select one threecredit course from a selection of courses for each of the four required areas. One hundred hours of field observation in school library media centers plus 40 full days of student teaching (20 elementary and 20 secondary) are required. Student teaching is conducted in the fall or spring terms in New York City under the supervision of a certified LMS. Field hours and student teaching must be completed, documented, and submitted to the coordinator in order to graduate. In addition, New York State requires a firm background in liberal arts and sciences for all certified teachers, to be determined prior to admission. In some cases students may earn these credits as they complete their SILS degree. Required courses: ED-608 Roots of Urban Education ED-610Child and Adolescent Development LIS-691 Serving Youth with Disabilites 148 Library and Information Science Library and Information Science 149 For more information, contact Professor Scholarships Internships and Practicum 1. Florentine Art and Culture, Museum and Merit scholarships are awarded To gain hands-on experience studying to entering students based on and working in one’s area of emphasis, their academic record. Continuing we strongly encourage students scholarships are awarded to students to participate in our program of for their second year of study based internships and practicum. Students Jessica Hochman, coordinator of the Library Media Specialist Program, at [email protected]. Advanced Certificate in Library and Information Studies (30 credits) on their work at SILS, including student select their work site based on program To meet the needs of experienced research and international study in our interests and career goals and have the professionals, Pratt offers a post- London and Florence programs and opportunity to work in such leading master’s certificate requiring 30 practicum study abroad. We also award cultural organizations as the Metropolitan credits of coursework. Of these, six tuition scholarships for two courses tied Museum of Art, the New York and must be research-oriented independent to a two-semester internships program Brooklyn Public Libraries, Brooklyn study. Of the remaining 24 credits, at a NYC cultural institution such as the Historical Society, Brooklyn Museum, students may take up to nine in related Metropolitan Museum of Art. Teachers College and Brooklyn College subject areas. Required courses: (eight 3-credit courses) Advisement and Mentoring MoMA, and Pratt libraries in addition to Admissions Students may begin their program fall, spring or summer. Applications are reviewed on a rolling admissions basis. Admission as a Special Student is assigned a faculty advisor to help with course planning to meet his/her educational and career goals as well as for e-portfolio advisement. Whether taking the 36-credit master’s or the 30-credit degree for students holding a master’s in another field, students work with their advisors to customize their programs. art on paper London is a two-course, six-credit program: 1. London Summer School on E-Publishing and the Strand Symposium in partnership with Kings College London, Department of Digital Humanities, is a two-week, threecredit program. It features visits to Cambridge, and Oxford, and lectures Archives, Frick Reference Library, Upon entering SILS, each student including rare books, manuscripts, and publishers and libraries in London, Planning Your Program Independent Study (six credits) which focuses on paper conservation Library and Archives, Lesbian Herstory 24 elective credits LIS-699Research-oriented Library Research and Documentation 2.Cultural Heritage Conservation, numerous other academic and special by noted academics. 2.Museums and Digital Media with the libraries in the metropolitan area in fields Ravensbourne College of Design and such as IT, publishing, and the corporate Communication sector. The practicum serves to bridge students to the professional world and facilitate career development. International Programs Workshops SILS provides students with a series of all-day workshops taught by experts in their fields. Past workshops Responding to the globalization of included Paper Conservation, Rare information and library service, SILS’s Book Cataloging, Introduction to EAD, the program as a special student, defined a team of knowledgeable and caring new program in international librarianship Introduction to Archivists Toolkit, Grant- as a non-matriculated student. As such, professionals, are ready to assist offers courses in Florence and London. writing for Digitization Projects, Graphic a student may take up to six credits. To students and to make their educational proceed in the program, a student must experience at Pratt rewarding Art Centers International (SACI) is a apply for admission and be accepted as and personally fulfilling. All students five-week, six-credit program offering matriculated. See www.pratt.edu/apply should establish a Pratt email account two three-credit courses that run for more information. and sign up for the SILS listserv to stay concurrently and are taught by SACI informed about school activities and Italian faculty: Students eligible for admission may begin In addition, the SILS office staff, job postings. Florence in partnership with Studio and Sequential Novels, and Podcasting and Information Visualization. 151 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences History of Art and Design Writing Media Studies Classes in the Liberal Arts Performance and Performance Studies The mission of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences is to enable students to explore areas of knowledge and reflect critically and creatively on aesthetic forms and on intellectual and cultural practices. Graduates can conduct research, substantiate arguments, and communicate in the broadest possible sociohistorical, literary, and scientific contexts. The school’s primary goal is for at Pratt because our inherent cross/ its students to make continuing transdisciplinary nature gives us the contributions as critical thinkers and freedom to fundamentally rethink the creative professionals. On the graduate way we approach our given subjects. level, the School of Liberal Arts and The School of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers the M.A. in Media Studies, Sciences also provides English language the M.S. in History of Art and Design, support for international students in the the M.F.A. in Writing, and the M.F.A. in Intensive, full-time Certificate of English Performance and Performance Studies. Proficiency, and summer certificate Our graduate programs are unique to Programs (IEP, CEP, and SCP). The a liberal arts school located within an courses in these programs help students art and design institution in that they to prepare for academic and studio work with and interrogate social spaces courses by incorporating elements of that are configured and reconfigured literature, as well as critical theories and using a creative lens influenced by examinations of the visual arts. The artists, designers, and architects. In SCP is strongly recommended for addition, the School of Liberal Arts students whose TOEFL score is below and Sciences offers graduate classes 600 (PbT). Students who complete the for students majoring in the fine arts, SCP program are not required to take digital arts, communications design, and the placement exam. architecture, among others. Our faculty members in the School Finally, our Writing and Tutorial Center gives support to students in their of Liberal Arts and Sciences are nationally graduate thesis by giving them the tools and internationally known creative artists, to better articulate and present their performers, writers, scholars, critics, final projects. and scientists who have chosen to be Dean Assistant to the Dean Office Andrew W. Barnes, Ph.D. Gloriana Russell Tel: 718.636.3570 | Fax: 718.399.4586 [email protected] www.pratt.edu/las 153 History of Art and Design Pratt Institute is an exceptional place to study the history of art and design. Our landmarked campus attracts leading artists, designers, historians, and theorists and is only minutes from the studios, galleries, private collections, libraries, and museums that make New York a premier center of art and design. Our faculty is composed of distinguished Every graduate student’s program scholars and mentors who focus on the includes “behind-the-scenes” intellectual and professional growth of experiences, not only at exhibitions and our students. They bring a broad range of museums but also in the Institute itself. expertise and different methodologies Connections with other departments in to the classroom; in addition, about all areas of fine arts and design—interior, half of our faculty also has extensive industrial, communication, and fashion— museum and curatorial experience. offer a unique platform for an interaction Their expertise, dedication, and original between practitioners and theoreticians. thinking are evident in our curriculum Our students witness the making of art and in the academic opportunities and design firsthand, which adds a real-life and professional connections faculty perspective to their scholarly studies. members create for their students, and The History of Art and Design most importantly, are reflected in the department offers exciting lectures and quality of our students’ work. seminars on a wide range of approaches, Explore our degree options and you from connoisseurship to the most recent will find students studying 17th-century theoretical approaches. Frequent frescoes in Venice, 20th-century product excursions and internships result from design at first-rate auction houses, and our extensive working relationships with 21st-century performance art at the the city’s museums, galleries, and cultural Museum of Modern Art. Students come organizations and are a crucial part of from a wide range of backgrounds, and the curriculum. leave with knowledge, experience, and a professional network that will inform and support their careers for many years. Chair Assistant chair Office Dorothea Dietrich, Ph.D. Gayle Rodda Kurtz, Ph.D. Tel: 718.636.3598 [email protected] Assistant to the Chair www.pratt.edu/history-of-art- Jill Song design-grad 154 History of Art and Design Graduate Degrees for the Certificate may be taken within The Department of the History of Art the credits required for the M.S. degree. History of Art and Design and Design offers the M.S. degree, requiring 36 credits as described below, and a thesis. Two dual degree programs requiring 30 credits are available: History of Art and Design with Fine Arts, leading to M.S/M.F.A. degrees; and History of Art and Design with Library and Information Science, leading to M.S/M.S degrees. Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art’s historical concern with materials and techniques exists naturally in connection with studio programs in the practice of art. This is an emphasis in all our courses, but it takes specific form in our required Materials, Techniques, and Conservation course, augmented by additional courses in Conservation and Materials. In addition, issues related to The Certificate in Museum Studies conservation problems in Venetian art complements the M.S. degree in the history are explored with the help of local History of Art and Design Department experts on site in our Venice program. by offering both a solid base in art and design history and practical, in-depth experience in the museum world. History of Art and Design courses are augmented by Pratt’s School of Information and Library Science, Department of Art and Design Education, and the Arts and Cultural Management program. Many members of our faculty are museum professionals who bring their expertise and experience to the classroom. As part of the program, students do two internships at premiere New York institutions. The Certificate is intended to give graduates an “edge” for those who seek museum and gallery employment. The Certificate is available to graduate students enrolled in the History of Art and Design master’s program as well as those in the dual programs with the Department of Fine Arts and the School of Information and Library Science and is only awarded upon completion of those master’s degrees. Some of the courses Pratt in Venice Pratt in Venice is a six-week summer program that takes place in June and July. Art History of Venice (HA590I, 3 credits) and Materials and Techniques of Venetian Art (HA600I, 3 credits) are offered together with Painting (Art 590I, 2–3 credits) and Printmaking/ Drawing (Art 591I, 2–3 credits). Graduate and undergraduate students enroll for six to nine credits. We collaborate with the Università Internazionale dell’Arte and the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice. Group visits to Padua and Bassano/Maser are included. The program fosters interaction between art history and the studio arts through group events, faculty/student discussions, visiting lecturers, and just by being there together. Participants experience the visual riches of Venice and have the opportunity to conduct research in extraordinary museums and libraries. Page 150: Students in class Page 152 and above: Class trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 157 Media Studies The Graduate Program in Media Studies at Pratt is situated in the uniquely vibrant environment of an art, design, and architecture school. Students who value both the intellectual and creative sides of media studies are encouraged to apply. Media Studies at Pratt is an intensive The Program’s Structure program developed in relation to The program emphasizes studies of Pratt’s art, design, and architecture media in their various forms, including environment and to the burgeoning film, video, television, radio, writing, mediascape, lively social space, and and computer-mediated forms of theoretical scene of Brooklyn and New convergence. Students study the logics York City. Classes are small, following and logistics of media and mediation, both the seminar and workshop format, and they explore cultural technologies and all classes are taught by professors. of expression, representation, and The program has been conceived manipulation, along with the aesthetic, and instituted in a way that understands economic, and political contexts in which that media emergence is rapidly such media necessarily operate. Students transforming experience, society, and gain expertise in media history, theory knowledge. It is designed to foster the and practice, and in textual analysis, investigation of many of the significant interpretation, and semiotics. social, political, cultural, economic, The Master of Arts in Media Studies and aesthetic questions of our time by graduate program consists of 30 credits drawing both on the historical record taken over three semesters and a thesis. with regard to media forms and on The program can be completed in three cutting-edge theory regarding gender semesters if the student finds a final and sexuality, race, nation, political thesis/project topic during the first year economy, aesthetic form, screen studies, and prepares to complete it in the third and the like. semester. Even so, an extra semester is generally recommended to allow more time to find, explore, and develop the thesis/project that will best serve the student’s particular interests. Chair Coordinator Office Maria Damon, Ph.D. Jonathan Beller, Ph.D. Tel: 718.678.5770 [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/grad-media-studies Administrative Secretary Kate Ryan [email protected] Media Studies Media Studies The core sequence for the M.A. The Final Project/Thesis Workshop objects. Foci will vary based upon consists of Mediologies I and II (six credits (HMS-659A) offers an intensive small specific expertise and interests of total) and Encounters I and II (two credits support group in which students can involved faculty and students. total), Practices I and II (elective courses develop and write their thesis; students totaling six credits), seminars and project who want more time to finish their thesis Studies Program will host a conference, courses (electives totaling 12 credits), an may take HMS-659B (Thesis in Progress). Mediologies, which will include Internship course (optional) and a final Students may also choose to Each year in late April, the Media presentations of work and works-in- thesis with required Final Project/Thesis undertake an internship for academic progress by students, faculty, and Workshop (four credits total). credit (HMS-9700, 9701, 9702, 9703) and guest presenters. Seminar courses professional enrichment. being offered in the spring will enable Mediologies courses (HMS-650A/B) provide students with crucial critical In addition to the core courses students to develop papers and and theoretical tools; students take a described above, the program offers projects specifically for presentation sequence of two required introductory a range of electives in areas of at Mediologies. courses during their first year. These specialization and interdisciplinary courses are designed to address constellations within media studies, Admissions Requirements students with substantial experience in enabling students to develop particular Applications for admission to the Master media studies as well as students with areas of concentration, first through of Arts in Media Studies are due January less exposure. coursework and then in their one-on- 5 for the following fall; the program one work with thesis advisors. Faculty accepts fall entrants only. Applicants of electives, including those taught in represent areas that include New Media, should have a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from other programs, such as Digital Arts. Documentary Studies, Global Media, an accredited institution. Candidates These courses enable students to acquire Media and the Urban Environment, Media must submit (1) a statement of purpose basic competence in media aesthetics and Performance, Music/Sound Studies, in which they describe their interest and production. Media/Attention Economies, Media in the program; (2) 10–20 pages of Practices courses comprise a range Ecology, Archaeology of (New) Media, relevant writing sample(s), with emphasis enable students to engage directly with and Media, Activism, and Social Change. on analytical writing about media; (3) others working in media fields, and with Elective seminars run in the format Encounters courses (HMS-549 A/B) transcripts of undergraduate coursework; timely issues and ideas, in an open- of small discussion courses focused and (4) two letters of recommendation. discussion “salon” environment. on individual or team presentations All applicants must follow the standard on the analysis of texts, films, objects, admission process for graduate programs themes, and theories. Elective project at Pratt: see www.pratt.edu/apply. courses are semester-long laboratory/ workshops in which students and one or more faculty members—in any one of several departments—engage a topic, idea, interface, space, or modality, focusing on the interface between the theorization and production of media Page 156: Students in class Above: Student in class 159 161 Performance and Performance Studies Through the simultaneous development of practice and study, students earning an M.F.A. in Performance and Performance Studies at Pratt are grounded in creative practices with a strong emphasis on conceptual framing, and develop a theoretical foundation they can apply directly to their work. The program is guided by a set of as teachers in colleges/universities principles about the integral nature and and other institutions in a variety of importance of performance, community, fields—such as theater, performance and politics, where students explore how studies, art criticism, movement, creative effective theater is artistically engaging writing—and in community settings, arts and is a catalyst for social change. education and youth programs and This new degree was developed other venues; (3) work as curators, arts with a wide range of practitioners, administrators, art critics, or production scholars, and students in mind, including staff, and in media; and (4), pursue a professionals in the field who are Ph.D. in a range of fields, including seeking terminal career credentials; performance studies, cultural studies, working performers and artists who theater and others. seek to gain a more critical/theoretical depth and background (as well as new The Program’s Structure performance skills) for their work; The goal of the M.F.A. in Performance scholars with some artistic training who and Performance Studies is to prepare seek to complement their work with students as artists and thinkers. Students training in performance technique; and will move from a basic command of the students from other disciplines who field of performance studies to become understand what opportunities they can active artists/scholars who contribute to gain by focusing on the performative the field’s evolution. dimensions of their fields. With an M.F.A. in Performance and Students in the program will take four semesters, or 60 credits worth of Performance Studies from Pratt, artist courses. Of this, 33 credit hours will scholars will be able to: (1) work as artists be in required courses, 27 in electives and performance practitioners; (2) work selected based on students’ needs Chair Coordinator Office Maria Damon, Ph.D. Tracie Morris DeKalb Hall 316 [email protected] [email protected] 718.636.3607 Assistant Kate Ryan [email protected] 162 Performance and Performance Studies and interests. Throughout, students professional practice; and (5) Thesis / will combine study in performance Project Workshops (PPS 659a and 659b) practice with theoretical inquiry in to support students in developing viable performance studies. After taking a and fully realized visions and incarnations series of foundation courses in the of their own work. first year, students will develop their Students will also take Open own body of work in the second year. Electives (totaling 27 credits), which will In their last semester the students will be theory and practice seminars offered focus on rounding out the competencies by full and part-time faculty and covering they are building and on refining their a wide range of topics and areas. concluding academic and performance art presentations. We also offer opportunities for As part of the program’s community focus, students are also strongly encouraged to do an internship to fulfill students to work with community-based one of their electives. The required organizations in which performance and second-semester workshop on constructs of performativity are central. community-based practice will provide The students will work intimately to serve important preparation and, in some these communities in conceptual and cases, specific venues and contacts to practical contributions to art practice accommodate a broad range of interests. and community empowerment for underserved populations. The Performance and Performance Admissions Requirements Applicants for admission to the Master Studies program is anchored around of Fine Arts (fall entrance only) must a series of core, required classes: (1) have either a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from Introduction to Performance Theory an accredited institution. Candidates (PPS 650a), where students focus on must submit (1) a statement of purpose conceptual underpinnings of the field; in which they describe their interest in (2) Introduction to Performance Practice the program, as well as their own goals (PPS 651a), providing core competencies and preparation; (2) 10-20 pages of rel- in crucial aspects of performance evant writing sample(s); (3) transcripts and presentation; (3) workshops with of undergraduate coursework; and (4) an artist-in-residence (PPS 549a), on two letters of recommendation. Collab- cross-cultural performance (PPS 550a) orative pairs will be welcomed, but each and on community-based practice member must apply separately under (PPS 550b); (4) a Critical Writing course the above guidelines. All applicants (PPS 652a) to support writing skills must follow the standard admission increasingly vital as a component both process for graduate programs at Pratt: of creative/collaborative processes and see www.pratt.edu/apply. Page 160: Students in class Opposite: Students in class 163 165 Writing The Pratt M.F.A. in Writing is a new and unique two-year program specifically designed to support and encourage intellectually rigorous and inspired writing practices that are philosophically, culturally, and politically informed. The premise of the program is that writing become now that the landscape writing can be transformative at all scales, for its production, distribution, and from the personal to the social, and we exchange includes not only books and aim to incubate such cosmopolitan, journals, but also internet platforms, local, pleasure-filled, and potentially digital technologies, video, audio, pdf, revolutionary poetic practices. blogs, and social media? Our approach to the M.F.A. This program engages a vision of curriculum emphasizes interdisciplinary writing that is not genre-specific, but group critiques (with core faculty, guest rather inclusive of multiple modes of artists, and peers engaging in weekly inscription—from fiction to poetry, discussions and presentations of student performance to nonfiction, translation to work). Additionally, students take part in cultural criticism, investigative journalism one-on-one guided mentorships, civic to digital media, documentary to science and urban exploration and fieldwork, fiction. There is also a special focus and seminars in Literature, Media on alternate or hybrid approaches to Studies, Performance, Experimental writing, with hybridity defined as a set of Practices, Activism and Critical Theory, interactive processes that can potentially to name a few. generate new social spaces. What The Pratt M.F.A. therefore offers avant-garde experiments, what research, contemporary writers the tools and the what interventions, what archives, what support they need to build a practice speech acts, what literary and artistic that is responsive and adaptive (and traditions, what genres, what media even a form of resistance) to our rapidly technologies, what theoretical frames, evolving environmental and political what narratives, and what materials are times and to the enormous shifts taking most suited to your artistic inquiries? place in media technologies. What can Chair Coordinator Office Maria Damon, Ph.D. Christian Hawkey Tel: 718.678.5770 [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/grad-writing Administrative Secretary Kate Ryan [email protected] Writing 166 We will help you figure that out as you Other notable features of the Pratt Writing To apply, follow the standard admission begin to establish a creative practice that M.F.A. in Writing include: process for graduate programs at Pratt: is sustainable across a lifetime of change. • Student-led collaborative Writing www.pratt.edu/apply. Our core faculty of writers is diverse Practice Seminars that explore the and internationally renowned. Their work intersections of writing, research, traverses and often combines numerous activism, radical pedagogy, and disciplines: activism, performance art, critical theory. translation, media and cultural theory, • Sustained focus on 21st-century theater, fine art. Our course of study modes of authorship including: emphasizes collaboration, radical activism, transdisciplinary and cross- pedagogy, administrative transparency, genre experiment, performance, and non-hierarchical learning. innovative uses of new media, investigative and research techniques, Course of Study conceptual frameworks, collaborative The Graduate Program in Writing M.F.A. methods, and site-specific consists of several core classes and approaches. seminars taken over four semesters • A course of study stressing a writing (two years), with the goal of producing process that takes into account the a final manuscript, performance, or material and technological aspects of collaborative event. writing, the human body that produces There are three notable features it, and the larger social, sexual, of the new program. First, the heart historical, economic, racial, and cultural of the program is a once-a-week core contexts in which and through which all class, the Writing Studio, which is an imaginative writing takes place. open, democratic forum dedicated to the collective critique and discussion Admission Requirements of student works-in-progress. Second, Applications for admission to the Master each student is offered one-on-one of Fine Arts are due January 5 for the guided Mentorship with a chosen faculty following fall; the program accepts fall member. Third, the program provides entrants only. Applicants should have a students with support and guidance to B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from an accredited extend their cultural productions and institution. Candidates submit (1) a research interests into the world in the statement of purpose in which they form of Fieldwork Residencies: ongoing describe how their writing interests align residencies conducted in collaboration with the vision of the program; (2) 10–20 with an outside institution, community pages of relevant writing samples of any organization, archive, occupational genre; (3) transcripts of undergraduate domain, or activist group. coursework; and (4) two letters of recommendation. Page 164: Students in class Above: Brooklyn Campus 169 Classes in the Liberal Arts Pratt provides a wellrounded education in the liberal arts that encompasses Humanities and Media Studies, Mathematics and Science, Social Science and Cultural Studies, and the History of Art and Design. In addition, the Institute supports international students in gaining the English language skills they need to pursue their education and to interact as vital members of the community. The Graduate Programs in the School of other computerized forms of media Liberal Arts and Sciences are one-of-a- convergence. Alongside their theoretical kind: programs that rethink disciplinary investigations, students are also boundaries and take advantage of their encouraged to become media makers. location within a leading art and design institution. We do things differently here. Master of Fine Arts in Writing A new and unique two-year program, Master of Arts in Media Studies the Pratt M.F.A. in Writing is specifically The graduate program in Media Studies designed to support and encourage offers freedom and flexibility for students intellectually rigorous and inspired to design their program of study. We offer writing practices that are philosophically, exciting and challenging opportunities culturally, and politically informed. The for students to confront the most premise of the program is that writing pressing issues of our time: questions can be transformative at all scales, from around social justice, sustainability, race, the personal to the social, and we aim sexuality, nationalism, militarization, to incubate such radically cosmopolitan, economics, and celebrity. The curriculum resolutely local, pleasure-filled, emphasizes studies of media in various and potentially revolutionary poetic forms, including film, video, television, practices. Our innovative approach radio, writing, smartphones, and to the M.F.A. curriculum emphasizes History of Art and Design Intensive English Program Humanities and Media Studies Mathematics and Science Social Science and Cultural Studies Certificate of English Proficiency Chair Director Chair Chair Chair Coordinator Dorothea Dietrich, Ph.D. Nancy Seidler Maria Damon, Ph.D. Carole Sirovich, Ph.D. Gregg M. Horowitz, Ph.D. Dana Gordon [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Assistant Chair Assistant to the Chair Assistant to the Chair Assessment and Educational Kathryn Cullen-Dupont Margaret Dy-So Sophia Straker-Babb Technology Coordinator [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Rachid Eladlouni Assistant to the Chair Laboratory Technician Danielle Skorzanka Tiffany Liu Assistant chair Gayle Rodda Kurtz, Ph.D. Assistant to the Chair [email protected] Jill Song [email protected] Assistant to the Director Fanny Lao [email protected] [email protected] 170 Classes in the Liberal Arts interdisciplinary group critiques with in independent and critical thinking and Pratt Institute and the School of Liberal core faculty, guest artists, and peers understanding of the historical roles Arts and Sciences welcome international assessed at or below Level 5 are required please refer to the catalog listing for engaging in weekly discussions and and responsibilities of art and design. students and offer an array of programs to enroll full time in the Certificate of particular schools and departments. presentations of student work. Internships at museums, libraries, and services to improve English-language English Proficiency (CEP) Program. Any New international students are strongly nonprofit art organizations, and galleries skills and academic readiness. All graduate international student who has encouraged to enroll in IEP summer Master of Fine Arts in Performance provide opportunities for students international students with TOEFL scores been enrolled in one Intensive English courses in order to be fully prepared and Performance Studies to work in professional areas of their below 600 (PbT), 250 (CBT), or 100 (iBT)— course without having expempted from for the academic requirements of their Through the simultaneous development interests and prepare for future careers. including transfer students—whose first (passed) the program will be moved degree programs. of practice and study, students The department also offers two dual language is not English must demonstrate to probationary status during his/her earning an M.F.A. in Performance degrees: M.S./M.F.A. with Fine Arts, proficiency in English by taking an English second semester. Students who have The Certificate of English and Performance Studies at Pratt are and the M.S./M.S. with Information and Placement Test upon arriving at the registered for two (fall and spring) Proficiency Program grounded in creative practices with a Library Sciences. Institute. The Intensive English Program semesters and who do not assess at (IEP) in the Language Resource Center the exempt level may be required strong emphasis on conceptual framing, Students whose proficiency is and develop a theoretical foundation Resources in the School of Liberal on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus administers to withdraw voluntarily from Pratt or they can apply directly to their work. The Arts and Sciences the test. register for the full-time CEP program. program is guided by a set of principles Intensive English Program about the integral nature and importance of performance, community, and politics, where students explore how effective theater is both artistically engaging and a catalyst for social change. Master of Science in the History of Art and Design The graduate studies in the History of Art and Design provide students with the skills and knowledge to pursue careers as art and design historians and professionals in museums, galleries, and libraries, or to pursue graduate work at the doctoral level. Through comprehensive study of global art and design within historical and cultural contexts and intensive research and scholarship in specialized areas, students develop a critical understanding of the The Intensive English Program (IEP) provides academic English language instruction to matriculated graduate and undergraduate students. In addition, two certificate programs run under the IEP’s umbrella: the full-time Certificate (CEP) and Summer (SCP) programs. The mission of all programs in the IEP is to support successful matriculation of international students by providing appropriate English language instruction. Internal assessment and advisement ensure students’ proper placement in English language courses, as well as successful matriculation and degree attainment. The curriculum includes art, design, and architecture content and is enhanced by direct exposure to related cultural experiences This placement test consists of Good communication skills are a reading test, a writing test, and a essential to academic success at personal interview with an IEP faculty Pratt Institute. Instruction in the IEP member. Students assessed at the emphasizes language use for general exempt level of English proficiency satisfy academic and specific purposes in the their Intensive English requirement and professions in which Pratt specializes, may enroll in all Institute courses without namely, art, design, architecture, and restriction. Students who are assessed as information and library science. IEP being in need of English instruction must faculty are trained and experienced in register in consecutive Intensive English teaching English as a second language, courses (including summer IEP classes as well as in integrating art and design should they wish to take other Institute content into their courses. Our classes are courses during those sessions) until they small (8 to 12 students per session), and achieve exempt status based on IEP exit enrolled international students benefit proficiency criteria. from their use of the Language Resource and Writing and Tutorial Centers for additional language learning practice. For information on the Test of Classes in the Liberal Arts 171 requirements at Pratt Institute, Laboratories and Computer Facilities The science laboratories (chemistry, physics, biology), located in the Activities Resource Center, are interdisciplinary research facilities. Sophisticated instruments and equipment are available, and undergraduates are encouraged to use them under faculty supervision. Computer facilities are available for use by all students of the Institute. Specialized facilities are employed in the sciences. The Certificate of English Proficiency (CEP) program at Pratt Institute is a oneyear English-language program located at our Brooklyn campus. Students whose TOEFL scores fall below the admission minimums established by Institute degree programs may apply to the CEP for fulltime English-language instruction. At the end of the two-semester program of English study, those students completing CEP coursework receive a certificate of English language proficiency. Courses focus on speaking, listening, reading, and writing within the context of art and design, as well as TOEFL preparation. For more information on Pratt’s Intensive and Certificate English programs, contact IEP administrative offices at 718.636.3450, visit the IEP website at www.pratt.edu/iep or email IEP at [email protected]. Writing and Tutorial Center The Writing and Tutorial Center provides free tutoring for all Pratt students in English, math, physics, art history, thesis preparation, and other academic areas. Special assistance is provided for students for whom English is a second language. Small-group and regularly scheduled one-on-one conversation sessions are also offered. The Writing and Tutorial Center staff consists of a director, faculty and staff tutors, and trained student peer tutors. The director coordinates scheduling and appointments in all areas. Any faculty member, staff member, or adviser may recommend students who need assistance. The Writing and Tutorial Center is located in North Hall 101 (opposite the bank). Appointments can be made by English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) phone, Skype IM, or in person. and language-learning technology. field as well as research and analytical skills. Graduates demonstrate excellence Page 168: Students in class 172 Above: Students on the Brooklyn Campus 173 Academic Degrees Overview Undergraduate Programs Graduate Programs School of Architecture School of Architecture Architecture B.Arch. 0202 Construction Management B.P.S. 0201 Construction Management B.S. 0201 Building and Construction 5317 A.A.S. School of Art Digital Design and Interactive Media A.O.S. Graphic Design 5012 A.O.S. 5012 Graphic Design/Illustration A.A.S. 5012 Illustration A.O.S. 5012 Painting/Drawing A.A.S. 5610 Art and Design Education B.F.A. 0831 Digital Arts B.F.A. 1009 Film B.F.A. 1010 Fine Arts B.F.A. 1001 Photography B.F.A. 1011 School of Design Communications Design B.F.A. 0601 Fashion Design B.F.A. 1009 Industrial Design B.I.D. 1009 Interior Design B.F.A. 0201 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Critical and Visual Studies B.A. 4903 History of Art and Design B.A. 1003 History of Art and Design B.F.A. 1003 Writing B.F.A. 1599 Combined Degree Programs Art and Design Education B.F.A./M.S. 0831 School of Design Architecture (first-professional) M.Arch. 0202 Architecture (post-professional) M.S. 0202 Architecture and Urban M.S. Design (post-professional) 0205 City and Regional Planning M.S. Facilities Management Communications Design M.F.A. 1009 Communications Design M.S. 0601 Industrial Design M.I.D. 1009 Interior Design M.F.A. 0201 Interior Design M.S. 0201 0206 Package Design M.S. 1009 M.S. 0201 School of Information and Library Sscience Historic Preservation M.S. 0299 1601 M.S. 0206 Library and Information Science M.S. Sustainable Environmental Systems 0899 M.S. 0206 Library and Information Science: Library Media Specialist M.S. Urban Placemaking and Management Archives Certificate Program ADV. CRT. 1699 Library and Information Studies ADV. CRT. 1699 Library Media Specialist ADV. CRT. 0899 ADV. CRT. 1699 M.S. 0702 School of Art Art and Design Education (init./prf. certification) M.S. 0831 Art and Design Education (prf. certification) M.S. 0831 Art and Design Education ADV. CRT. 0831 Museum Libraries Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. 0599 Museums and Digital Culture Art Therapy and Creativity Development M.P.S. 1099 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Art Therapy and Creativity Development (spring/summer) M.P.S. 1099 History of Art and Design M.S. 1003 Media Studies M.A. 0601 Museum Studies ADV. CRT. 1003 M.F.A. 1007 M.F.A. 1599 Art Therapy with Special Needs Children M.P.S. 1099 Performance and Performance Studies Art Therapy with Special Needs Children (spring/summer) M.P.S. 1099 Writing Combined Degree Programs Library and Information Science/Digital Arts M.S./M.F.A. 1601/ 1009 1099 Library and Information Science/Law M.S./J.D. 1601/ M.S./L.L.M. 1401 M.P.S. 0599 M.F.A. 1009 History of Art and Design/Fine Arts M.S./M.F.A. 1009/ 1001 M.F.A. 1001 History of Art and Design/Information and Library Science M.S./M.S. Library and Information Science/Information Law and Society M.S./L.L.M 1601/ 1401 Planning and Law M.S./J.D. Dance/Movement Therapy M.S. 1099 Dance/Movement Therapy M.S. (spring/summer) Design Management Digital Arts Fine Arts 1009/ 1601 0206/ 1401 Curricula 174 Curricula 175 M.S. in Sustainable M.S. in Historic Preservation School of Architecture M.Arch. in Architecture M.S. in Architecture (Post-Professional) (First-Professional) (Post-Professional) Semester 1 Semester 1 ARCH-601 Design Studio I: Fundamentals 5 ARCH-611 Computer Media I: Multimedia 3 ARCH-631 ARCH-651 Structures I History and Theory I: Modern History Credit subtotal 3 ARCH-612 Design Studio II: Context 14 5 3 ARCH-632 Structures II 3 ARCH-652 History and Theory II: Architectural Theory 3 14 Semester 1 Pro Seminar I 3 UD-803 UD Studio I 5 GAUD Elective 6 UD-813 Methods and Computer Applications 3 Urban Design Theory 3 Summer Design Studio VI: Vertical Option 5 UD-993 14 Semester 2 Credit subtotal 11 ARCH-901 Fall Design Studio 5 UD-901 UD Studio II 5 ARCH-982 Pro Seminar II 3 UD-981A Culmination Project Research 3 ARCH-988 Thesis Research Credit subtotal 3 UD-991 3 14 ARCH-912 Fundamentals: Seminar and Studio 5 PLAN-602 History and Theory of City Planning 3 PLAN-603 Urban Economics 3 Elective Credits 3 Credits subtotal 14 Thesis 5 All-Institute Elective 3 Credit subtotal 8 PLAN-604 Planning Law 3 PLAN-605 Planning Methods I 3 3 All-Institute Electives 3 Elective Credits 8 14 Credits subtotal 14 Semester 3 UD-902 Semester 2 Urban Design and Implementation: Case Studies Credit subtotal Semester 3 Semester 1 Semester 1 PLAN-600 Semester 2 GAUD Elective Semester 3 ARCH-703 ARCH-803 Environmental Systems Semester 1 Credit subtotal Computer Media II: Advanced Multimedia Credit subtotal ARCH-781 3 Semester 2 ARCH-602 M.S. in City and Regional Planning M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design Semester 3 UD Culmination Project 5 PLAN-701 Planning Methods II All-Institute Elective 3 Credit subtotal 8 PLAN-810 or Studio: Sustainable Communities PLAN-820 or Studio: Land Use and Urban Design PLAN-850 3 SES-633A Environmental Law 3 PR-640 History/Theory of Preservation 3 SES-631 Sustainable Communities 3 PR-643B MSCI-610 Science of Sustainability 3 Architecture and Urban History I: Europe PR-641 Documentation/Interpretation 3 PR-651 Building Technology 3 Credit subtotal 12 PR-661 Preservation Law and Policy 3 Concepts of Heritage 3 Architecture and Urban History II: United States 3 Preservation Elective 3 Credit subtotal 12 3 Professional Elective Credits 5 Credit subtotal 14 Semester 2 3 Environmental Economics SES-633B Environmental Impact Assessment 3 PR-642A SES-634A Climate Change and Cities 1 PR-643A SES-634B Sustainability Indicators 1 SES-634C Life Cycle Analysis 1 SES-635A Solid Waste Management 1 Semester 3 SES-635B Water Quality Management 1 PR-891 SES-635C Urban Energy Management 1 Demonstration of Professional Competence All-Institute Elective Credits 2 PR-652A Interventions, Alterations, and 3 Adaptive Reuse Credit subtotal 14 5 5 ARCH-753 History and Theory III: Non-Western History 3 Environmental Controls 3 Studio: Sustainable Development 5 ARCH-761 ARCH-762 Material and Assemblies 3 Elective Credits 3 PLAN-820 Land Use Studio 14 Credits subtotal 11 SES-660A Demonstration of Professional Competence 2 Credit subtotal Semester 4 Total credits required 33 Design Studio IV: CAP 5 ARCH-861 Professional Practice 3 History/Theory Elective 3 GAUD Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14 Semester 5 ARCH-805 Design Studio V: Vertical Option 5 ARCH-861 Professional Practice 3 History/Theory Elective 3 GAUD Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14 PLAN-810 or Studio: Sustainable Communities PLAN-820 or Studio: Land Use and Urban Design PLAN-850 Studio: Sustainable Development 5 PLAN-891 Directed Research 2 Elective Credits 5 Credits subtotal 12 Semester 5 PLAN-892 Demonstration of Professional Competence 3 Elective Credits 6 Credits subtotal Semester 6 Design Studio VI: Vertical Option 5 History/Theory Elective 3 All-Institute Elective 6 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 84 Total credits required Preservation Elective 3 Credit subtotal 9 PR-840 Preservation Studio 5 PR-670A Intro to Real Estate Development 1 Semester 3 Semester 4 ARCH-704 ARCH-806 36 Semester 2 SES-632 Design Studio III: Urban Mixed Use Total credits required 9 60 3 Semester 4 Elective Credits 5 Credit subtotal 12 PR-670B Real Estate Market Analysis 1 Total credits required 40 PR-670C Preservation Tax Credit Projects 1 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 11 Total credits required 44 Curricula 176 Curricula 177 School of Art M.S. in Facilities Management Semester 1 Computer Applications 3 FM-631 Principles of Facilities Management 3 FM-663 Managerial Accounting and Finance 3 Real Estate Development 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 2 FM-632 Project Management 3 FM-634 Facility Programming and Design 3 Facility Maintenance and Operations 3 Elective Credits Credit subtotal FM-636 M.S. in Art and Design Education M.S. in Art and Design Education Advanced Certificate in and Management (Initial/Professional Certification) (Professional Certification) Art and Design Education Semester 1 FM-621 FM-633 M.S in Urban Placemaking History and Theory of Public Place 2 UPM-609 Lab: Analysis of Public Space 5 Take 3 of 4 one -credit courses offered as Proseminar: UPM-602A UPM-602B UPM-602C UPM-602D FM-733 UPH-611 3 Democracy, Equity, and Public 2 Space 12 “Area of Focus” Electives Economic Evaluation of Facilities 3 FM-735 Telecommunications: Concepts and Strategies 3 FM-771 Legal Issues 3 12 Semester 4 FM-798 HMS-697A ADE-616B Fieldwork in Art and Design Education (with Special Populations) 2 ADE-616C The Inclusive Art Room 1 ADE-630 Media and Materials: from Studio to Classroom 3 3 6 11 UPM-622 Open Space and Parks 3 UPM-612 Economics of Place 1 UPM-613 Place, Politics, & Management 2 “Area of Focus” Electives 4 Credit subtotal 10 Semester 4 UPM-698 Demonstration of Professional 3 Competence Placemaking Workshop 5 Thesis Writing I 1 Civic Engagement 1 Elective Credits 9 Credit subtotal 9 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 30 Total credits required 50 UPH-614 Roots of Urban Education Credit subtotal ADE-522 or ADE-524 3 ADE-616A or ADE-616B ADE-616C Media and Materials: From Studio to Classroom 3 Elective 2 10 3 Student Teaching: In the Galleries Survey of Art Education Literature 3 ED-605 The Teacher in Film and Fiction 3 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 9 Directed Research in Art and Design Education 2 Credit subtotal 9 ADE-517A Student Teaching: Saturday Art School 3 or ADE-517B Student Teaching: After School ADE-621 The Art of Teaching Art and Design 3 Thesis I 3 Elective 2 Credit subtotal 11 Student Teaching: In the Public Schools 4 ED-660A Semester 4 or ADE-531B ADE-532A Student Teaching Seminar ED-660B Thesis II 3 Credit subtotal 8 Total credits required (Plus courses and credits listed under "Certification Requirements") Directed Research in Art and Design Education (with Special Populations) Special Topics in Art and Design Education 1 38 3 Thesis I 3 Credit subtotal 8 Thesis II 3 Semester 4 ED-660B Elective 3 Credit subtotal 6 Total credits required Student Teaching: With Special Populations 1 ADE-521 Student Teaching: Saturday Art School 3 or ADE-523 ADE-616B Student Teaching: After School 2 ADE-620 The Art of Teaching Art and Design 3 ED-608 Roots of Urban Education 3 34 12 Semester 2 or ADE-524 ADE-531A or ADE-531B Student Teaching: Saturday Art School 3 Student Teaching: In the Galleries Student Teaching: In the Public Schools 4 3 Course in a Foreign Language 3 The courses may be taken at Pratt or transferred from another accredited post-secondary institution. Completion of the following workshops taken with a provider approved by NYSED: Child Abuse Identification Workshop 0 School Violence Prevention and Intervention Workshop 0 Training in Harassment, Bullying, Cyberbullying, and Discrimination in Schools: Prevention and Intervention 0 Passing scores on the following tests and assessments: Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST) Content Specialty Test (CST) ADE-532A Student Teaching Seminar 1 ADE-619 Foundations in Art and Design Education 3 Total credits required Course in Child/Adolescent Development Educating all Students (EAS) Student Teaching: With Special Populations Credit subtotal The following requirements must be fulfilled prior to applying for New York State Education Department (NYSED) Initial Certification in Visual Arts, Pre-K–12. Academic Courses Fieldwork in Art and Design Education with Special Populations ADE-522 Semester 3 Semester 3 Literacy and Language Acquisition in the Art Classroom Credit subtotal ED-602 3 ADE-531A 11 NYSED Certification Requirements ADE-506 Semester 2 Survey of Art Education Literature ED-660A 1 ADE-630 ED-602 ADE-620 The Inclusive Art Room 3 3 or ADE-523 Fieldwork in Art and Design Education (with Special Populations) Credit subtotal Student Teaching: Saturday Art School 2 Play and Performance: From Childhood to Pedagogy Foundations in Art and Design Education ADE-521 Semester 1 Fieldwork in Art and Design Education ADE-625 ADE-619 Semester 3 UPM-699 Demonstration of Professional 4 Competence 1 Semester 2 Urban and Contextual Design 3 Literacy and Language Acquisition in the Art Classroom ED-608 UPM-621 Strategic Planning and Management Semester 1 ADE-506 10 Semester 2 Credit subtotal Credit subtotal 3 Proseminar: Design and Infrastructure Proseminar: Planning & Policy Proseminar: Economics Proseminar: Management Credit subtotal Semester 3 FM-731 Semester 1 UPM-601 11 23 Education Teacher Portfolio Assessment (edTPA) 178 Curricula M.P.S. in Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity Development and M.P.S. in Art Therapy Development and M.P.S. in Art Therapy with Special Needs Children with Special Needs Children Leadership and Team Building Low Residency Program Year 3 Academic Year Program Low Residency Program Year 1 Semester 7 (spring) Semester 1 Year 1 ADT-641/ 621 Creative Arts Therapy I/ Special Ed. I 3 Semester 1 spring) Group Creative Arts Therapy I/ Special Ed. I 3 Creative Arts Therapy I Theory and Practice of Dance 3 Therapy I Semester 1 (spring) ADT-641/ 621 ADT-664/674 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV DT-671 DT-673 3 ADT-641 Creative Arts Therapy I 3 DT-673 Movement Behavior I 3 ADT-640 Development of Personality I Studies in Movement Behavior I ADT-641 Creative Arts Therapy I 3 ADT-640 Development of Personality I 3 ADT-645 Group Creative Arts Therapy I 3 Semester 2 (summer) ADT-661 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I 2 Credit subtotal 14 DT-672 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy II 3 Semester 3 (fall) DT-674 Studies in Movement Behavior II 3 ADT-661/ 671 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I ADT-632 Research and Thesis 3 ADT-642 Creative Arts Therapy II 3 Management Communications 2 Behavioral Simulation 1 Management of Arts and Cultural Organizations 2 ADT-645/ 625 2 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I/Special Ed. I 2 Art in the Urban Environment ADT-661/ 671 Credit subtotal 9 TECH-634/ 635 Materials in Creative Arts Therapy/Special Ed I 3 Credit subtotal 11 Semester 2 (spring) ACM-623 Financial Planning and Budget Management 2 ACM-624 Arts and Cultural Education 2 ACM-632 Organizational Behavior 2 ACM-642 Nonprofit Law and Governance 2 Credit subtotal 8 Semester 3 (summer I and summer II) ACM-626 Managing Innovation and Change 2 ACM-633 Negotiating 1 ACM-646 External Relations 2 ACM-652 Directed Research 1 ACM-664A Capstone Planning: Advisement 1 Credit subtotal 7 Semester 4 (fall) ACM-621 Strategic Marketing 2 ACM-622 Fundraising for Arts and Culture 2 ACM-643 Art, Culture, and Social Policy 2 ACM-654 Strategic Technology 2 Credit subtotal 8 Semester 5 (spring) Semester 2 ADT-632/ 633 Research and Thesis/ Research and Thesis: Special Education 3 ADT-642/ 622 Creative Arts Therapy II/ Special Ed. II 3 ADT-640 Development of Personality I 3 ADT-647 Art Diagnosis 3 ADT-662/ 672 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II/Special Ed. II 2 14 Semester 3 or ADT-651 or ADT-653 Advertising and Promotion 2 ACM-644 Cultural Pluralism: Designing Cultures of Inclusion 2 Finances and Financial Reporting for Nonprofit Managers 2 ACM-664B Shaping the 21st Century: Integrative Capstone 2 ACM-671 Managerial Decision-Making 1 DM-643 Intellectual Property Law 1 10 Total credits required 42 Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-645/ 625 Group Creative Arts Therapy I 3 TECH634/635 Materials in Creative Art Therapy 3 Semester 3 (fall) Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I 2 Credit subtotal 17 Year 2 3 Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy Adults Developmentally Disabled ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues 3 ADT-662/ 672 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II 2 ADT-647 Art Diagnosis 3 Semester 5 (summer) Children and Adolescents ADT-632 Research & Thesis 3 ADT-649 Advanced Seminar I in Creative 3 Arts Therapy Adults Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues 3 ADT-663/ 673 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III/Special Ed. III 2 ADT-688 Family Art Therapy 3 ADT-655 Development of Personality II 3 or ADT-651 or ADT-653 14 ADT-688 Family Art Therapy ADT-655 Development of Personality II 3 Credit subtotal ADT-646/ 626 ADT-650 or ADT-652 or ADT-654 ADT-664/ 674 Group Creative Arts Therapy II/Special Ed. II Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy Adults Children and Adolescents Semester 6 (fall) 3 ADT-663/673 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III Credit subtotal Children and Adolescents The Psychology of Intergroup 3 Relations and Institutional Process Expressive Modalities 3 ADT-646/ 626 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-660 Psychology of Intergroup Relations 3 ADT-650 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy Adults 3 or ADT-652 or ADT-654 Semester 2 Developmentally Disabled Children and Adolescents Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 53 ADT-642 Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-645 Group Creative Arts Therapy I 3 DT-671 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy I 3 Credit subtotal 2 ADT-640 Development of Personality I 3 Credit subtotal 17 or ADT-651 or ADT-653 ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues 3 DT-674 Movement Behavior II 3 Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy 3 Advanced Seminar I in Creative 3 Arts Therapy Adults Developmentally Disabled Children and Adolescents ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues 3 DT-675 Improvisation 3 ADT-663 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III 2 ADT-655 Development of Personality II 3 Credit subtotal 2 22 3 ADT-649 or ADT-651 or ADT-653 Adults ADT-655 Development of Personality II 3 ADT-662 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II Developmentally Disabled Children and Adolescents 2 Semester 5 (summer) 14 Semester 4 ADT-632 Research & Thesis DT-672 Theory and Practice of Dance 3 Therapy II 3 Semester 6 (fall) ADT-646 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-650 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy Adults 3 or ADT-652 or ADT-654 20 Year 2 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II ADT-649 2 Semester 4 (spring) ADT-662 Developmentally Disabled 3 Developmentally Disabled ADT-643 Semester 3 ADT-630 ADT-660 Credit subtotal 3 ADT-642/ 622 ADT-661/ 671 2 Semester 8 (summer) Semester 4 (spring) Credit subtotal ADT-649 3 Semester 2 (summer) Semester 4 ACM-628 ACM-651 M.S. in Dance/Movement Therapy Semester 1 ACM-631 ACM-645 M.S. in Dance/Movement Therapy Academic Year Program ACM-627 ACM-641 179 2 Semester 1 (fall) ACM-625 Curricula Developmentally Disabled Children and Adolescents ADT-660 The Psychology of Intergroup Relations and Institutional Process 3 ADT-664 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV 2 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV/Special Ed. IV 2 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14 Credit subtotal Total credits required 53 Total credits required 11 56 ADT-663 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III 2 Credit subtotal 22 Curricula 180 M.P.S. in Design Management Year 3 Semester 1 Semester 7 (spring) DM-631 Leadership Behavioral Simulation DM-632 Leadership and Team Building 2 Semester 8 (summer) DM-652 Design Management 2 ADT-646 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 DM-654 Strategic Technology 2 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy DM-661 Financial Reporting and Analysis 2 ADT-664 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV 2 ADT-660 The Psychology of Intergroup 3 Relations ADT-650 or ADT-652 or ADT-654 Adults DT-675 Improvisation 3 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 56 3 Developmentally Disabled Children and Adolescents Credit subtotal 9 Semester 2 DM-622 Advertising and Promotion 2 DM-633 Managing Innovation and Change 2 International Environment of Business 2 DM-641 DM-651 Management Communications 2 Credit subtotal 8 DM-634 Negotiating 1 DM-653 Design Operations Management 2 Semester 3 M.F.A. in Digital Arts Arts Concentration) (Digital Imaging Concentration) DDA-606A Graduate Seminar I 3 DDA-606A Graduate Seminar I 3 DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum 3 DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum 3 DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum DDA-617 Languages 3 DDA-617 Languages 3 DDA-617 Languages DDA-643 Animation Studio 3 DDA-622 Interactive Media I 3 DDA-645 Studio Elective 3 Studio Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 Credit subtotal 15 Semester 2 2 DM-642 Business Law 2 DM-643 Intellectual Property Law 1 DM-663 Financing: Companies and New 2 Ventures DM-671 Managerial Decision Making 1 Credit subtotal 8 DM-623 Building Entrepreneurial Courage 2 DM-644 Design Futures: Theory and Practice 2 DM-655 New Product Management and 2 Development DM-672 Business Strategy 2 DM-674 Shaping the 21st Century: Integrative Capstone 2 Credit subtotal 10 Total credits required 42 Semester 5 3 Studio Major 3 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Imaging Studio 3 Studio Electives 6 Studio Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 Credit subtotal 15 Semester 2 Semester 2 Studio Major 3 3 DDA-585 Interactive Installation 3 DDA-606B Graduate Seminar II 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Animation Studio 3 DDA-587 Art of Electronics 3 DDA-614 3-D Modeling 3 Liberal Arts 3 DDA Elective 6 DDA-606B Graduate Seminar II 3 DDA-645 Imaging Studio 3 Studio Electives 6 Studio Elective 3 DDA Elective 3 DDA Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 Credit subtotal 15 Studio Elective 3 Studio Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 Credit subtotal 15 Thesis I 6 Semester 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Post-Production 3 Semester 3 DDA-660A Thesis I 6 DDA-660A Thesis I 6 Art History Elective 3 DDA-646 Interactive Arts 3 DDA Electives 6 DDA Elective 3 DDA Electives 3 Art History Elective 3 Semester 4 Art History Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 FA-601 Thesis Statement I 2 Credit subtotal 15 FA-650B Thesis II 5 Thesis II 6 Studio Electives 7 Thesis II 6 Liberal Arts Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 60 Credit subtotal 15 Semester 3 Semester 3 DDA-653 DDA-660B Strategic Marketing 3 Graduate Seminar II 2 DM-621 Aesthetics DDA-643 Money and Markets Semester 4 Semester 2 PHIL-604 DDA-606B DM-662 7 Semester 1 3 1 Credit subtotal Semester 1 Graduate Seminar I Directed Research 1 Semester 1 DDA-606A DM-656 Capstone Planning: Advisement M.F.A. in Fine Arts M.F.A. in Digital Arts (Interactive Motion Arts Concentration) Semester 4 DM-673 181 M.F.A. in Digital Arts (3-D Animation and Semester 1 1 Curricula DDA-660A FA-650A Semester 4 Thesis II 6 Semester 4 Liberal Arts Elective 3 DDA-660B DDA Elective 3 Liberal Arts Elective 3 DDA Elective 3 DDA Elective or Internship 3 DDA Elective 3 DDA Elective or Internship 3 DDA-660B Credit subtotal 15 DDA Elective or Internship 3 Credit subtotal 15 Total credits required 60 Credit subtotal 15 Total credits required 60 Total credits required 60 Thesis I 5 Studio Electives 8 Credit subtotal 16 Curricula 182 183 School of Design M.F.A. in Communications Design Semester 1 Semester 4 Graduate Studio: Visual Language A 3 DES-797 M.F.A. Thesis Production & Exhibition 1 DES-720A Graduate Studio: Technology A 3 DES-799 M.F.A. Thesis II 3 DES-730A Graduate Studio: Transformation Design A Elective Credits 9 DES-795A M.F.A. Thesis Resource A 1 DES-795B or DES-607 M.F.A. Thesis Resource B 1 HD-641 Graduate Seminar A 3 3 Origins of Contemporary Comm. Design 3 Credit subtotal 15 Semester 2 3 Elective Credits 6 Credit subtotal 15 DES-760B Graduate Seminar B 3 DES-794A M.F.A. Thesis Resource A 1 DES-794B or HMS-697A M.F.A. Thesis Resource B 1 DES-796 Semester 2 DES-619 Design Process & Methodology 3 HA-601 or HD-662 Credit subtotal History of Western Art DES-602 Design Technology 3 History of Communications Design DES-603 Design Ideation & Visualization 3 Credit subtotal DES-604 Typography 3 3 Credit subtotal 12 2 11 Semester 3 DES-629 Fragrance Packaging Research Workshop 3 DES-631 Packaging: Graphics II 3 DES-660 Directed Research 2 DES-680 Digital Design 3 Credit subtotal 11 Semester 4 DES-634 or DES-640 DES-699A Graduate Thesis Writing M.F.A. Thesis I Typography II 3 Thesis Research 3 3 12 3 DES-791 Graduate Studio: Transformation Design B Credit subtotal Packaging: Graphics I DES-601 DES-730B Electronic Pre-press Structural Packaging Design 3 Graduate Studio: Technology B 3 IND-612A 3 DES-630 Design Writing DES-720B 3 Visual Perception DES-628 DES-751 or DES-640 3 Visual Communications I DES-625 62 Prerequisite Courses Graduate Studio: Visual Language B DES-620 IND-667B or IND-516 Total credits required 3 DES-710B Semester 1 15 Cross-Disciplinary Studio Semester 3 Semester 4 3 Credit subtotal DES-741 Design Management Year 1 (Core) Typography I DES-677 Portfolio Development 3 17 M.F.A. in Interior Design DES-618 Semester 1 DES-710A DES-760A M.I.D. in Industrial Design M.S. in Package Design Marketing 3 Design Management Thesis I 6 Credit subtotal 9 Semester 5 HD-505 or HD-506 History of Modern Design DES-699B Thesis II 3 Credit subtotal 5 2 Concepts of Design Total credits required IND-614A IND-672 48 DES-608 Design Procedures 3 DES-676 Computer Graphic Systems 3 Graduate Color Workshop I (2-D) 3-D I 2 2 IND-694 or IND-515 Drawing I IND-608 History of Industrial Design 2 Credit subtotal 11 2 Prototypes I Semester 2 IND-612B Industrial Design Technology II 3 (with Seminar) IND-614B Graduate Color Workshop II (2-D) Elective (Graphics) 2 3-D II 2 or IND-673 or IND-516 Prototypes II IND-543 or IND-541 Digital Ideation IND-615 or IND-690 Model Making IND-669 Business of Design for I.D. 2 Credit subtotal 13 2 Solidworks I 2 IND-587 Sustainable Production Methods 2 Directed Research I 2 Process/Product Studio IND-622 Interdepartmental Studio IND-624 Design Methodology IND-626 Design Strategies IND-628 Furniture Design IND-630 Exhibit Design IND-632 Tabletop Design IND-667A or IND-515 Global Research Seminar 3 Interior Design Studio 6 INT-713 Ideation and Representation 3 INT-715 Light, Color, and Material 3 INT-717 Interior Design Theory 3 Credit subtotal 15 Process/Product Studio INDC-622 Interdepartmental Studio Semester 2 INDC-624 Design Methodology INT-722 Interior Design Options Studio 6 INDC-626 Design Strategies INT-724 Construction and Fabrication 3 INDC-628 Furniture Design INT-726 INDC-630 Exhibit Design Environmental Technology and 3 Sustainable Elements INDC-632 Tabletop Design INDC-660B 3 Directed Research II 2 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 10 Theory Elective 3 Credit subtotal 15 INT-731 Interior Design Options Lab 3 INT-799A Thesis II 6 Elective 3 Elective 3 Internship 1 Credit subtotal 16 INT-799B Thesis II 6 INT-641 Professional Practice 2 Elective 3 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 60 Semester 3 Year 3 (Thesis) Semester 5 IND-515 or IND-658 Prototypes I HD-668 Thesis Seminar 2 IND-699A Thesis I 3 Elective 2 Credit subtotal 9 2 INT-9401 Special Project Semester 4 Semester 6 Thesis II 3 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 6 Total credits required Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses. IND-620 Prototypes II INT-711 INDC-620 IND-699B Semester 3 2 Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses. Industrial Design Workshop I Year 2 (Research) IND-660A prerequisite courses Industrial Design Technology I 3 (with Seminar) Semester 1 Global Research Seminar 60 NYSED requirements *History of Interior Design I and II may be required for students whose undergraduate studies did not cover the subject matter. This will be determined by a review of an applicant’s transcripts and an interview with the academic advisor. *Students accepted into the three-year M.F.A. program must complete the qualifying year classes before starting the program as described above. The qualifying program is described under the M.S. as semesters 1 and 2. 2 Prototypes I Elective 2 Credit subtotal 11 Curricula 184 Curricula 185 School of Information and Library Science M.S. in Library and Information Science M.S. in Library and Information Science: M.S. in Museums and Digital Culture M.S./M.F.A. in Library and Information Library Media Specialist Semester 1 Science/Digital Arts Semester 1 Semester 1 LIS-651 Information Professions 3 LIS-651 Information Professions 3 LIS-652 Information Services and Sources 3 LIS-653 Knowledge Organizations 3 LIS-648 Library Media Centers 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 9 Credit subtotal 9 Semester 2 Information Services and Resources 3 3 LIS-654 Information Technologies 3 Elective Credits 3 ED-610 Child Development 3 Credit subtotal 9 LIS-691 Serving Children and Youth with Disabilities 3 Elective Credits 9 Credit subtotal 12 Credit subtotal 9 Knowledge Organization 3 LIS-654 Information Technologies Semester 3 Semester 4 Elective Credits 9 Credit subtotal 9 Total credits required Museums & Digital Culture: Theory and Practice 3 LIS-681 Community Building and Engagement 3 LIS-653 Semester 2 LIS-652 LIS-653 Semester 3 LIS-676 Literature and Literacy for Children 3 LIS-677 Literature and Literacy for Young Adults 3 Credit subtotal 36 6 Semester 4 LIS-690 Student Teaching: Elementary 3 ED-608 The Roots of Urban Education 3 Elective Credits Credit subtotal 3 9 LIS-680 LIS-654 LIS-655 3 Elective credits 3 Credit subtotal 9 Total Credits required 45 3 Credit subtotal 9 Digital Preservation and Curation LIS-669 Digital Asset Management LIS-663 Metadata, Description and Access LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Access and Description LIS-663 Programming for Cultural Heritage LIS-647 Visual Resources Management LIS-695 Photography Collections Credit subtotal 3 LIS-651 Information Professions 3 LIS-657 Digital Humanities 3 Information Visualization DDA-572 or DDA-626 Electronic Music and Sound LIS-658 LIS-680 Instructional Technologies DDA-600 Digital Arts In Context 3 LIS-675 Museum and Library Education and Outreach DDA-610 Fundamentals of Computer Graphics 3 Museums & Library Research at Metropolitan DDA-616 Design for Interactive Media 3 Credit subtotal 15 LIS-652 Information Services and Sources 3 LIS-653 Knowledge Organization 3 DDA-500 Interactive Studio, or DDA-585 Interactive Installation 3 DDA-622 Interactive Media 3 Electives may be selected from the below lists of required or recommended courses. Credit subtotal 12 DDA-587 Physical Computing 3 DDA-660 Thesis II 3 Credit subtotal 17 Total credits required 86 LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives 9 LIS-669 Digital Asset Management 3 LIS-630 Information Science Research 3 Elective 3 Credit subtotal 9 LIS-643 Information Architecture & Interaction Design NYSED certification requirements LIS-608 Human Information Behavior The following academic requirements must be fulfilled prior to applying for Initial Teaching Certification. The courses or workshops may be taken at Pratt or transferred from another postsecondary school or institution. LIS-644 Usability; Theory and Practice LIS-698 3 Elective 3 Seminar/ Practicum with Research Project 3 Course in Child/Adolescent Psychology 3 Credit subtotal 9 One semester of a foreign language 3 Total Credits required 36 Workshop in Child Abuse Prevention 0 Workshop in Life Safety and 0 Violence Prevention 0 3 DDA-614 3-D Modeling 3 DDA-660 Thesis I 3 Note: 6 credits of non-DDA courses required for the M.F.A. in DA degree are taken in the M.S. LIS program from list of M.S. LIS electives with asterisks (See List). Information Technologies Electives (See List) 3 Credit subtotal 18 LIS Elective Course 3 LIS Elective Course 3 Semester 6 3 LIS Course from the list of 3 “Required Electives” (See List) DDA-620 Graphics Programming 3 DDA-625 Video Editing 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 4 Subtotals by Degree: M.S. in LIS 30 M.F.A. in DA 45 Elective Courses—M.F.A. in DA Recommended Electives LIS Course from the list of 3 “Required Electives” (See List) LIS Course from the list of “Recommended Electives” (See List) 3 DDA-645 Digital Imaging Studio 3 DDA-650 Thesis Research 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 4 Elective Course (Electives may be selected from lists of required or recommended courses.) DDA Semester 2 LIS-654 LIS Audio for Digital Media Semester 3 Semester 3 Choose one from the following: Semester 5 Information Policy 3 3 Semester 1 LIS-611 LIS-629 Information Technologies Choose one course from the following: Student Teaching: Secondary 3 Instructional Technologies Knowledge Organization Semester 2 Semester 5 LIS-692 Electives LIS-679 DDA-587 Physical Computing 3 DDA-612 Digital Imaging 3 DDA-614 3-D Modeling 3 DDA-620 Graphics Programming 3 Other Electives DDA-510 Artist Books in the Digital Age 3 DDA-513 3-D Lighting and Rendering DDA-514 Storyboarding and Storytelling 3 DDA-584 ActionScript 3 DDA-624 3-D Computer Animation 3 DDA-630 Advanced Interactive Media 3 DDA-643 Digital Animation Studio 3 3 Curricula 186 Curricula 187 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Advanced Certificate in Archives Elective Courses—M.S. in LIS Semester 1 Recommended Electives LIS-625 Required Electives: 6 credits (two 3-credit courses) related to digital technology and information; students select two courses from the following: LIS-608 Human Information Behavior Conservation and Preservation 3 LIS-643 Information Architecture and 3 Interaction Design LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives Metadata, Description and Access 3 LIS-680 Instructional Technology 3 LIS-693 Digital Libraries 3 Recommended Electives: 12 credits (four 3-credit courses). Note: “SS” indicates summer session. Besides these elective courses, students may choose other electives such as Photography Collections, Film and Media Collections, and Digital Libraries. Credit subtotal 3 Advanced Certificate in Library Information Studies Media Specialist Four courses are needed in order to obtain the Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries. This certificate is for students who have already graduated and obtained an MLS, whether from Pratt-SILS or another accredited library school. LIS-699 3 Museum Library Research LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation LIS-667 Art Librarianship Credit subtotal 3 LIS-686 Performing Arts Librarianship Total credits required 12 LIS-688 Map Collections LIS-689 Rare Books and Special Collections LIS-697 Special Topics in Florentine Art and Culture LIS Elective courses: LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation LIS-650 Principles of Records Management Credit subtotal LIS-686 Performing Arts Librarianship LIS-643 Information Architecture Special Topics in Electronic Collections and Sources (SS) 3 LIS-688 Map Collections LIS-665 Online Databases Humanities and Social Sciences 3 3 LIS-642 Special Topics in Thesaurus Design and Construction 3 LIS-686 Special Topics in Performing Arts Librarianship 3 LIS-696 Special Topics in Special Collections Institutes 3 LIS-698 Practicum/Seminar 3 9 LIS-629 3 3 Credit subtotal 3 Special Topics in the Art World: Services and Sources Information Systems Analysis 3 Credit subtotal LIS-618 Abstracting and Indexing Student Teaching I LIS-677 Management of Electronic Records LIS-641 LIS-690 Curatorial: LIS-669 LIS-634 3 LIS Elective from the following courses: 3 3 Literature and Literacy for Children 3 Information Policy Academic Libraries and Scholarly Communication LIS-676 LIS Elective (See list below) LIS-611 LIS-631 30 3 Semester 2 Projects in Digital Archives Special Topics in Museum and 3 Library Research Total credits required Library Media Centers Semester 1 LIS-665 LIS-629 30 LIS-689 Rare Books and Special Collections LIS-694 Film and Media Collections LIS-695 Photography Collections LIS-634 Conservation LIS-635 Archives Application LIS-655 Digital Preservation 3 3 Semester 1 LIS-648 3 Special Topics in Online Data- 3 base Searching and Services LIS-623 Credit subtotal M.S. in History of Art and Design Semester 1 Credit subtotal Metadata LIS-621 24 LIS-698 LIS-663 LIS-605 6 LIS Elective Courses (8) (See Concentration Advisor) 3 Seminar and Practicum Seminar and Practicum Independent Study LIS Elective (See list below) Semester 4 LIS-698 Advanced Certificate in Library and Museum Libraries 1 course is required: Semester 3 3 LIS-663 3 Semester 2 3 LIS-632 Management of Archives and Special Collections Advanced Certificate in HA-602 or HA-650 Art History (Film/Design Electives) Digital Technology: 9 3 Instructional Technology 3 Semester 2 Student Teaching II 3 HA-602 or HA-650 Theory and Methodology HA-650 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation 9 The following academic requirements must be fulfilled prior to applying for Initial Teaching Certification. The courses or workshops may be taken at Pratt or transferred from another postsecondary school or institution. LIS Elective from the following courses: Credit subtotal LIS-692 NYSED certification requirements Semester 2 3 LIS-680 18 Course in Child/Adolescent Psychology 3 One semester of a foreign language 3 Workshop in Child Abuse Prevention 0 Workshop in Life Safety and Violence Prevention 0 3 Art History (Architecture Electives) 3 Total credits required 3 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Literature and Literacy for Young Adults Credit subtotal 3 Theory and Methodology Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art History (Non-Western Electives) 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 9 Art History (Pre-Renaissance Electives) 3 Semester 3 Art History (Renaissance/ Baroque Electives) 3 Projects in Digital Archives Elective Credits 3 LIS-680 Instructional Technologies Credit subtotal 9 LIS-693 Digital Libraries Semester 4 LIS-697 Special Topics in London/ E-Publishing HA-605 Thesis 3 LIS-651 Web Design Art History (Renaissance/ Impressionism Electives) 3 Credit subtotal Elective Credits 3 3 3 Semester 3 Credit subtotal Total credits required LIS-668 Projects & Moving LIS Elective from the following courses LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Museum Library Education and Outreach: LIS-697 Special Topics in Research Local Histories LIS-675 LIS-697 Special Topics in Cultural Heritage Conservation Museum and Library Education 3 Outreach Credit subtotal 3 Seminar and Practicum 3 Credit subtotal 3 Total credits required 12 Semester 4 LIS-698 9 36 188 Curricula M.S./M.S. in History of Art and Design/ M.S./M.F.A. in History of Art and Library and Information Science Design/Fine Arts Semester 1 LIS-651 LIS-652 HA-602 or HA-650 Information Professions 3 Information Services and Sources 3 Theory and Methodology 3 Semester 1 Semester 1 HA-602 Theory and Methodology 3 Studio Elective 3 Studio Major 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Art History Elective 2 Credit subtotal 11 Liberal Arts Elective Credit subtotal 3 Mentored Studies I 1 HA-560 Museology 3 HMS-549A Encounters I 1 WR-602A Writing Practices I 3 HA-610 Internship 6 All-Institute Electives 6 WR-601 The Writing Studio 4 HA-610B Internship 6 Credit subtotal 10 Writing Elective 2 A choice of 6 elective credits from: Credit subtotal 10 HA-600I Materials and Techniques of Venice, Pratt in Venice Program 3 ADE-524 Student Teaching in the Gallery 2 LIS-629 Museum and Library Research 3 LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation 3 ACM-621 Strategic Marketing 2 ACM-622 Fundraising for the Arts and Culture 2 Semester 2 HMS-549B HMS-650B Semester 3 Studio Elective 3 3 HMS-659A Studio Major 3 Information Technologies HA-602 or HA-650 Theory and Methodology Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art History Elective 2 Credit subtotal 11 Liberal Arts Elective 3 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal Semester 3 Required core courses: WR-600A 3 LIS-654 HA-650 Semester 1 3 3 3 Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies Methodologies I Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Knowledge Organization 189 HMS-650A 15 Semester 2 LIS-653 M.F.A. in Writing M.A. in Media Studies Theory, Criticism, and History of Art, Design, and Architecture Requirements Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Semester 2 Encounters II 1 Semester 2 All-Institute Electives 6 WR-600B Mentored Studies II 1 Methodologies II 3 WR-601 The Writing Studio 4 Credit subtotal 10 HMS Elective 3 Writing Elective 2 Thesis Workshop 4 Credit subtotal 10 All-Institute Electives 6 Semester 3 Credit subtotal 10 WR-601 The Writing Studio 4 Total credits required 30 WR-602B Writing Practices II 3 WR-603A Fieldwork Residency I 1 ACM-624 Arts and Cultural Education 2 Writing Elective 2 ACM-642 2 Credit subtotal 10 Nonprofit Law and Governance ACM-651 2 21 18 Semester 3 WR-601 The Writing Studio 4 Finance and Financial Reporting for Nonprofit Managers Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 WR-603B Fieldwork Residency II 4 Total credits required 6 History of Art and Design Elective 3 WR-604A Final Thesis Project 1 6 Credit subtotal 14 Credit subtotal 9 Total credits required 39 FA-601 Thesis Statement I 2 FA-650B Art History Elective 6 Library Science Elective 6 Credit subtotal 12 Art History Elective Library Science Elective FA-650A Semester 4 Thesis 1 5 Semester 4 Studio Elective 3 Credit subtotal 12 Art History Elective 5 Thesis II 5 Library Science Elective 6 Studio Elective 3 Credit subtotal 11 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Thesis 3 Credit subtotal 13 Credit subtotal 3 Total credits required 60 History of Art and Design Electives 9 Credit subtotal 9 Thesis 3 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal 6 Total credits required 75 Semester 5 Semester 4 Semester 6 HA-605 Curricula Semester 5 Semester 6 HA-605 (For the M.S. degree—one elective in each of the distribution requirement fields: Film/Photo/ Design, Architecture, Non-Western, PreRenaissance, Renaissance through 18th Century, 19th/20th/21st Centuries) 190 Architecture Faculty Vito Acconci Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., College of the Holy Cross; M.F.A.,Writers’ Workshop, University of Iowa; his design and architecture come from another direction: a background first in writing and then in art. By the late ’80s his work had crossed over, and he formed Acconci Studio, whose operations come from computer thinking and mathematical and biological models. Acconci Studio treats architecture as an occasion for activity and making spaces fluid, changeable, and portable. The Studio is currently working on a three-story building in Milan, a bridge-system and park near Delft, and an amphitheater in Stavanger, and has other projects in Toronto and Indianapolis. Nick Agneta, AIA Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Cooper Union; R.A., New York State; member, Queens Chapter American Institute of Architects; architect and construction manager in the NYC metropolitan area; awards and honors: Suffolk County 9/11 Memorial Competition, First Place; Alabama School of Fine Arts Competition, Second Place; achieved licensure with New York State in 1986; has taught at New York University and New York Institute of Technology and is the technical director for Nelligan White Architects in New York, N.Y.; currently teaches professional practice and is IDP coordinator at Pratt. Carlos Arnaiz Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Philosophy, Williams College; M.Arch., Harvard University; an associate partner at Stan Allen Architect; previously worked for Office dA in Cambridge, Field Operations and Bumpzoid Architects in New York, and as a founding principal for RUF studio in New York. His experience at these offices has ranged from high-level strategic planning for cities around the world to project design and construction documentation on commercial and residential projects. At Field Operations, he served as project manager and lead designer on the transformation of a 650-acre plot of land in the middle of San Juan, Puerto Rico, into the island’s largest and most important Botanical Garden. He led the development of all aspects of the project including the creation of an expanded river corridor along one of San Juan’s principal waterways. His academic research has focused on the ongoing relationship between ornament and structure in design. While at Harvard, he collaborated with Peter Rowe on a number of research projects investigating innovative solutions in the planning and management of contemporary urban regions. He has served on juries at various institutions in the U.S.A. including Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Pennsylvania, where he taught advanced studios in the Landscape Architecture Program from 2002 to 2004. Architecture Faculty 191 Kutan Ayata Robert Cervellione Manuel De Landa Catherine Ingraham Mehmet Ferda Kolatan Adjunct Assistant Professor M.Arch., Princeton; B.F.A., Architecture, Massachusetts College of Art, Boston; partner/ co-director of Young & Ayata, a practice dedicated to both building commissions and experimental research and setting out to explore novel formal and organizational possibilities in architecture and urbanism. Previously, Kutan worked at Reiser + Umemoto, where he was the lead project architect for the O-14 Tower in Dubai and performed as a senior designer in a number of projects and competition entries; awards: Suzanne Kolarik Underwood Thesis Prize. Visiting Instructor B.Arch., Architecture, Roger Williams University; M.Arch., Architecture, Pratt Institute; principal of CERVER Design Studio, a multidisciplinary practice utilizing leading edge methodologies with advanced computational systems; actively involved in research that is focused on the advancement of digital fabrication and computational geometry; has worked for influential architects and designers creating work of the highest quality that garners international recognition; has also taught at SCI-Arc in Los Angeles and the University of Michigan. Adjunct Professor B.F.A., School of Visual Arts; has authored five philosophy books: War in the Age of Intelligent Machines (1991), A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History (1997), Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (2002), A New Philosophy of Society (2006), and Philosophy, Emergence, and Simulation (2009); also teaches at the University of Pennsylvania, SCI-Arc in Los Angeles, and holds the Gilles Deleuze chair at the European Graduate School in Switzerland. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Arch. Dipl. (with distinction), RWTH Aachen; founded SU11 architecture+design with Erich Schoenenberger as an experimental architecture practice in New York City; firm has since received national and international acclaim and has been published widely; awards include Lucille Smyser Lowenfish Memorial Prize and the Honor Award for Excellence in Design, Columbia University. Alexandra Barker Steven Chang, AIA Adjunct Assistant Professor; Coordinator, M.Architecture B.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Harvard University; has coordinated the M.Arch program since 2001; grants: (with Catherine Ingraham) NCARB GRANT to create a seminar integrating practice and the academy; (with Nico Kienzl) FIPSE/CSDS grant to integrate sustainable practices into the GAUD curriculum; is a principal of Barker Freeman Design Office, a New York practice employing material research, fabrication technologies, and system design as generative tools in the development of multivalent spatial solutions. Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., University of California at Berkeley; Eisner Prize in Architecture; a senior associate at Polshek Partnership Architects, who has worked as a senior designer/project architect on numerous cultural and institutional projects, including the New York Botanical Garden and the Brooklyn Museum; also has worked in construction as a carpenter and traveled extensively while working at architecture offices in Portugal, Germany, and Korea. Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.A., Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins University; chair of Graduate Architecture, Pratt Institute, 1999–2005; editor, Assemblage, 1991–98 and (with Marco Diani) of Restructuring Architectural Theory; author, Architecture, Animal, Human; Architecture and the Burdens of Linearity; and over 50 published articles on architectural theory and history; recipient of New York State Council on the Arts grant, Canadian Center for Architecture research fellowship, Graham Foundation grants, NEA grant, SOM research fellowship, Chicago, and four MacDowell Colony residencies; winner, Museum of Women’s History design competition; has given invited lectures, seminars, and symposia at over 60 national and international universities. Stéphanie Bayard Adjunct Assistant Professor M.S., Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Dipl. Arch. Paris La Villette; teaches design studio and urban design seminars; previously taught at Ohio State and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; founded aa64 with Phillip Anzalone, as an experimental practice focusing on design, digital fabrication, and material construction in the United States and Europe; their work has been published and exhibited at the AIA NY Center for Architecture. Cristobal Correa Assistant Professor B.S.C.E., Universidad de Chile; M.S.C.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; associate principal, Buro Happold, New York office; joined Buro Happold in 1998 and now manages teams in the structural engineering division, dealing with, among other things, tension structures, longspan structures, and façades; notable projects include the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas; the Arena das Dunas in Natal, Brazil; and the Roppongi Canopies in Roppongi, Japan; serves as a member of the board of the Structural Engineers Association of New York. Theo David Meta Brunzema Adjunct Associate Professor M.Arch., Columbia University; principal of Meta Brunzema Architect P.C., an award-winning architecture and urban design practice that addresses contemporary spatial, environmental, and socio-political challenges in innovative ways; the firm specializes in carbon-neutral design; current projects include “Park Avenue Market Mile” in N.Y.C. and “River Pool” in Beacon, N.Y. Brunzema is a LEED(R) accredited professional. Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Arch., Yale University; practicing architect in New York City and Nicosia, Cyprus; studied under Paul Rudolph at Yale; tenured professor, former faculty president, and chair of graduate architecture; has been awarded the 2009 Cyprus Architects Association Prize in Architecture, the 2001 Cyprus State Architecture Award, the New York City Bard Honor Award, NYSAIA Design Award, and was nominated for the Mies van der Rohe Award; his work as an architect/educator has been exhibited and published worldwide. Deborah Gans Professor B.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Princeton University; design work has been published and exhibited at IFA Paris, RIBA London, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Venice Biennial; currently engaged in a community-based project in New Orleans funded initially by HUD and in a master plan for The Graham School, Hastingson-Hudson, New York; publications include The Le Corbusier Guide, now in its third edition; The Organic Approach; and, most recently, Extreme Sites: Greening the Brownfield. Hina Jamelle Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Denison University; M.Arch., University of Michigan; co-director and a principal architect at Contemporary Architecture Practice with Ali Rahim. James Garrison Robert Kearns Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Syracuse University; founder of Garrison Architects, a firm founded in 1991 and located in DUMBO, Brooklyn; since its inception, the firm has risen to the forefront of modular building and sustainability innovation; working across a diverse range of project types, from private residential to large-scale public work, Garrison Architects pairs a research-driven approach to design with highly refined modernist aesthetics; the firm collaborates with designers, engineers, and manufacturers to produce architecture that responds to economic, cultural, technical, and environmental challenges. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A.E., M.A.E., Penn State University; educational background emphasized integration of building engineering disciplines with architectural design and sustainability; has worked in construction in Singapore and Germany; joined Buro Happold’s New York office in 2003 as a graduate engineer and is currently an associate; his work with Buro Happold has explored various areas of building power systems, energy-efficient lighting design, and alternative energies; experience with international projects and architects has familiarized him with a vast array of innovative design and construction practices. Erik Ghenoiu Karel Klein Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Geography (cultural), Clark University, M.A. History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University; M.S. Geography (urban), University of Wisconsin at Madison; Ph.D. Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning, Harvard University; works on architecture, design, and urban planning of the 19th and 20th centuries, with particular focus on Germany and the United States; has taught at Pratt, Parsons, and the University of Wisconsin at Madison; has served as a fellow of several research institutes on both sides of the Atlantic and is currently involved in founding a new institute in Berlin; currently a co-editor and faculty coordinator for GAUD’s Tarp publication. Adjunct Associate Professor B.S. Civil Engineering, B.S. Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; M.Arch., Columbia University; co-director of Ruy Klein; investigating craft, precision, and the evolution of design expertise in the digital age, she continues to foreground the persistence of the designer in contemporary culture; publications include GA Houses, The New York Times Magazine, and Architectural Record; registered architect in New York State. Jose Gonzalez Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; cofounder and principal, SOFTlab, a design studio. Carisima Koenig Visiting Instructor B.A., Drake University; M.Arch., Iowa State University; senior associate and LEED-accredited professional practicing architecture at EYP Architects & Engineers; specializes in the renovation of modernist icons; her research interests include the evolving relationships between architecture, urbanism, and security from modernism to contemporary practices; her work also addresses gender, diversity, and politics in architecture. Sulan Kolatan Adjunct Professor Diploma, Technische Hochschule Aachen Universitat; M.S., Architecture and Building Design, Columbia University; founded KOL/MAC Studio along with William MacDonald, in New York City in 1988. Kolatan and MacDonald have taught architecture as visiting professors at Barnard College, Ohio State University, the University of Pennsylvania, Parsons School of Design, University of Virginia, the Institute of Advanced Architectural Studies in Basel, Switzerland, and Venice, Italy, and Columbia University. The Kolatan/MacDonald Studio primarily works with strangely shaped structures, of housing and apartment blocks. Dubbed “Vertical Urbanism,” the apartment structures are divided into pods that structurally conform to the addition and removal of other pods. Craig Konyk Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Catholic University; M.Arch., University of Virginia; founder of Konyk Architecture, a selfdescribed creative architectural design studio, a characteristic that is evident in all of its work, ranging from the smaller-scale designs, such as its Hybrid House, to its larger-scale proposals for the Museum of Polish History; the firm creates eye-catching structures that are rooted on the contextual underpinnings of the site, supported by their studies of sustainability, or constitute a redefinition of the public realm; the firm has been awarded two NYFA fellowships, two ACSA Design Awards, six AIA New York Chapter Design Awards, and has exhibited work at Parsons School of Design, the Architectural League of New York, and the Storefront for Art and Architecture. Christopher Kroner Adjunct Assistant Professor B.S., Architecture Design, University of Virginia; M.Arch., Columbia; senior designer at Dean/Wolf Architects in New York City; teaches courses in a digital design sequence, focusing on fundamental and advanced techniques in modeling, simulation, visualization, analysis, scripting, and fabrication; has taught at Columbia University GSAPP, the City College of New York, the University of Virginia, and at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. 192 Architecture Faculty Sameer Kumar Ariane Lourie-Harrison Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., CEPT, Ahmedabad; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; LEED-accredited professional; currently at KPF Associates, working on projects in Hong Kong, China, and India; previously worked for Heintges as building envelope consultant with Studio Daniel Libeskind, Santiago Calatrava, Polshek Partnership, and other New York practices; worked for FTL Design Engineering Studio and specialized in long-span, lightweight, and deployable structures; is a visiting critic at Columbia and Parsons. Adjunct Associate Professor A.B., Princeton University; M.Arch., Columbia University; Ph.D. (modern architecture), Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; registered architect; principal and co-founder of Harrison Atelier: recent projects include a theaterpavilion at Architecture OMI (Ghent, NY, 2014) and installation-performances VEAL (The Invisible Dog Art Center,2013), Pharmacophore (Storefront for Art and Architecture, 2011), and Anchises (Bournemouth, Bristol, and New York, 2010); has been recognized for innovative installation design (World Stage Design, 2013); editor of an anthology, Architectural Theories of the Environment: Posthuman Territory (Routledge, 2013) and contributed to a number of architectural journals (Log, Perspecta, Speciale Z, Volume); received fellowships from the AIA/AAF, the Marandon Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation; has taught at Yale and MIT. Sanford Kwinter Professor B.I.S. University of Waterloo/University of Toronto; D.E.A., Université de Paris; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University; founder/editor ZONE 1984-2001; co-director, Master of Design Studies, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, 2008-2014; author: Architectures of Time: Toward a Theory of the Event in Modernist Culture; Mutations: the American City; Far From Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture; Requiem: For the City at the End of the Millennium; recipient of Arts and Letters Award, American Academy of Arts and Letters, 2013. Thomas Leeser Associate Professor Dipl. Ing. Architect; founder and principal, Leeser Architecture, an internationally acclaimed studio, known as a pioneer in design that specializes in the inclusion of new media and digital technologies in architecture. Carla Leitao Adjunct Associate Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Architecture School of Lisbon; architect (licensed in Europe), designer, and writer; co-founder, AUM Studio (architecture and multimedia) and Umasideia (architecture and engineering) in Lisbon; projects include “Visibility” (UIA Celebration of Cities competition, 2003, Lisbon, Portugal); “Suture,” a multimedia installation; MAK Vertical Garden (competition by invitation, 2006); awards include the Akademie Schloss Solitude Fellowship, 2005. John Lobell Professor B.Arch., M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; interests include architecture, cultural theory, consciousness, Buddhism, information theory, and generative genomics; recipient of several grants, including one from the Graham Foundation; author of numerous articles and several books, including Between Silence and Light: Spirit in the Architecture of Louis I. Kahn (Shambhala, 2008); consults on metal fabrication with Milgo/Bufkin; director of research, Timeship. Peter Macapia Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; M.T.S., Harvard University; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University; his design focuses on problems of computation, mathematics, the geometry and topology of matter/energy relations, and problems of urban density; publications include Log, Monitor, Spread, and The Cambridge Journal of Architecture; recipient of grants for research in sustainability and design from Columbia University and Pratt Institute; has taught and lectured internationally in New York (Columbia and Pratt), Los Angeles (SCIArc), Paris (ESA, Malaquais), Mexico City (UNAM), and Tokyo (TUS). William MacDonald Chair of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design M.Sc. Architecture and Urban Design, Columbia University; B.Arch., Syracuse University; attended the Architectural Association in London; director, KOL/MAC, LLC, Architecture + Design, co-founded with Sulan Kolatan; has taught as professor, distinguished visiting professor, or visiting chair at the University of Virginia (as acting chair); Columbia University; the University of Pennsylvania; Southern California Institute for Architecture; The Ohio State University; City University of New York; University of California at Berkeley; and Pratt Institute; academic and professional honors and awards include the “40 under 40” award, Progressive Architecture awards, AIA design awards; represented the U.S. in the U.S. national pavilion and for the international segment of the International Architecture Bienniale in Venice; via KOL/MAC, has collaborated with various leading companies, including DuPont, AI Implant of Biotech Industries, Alias, Merck Chemicals, Autodesk, C-TEK, ARUP AGU, DitlevFilms, Inc.; exhibited at MoMA, SFMoMA, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, Centre Georges Pompidou, Barbican Art Gallery, Architekturmuseum, Mori Contemporary Art Museum, 1st International Architecture Biennial in Beijing, VITRA, Yale University, and the FRAC; publications include The New York Times; The Washington Post, CNN, Phaidon Press, Rizzoli, GA Houses, AD Magazine, Architectural Digest, ACTAR, Domus, Lotus International, Architectural Record; co-author, Lubricuous Architectures with Kari Andersen; a comprehensive monograph titled KOL/MAC WORK BOOK is currently in preparation for publication. Radhi Majmuder Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Economics, M.S., Civil Engineering, Columbia University; M.B.A., Global Executive, London Business School; vice president of an internationally recognized and innovative structural engineering firm in charge of U.S. and Caribbean operations from its office in New York; licensed professional engineer with over 18 years of experience; has worked for various design consultancies that specialize in the design of buildings, bridges, marine and coastal works, and industrial and environmental structures; has directed many projects from the conceptual planning and proposal stages through the entire design, engineering, and construction cycle, including staffing and facilities start-up. Rosalinda Malibiran Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch. Design, University of Florida; M.Arch., Columbia University; a visual effects artist working for Blue Sky Studios, who has worked on feature films such as Rio, IceAge: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, Horton Hears a Who, IceAge: The MeltDown, and Robots. Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Philosophy, Kenyon College; Master of Landscape Architecture, University of California at Berkeley; interests include how art and design contribute to the success of the urban experiment; current research focuses on temporal and situational spatiality; partner, thread collective, a multidisciplinary design firm that explores the seams between building, art, and landscape; a broadly defined notion of sustainability, existing site characteristics, and sensory experience further inform the firm’s design process; has worked for five years with Mary Miss, one of the most influential artists in the public realm. Architecture Faculty 193 Deborah McGuinness Brian Ringley Paul Segal Visiting Associate Professor B.S., Civil Engineering, Villanova University; joined Robert Silman Associates in 1994 and was named an associate with the firm in 2001; works on a range of building types, from private residences to university laboratories; has extensive experience with new construction and renovation projects for primary and secondary schools in both the public and private sector; Professional Engineer registered in New York State; has been on the Board of Directors for SEAoNY as a director and secretary and is currently active in the education and scholarship committees. Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., M.Arch., University of Cincinnati; design technology platform specialist at Woods Bagot leading global efforts on computation, fabrication, and building analysis; has also taught at the University of Cincinnati and the City University of New York and led workshops at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, +FARM, and ACADIA with a focus on data-driven parametric workflows for automated manufacturing. Adjunct Professor B.A., Princeton University; M.F.A., Princeton University; founding partner of the internationally published firm, Paul Segal Associates Architects, LLP, who were recipients of 17 AIA Awards for Design Excellence; past president of the AIA/NYC and of the Center for Architecture Foundation; author of the textbook, Professional Practice: A Guide to Turning Designs into Buildings (W.W. Norton, 2006); also an adjunct professor and director of practice at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture; holds an NCARB certificate and is a licensed architect in seven states. Benjamin Martinson Visiting Instructor Bachelor of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder; M.Arch., Pratt Institute; worked for the New York office of Buro Happold as an intern; spent two years working for KOL/MAC, LLC, a digital design practice based in New York and Istanbul; currently is working on starting his own design firm with small projects in Portland, Oregon, and Boulder, Colorado. Bruce Nichol, ARB, RIBA Visiting Professor B.A. (Hons), Huddersfield Polytechnic; Graduate Diploma, Architecture, Oxford Brookes University; a licensed architect in the U.K. and a founding partner of Front Inc.; formerly with Foster and Partners and the Renzo Piano Building Workshop; has over 25 years of architectural experience; an exponent of protean practice and design innovation, his built work includes the Morgan Library and Museum, and the New York Times Building, New York, Perez Art Museum, Miami, and the Kimbell Art Museum expansion in Fort Worth. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.A., Smith College; B.S.L.A., City College School of Architecture; B.S., Pratt Institute; fellow, American Society of Landscape Architects; principal, Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects PC since 1979; vice president, N.Y.C. Public Design Commission; recipient of more than two dozen national design awards; co-author of three books—High Performance Infrastructure Guidelines; Cool and Green Roof; and Sustainable Site Design—and author of Sky Gardens. Philip Parker Assistant Chair of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design, Adjunct Associate Professor B. Design in Architecture, University of Florida; M.Arch., Yale University; principal, Phillip Parker Architects, a practice that spans scales from furniture and building components to urban parks; his projects on program, matter, city, and texts have been exhibited, published, and reside in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; he has lectured on architecture and media and taught design studios and media theory practice at a number of schools, including Columbia University GSAPP, as coordinator of core visual studies; Princeton University; The Ohio State University; and RISD. David Ruy Associate Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.Arch., Columbia University; director, Ruy Klein, an award-winning design office in New York City; firm’s work has been extensively published and exhibited and the firm is recognized as one of the leading speculative practices in architecture today; Ruy has previously held positions at Columbia, Princeton, and was the director of research of The Nonlinear Systems Organization (NSO), a transdisciplinary research organization, at the University of Pennsylvania; his research examines design topics at the intersection of architecture, nature, and technology; the work of his practice has recently been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, the Rhode Island School of Design, and at Artists Space, New York City. Richard Scherr Director, Facilities Planning, Adjunct Professor B.Arch., Cornell University; M.S. Architecture, Columbia University; published in the Journal of Architectural Education; Architectural Record; Progressive Architecture; Journal of the American Planning Association; Competitions; Places Magazine; Space; Octagon Architecture; Indian Architect and Builder; and Asian Thought and Society; author of The Grid: Form and Process in Architectural Design; finalist, Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial Competition; Eidlitz Traveling Fellowship; registered architect in New York and Texas. Erich Schoenenberger Adjunct Associate Professor B. Environ. Design, Technical School of Novia Scotia; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University; co-founded (with Ferda Kolatan) su11 architecture+design in New York City in 1999; received the Swiss National Culture Award for Art and Design and the ICFF Editors Award for Best New Designer; 2006 finalist for the prestigious Chernikhov Prize; 2007 chosen finalist for the MoMA/PS1 YAP competition. Benjamin Shepherd Adjunct Associate Professor B.S.C., Environmental Science, Northland College; M.A., Environmental Management, Yale School of Forestry; LEED-accredited professional and planning practice leader at international environmental design consultant firm Atelier 10, with extensive experience with urban ecology, renewable energy systems, and green development assessments; has managed the development of sustainability guidelines for a wide range of master plans on a multitude of sectors including commercial, university, government, and transportation; he also teaches core courses on environmental design and building services at Yale School of Architecture. Maria Sieira Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; coordinates the GAUD Housing Studio: Live, Work, Play and the History/Theory sequence; teaches architecture design studios that focus on green urban projects as well as seminars on film and on installation art; founded Xoguete Architecture in 2007; registered architect in New York; has worked on the Cidade da Cultura in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, while at Eisenman Architects in New York and on the Philadelphia Airport while at DPK&A in Philadelphia ; also one of the founding members of the Compostela Architecture program in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Henry Smith-Miller Adjunct Professor B.A., Princeton University; M.Arch, University of Pennsylvania; former Fulbright scholar in architecture in Rome, Italy; received the Brunner Award and the New York Chapter Gold Medal for Excellence in Design with his partner, Laurie Hawkinson; significant projects include the Corning Museum of Glass and the North Carolina Museum of Art Outdoor Cinema and Amphitheater and Master Plan; recently completed projects include the Land Ports of Entry at Champlain and Massena, New York, and a mid-rise, multi-unit condominium complex in Manhattan; currently the design architect for the new River Building for the Hospital for Special Surgery and the Bond Hotel tower, both in New York City. Urban Design Faculty 195 Stéphanie Bayard Carla Leitao Benjamin Martinson Adjunct Assistant Professor M.S., Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Dipl. Arch Paris La Villette; teaches design studio and urban design seminars; previously taught at Ohio State and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; founded aa64 with Phillip Anzalone, as an experimental practice focusing on design, digital fabrication, and material construction in the United States and Europe; their work has been published and exhibited at the AIA NY Center for Architecture. Adjunct Associate Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Architecture School of Lisbon; architect (licensed in Europe), designer, and writer; co-founder, AUM Studio (architecture and multimedia) and Umasideia (architecture and engineering) in Lisbon; projects include “Visibility” (UIA Celebration of Cities competition, 2003, Lisbon, Portugal); ”Suture,” a multimedia installation; MAK Vertical Garden (competition by invitation, 2006); awards include the Akademie Schloss Solitude Fellowship, 2005. Visiting Instructor Bachelor of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder; M.Arch., Pratt Institute; worked for the New York office of Buro Happold as an intern; spent two years working for KOL/MAC, LLC, a digital design practice based in New York and Istanbul; currently is working on starting his own design firm with small projects in Portland, Oregon, and Boulder, Colorado. 194 Roland Snooks Nanako Umemoto-Reiser Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., RMIT University; B. App.Sci.Environ. Design, University of Canberra; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University; a design director of Kokkugia, he has previously directed design studios and seminars at UCLA, SCI-Arc, Pratt Institute, RMIT University, and the Victorian College of the Arts; his current teaching and research interests focus on emergent design processes involving genetic and agent-based techniques; his ongoing design research into emergent design processes has developed behavioral animation techniques for the generation of architectural form; design experience includes working in the offices of Reiser + Umemoto; Kovac Architecture; Minifie Nixon; and Ashton Raggatt McDougall. Adjunct Professor B.A., Osaka University of Art, Japan; B.Arch., Cooper Union; a principal and co-founder of Reiser + Umemoto, an internationally recognized multidisciplinary design firm, which has built projects at a wide range of scales: from furniture design, to residential and commercial structures, up to the scale of landscape, urban design, and infrastructure; she has previously taught at various schools in the U.S. and Asia, including Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, Hong Kong University, Kyoto University, and the Cooper Union; and she has lectured at various educational and cultural institutions throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. Michael Szivos Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., Louisiana State University; M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; curator of the GAUD Exihibtion; founder (in 2004) of SOFTlab, a new media and digital design practice specializing in the intersection of video, space, interactivity, and branding through digital media and emerging production; SOFTlab designed and produced the portfolio website for the GAUD; SOFTlab has participated in many group exhibitions and produced digital video and interactive media for MoMA, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Van Alen institute, and The New York Times, as well as work for various artists, architects, and designers; recipient of the Honor Award for Excellence and Award in Visual Studies at Columbia University. Jeffrey Taras Visiting Instructor B.A., M.A., University of Michigan Ann Arbor; M.Arch., Columbia University; currently a partner at both Associated Fabrication and 4-pli Design in Brooklyn, New York; professional focus has been on bridging the gap between design and digital fabrication. Maria Ludovica Tramontin Adjunct Assistant Professor B.S., Civil Engineering, University of Cagliari, (Italy); M.S., Columbia University GSAPP; Ph.D., University of Cagliari (Italy); registered engineer in Italy; in 2004, cofounded ASPX, an architectural research practice based in Italy/UK; the firm’s work has received several awards, most recently First Prize in a competition for a 600,000-square-foot general hospital with a project that engages the latest trends in renewable energy sources; while at NOX she worked on built projects: Son-Ohouse, an interactive artwork in The Netherlands, and Maison Folie, a cultural center in Lille. Jason Vigneri-Beane Adjunct Associate Professor; Coordinator, M.S., Architecture B.P.S.Arch., SUNY at Buffalo; M.Arch., Iowa State University; coordinator, M.S. Architecture; media co-coordinator, M.Architecture; coordinator, Graduate Architecture in Rome Program; founder and principal, Split Studio; LEED-accredited professional, who has lectured, taught, exhibited, published in the United States, Europe, and Asia. John Christopher Whitelaw Visiting Instructor B.S., Georgia Institute of Technology; M.Arch., Columbia University; co-coordinator of digital media; director of research and development at Evans & Paul, a global leader in the production of custom architectural interiors; he has lectured and taught in the United States and Europe; his work seeks to accelerate the bridging between computation and construction; while at Evans and Paul, he has constructed a number of high profile projects for a list of architects, including DS+R, Herzog 7 de Meuron, Richard Meier, Asymptote, and KOL/MAC. Urban Design Faculty Vito Acconci Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., College of the Holy Cross; M.F.A.,Writers’ Workshop, University of Iowa; his design and architecture come from another direction: a background first in writing and then in art. By the late ’80s his work had crossed over, and he formed Acconci Studio, whose operations come from computer thinking and mathematical and biological models. Acconci Studio treats architecture as an occasion for activity and making spaces fluid, changeable, and portable. The Studio is currently working on a three-story building in Milan, a bridge-system and park near Delft, and an amphitheater in Stavanger, and has other projects in Toronto and Indianapolis. Carlos Arnaiz Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Philosophy, Williams College; M.Arch., Harvard University; an associate partner at Stan Allen Architect; previously worked for Office dA in Cambridge, Field Operations and Bumpzoid Architects in New York, and as a founding principal for RUF studio in New York. His experience at these offices has ranged from high-level strategic planning for cities around the world to project design and construction documentation on commercial and residential projects. At Field Operations, he served as project manager and lead designer on the transformation of a 650-acre plot of land in the middle of San Juan, Puerto Rico, into the island’s largest and most important Botanical Garden. He led the development of all aspects of the project including the creation of an expanded river corridor along one of San Juan’s principal waterways. His academic research has focused on the ongoing relationship between ornament and structure in design. While at Harvard, he collaborated with Peter Rowe on a number of research projects investigating innovative solutions in the planning and management of contemporary urban regions. He has served on juries at various institutions in the U.S.A. including Harvard, Princeton, and the University of Pennsylvania, where he taught advanced studios in the Landscape Architecture Program from 2002 to 2004. Meta Brunzema Adjunct Associate Professor M.Arch., Columbia University; principal of Meta Brunzema Architect P.C., an award-winning architecture and urban design practice that addresses contemporary spatial, environmental, and socio-political challenges in innovative ways; the firm specializes in carbon-neutral design; current projects include “Park Avenue Market Mile” in N.Y.C. and “River Pool” in Beacon, N.Y. Brunzema is a LEED® accredited professional. Jose Gonzalez Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; cofounder and principal, SOFTlab, a design studio. Mehmet Ferda Kolatan Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Arch. Dipl. (with distinction), RWTH Aachen; founded SU11 architecture+design with Erich Schoenenberger as an experimental architecture practice in New York City; firm has since received national and international acclaim and has been published widely; awards include Lucille Smyser Lowenfish Memorial Prize and the Honor Award for Excellence in Design, Columbia University. Sulan Kolatan Adjunct Professor Diploma, Technische Hochschule Aachen Universitat; M.S., Architecture and Building Design, Columbia University; founded KOL/MAC Studio along with William MacDonald, in New York City in 1988. Kolatan and MacDonald have taught architecture as visiting professors at Barnard College, Ohio State University, the University of Pennsylvania, Parsons The New School of Design, University of Virginia, The Institute of Advanced Architectural Studies in Basel, Switzerland, and Venice, Italy, and Columbia University. The Kolatan/MacDonald Studio primarily works with strangely shaped structures, of housing and apartment blocks. Dubbed “Vertical Urbanism,” the apartment structures are divided into pods that structurally conform to the addition and removal of other pods. William MacDonald Chair of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design M.Sc. Architecture and Urban Design, Columbia University; B.Arch., Syracuse University; attended the Architectural Association in London; director, KOL/MAC, LLC, Architecture + Design, co-founded with Sulan Kolatan; has taught as professor, distinguished visiting professor, or visiting chair at the University of Virginia (as acting chair); Columbia University; the University of Pennsylvania; Southern California Institute for Architecture; The Ohio State University; City University of New York; University of California at Berkeley; and Pratt Institute; academic and professional honors and awards include the “40 under 40” award, Progressive Architecture awards, AIA design awards; represented the U.S. in the U.S. national pavilion and for the international segment of the International Architecture Bienniale in Venice; via KOL/MAC, has collaborated with various leading companies, including DuPont, AI Implant of Biotech Industries, Alias, Merck Chemicals, Autodesk, C-TEK, ARUP AGU, DitlevFilms, Inc.; exhibited at MoMA, SFMoMA, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, Centre Georges Pompidou, Barbican Art Gallery, Architekturmuseum, Mori Contemporary Art Museum, 1st International Architecture Biennial in Beijing, VITRA, Yale University, and the FRAC; publications include The New York Times; The Washington Post, CNN, Phaidon Press, Rizzoli, GA Houses, AD Magazine, Architectural Digest, ACTAR, Domus, Lotus International, Architectural Record; co-author, Lubricuous Architectures with Kari Andersen; a comprehensive monograph titled KOL/MAC WORK BOOK is currently in preparation for publication. Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Philosophy, Kenyon College; Master of Landscape Architecture, University of California at Berkeley; interests include how art and design contribute to the success of the urban experiment; current research focuses on temporal and situational spatiality; partner, thread collective, a multidisciplinary design firm that explores the seams between building, art, and landscape; a broadly defined notion of sustainability, existing site characteristics, and sensory experience further inform the firm’s design process; has worked for five years with Mary Miss, one of the most influential artists in the public realm. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.A., Smith College; B.S.L.A., City College School of Architecture; B.S., Pratt Institute; fellow, American Society of Landscape Architects; principal, Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architects PC since 1979; vice president, N.Y.C. Public Design Commission; recipient of more than two dozen national design awards; co-author of three books—High Performance Infrastructure Guidelines; Cool and Green Roof; and Sustainable Site Design—and author of Sky Gardens. Philip Parker Assistant Chair of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design, Adjunct Associate Professor B. Design in Architecture, University of Florida; M.Arch., Yale University; principal, Phillip Parker Architects, a practice that spans scales from furniture and building components to urban parks; his projects on program, matter, city, and texts have been exhibited, published, and reside in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; he has lectured on architecture and media and taught design studios and media theory practice at a number of schools, including Columbia University GSAPP, as coordinator of core visual studies; Princeton University; The Ohio State University; and RISD. David Ruy Associate Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.Arch., Columbia University; director, Ruy Klein, an award-winning design office in New York City; firm’s work has been extensively published and exhibited and the firm is recognized as one of the leading speculative practices in architecture today; Ruy has previously held positions at Columbia, Princeton, and was the director of research of The Nonlinear Systems Organization (NSO), a transdisciplinary research organization, at the University of Pennsylvania; his research examines design topics at the intersection of architecture, nature, and technology; the work of his practice has recently been exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art, the Rhode Island School of Design, and at Artists Space. City and Regional Planning Faculty 197 Frank Lang, R.A. Larisa Ortiz Pu-Folkes Lacey Tauber Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; B.Arch., Columbia University; Director of Housing, St. Nick’s Alliance. Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; principal, Larisa Ortiz Associates. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., City & Regional Planning, M.S., Historic Preservation, Pratt Institute; Legislative Director, NYC City Councilmember Reynoso. 196 Erich Schoenenberger Visiting Instructor B. Environ. Design, Technical School of Novia Scotia; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University; co-founded (with Ferda Kolatan) su11 architecture+design in New York City in 1999; received the Swiss National Culture Award for Art and Design and the ICFF Editors Award for Best New Designer; 2006 finalist for the prestigious Chernikhov Prize; 2007 chosen finalist for the MoMA/PS1 YAP competition. Nanako Umemoto-Reiser Adjunct Professor B.A., Osaka University of Art, Japan; B.Arch., Cooper Union; a principal and co-founder of Reiser + Umemoto, an internationally recognized multidisciplinary design firm, which has built projects at a wide range of scales: from furniture design, to residential and commercial structures, up to the scale of landscape, urban design, and infrastructure; she has previously taught at various schools in the U.S. and Asia, including Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, Hong Kong University, Kyoto University, and the Cooper Union; and she has lectured at various educational and cultural institutions throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. City and Regional Planning Faculty Moshe Adler Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles; Adjunct Associate Professor, Columbia University. Caron Atlas Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., University of Chicago; B.A., University of Chicago; Director, Arts Democracy Project. Eddie Bautista Adam Friedman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Haverford College; J. D., Benjamin Cardozo School of Law; Certificate in Strategic Planning In Non-Profit Management, Harvard Business School; Executive Director, Pratt Center for Community Development; founding executive director, New York Industrial Retention Network. Mindy Fullilove Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Nutrition, M.D., Columbia University; Co-Director, Columbia University Community Research Group; Professor, Columbia University. Moses Gates Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; Executive Director, New York City Environmental Justice Alliance. Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.P., Hunter College; Director, CHAMP, Association for Neighborhood Housing Development. Jennifer Becker Eva Hanhardt Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; consultant, Pratt Center for Community Development. Bethany Bingham Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Pratt Institute; B.A. University of Cincinnati; Community Specialist, Partnerships for Parks. Jessica Braden Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Geography and Planning, University of Toledo; B.A., University of Toledo; Director, Pratt Center for Spatial Analysis Visualization Initiative. David Burney Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.P., New York University; B.A., Brown University; advisor to the NYC Environmental Justice Alliance and other civic organizations. Daniel Hernandez Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., University of California; B.S., California State University; Director of Planning Practice, Jonathan Rose Companies. George Jacquemart, P.E. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.U.P., Stanford University; principal, BFJ Planning. Associate Professor M.S., University of London; Dip. Arch., Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh; Dip. Arch., Kingston University, London; former Commissioner, NYC Department of Design and Construction. David Kallick Joan Byron Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. candidate, Rutgers University; Masters in Urban Spatial Analytics, University of Pennsylvania; Researcher, Alan M. Voorhees Transportation Center, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University. Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; Urban and Regional Policy Fellow, Harvard University; Director of Policy, Pratt Center for Community Development. Mike Flynn Visiting Assistant Professor University of Vermont; M.S.C.R.P, Pratt Institute; Director of Capital Planning, NYC Department of Transportation. Michael Freedman-Schnapp Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.U.P, New York University; Director of Policy, NYC City Council. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University; Grundstufe, Goethe Institut; Senior Fellow, Fiscal Policy Institute. Nicholas Klein Raj Kottamasu Visiting Assistant Professor Master of City Planning with Urban Design Certificate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Certificate in Film, Video and New Media, Art Institute of Chicago; principal, Raj Kottamasu Video and Design. Tanu Kumar Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Cornell University; B.A., Williams College; Senior Planner for Economic Development, Pratt Center for Community Development. Matthew Lister Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Real Estate Development, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Master of Suburb and Town Design, University of Miami; Project Manager, Jonathan Rose Companies. Alan Mallach Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Sociology, Yale University; Senior Fellow, Center for Community Progress; Senior Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program, The Brookings Institution. Elliott Maltby Juan Camilo Osorio Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., University of Massachusetts; B.Arch., Universidad Nacional de Columbia; Director of Research, NYC Environmental Justice Alliance. Stuart Pertz Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., B.Arch., Princeton University; École des Beaux Arts, Fontainebleu, France; former member, New York City Planning Commission; founding chair, Pratt Institute Graduate Urban Design Program. Steven Romalewski Adjunct Associate Professor M.L.A., University of California at Berkeley; principal, Thread Collective. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Columbia University; Director, CUNY Mapping Service, Center for Urban Research at The Graduate Center/CUNY. Michael Marrella John Shapiro, AICP Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P., Certificate in Urban Design, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Director, Waterfront and Open Space Planning, NYC Department of City Planning. Associate Professor Chair, Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; formerly principal, Phillips Preiss Shapiro Associates, Planning Consultants. Jonathan Martin Ronald Shiffman, FAICP, FAIA Associate Professor Ph.D., Cornell University; M.R.P., Cornell University; B.S.D., Arizona State University; Associate, Buckhurst, Fish and Jacquemart, Planning Consultants. Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; B.S.Arch., Pratt Institute; founder, Pratt Center for Community Development. William Menking Professor Doctoral Candidate, The Graduate School of the City University of New York; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; M.S., University College, London; B.A., University of California at Berkeley; editor in chief, The Architect’s Newspaper. Mercedes Narciso Adjunct Associate Professor M.S.C.R.P, Pratt Institute; B.A., Simon Bolivar University; formerly Senior Planner, Pratt Center for Community Development. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.L.Arch., City College of New York; B.A., Smith College; B.S., Pratt Institute; principal, Mathews Nielsen Landscape Architecture. Toby Snyder Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design; Certificate, Urban Design, University of Pennsylvania; M.S.C.R.P., University of Pennsylvania; B.Arch., Clark University; Urban Designer, FX Fowle Architects. Daniel Steinberg Visiting Assistant Professor Doctoral Candidate, Urban Planning, Columbia University; B.A., University of Chicago. Samara Swanston Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University; counsel to the Environmental Protection Committee, NYC City Council. Petra Todorovich Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Rutgers University; former Director of America 2050, Regional Plan Association; Senior Officer of Outreach, Amtrak. Meg Walker Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., Columbia University; Vice President, Project for Public Spaces. Ben Wellington Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., M.S., Computer Science, New York University; Quantitative Research Analyst Two Sigma Investments; Co-Founder, Cherub Improv. Andrew Wiley-Schwartz Visiting Assistant Professor Former Assistant Commissioner, NYC Department of Transportation; consultant at Bloomberg Associates. Barika Williams Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; B.A., Washington University in St. Louis; Policy Director, Association for Neighborhood and Housing Development. Edward Perry Winston, R.A. Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Rice University; Senior Architect, MAP Architects. Ayse Yonder Professor Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley; M.C.P., University of Pennsylvania; Diploma for Architecture, Istanbul Technical University. 198 199 Sustainable Environmental Systems Faculty Tom Jost Ronald Shiffman, FAICP, FAIA Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.D. Urban Design, Pratt Institute; B.A. Economics, Lehigh University; senior urban strategist, Parson Brinckerhoff. Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; B.S. Arch., Pratt Institute. Bridget Anderson Gavin Kearney Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.A., Columbia University; B.A., Macalaster College; Director, NYC Department of Sanitation Bureau of Waste Prevention, Reuse and Recycling. Alec Appelbaum Visiting Assistant Professor M.B.A., Yale University; B.A. English, Yale University; green economy correspondent, The Faster Times. Jen Becker Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.K.P., Pratt Institute; B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison. Michael Bobker Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Energy, New York Institute of Technology; director, Building Performance Lab, CUNY Institute for Urban Systems. Carlton Brown Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Princeton University; C.O.O., Full Spectrum. Damon Chaky, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Science Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Carter Craft Visiting Assisting Professor J.D., University of Minnesota; B.A., Lawrence University; director, Environmental Justice program, New York Lawyers for the Public Interest. Katie Kendall Visiting Assisting Professor L.L.M., Vermont Law School; J.D., Brooklyn Law School; B.A., Wittenberg University; general counsel, Mayor’s Office of Environmental Coordination for the City of New York. Sarah Kogel-Smucker Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., Boston College Law School; Senior Counsel, New York City Law Department Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor M.L.A., University of California at Berkeley; B.A., Kenyon College; principal, Thread Collective. Paul Mankiewicz, Ph.D. Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., City University of New York; founding director, Gaia Institute. Michael Marella Visiting Assistant Professor Director of Waterfront and Open Space Planning, NYC Department of City Planning. Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.P., New York University; co-founder, Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance; managing member, Outside New York. Gita Nandan Adam Friedman Carolyn Schaeberle Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Haverford College; J.D., Benjamin Cardozo School of Law; Certificate in Strategic Planning In Non-Profit Management, Harvard Business School; executive director, Pratt Center for Community Development; founding executive director, New York Industrial Retention Network. Ben Gibberd Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Edinburgh University; author: New York Waters: Profiles from the Edge (Globe Pequot Press, 2007), and The Little Black Book of New York (Peter Pauper Press, 2006). Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., University of California at Berkeley; principal, Thread Collective. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.I.D., Pratt Institute; B.S., Engineering Science, Smith College; Assistant Director, Pratt’s Center for Sustainable Design Strategies. David Seiter Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.A. Landscape Architecture, University of Pennsylvania; B.A. Art History, Vassar College; principal, Future Green Studio. Sarah Kogel-Smucker Visiting Assistant Proffessor J.D., Boston College Law School; Senior Counsel, New York City Law Department Jaime Stein Coordinator, Sustainable Environmental Systems M.S., Pratt Institute; B.S., Millersville University. Ira Stern Facilities Management Faculty Lennart Andersson Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., Savannah College of Art and Design; M.B. Engr., Wasa Gymnasium, Stockholm, Sweden; associate, The LiRo Group, New York, NY. Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; regional manager, Bureau of Water Supply for the New York City Department of Environmental Protection. Regina Ford Cahill Gelvin Stevenson, Ph.D. Matthias Ebinger Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D. Economics, Washington University; B.A., Carleton College; director, Clear Skies Solar. Samara Swanston Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University; counsel to the Environmental Protection Committee, New York City Council. Evren Uzer, Ph.D. Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., B.A. Urban Planning, Istanbul Technical University; Founder of socially engaged art collective “roomservices” and design interventions initiative “imkanmekan.” Edward Perry Winston Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Harvard University; M.Arch, Rice University; B.A., Princeton University; Senior Architect, MAP Architects. Chair, Associate Professor B.S., SUNY Downstate Medical Center; M.S., Pratt Institute Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Construction Management, New York University; LEED; Dipl.Ing.FH, Konstanz University of Applied Science; development cooperation and consulting, German Foundation for International Development; public administration, University of South Africa; PMP, American Project Management Institute. William Henry Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., New York University; Advanced Information Systems Institute Training, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; president and CEO of Millennium II Consulting Group, Inc. which he founded in 1997; 30 years of prior experience in the information technologies (IT) industry; managing principal of HENRY Consultants, Inc., an IT services firm he cofounded in 1994; employed at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company 1987–1994; appointed director of corporate telecommunications in 1989. Stephen LoGrasso Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., New York Institute of Technology; 25 years of experience in facility and construction management; has provided services for various clients including Goldman Sachs, CitiGroup, McGraw-Hill, and Hertz. Harriet Markis Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; M.Eng., Cornell University; member of IFMA, CMAA, ASCE, ACI, SECB, and SEONY; partner at Dunne & Markis Consulting Structural Engineers, PLLC since 1990; 30 years of experience as a structural designer in a variety of projects; licensed to practice structural engineering in the states of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. Mary Matthews Edward Re Professor Emerita B.A., Concentration in Sociology and Education Management, Emmanuel College; M.S. Social Work, Boston College; M.B.A. Candidate, NYU Stern School of Business; consistent career advancement specializing in safety, training, government compliance, environmental issues, and insurance programs in the construction management and facilities management industries in the public and private sector; professor and former chair in the Construction Management and Facilities Management departments at Pratt Institute. Adjunct Associate Professor A.A.S. Construction Technology, NYC Technical College; B.S. Construction Management; M.S. Facilities Management, Pratt Institute; AIA; certified professional constructor; certified real estate appraiser (NAREA); certified environmental inspector (EAA); certified occupational safety and health director; knighted, Government of ItalyLegions of Merit; qualified continuing education instructor, State of New York Department of State/Division of Licensing for Architecture and Real Estate Appraising; arbitrator, American Arbitration Association (AAA). Gerald F. McGowan Norman Rosenfeld Visiting Associate Professor M.B.A. Management, New York University; ALM Media, Inc., director, Real Estate and Purchasing; professional affiliations: IFMA, CoreNet. Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; Norman Rosenfeld Architects LLC. Martin McManus Visiting Assistant Professor B.B.A. Accounting, Pace University; CPA; financial principal and registered representative with NASDl; member of the NYS Society of CPAs; American Institute of CPAs. Russell Olson Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., M.S. Urban Environmental Systems, Pratt Institute; awarded IFMA 2002 Educator of the Year Award; president and CEO of R.O.I. Consulting Group; specializes in the technology aspects associated with design, construction, and facilities management; responsible for providing staff, as well as business and technology consulting for numerous Fortune 500 companies. John Osborn Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Political Science and Economics, SUNY at New Paltz; J.D., University of South Carolina Law Center; John Osborn, P.C. Attorneys and Counselors at Law; practice areas include environmental law, construction law, surety law, healthcare law, commercial litigation, hospitality law, and professional liability defense; author and frequent speaker on construction and environmental law, risk management, and dispute resolution; 2000 Member of the Year, Greater New York Construction User Council. Audrey L. Schultz Associate Professor M.S. Architecture, Concentration in Construction Management, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Ph.D., Built Environment, Concentration in Lean Facilities Management, The University of Salford; FMP; Member IFMA, Lean Construction Institute, ASC, CIB. Marjorie St. Elin Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Construction Management, Pratt Institute; LEED-AP; assistant project manager, Turner Construction Co. Mira Tsymuk Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Economics and Computer Science, University of Business Management, Moscow, Russia; M.B.A., University of Economics and Finance, Moscow, Russia; M.A. Economics, CUNY Hunter; member, American Economic Association and International Institute of Public Finance. Art and Design Education Faculty 201 Shari Fischberg Tonya Leslie Theodora Skipitares Adjunct Instructor B.F.A., The School of The Museum of Fine Arts Boston; B.A., Tufts University; M.F.A., CUNY Queens College. With more than 15 years of experience as an urban art educator in New York City, Boston, and Oakland, Fischberg was honored by the New York City Board of Education as Teacher of the Year in 2000. A previous director of special programs for the Studio in a School Association, she has created professional development programming for teaching artists with MoMA, Queens Museum, and Asia Society. She has conceived and implemented grant-funded after school programs and curated exhibitions for the Edward Hopper House Art Center. Currently a teaching artist with the aging population in Washington Heights and at the Anne Frank Center USA, Fischberg continues her practice in sculpture and encaustics at her studio in the lower Hudson River Valley. Visiting Instructor B.A, SUNY New Paltz; M.A., New York University; Ph.D. candidate in Teaching and Learning at New York University. Leslie is an educational consultant; her work focuses on academic resilience and culturally responsive pedagogy. She has worked nationally as a researcher, editor and professional development provider for organizations including NYU’s Metro Center, Scholastic Inc., and the Schomburg Center for Research and Black Culture. She is also the author of several children’s books including True You: Sometimes I Feel Ugly and Other Truths about Growing Up, available online through Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty. In 2014, she received a Fulbright Hays for research in Belize. Associate Professor B.S., University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A., New York University. An interdisciplinary artist, Skipitares has exhibited work and performed throughout Europe, Asia, and South America. She has received grants from the NEA, NYFA, UNIMA, and the Guggenheim, Fulbright, and Rockefeller Foundations, among others; twice, The New York Times has named her plays among the 10 best of the year, and her production Iphigenia won two New York Innovative Theater Awards. She has created performances in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Korea, and travels frequently to India to develop new projects. She has taught workshops to diverse populations with Hospital Audiences, Inc. and has developed classes and performances at Rikers Island Prison. Her most recent performances and exhibitions include the Ionesco Project at the Long Island University Gallery and Rituals of Rented Island: Object Theater, Loft Performance and the New Psychodrama—Manhattan, 1970–80 at the Whitney Museum. Currently she is planning workshops at Gibb Mansion, a housing facility for homeless and chronically ill community residents, managed by Pratt Area Community Council. 200 Historic Preservation Faculty Lisa Ackerman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Middlebury College; M.B.A., New York University; M.S., Pratt Institute; C.O.O., World Monuments Fund. Beth Bingham Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Pratt Institute Patrick Ciccone Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.S., Columbia University; Partner, Gambit Consulting; Principal, Charles Lockwood and Associates. Carol Clark Visiting Associate Professor B.A., University of Michigan; M.S., Columbia University; assistant commissioner, New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development. Peter Destabler Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Bowdoin College; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University Pat Fisher-Olsen Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Thomas Edison State College; M.S., Pratt Institute; coordinator, Historic Preservation Certificate Program, Bucks County Community College. Eric Ghenoui, Ph.D. Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Clark University; M.S., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M. A., Ph.D., Harvard University Bill Higgins Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Boston College; M.S., Columbia University; partner, Higgins and Quasebarth Historic Preservation Consultants. Anne Hrychuk, Ph.D. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Alberta; M.A., Ph.D., New York University. Ben Margolis Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.P.A. Urban Policy, Columbia University; Norman Mintz Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Industrial Design, Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University; design director, 34th St. Partnership; founder, New York Main Street Alliance. Art and Design Education Faculty Lisa Baumwell Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Amherst College ; M.S. Historic Preservation, Columbia University Visiting Associate Instructor B.S. Psychology, Union College; M.A. Counseling and Guidance, New York University; Ph.D. Developmental Psychology, New York University. Dr. Baumwell is a research affiliate at New York University’s Center for Research on Culture, Development, and Education. Her work focuses on the relational and environmental factors influencing the development of at-risk children, and the refinement of intervention programs for families with infants and toddlers. She has authored journal articles, chapters, and entries regarding the impact of psychosocial circumstances on children and families. Theodore Prudon, Ph.D, FAIA Lisa Capone Nadya K. Nenadich, Ph.D. Academic Coordinator B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University; Ph.D., Polytechnic University of Cataluña Christopher Neville Adjunct Professor M.A., M.S., Ph.D., Columbia University; M.S., University of Delft, the Netherlands; partner, Prudon and Partners, LLP; president, Docomomo U.S.; author: Preservation of Modern Architecture (Wiley, 2008). Lacey Tauber Visiting Assistant Professor B. Journalism, University of Texas at Austin; M.S., Pratt Institute; Legislative Director and Communications for Council Member Antonio Reynoso. Vicki Weiner Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Drew University; M.S., Columbia University; director of planning and preservation, Pratt Center for Community Development. Kevin Wolfe Visiting Assistant Professor B. A., Holy Cross College; B.L.A., City College of New York; M.A., Clark University; M.Arch., Columbia University Arthur Zabarkas Visiting Assistant Professor B. Arch, Pennsylvania State University; M.S. Urban Planning, Columbia University; Architectural Association, London, England Adjunct Instructor M.F.A. Sculpture, Pratt Institute; B.F.A. and B.A., Marymount College, New York and Chelsea School of Art, London, England. With an expertise and focus on sculpture and 3-D art-making, she has taught in a variety of private and public educational venues throughout New York City and was director and founder of the art program Salon Enfants. Her most recent exhibition took place at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art 2012 in Fusion/A Century of Glass. Her publication features include Interior Design Magazine, New Glass Review and Art in America. She has received two Pratt Faculty Development Grants for her ongoing series Beauty and the Beast. Mary Elmer-Dewitt B.A., New York University; M.S., Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute. An elementary school art educator and mentor, Elmer-Dewitt was a teaching artist with Studio in a School for nine years, most recently as a research-facilitator with Arts Achieve, a Federal i-3 research project investigating the role of assessment in student achievement in the arts. She has conducted workshops for Studio in a School artists, trained Department of Education art teachers in the implementation of the New York City Blueprint, and collaborated with fellow Studio in a School artists to bring children from diverse areas of the city together through art making. In her research she has looked at how different materials and processes enable young children to make their learning visible, and what occurs when kindergarten students are directed away from storytelling in the art room. Elmer-Dewitt works across several processes, primarily photography and painting. Her recent works were exhibited at the Edward Hopper House in Nyack, NY and at the MS Renzy Gallery in Lexington, KY. She completed a one-month painting residency at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson, Vermont. Borinquen Gallo Assistant Professor B.F.A., Cooper Union, M.F.A., Hunter College; Ed.D. candidate, Teachers College, Columbia University. Areas of expertise include contemporary art practices and contemporary art-based education, studio-based education, and the intersections of curation and education. Born in Rome and currently living in NYC, she has more than 10 years of planning, development and management experience in the education sector. She has organized and facilitated professional development workshops for art educators citywide and designed curricula for a host of organizations, including Studio in a School and the NYC Department of Education. Widely exhibited locally and nationally, including, most recently, at the National Academy Museum, the Kate Shin Gallery, and the Queens Museum of Art in New York. Recent residencies include the Vermont Studio Center (2013) and the Artists in the Marketplace at the Bronx Museum of the Arts (2015). Christopher Kennedy Assistant Professor B.S., Environmental Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; M.A., Education, New York University; Ph.D., Education Studies, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. A teaching artist and organizer, Kennedy works with schools, youth and artists to create site-specific projects exploring trans-disciplinary exchange, digital storytelling, and social engagement. He has worked as a science and art teacher in schools across NYC, as the education curator for an experimental residency and living museum called Elsewhere in Greensboro, North Carolina, and has designed curricula and programming for MoMA, the Cooper-Hewitt, the Ackland Museum, PAFA and a host of nonprofits. His research interests include participatory art and public pedagogy, experimental bookmaking, and the experience of LGBTQ youth in the art classroom. Heather Lewis Associate Professor Ph.D., New York University; research explores the intersection of urban social movements and institutional reform in education and the arts. Her book, New York City Schools from Brownsville to Bloomberg: Community Control and Its Legacy, was published by Teachers College Press in 2013. She is currently working on a historical study of Harlem’s community control movement as part of Columbia University’s Educating Harlem project. As part of her active engagement in efforts to improve teaching and learning in higher education, she is the recipient of a Pratt Faculty Innovation Grant to support her Assessment by Design project. Joshua Millis Visiting Instructor B.F.A.,Tyler School of Art; M.F.A., The School of The Art Institute of Chicago; Millis has taught art to students ranging from four to 95 years old. As a Studio in a School teaching artist, he taught art of various media in more than 20 schools and other community settings; he has led workshops for DOE art teachers in the implementation of the NYC Blueprint for the Arts, and collaborated on i-3 Arts Achieve, a federal innovation research grant. Millis has designed and led summer camp at the Queens Museum, in addition to being a teaching artist at several of the museum’s partnering schools. Millis has also taught adults as a resident artist in more than six New York Public Library branches. Since 2008, he has taught at Pratt Institute as a Visiting Instructor. When he is not teaching, you can find him painting in his studio in Brooklyn. Aileen Wilson Professor M.A. in Printmaking, Chelsea School of Art; Ed.D., Art/Art Education, Teacher’s College, Columbia University; recipient of a Fulbright specialist grant, 2011 and 2012 and a National Art Education Foundation Research Award 2013-2014; recent projects include Activating Design: Brokering Change, an exhibition of work by the graduating students in the School of Design Strategies, Parsons The New School at the Arnold and Sheila Aronson Gallery, 2013; and Studio Pedagogy: The Imperative of Teaching, a group exhibition with Kim Beck, Adam Brent, Nina Katchadourian, Sheila Pepe and students, co-curated with Tara Kopp at the Gallery at Bergen Community College, Paramus, New Jersey, 2013. Creative Arts Therapy Faculty 203 Jean Davis Fred Landers Sara Rothstein Adjunct Associate Professor LCAT, ATR-BC; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; private practice; former director, Transitional Living Community-Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service; former clinical director, Greenwich Village Youth Council; postgraduate training in group therapy, environmental psychology, and gestalt therapy; published in Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association and The Arts in Psychotherapy. Visiting Instructor Ph.D., LCAT, RDT; Landers is a licensed creative arts therapist who publishes on the relationship between play (as it appears in a Developmental Transformation Drama Therapy Session) and violent behavior outside of session. He has worked with sexually abused children and adolescents as well as combat veterans with PTSD and violent behavior as a result of military service. Ha has developed a form of activism called Urban Play that involves mutual play with people in public places, and has taught drama therapy in South Korea, Thailand, China, Japan, New Zealand, Uganda, Kenya, Canada, and the U.S. Visiting Instructor LCAT, ATR; M.P.S., Pratt Institute, Creative Arts Therapy and Creativity Development; licensed and registered creative arts therapist; earned a certificate of completion from Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society; in private practice co-founded and co-facilitates Art of Parenting, providing individual and group work and psychotherapy for parents with young children and their families. 202 Arts and Cultural Management Faculty Catherine Ashcraft Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Catherine Cacho-Leary Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Dance, The George Washington University; M.B.A., Public Administration, Keller Graduate School of Management; Cacho-Leary worked in the Finance Department at Dia Art Foundation and served as financial and administrative consultant for QIIQ Productions, a literacy-based youth theater organization. She also worked as a budget analyst at Brooklyn Academy of Music and was instrumental in restructuring and advancing the internal operations of the Finance Department. After earning her undergraduate degree in dance, she studied at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center. She is the founder of Community Arts Works, an arts management company that provides arts management services and brings a broader understanding of business to emerging performing arts organizations. Tyra Nicole Dumars Mary McBride Professor and Chair of Arts and Cultural Management Ph.D., New York University; Partner, Strategies for Planned Change, an international consulting group specializing in creating excellence by design; visiting professor international universities including Esade, Spain; Koc University, Turkey; ISG, France; European University, Russia; former director, Management Decision Lab, Stern School of Business, New York University. Christina Rosan Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., City Planning and International Development, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Susan Schear Visiting Assistant Professor Schear is the founder and president of ArtIsIn, L.L.C. ArtIsIn focuses on business development, management, facilitation, consulting, and coaching services to arts and cultural organizations. M.A., International Education, New York University; Account Director, WIT Media Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., New York University Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service; CPA, M.B.A, New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business; Program Director, Health Policy and Management MPH Program, New York Medical College School of Health Sciences and Practice. Jeffrey Klein Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., Fordham University; Chief Development Officer, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center Adjunct Assistant Professor LCAT, ATR. Shannon Bradley Corinna Brown Denise Tahara Director, Education and Community at Vimeo; Leader, Vimeo Video School Joachim Boenig JoJo Spiker Kristen Earls Daniel Hayek Visiting Instructor LCAT, LP, NCPsychA, ATR-BC; M.P.S., Pratt Institute, licensed creative arts therapist, licensed psychoanalyst; executive director emerita, Institute for Expressive Analysis (2002–2008); board member 1993–2002, IEA; courses: Art Diagnosis; Symbolism in Art Therapy; Alchemy, Symbolism, and Creativity; Dream Analysis; Mandala; MARI certification, Projective Drawing Institute Certification; private practice, Manhattan. Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Human and Organizational Development, Fielding Graduate University Christopher Shrum Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute; Associate Creative Director, Intermedia.net. Professor Former director of new products and joint ventures, Citibank-Diners Club; consultant specializing in developing organizational change strategies and the improvement of internal team processes. Claudia Bader Visiting Instructor LCAT, ATR-BC; M.S. Art Therapy and Creativity Development from Pratt Institute; Bradley currently works at Interfaith Medical Center, and maintains a private practice in Manhattan where she has experience working with anxiety, depression, trauma, life transitions, addiction, eating disorders, mental and medical illness. M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute; Consultant, Proof Integrated Communications; Practicum Professor, Boston University Center for Digital Imaging Arts (CDIA). Richard Green Creative Arts Therapy Faculty Kelly Kocinski Trager Visiting Associate Professor J.D., Brooklyn Law School; Attorney and Founder, the Law Office of Kelly Kocinski Trager, P.C. Alicia Whiteman M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute; Director, Operations and International Project Management, MRM/McCann Visiting Instructor LCAT, BC-DMT; B.A.; M.A., State University of New York at Albany; M.S., Hunter College City University of New York; Certified Alcoholism Counselor; Certificate in Neo-Reichian Psychotherapy; current vice president and former editor of the New York State Chapter of the American Dance Therapy Association newsletter; ADTA Research Subcommittee; experience in addictions, adults with multiple sclerosis, adult inpatient and outpatient psychiatry, geriatrics, and men with AIDS/HIV; private practice. Kimberly Bush Adjunct Assistant Professor LCAT, ATR-BC; B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.F.A., Parsons the New School of Design; Adv. Cert., Pratt Institute; Adv. Cert., Westchester Institute for Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy; has been working creatively with children, teachers, and parents for over 20 years. She is a visual artist, a NYS licensed Creative Arts Therapist, and Certified Child Life Specialist. In addition, she is completing her training as psychoanalytic candidate at the Westchester Institute for Training in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. Christina Devereaux Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., LCAT, LMHC, BC-DMT; B.A., Kent State University; M.A., University of California at Los Angeles; Ph.D., Santa Barbara Graduate Institute; Board of Directors, chair of Public Relations, and Newsletter Editor, American Dance Therapy Association; past president, Southern California Chapter, ADTA; former Executive Board member, California Coalition for Counseling Licensure; experience in trauma, domestic violence, attachment in child development, family work, and prenatal and perinatal psychology. Judith R. Levy Visiting Instructor LCAT, LMFT, LP, ATR-BC. Judith Luongo Alison Gigl-George Adjunct Associate Professor LCAT, LP, ATR.; Licensed Creative Arts Therapist and Psychoanalyst in private practice in both disciplines. She graduated from the Pratt Art Therapy program in 1977 and has been on the faculty of the Creative Arts Therapy Program at Pratt since her graduation. She served as chairperson for the program from 1989-1991. In addition Judith completed her training as and open studio facilitator in 2014 at the Open Studio Project in Evanston Chicago, She has published writing in the online literary journal Mr. Beller’s Neighborhood and shown art at BWAC, an artist’s cooperative in Brooklyn. Adjunct Assistant Professor LCAT, ATR-BC. Julie Miller Ted Ehrhardt Adjunct Assistant Professor LCAT, BC-DMT, CMA; M.S. Hunter College; faculty, Laban-Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies; Director: Creative Arts Therapies department and dance/movement therapist, Woodhull Medical and Mental Health Center; private practice in NYC. Valerie Hubbs Visiting Instructor LCAT, BC-DMT; B.A., Hofstra University; M.S., Hunter College, City University of New York; certified group psychotherapist; founder/ director, Psychiatric Rehabilitation Therapy-North General Hospital; approval committee, American Dance Therapy Association; administrative, clinical, consulting, supervisory, and teaching experience in multiple psychiatric facilities. Melissa Klay Adjunct Instructor Ph.D., LCAT, ATR-BC; B.A., Stephens College; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Pacifica Graduate Institute; has worked with children, adolescents, and adults in inpatient and outpatient settings. Between 1998 and 2001 she attended the Institute for Expressive Analysis and participated in a number of courses in play therapy and sandplay therapy. Currently, has a private practice and works with adolescents at St. Luke’s Hospital Center. Chair LCSW, LCAT, BC-DMT; M.A./M.S., Hunter College Dance Therapy Master’s Program and the Hunter School of Social Work; maintains a private practice in dance/movement and verbal psychotherapy and is co-director of the New York Center for the Study of Authentic Movement; teaching Authentic Movement and DMT nationally and internationally in China. Deborah Rice Visiting Professor LCAT, LMHC, ATR; B.S., University of Pittsburgh, Psychology and Studio Arts; M.P.S. Pratt Institute, Creative Arts Therapy and Creativity Development; faculty, Pratt Institute’s Creative Arts Therapy Department; private practice; clinical supervisor, Counseling In Schools; former clinical supervisor, Artistic Noise. Maria Romani de Goes Visiting Instructor LCAT, ATR; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; One-year training in family therapy, Roberto Clemente Center; Postgraduate training in group psychotherapy, Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society; Co-founder, Art of Parenting since 2008; private practice; provides group and individual psychotherapy; special interest in migration and acculturation as well as parenting; Madeline Rugh Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., ATR-BC; M.A., University of Michigan at Ann Arbor; B.F.A., Columbus College of Art and Design; Ph.D., University of Oklahoma; specializing in providing healing art experiences to disabled children and older adults and developing programming at the interface of art, ecology and spirituality; uses the arts to serve as the container and primary vehicle for expressing synthesized knowledge and for addressing the health and healing needs of the individual or group. Dina Schapiro Adjunct Assistant Professor LCAT, ATR-BC; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Faculty in Creative Arts Therapy Department since 2003 in both the Academic Year and Low Residency programs, teaching Dynamics of Art Materials, family therapy and supervision courses; Coordinator, Fieldwork/Practicum for the Art Therapy department placing and coordinating all art therapy students in internships; faculty, private practice in Sag Harbor and NYC, specializing in eating disorders, addictions, and anxiety. Jean Seibel Visiting Instructor LCAT, BC-DMT. Linda Siegel Director of Graduate Art Therapy Program; Assistant Professor LCAT, ATR-BC; Certificate in Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy, Brooklyn Institute for Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis; Certificate in Parent Infant Psychotherapy, Ani Bergaman Parent Infant Training Program in Parent Infant Psy; previous director of Art and Creative Therapy Program at New Directions, out patient substance abuse program; co-founder, Park Slope Counseling Center since 1990; exhibiting artist. 204 205 Jennifer Frank Tantia Joan Wittig Visiting Instructor Ph.D., LCAT, BC-DMT; M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., The Chicago School for Professional Psychology; advanced training in somatic experiencing; past PR chair, New York Coalition of Creative Arts Therapies; past program director, New York State Chapter, ADTA; current research committee, United States Body Association for Body Psychotherapy; published in the U.S.A. Body Psychotherapy Journal and several ADTA national and state chapter newsletters; national and international conference presenter; private practice: leading authentic movement groups and specializing in trauma and somatic disorders; areas of research interest: embodied epistemology and dance/movement therapy and somatic psychology pedagogy. Director of Graduate Dance/Movement Therapy Program; Associate Professor LCAT, BC-DMT; B.S., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.S., Hunter College, City University of New York; worked for New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation for 16 years, including seven years as director of the Creative Arts Therapy Department at Woodhull Medical and Mental Health Center. She teaches and presents widely, serves on the Approval Committee for the American Dance Therapy Association, is a member of the New York State Board for Mental Health Professionals, and has a private practice in Manhattan; co-director of the New York Center for Authentic Movement; co-director, teacher, IICAT program developing DMT in Bejing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong, China. Laurel Thompson Associate Professor Ph.D., LCAT, ATR-BC, BC-DMT; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Union Institute and University; board member, American Dance Therapy Association; chair of Education, Research and Practice; Education Committee, American Art Therapy Association; board member, USA Body Psychotherapy Association; editorial board for Arts in Psychotherapy, Art Therapy: The American Journal of Art Therapy, and Body, Movement and Psychotherapy; numerous publications and extensive presentations, credentialed dance movement therapist, credentialed art therapist, focusing trainer; private practice specializing in eating disorders, dissociative disorders, and trauma. Susan Tortora Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., LCAT, BC-DMT. Elissa White Visiting Assistant Professor LCAT, BC-DMT; Charter member and past president of American Dance Therapy Association (ADTA) and other board positions since 1964. Former co-editor and editorial board member of the American Journal of Dance Therapy. Cofounder of the Dance Therapy Program at Hunter College, CUNY; author, articles on dance therapy and Lab analysis, extensive teaching and presenter of Marian Chace theory and practice. Eva Teirstein Young Visiting Instructor LCAT, ATR-BC; M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago; M.P.S. Creative Arts Therapy, Pratt Institute; graduate, the William Alanson White Institute’s Child and Adolescent Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy program; has worked with children, adolescents, and families at the New York Foundling Hospital and Bellevue Hospital; creative arts therapy consultant to the Young Dancemakers Company and has a private practice in NYC. Design Management Faculty Catherine Ashcraft Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Laurence DeGaetano Adjunct Assistant Professor M.B.A., New York University; Financial Officer, Met Life Financial Services; member, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. Dyanis DeJesús Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S., Design Management, Pratt Institute; Partner/Creative Director, Prototipo.Media; former Associate Creative Director, Leo Burnett Milan. Tyra Nicole Dumars Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S., Design Management, Pratt Institute; Associate Creative Director, Intermedia.net. Roger Dunbar Visiting Professor Ph.D., Cornell University; Professor of Management, New York University, Stern School of Business Administration. Scott Fiaschetti Visiting Associate Professor VP, Insights & Strategy, Questus, Inc. Larry Gibbs Visiting Assistant Professor Product and Technology Officer, March Warden Consulting. Richard Green Professor Former director of new products and joint ventures, Citibank-Diners Club; consultant specializing in developing organizational change strategies and the improvement of internal team processes. Mary McBride Professor and Chair of Design Management Ph.D., New York University; Partner, Strategies for Planned Change, an international consulting group specializing in creating excellence by design; visiting professor at international universities including Esade, Spain; Koc University, Turkey; ISG, France; European University, Russia; former director, Management Decision Lab, Stern School of Business, New York University. Jacqueline McCormack Adjunct Associate Professor M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Communications Director, Federal Reserve Bank of New York; former Chief of Staff to New York State Banking Commissioner; former Director of Communications and Employee Engagement, TD Waterhouse. James Murray Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Vice President of Design/ Product Development/Visual Merchandising, Simon Pearce; former Design Director, Bed, Bath and Beyond. Christina Rosan Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., City Planning and International Development, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Digital Arts Faculty Peter Patchen Chair M.F.A., University of Oregon; Peter Frank Patchen is a digital artist exhibiting and lecturing nationally and internationally. He grew up in Colorado where the natural environment had a profound influence on his perception of the relationships that exist between nature, humanity, culture, and technology. In 1993, he founded the Cyber Arts (now New Media) program at the University of Toledo. Recent work includes interactive artworks, prints, web-based art, and mixed media pieces. Carla Gannis Visiting Assistant Professor M.B.A., Baruch College; President, The Shadow Group, an advertising group specializing in strategy for not-for-profit companies. Assistant Chair M.F.A., Boston University; B.F.A., University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Carla Gannis is the recipient of several awards, including a 2005 New York Foundation for the Arts Grant in Computer Arts, an Emerge 7 Fellowship from the Aljira Art Center, and a Chashama AREA Visual Arts Studio Award in NYC. She has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions both nationally and internationally. Features on Gannis’s work have appeared in Res Magazine and Collezioni Edge, and her work has been reviewed in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Miami Herald, the Daily News, and the Village Voice. Denise Tahara Justin Berry Jo Ann Stonier Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University; Senior Vice President, Global Privacy and Data Protection Officer, MasterCard Worldwide; former Chief Privacy Officer, American Express Company. Marvin Waldman Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., New York University Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service; C.P.A., M.B.A., New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business; Program Director, Health Policy and Management MPH Program, New York Medical College School of Health Sciences and Practice. Kelly Kocinski Trager Visiting Associate Professor J.D., Brooklyn Law School; Attorney and Founder, the Law Office of Kelly Kocinski Trager, P.C. Visiting Assistant Professor Digital Arts M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago Thomas Bone Visiting Assistant Professor Professional digital and traditional animator and cartoonist with over 14 years of professional work experience in film, television, illustrations, web, advertising, and merchandising productions. Liubomir Borissov Associate Professor B.S. Mathematics and Physics, California Institute of Technology; M.P.S. Interactive Telecommunications, New York University; Ph.D. Physics, Columbia University; Global Vilar Fellow, Tisch School of the Arts, NYU; exhibitions: New Interfaces for Musical Expression conference, Japan, 2004; Canada 2005; Lincoln Center Summer Festival, NYC; the Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C. Borissov has taught at Harvestworks, Parsons School of Design and the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Svjetlana Bukvich-Nichols Visiting Associate Professor Bukvich grew up during the wildly active music scene in Sarajevo’s ’80s, with Arabian horses and four major religions at her doorstep. Her signature sound weaves deconstructivist dance suites with polymicrotonal sympho-rock tone poems, experimental prog rock/world jazz fusions with musique concrète spirituals, and contemporary art-song with electronica. A “concert composer/ performer whose music defies boundaries,” (ASCAP), Bukvich has appeared in the U.S. and internationally. She has received grants from the Soros Foundation, the American Composers Forum, ASCAP’s Buddy Baker Film Scoring Scholarship, New England Foundation for the Arts, and the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue at Harvard University. Bukvich is featured in the recently released book In Her Own Words—Conversations with Composers in the United States (University of Illinois Press). She was artist-in-residence at Lafayette College, and collaborated with Pomegranate Arts in New York in support of Goran Bregovic and His Wedding and Funeral Orchestra’s North American tour. Her score Interior Designs was listed as one of the top 10 dance events of 2013 (The Star-Ledger) and has received the New Music USA, 2013 Live Music for Dance award. Her album EVOLUTION was released on PARMA’s Big Round Records in April 2014. In July, she was an artist-in-residence at the historic Manley-Lefevre House in Vermont. Bukvich is also on the faculty at NYU, and is a 2013 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellow in Music/Sound. Jonathan Cohrs Visiting Instructor Digital Arts M.F.A., Parsons The New School of Design. Elliot Cowan Visiting Instructor Cowan was born in Melbourne, Australia, then moved to the wilds of Tasmania, where he directed thousands of commercials for regional television. In 2006 he left for London where he mostly worked with UIi Meyer animation. While in London he began animating the award-winning Boxhead and Roundhead shorts. Now he lives in New York with all kinds of grown-up stuff like a wife and child and a green card. He has recently completed The Stressful Adventures of Boxhead & Roundhead, his first feature, and he did almost all of it himself in between teaching, freelance animation gigs, and his family. 206 Digital Arts Faculty Edward Darino Stephen Jackett Peter Mackey Genevieve Okupniak Adjunct Assistant Professor Ph.D., UEU on New Technologies; M.F.A., Tisch School of Art, New York University; designer, on-air identification for Manhattan Cable, HBO, Calliope, USA Networks, Con Edison, USA Olympics, Snoopy and Superman specials; editor, director, and special effects supervisor for Hollywood Stars, Grand Entertainment, Disney Entertainment, Discovery, Galavision, and many others. Darino’s Special Effects Library is used in 62 countries worldwide. Visiting Instructor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.F.A., School of Visual Arts; works include award-winning commercial animation for J.J. Sedelmaier Productions, with clients such as the Oxygen and Discovery channels, Saturday Night Live, Chef Boyardee, the Ad Council, and the Chicago Tribune; additional work includes animated Web advertisements for ESPN360.com for W/M Animation and an antismoking 3-D animated film for the C. Everett Koop Institute (1998–99); web-based projects include 3-D animated e-cards for online greeting card brand MyFunCards and various popular Facebook applications, such as the FlowerShop, My Own Superhero, and Smiley Creator. Professor B.A., Syracuse University; M.F.A., University of Southern California; has nearly 40 years of experience writing and directing award-winning films, videos, multi-image, and interactive programs and installations for companies such as GE, Apple, and Simon and Schuster Interactive. He has taught and lectured in South Korea and Turkey, writes speculative fiction, and enjoys pushing the limits of three-dimensional interactivity, player-mediated generative art, and artist-friendly microelectronics. Visiting Instructor Digital Arts M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts Marianna Ellenberg Visiting Instructor B.A., Wesleyan University; M.A., Slade School of Art; 2009 LMCC Swing Space residency; exhibitions: The N.Y. Underground Film Festival, 2007, The Collectif Jeune Cinéma, 2003, LA Freewaves, 2006; exhibitions: The Pleasure Seekers, Chashama Gallery, NYC, 2009, Hysteria, UC Long Beach, 2008. Mike Enright Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., The University of the Arts; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts; curated national and international animated shorts and features for the Philadelphia Film Society (2002–08); also produced animated campaigns for the Philadelphia Film Festival and The Philadelphia International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival; scenic painter for theater, broadcast, and museum installations, whose credits include work for NBC, VH1, Anheuser Busch theme parks, and the Long Beach Opera; his works in oil and acrylics are held by private collectors; his independent animated films include Moo! (1995), nominated for a Student Academy award, and Grit!, a 10-minute, hand-processed 16mm tribute to boxing featured at MoMA (2006). Kay Hines Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Art History, Barnard College; Cine Golden Eagle Award, editor of 9/11: Response and Recovery for Signet Productions and Bovis Lend Lease, 2003; Greenwald Foundation Grant, 1995; New York Foundation for the Arts Grant, 1992, 1985; National Endowment for the Arts Creative Artist Fellowship Grant, 1981; videographer and internationally exhibited media installation artist; co-owner/ founder of Dekart Video, est. 1981. Kenneth Hughes Visiting Instructor Everett Kane Assistant Professor B.A. Religion, Princeton University; B.F.A., with distinction, Fine Arts, M.F.A., Fine Arts, Art Center College of Design. Kane is an artist, 3-D animator, and technical director whose clients include Nike, Klasky-Csupo, Reel FX, Location One, CalTech, Sloan-Kettering, Rockefeller College, Pixel Blocks, New York Festivals, Mirabell Films, and DZI; exhibitions include Location One, White Box, Animamus Art Salon, Los Angeles Arboretum, Art Center College of Design, Hotel Grifou, Pillers Gallery, Envoy Enterprises, Nezla Productions, L.A. Municipal Gallery. For the last 16 years, he has taught 3-D modeling, animation, drawing for animation, character design, character modeling, 3-D lighting and rendering, VFX, dynamics, programming for animators, character rigging, technical direction, digital compositing, digital painting, digital imaging, web design, interface design, fine art, critical theory, and experimental digital media. Hyunsuk Kim Visiting Instructor Digital Arts Linda Lauro-Lazin Adjunct Associate Professor Masters, Computer Graphics, NYIT. Lauro-Lazin is a cross-disciplinary artist, curator, lecturer and educator. Her work explores impermanence, perception and vehicles of communication. She has been using digital media in her practice since 1986 and is considered a pioneer of digital art. Lauro-Lazin began her career as a painter and photographer. She is a Fulbright scholar in art. Her work is included in Art in the Digital Age by Bruce Wands. She has been teaching for many years and has organized and moderated many guest lectures and panel discussions. She has served on international art juries and has curated some provocative exhibitions. Lauro-Lazin has a great passion for building community and sharing her ideas about art. She also loves a good story. David Mattingly Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Colorado State University; M.F.A. Art Center; headed the Matte Department at Walt Disney Studios where he worked on The Black Hole, Tron, Dick Tracy, Stephen King’s The Stand, and I, Robot for Weta Digital in New Zealand; has produced over 500 covers for most major publishers of science fiction and fantasy, including Baen, Bantam, DAW, Del Rey, Dell, Marvel, Omni, Playboy, Signet, and Tor; for Scholastic Inc., he painted 54 covers for K.A. Applegate’s Animorphs series, along with the last five covers for the Everworld series; illustrated the popular Honor Harrington series for author David Weber; painted the latest repackaging of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ “Pellucidar” books for Ballantine Books; two-time winner of Magazine and Booksellers Best Cover of the Year award, and winner of the Association of Science Fiction Artists Chesley award; other clients include Michael Jackson, Lucasfilm, Universal Studios, Totco Oil, Galloob Toys, R/ Greenberg Associates, Click 3X, and Spontaneous Combustion; author of The Digital Matte Painting Handbook (Sybex, 2011), the first guide to digital matte painting. Nicholas O’Brien Visiting Instructor M.F.A., University of Colorado at Boulder; O’Brien is a net-based artist, curator, and writer whose research revolves around the exploration of digital self and the relevance of landscape representation within network culture. His work has appeared internationally in Mexico, Berlin, London, Dublin, Italy, and throughout the U.S. He has also been featured in several publications including ARTINFO, Art F City, Sculpture Magazine, Dazed Digital, The Creators Project, DIS, ilikethisart, Frieze d/e, the Brooklyn Rail, Rhizome at the New Museum, and The New York Times. In 2011 he was awarded a Turbulence Commission Grant funded by the NEA and curated a top 10 exhibition of 2011 as noted by Paddy Johnson for L Magazine. Last year he premiered a new work in collaboration with Rashaun Mitchell at the Baryshnikov Art Center in New York as well as mounting an exhibition at the Arti et Amicitiae in Amsterdam. He is currently living in Brooklyn working as a visiting artist professor and gallery director for the Department of Digital Art at Pratt Institute. Michael O’Rourke Professor M.F.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ed.M., Harvard University; artist, author, and educator; selected exhibitions include: Kennedy Center for the Arts, Washington, D.C.; Musée d’Art Moderne, Paris; Isetan Museum, Tokyo; Laumont Editions, NYC; Hong Gah Museum, Taipei; Uma Gallery, NYC. His artwork encompasses printmaking, murals, sculpture, drawing, and animation, and frequently combines digital and traditional techniques. Recent work focuses on large-scale multimedia murals, multimedia sculpture, and digital prints. The interactive multimedia works combine static imagery, drawing, video, and 3-D animation. In the 1980s, he worked at the world-famous NYIT Computer Graphics Lab, with many of the pioneers and inventors of computer imaging and animation. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, he did extensive work for the artist Frank Stella, producing sculptural models, graphics, and animation. He has consulted on digital imaging for a number of artists, including Jenny Holzer, and is the author of two books and numerous articles about digital art. His teaching experience includes teaching kindergarten, conversational French, and English as a foreign language in Birkina-Faso, Africa. Mira Scharf Visiting Instructor B.S., University of California at San Diego; M.F.A., University of at California, Los Angeles; animated for television programming including Dilbert, Queer Duck, Assy McGee, Wonder Pets, Sesame Street shorts and Pinky Dinky Doo; also animated many webisodes for General Mills, Postopia, and PBS Kids, and animated computer games for Dreamworks Interactive, Knowledge Adventure, and others; illustrated 25 educational workbooks for U.R.J. Press and has written copy for computer games and created story and graphic content for computer game play as well; her cartoons have appeared in Harvard Business Review, Reader’s Digest, Funny Times, and Narrative magazine. Digital Arts Faculty 207 Claudia Tait Bryan Zanisnik Associate Professor M.F.A., University of Maryland Baltimore County; B.F.A., Ringling School of Art and Design. She is a digital artist and media theorist whose works explore the meaning of technology in the construction of gender. Her critical inquiries focus on the social, political, and economic role of computer programming and contextualize technology’s languages as a form of writing and literacy. Katherine Torn Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Chicago Institute of the Arts Digital Arts Lukas Wadya Visiting Instructor Digital Arts M.F.A., School of Visual Arts Gregory Webb Adjunct Instructor Daniel Weisbard Visiting Instructor Digital Arts M.F.A., Rochester Institute of Technology Elizabeth White Visiting Instructor B.A., Vassar College; M.F.A. Photography, Video and Related Media, School of Visual Arts; White is a multidisciplinary artist whose work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, most recently in The Balloon, a group show at Rawson Projects curated by Jessamyn Fiore. Other recent exhibitions include A Map is Not the Territory at FiveMyles, the fourth annual Artisterium International Contemporary Art Exhibition in Tbilisi, No Soul For Sale at the Tate Modern in London, and Surveil, a two-person show with Anne Elizabeth Moore at the Center for Endless Progress in Berlin. White curated Culturehall’s Feature Issue 95, and her work was recently published in The State (UAE). She has been awarded residencies in Leipzig, Tbilisi, Marfa,TX, and on Governors Island, and has received support from CECArtsLink, the Hattie Strong Foundation, and the Davis Educational Foundation. She was the recipient of an Aaron Siskind Fellowship. Based in Brooklyn, she teaches in the graduate program in digital arts at Pratt Institute, and at Bennington College in Vermont. Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Hunter College; attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. He has recently exhibited and performed at PS1, Sculpture Center, and the Queens Museum of Art; in Philadelphia at the Fabric Workshop and Museum; in Miami at the De La Cruz Collection; in Chicago at the Museum of Contemporary Photography; in Los Angeles at LAXART; and internationally at the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, the Kunsthalle Exnergasse in Vienna and the Futura Centre for Contemporary Art in Prague. Zanisnik’s work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art in America, Artforum, ARTnews, Modern Painters, and Time Out New York. He has completed residencies at the Macdowell Colony, the Art Omi International Artists Residency, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace Program, and the Guangdong Times Museum in Guangzhou, China. Currently he is an artist in residence at the Smack Mellon Artist Studio Program in Brooklyn, NY, and presented a commissioned project at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia in the spring of 2014. 208 Fine Arts Faculty David Alban Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art; selected group exhibitions: Clay Art Center, Port Chester, N.Y.; Josaphat Arts Hall & Convivium33 Gallery, Cleveland; Lill Street Art Center, Chicago; Wrocław National Gallery, Poland; selected grants and residencies: Ksiaz Factory, Poland; Watershed Center for the Ceramic Arts; Panevezys Glass Works, Lithuania; International Ceramics Symposium, Hongik University, Seoul, Korea; Jerome Foundation Grant Residency, St. John’s University; other professional: master kiln builder; art fabricator, Polich Art Works, Newburgh, N.Y.; collections: The Decorative Arts Museum, Prague; International Museum of Ceramic Arts, Czech Republic; Ceramic Arts Museum, Poland; the Bemis Foundation; the Butler Museum of Art. Adam Apostolos Sculpture Technician, Visiting Instructor Karen Bachmann Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Pratt Institute; exhibitions: Museum of Arts and Design, New York; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Oregon College of Arts and Sciences; Greene and Greene Gallery, Lambertville, N.J.; Miyo Oto, San Francisco; Flushing Council of the Arts and Sciences, Flushing, N.Y.; Craze Gallery, London; www.karenbachmanndesigns.com. Lisha Bai Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Washington University in St. Louis; M.F.A, Yale University; exhibitions: National Academy, New York; MCLA Gallery 51, North Adams, Mass.; Bravin Lee Programs, New York; Zone Chelsea Center for the Arts, New York; Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York,; Tyler Estate, New York; Musée d’Art Américain Giverny, Giverny, France; awards and residencies: S.J. Wallace Truman Fund Award, National Academy, New York; Vermont Studio Center Full Fellowship, Johnson, Vt.; Terra Summer Residency Fellow, Giverny, France; publications: The New York Times; The New Yorker; New York Sun; www.lishabai.com. Hannah Barrett Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Boston University; B.A., Wellesley College; has spent a decade developing and exhibiting an oeuvre of androgynous portraiture; had solos in New York City at the Stephan Stoyanov Gallery and in Boston at the Childs Gallery and Howard Yezerski Gallery; has exhibited at the Museum for Women in the Arts, Washington, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; recipient of an Artadia Award and Travel Fellowships from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Wellesley College. Rick Barry Mona Brody William Carroll Digital Arts, Professor Donald Pierce School of Painting; Pratt Institute; founded Rick Barry/Desktop Studio in 1987; prior design work at William Etsy Company, Craig Adams Associates, Helitzer Advertising, and Robert Whitehall Advertising. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., East Carolina University; M.F.A., Virginia Commonwealth University; recent exhibition and curatorial projects: Location One, New York; PS1 MoMA, New York; public arts projects: MTA Arts for Transit, BACA, and PACC; special projects manager, PS1 MoMA; Teme Celeste magazine; national and international exhibitions; recipient of Pollock-Krasner fellowship; www.lisabateman. tumblr.com/post/3622546208. Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Vermont College of Art; M.S., Massachusetts College of Art; B.F.A., Moore College of Art and Design; solo exhibitions: Aljira, Newark, N.J.; the Montclair Art Museum, N.J.; Pleiades Gallery, N.Y.; group exhibitions: Southwest Minnesota State University Art Museum, Marshall; Kunstlerhaus, Graz, Austria; awards: Geraldine Dodge Foundation Grant; National Association for the Advancement of Psychoanalysis, N.Y.; Printmaking Fellowship, Rutgers Center for Innovative Print and Paper; collections: Museum of Modern Art Library, New York; the Montclair Art Museum, Montclair, N.J.; Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Sweet Briar; Boleshlawiec Art Museum, Poland; publications: The New York Times, Washington Art News; www.monabrody.com. Visiting Associate Professor M.F.A., C.U.N.Y. Queens College; B.F.A., Pratt Institute; director of the Studio Program at the Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts; involved with the New York art world for more than 25 years; held prior positions at the Dia Art Foundation, the Brooklyn Museum, and as the gallery director for Charles Cowles Gallery and the Elizabeth Harris Gallery; has lectured for the New York Foundation for the Arts, Bard College, Cranbrook Academy of Art, F.I.T., New York University, and the School of Visual Arts. Michael Brennan Howard Buchwald Lisa Bateman Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.A., University of Florida; exhibited with Minus Space, Thatcher Projects, Lucas Schoormans, Anthony Meier Fine Arts, Yoshii Gallery, and others; exhibited internationally in Brussels, Paris, Shanghai, Sydney; group exhibitions include PS1 MoMA, Vassar College, St. Peter’s College; has written extensively for The Brooklyn Rail, ArtNet, and numerous catalog essays; reviewed in Art in America, The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, etc.; collected in the National Gallery of Art, Baltimore Museum of Art, San Jose Museum of Art, American Express, General Dynamics; also teaches at Hunter College and has taught at the Cooper Union; www. michaelbrennan.info. Deborah Bright Chair M.F.A., University of Chicago; B.A., Wheaton College; photographic projects have been exhibited internationally, including at the Victoria and Albert Museum; the Museet for Fotokunst, Copenhagen; Nederlands Foto Instituut, Rotterdam; Museum Folkwang, Essen; Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography, Ottawa; Cambridge Darkroom; Vancouver Art Gallery; her photographs are included in the collections of the Whitney Museum; National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian; Addison Gallery of American Art; Fogg Art Museum; Boston Athenaeum; Rose Art Museum; University Art Museum at Binghamton University; California Museum of Photography; and the RISD Museum of Art; www.deborahbright.net. Professor M.A., Hunter College; B.F.A., The Cooper Union; since 1971: numerous solo and group exhibitions here and abroad; represented by Nancy Hoffman Gallery: www.nancyhoffmangallery.com; awards: Gottlieb Foundation, Elizabeth Foundation, Pollock-Krasner Grant, National Endowment for the Arts CAPS (Creative Artists Program Services), Guggenheim Fellowship. David Butler Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., University of Washington; B.F.A., Georgia State University; sculptor, jeweler, designer, and goldsmith; his work has been extensively exhibited and is included in public and private collections; www.davidbutlerco.com. Blake Carrington Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Syracuse University, B.A., Indiana University; works within the spheres of the sound, visual, and performing arts; in 2014 he performed with Soundwalk Collective and Patti Smith for the French Institute/Alliance Française Crossing the Line Festival; staged a solo exhibition and premiered an audiovisual performance at Contemporary Art Center New Orleans; received a Jerome Foundation research grant; curated shows for This Red Door and Dumbo Arts Festival; previously he also staged solo exhibitions at the Philadelphia Photo Arts Center and Central Utah Arts Center, and has performed at the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire du Judaïsme in Paris and Elektra Festival in Montreal; in 2012 he completed a sound art commission for Radio del Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid and performed in the River to River Festival in New York; has been artist-inresidence at LMCC’s Swing Space in New York, Rustines Lab in Montreal, Tofte Lake Center in Minnesota, and Haeinsa Temple in South Korea, among others; in 2011 he received a NYSCA grant in support of his debut CD release concert at St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral in New York; born in Indiana and currently lives and works in Brooklyn. Nanette Carter Adjunct Associate Professor, Coordinator for Drawing M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.A., Oberlin College, studied abroad in Perugia, Italy, and traveled through Europe and North Africa; exhibits with the G.R. N’Namdi Gallery in Chicago, Miami, and Detroit; works and lives in New York; had solo show in Miami in October 2012 and in São Paulo, Brazil, in 2013 and Havana, Cuba, in 2014; www.nanettecarter.com. Cammi Climaco Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A., Kent State University, Ohio; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art, Mich.; Pilchuck Glass School, Seattle; solo exhibitions: Lump Gallery, Raleigh, N.C.; Garden Fresh, Chicago; Silo, New York; Claude Howell Gallery, University of North Carolina, Wilmington; Duncan Art Gallery, Stetson University, Deland, Fla.; group exhibitions include: Front Room, Brooklyn; Rotunda Gallery, Brooklyn; Spaces, Cleveland; Redsaw, Newark; publications include: The New York Times, The New York Sun, Cleveland Plain Dealer, and flavorpill.net; www.brightsunnyfutures.com. Ian Cofre Visiting Instructor Political Science and Economics, Columbia University; independent curator and writer based in New York City, engaged primarily with emerging and established artists working locally and in Latin America; his main areas of interest are examining the art market, alternative economies and their modes of art production, turning the lens onto underrepresented artists and marginalized communities, and contextualizing artists crossgenerationally; has previously worked as director at Sue Scott Gallery, Studio Manager for Mickalene Thomas, and most recently as U.S. Director for the PINTA NY art fair; recent projects include cocurating, as one of 10 curators, the exhibition TEN at Cindy Rucker Gallery (New York, 2014); Bigger Than Shadows, DODGEgallery (New York, 2012) with Rich Blint; and both Tracing the Unseen Border, La MaMa La Galleria (New York, 2011) and Southern Exposure at Dumbo Arts Center (Brooklyn, 2009) with Omar Lopez-Chahoud; other shows include South Central (2014), a co-curated review of regional painters from the south of Chile; Behind Closed Doors (2011), a curated solo project by Manuela Viera-Gallo at Y Gallery; and The Doubtful Fine Arts Faculty 209 Guest (2010) at Kill Devil Hill in Greenpoint, NY; publications include an artist profile of Alberto Borea for Arte al Día and co-writing an essay with Lopez-Chahoud for the Bronx Museum’s Taking AIM! The Business of Being an Artist Today (2011) edited by Marysol Nieves; profiles and reviews of exhibitions he has curated have appeared in The Art Newspaper, Arte al Día International, and The Wall Street Journal, among others. Peggy Cyphers David Cohen Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Hons (History of Art) University of Sussex; M.A., (History of Art) Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. Alexia Cohen-Tortoledo Jewelry Technician, Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Massachusetts College of Art and Design; her art jewelry pieces have been shown with Mobilia Gallery and Gallery Loupe, both prominent galleries in the Art Jewelry world; recently, her work was shown as part of the Art of Adornment: Studio Jewelry exhibition at the Hunterdon Art Museum in New Jersey; www.alexiacohen.com. Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Maryland Institute of Art; Towson State University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; recipient of National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, PS1 MoMA New York Studio Award; Ingor Foundation Award; represented by E. M. Donahue Gallery, New York; Solo Press, New York; Betsy Rosenfield Gallery, Chicago; contributing writer to Arts Magazine, Art Journal, and other publications; www.peggycyphers.com. Pradeep Dalal Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., International Center of Photography/ Bard College; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Architecture; B.Arch., Center for Environmental Planning and Technology, 1987; www.pradeepdalal.com. Gregory Drasler Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., M.F.A., University of Iowa; has shown his work in the U.S. and in Europe; founding member of REPOhistory, an artist collective that makes site-specific public artwork based on issues of race, gender, class, and sexuality; created a multimedia installation titled datamap_2001.2 that dealt with the social and political climate and was shown at the Annex, which is affiliated with White Box; www.jimcostanzo.us. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., M.F.A., University of Illinois; solo exhibitions: Betty Cunningham Gallery, New York; the Center for Contemporary Art, Chicago; Queens Museum of Art, N.Y., and the recent Tattoo Parlor, at California State University at Fullerton, Santa Ana; group exhibitions include New Museum of Contemporary Art; Whitney Museum of Contemporary Art/Champion, New York; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; awards: Guggenheim Fellowship, National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship; author of: “Painting into a Corner: Representation as Shelter,” in The Vitality of Objects: Exploring the Work of Christopher Bollas (Wesleyan University Press, 2002); represented in New York by the Betty Cunningham Gallery; www.drasler.com. Grayson Cox Kelly Driscoll Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Columbia University; B.F.A., Indiana University; exhibitions include Exquisite Corpse Project, Gasser Grunert Gallery, N.Y.; Short-Term Deviation, The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts, N.Y.; One and Three Quarters of an Inch, curated by Peter Clough, St. Cecilia’s Parish Art Space, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Entropy Symphony, performance with Zefrey Thorwell, Whitney Museum, N.Y.; B-Sides, 6–8 Months Project Space, N.Y.; grants and residencies include Rema Hort Mann Foundation Nominee; Catwalk Artist Residency, Catskill, N.Y.; Montrose Initiative for the Arts, Artist Residency program; the Daisy Soros Prize for Fine Arts, awarded by the American Austrian Foundation to study in Salzburg, Austria; work held in the collections of Fisher Landau Center for Art; John Friedman, Easton Capital, N.Y.; Serra Sabuncuoglu, N.Y.; www.graysoncox.com. Assistant Professor B.F.A., Plymouth University of England; M.F.A., City College, New York; exhibitions: Kristen Frederickson Gallery, New York; International Print Center, New York; Greater New York (2000), MoMA PS1, N.Y.; Mark Wooley Gallery, Portland, Ore.; D.A.P, New York; Kaosiung Museum of Fine Art, Taiwan; artist books: Jalaluddin Mohammad Rumi (Vincent Fitzgerald & Co, New York), and Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye (the Institute for Cultural Inquiry, Calif.). James Costanzo Samuel Evensen Visisting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Brigham Young University; M.F.A., the New York Academy; B.F.A. from Brigham Young University. Exhibition venues include: Fuse Gallery, NY; Art House Gallery, Philadelphia; Mark Miller Gallery, NY; and Sloan Fine Art, NY. 210 Fine Arts Faculty Brad Ewing Michael Fujita Anne Gilman Dave Hardy Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; Teaching Certificate, Brown University; B.F.A., Cornish College of the Arts; exhibitions: IPCNY, New York; Temple University, Rome, Italy; 193c Gallery, Brooklyn, N.Y.; professional activities: director and printer, the Grenfell Press, New York; printer, Sienese Shredder Editions, New York; director and printer, Marginal Editions, New York; printer for artist Philip Taaffe. Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University; B.F.A., Ceramic Art, Kansas City Art Institute; exhibitions include Periphery, Philadelphia Art Alliance; Sightlines, Jane Hartsook Gallery; Greenwich House Pottery, New York; New Porcelain Work, Cross Mackenzie Gallery, Washington; Artificially Flavored, the Evelyn Shapiro Foundation Fellowship Solo Exhibition, The Clay Studio, Philadelphia; Preserve, Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition, Schein-Joseph International Museum of Ceramic Art, Alfred, N.Y.; Michael Fujita, New Work, Red Star Studios, Kansas City, Mo.; Gyeonggi International CeraMIX Biennale International Competition, Icheon, Republic of Korea; Strangely Familiar, NCECA, University of South Florida School of Art, Tampa, Fla.; Pretty Young Things, Lacoste Gallery, Concord, Mass.; Midsummer Eve, Meredith Gallery, Baltimore; Correlations, Red Star Studios; Small Favors V, Philadelphia; Of This Century, The Clay Studio; Conversations, Coincidences, and Motivations: The Alfred Experience, Snyderman Gallery, Philadelphia; www.michaelfujita.com. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., State University of New York at New Paltz; M.F.A., Brooklyn College; solo exhibitions: Palacio del Segundo Cabo, Havana, Cuba; Casa Cristo, Guadalajara, Mexico; Sala Polivanted, Matanzaz, Cuba; and numerous group exhibitions and awards; collections: the New York Public Library; Kresge Museum of Art; Brooklyn Museum; National Museum of Women in the Arts; Colegio de Arquitectos de Estado de Jalisco, Guadalajara, Mexico; Library of Congress; publications: Frayed Edges (Ediciones Vigia, Matanzas, Cuba, 2001); Facing Eviction and Don’t Lose Heart, ISCA; www. annegilman.com. Visiting Professor M.F.A., the Yale School of Art; B.A., Brown University; studied at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture; selected group exhibitions include Make It Now at Sculpture Center, Unbalance at Jack Shainman, and Greater New York 2005 at PS1 MoMA. Solo exhibitions include Art in General, 92Y Tribeca, and La Mama Galleria in New York and Southern Exposure in San Francisco; recipient of New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship in 2011; had a solo show at Regina Rex in September 2013; www.davehardystudio.com. Patrick Fenton Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Stanford University; B.A., University of California at Los Angeles. Partner and co-founder of Swayspace, Brooklyn, a custom design studio with an emphasis on custom printing, letterpress, book design, interface design, and identity design. Recent exhibitions include International Print Center, Art Directors Club, and Governors Island, in New York. Featured in Made in New York: Handcrafted Works by Master Artisans. Allen Frame Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Art History and English, Harvard University; represented by Gitterman Gallery in New York where he had solo exhibitions in 2005 and 2009; his book Detour, a compilation of his photographs over a decade, was published by Kehrer Verlag Heidelberg in 2001; recipient of grants from the Penny McCall Foundation, the Peter Reed Foundation, Creative Time, Art Matters, CEC Artslink and others; co-founder of the contemporary art center Delta Axis in Memphis in 1992, and in 1990, co-created “Electric Blanket,” an epic slide show about AIDS, which toured throughout the U.S. and to Norway, the U.K., Germany, Hungary, Japan, and Russia; has been the curator of exhibitions at Art in General, including Darrel Ellis in 1996 and In This Place in 2004; at PS122 Gallery, including Bearings: the Female Figure in 2006; and at the Camera Club of New York, including Linda Salerno: A Selection of Experimental Photographs from the Black Mirror Series; currently serves as the president of the board of the Camera Club of New York, and is an executive producer of Joshua Sanchez’s feature film Four; www.allenframe.net. Linda Francis Adjunct Professor M.A., B.F.A., Hunter College; selected solo exhibitions include Hal Bromm Gallery, Gallerie Gislain Mollet-Vieville, PS1 MoMA, Damon Brandt Gallery, Gallerie Per Sten, William Paterson University, Nicholas Davies Gallery, University of Alabama College of Arts and Sciences, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, Minus Space; selected group exhibitions include Aldrich Museum, Studio La Citta, Moore College of Art, Stadische Gallerie Im Lenbachhaus, Kunsthalle Basel, List Gallery MIT, Nordjyllands Kunst-museum, The Kitchen, Louisiana Museet, Leubsdorf Art Gallery at Hunter College, Rogalund Kunstmuseum, Sydney Non Objective, Vassar College, and Academy of Arts and Letters Invitational. Joseph Fyfe Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., University of the Arts, Philadelphia College of Art; selected solo exhibitions: JG Contemporary, New York; Ryllega Gallery, Hanoi, Vietnam; Cynthia Broan Gallery, New York; selected group exhibitions include Intersections, Meyer School of Art; Paint/Not Paint, Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art, New York; Carton Rouge, Atelier Tampon-Ramier, Paris; selected awards: Guggenheim Fellowship; McDowell Fellowship; Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Award; Pollock-Krasner Award; Fulbright Award; selected publications: Art, das Kunstmagazin; Art in America, Joe Fyfe at Nicholas Davies; www.joefyfe.com. Mariam Ghani Visiting Associate Professor M.F.A., School of Visual Arts; B.A., New York University; Mariam Ghani’s research-based practice spans video, installation, photography, performance, and text. Her recent exhibitions and screenings include the Rotterdam and CPH:DOX film festivals; dOCUMENTA (13) in Kabul, Afghanistan, and Kassel, Germany; MoMA in New York, and the Sharjah Biennial in the United Arab Emirates. Recent texts have been published in Filmmaker, Mousse, the Radical History Review, The New York Review of Books blog, and dOCUMENTA’s 100 Notes/100 Thoughts book series. Ongoing collaborations include Index of the Disappeared (with Chitra Ganesh), Performed Places (with Erin Kelly), and the Afghan Films online archive (with pad.ma). Ghani has been awarded the New York Foundation of the Arts and Soros Fellowships, grants from the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, CEC ArtsLink, the MidAtlantic Arts Foundation, and the Experimental Television Center; and residencies at Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Eyebeam Atelier, Smack Mellon, and the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart. Jonathan Goodman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Columbia University; M.A., University of Pennsylvania; freelance writer and editor, various publications, including Art in America, ARTnews, Drawing, and Art Asia Pacific. David Gothard Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Pratt Institute; freelance illustrator providing conceptual images for major national and international publications such as The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, Time magazine, the Los Angeles Times, and The New York Times; www.davidgothard.com. Toni Greenbaum Visiting Associate Professor M.A., Hunter College; B.A., City College of New York; a Brooklyn-based art historian specializing in 20th and 21st-century jewelry and metalwork; wrote Messengers of Modernism: American Studio Jewelry 1940-1960, along with numerous book chapters and essays for arts publications; has lectured internationally at institutions such as the Museum of Arts and Design, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and Pinakotheck der Moderne, Munich, and curated exhibitions for several institutions, including the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Nancy Grimes Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Indiana University; M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago; co-founder of the artists’ space West Hubbard Gallery, Chicago; exhibited widely nationally; author of Jared French’s Myths; writes for Art in America and ARTnews, for which she has been an editorial associate since 1986; www.nancygrimes.net. Eric Heist Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., University of Delaware; Empire State College, SUNY Studio Program in New York; M.F.A., Hunter College; exhibitions: Schroeder Romero (solo exhibition), New York; Max Protetch, New York; Islip Art Museum, East Islip, N.Y.; Ronald Feldman Gallery, New York; Brooklyn Museum, N.Y.; Centre of Attention, London; publications: Contemporary magazine; The New York Times, Village Voice; Elle; founder and director of Momenta Art, Brooklyn, N.Y.; www.ericheist.com. Vera Iliatova Visiting Assistant Professor Studied at the Sorbonne University in Paris, France, B.A., Brandeis University; M.F.A. Painting, Yale University; attended Skowhegan School of Art; exhibition venues include: Monya Rowe Gallery, NY; Schroeder Romero NY; Eleven Rivington, NY; and Artists’ Space, NY. Martine Kacynski Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Parsons The New School of Design; B.F.A., Liverpool Polytechnic, England; exhibitions: Sculpture Space, Utica, N.Y.; Mary Dinaburg Studios, New York; Affinity Archives, Dublin, Ireland; Jessica Murray Projects, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Kent Gallery, New York; Art and Idea, Mexico City; Davis Anderson Gallery, Buffalo, N.Y.; public sculpture: Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island City, N.Y.; The Rosen Sculpture Park, N.C.; Lipe Art Park in Syracuse, N.Y.; recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship; represented by Dinaburg Arts in New York; www.martinestudio.com. Yael Kanarek Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; a multidisciplinary artist; has been working with the visual properties of languages and the Internet, to explore the universality of human interaction; in addition to her fine art practice at yaelkanarek.com, she recently founded Aleph Foundry, a company that specializes in text-based jewelry; selected for the 2002 Whitney Biennial, past exhibitions of Kanarek’s work also include The Drawing Center, New York; Beral Madra Contemporary Art, Istanbul; National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens; CU Museum, Boulder; Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University; The Fine Arts Faculty 211 Jewish Museum, New York; Exit Art; The Kitchen; Museum of the Moving Image, New York; Wood Street Galleries, Pittsburgh; bitforms gallery, New York; in addition to a Rockefeller New Media Fellowship and an Eyebeam Honorary Fellowship, Kanarek is also the recipient of grants from the Jerome Foundation Media Arts and New York Foundation for the Arts; commissions from the SFMoMA and Turbulence.org; residencies at Civitella Ranieri, Harvestworks and the Ma’amuta Art and Media Center; in 1999, she founded Upgrade! International. Peter Kruty Shirley Kaneda Professor B.F.A., Parsons The New School of Design; recent solo exhibitions: Danese Gallery, New York; Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London; Galerie Jean-Luc and Takako Richards, Paris; Feigen Contemporary, NY; Galerie Schuster and Scheuerman; Berlin and Frankfurt; Centre d’Art Contemporain Roussillon-Languedoc, France; Centre d’Art d’Ivry, Paris; publications include: Art in America, ARTnews, Contemporary, The New York Times, Time Out; Beauty and the Contemporary Sublime by Jeremy Gilbert Rolfe; What is Abstraction by Andrew Benjamin; Talking Painting: Dialogues with 12 Contemporary Abstract Painters by David Ryan; awards: Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Grant, Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, NEA Regional Fellowship, and The Elizabeth Foundation; contributing editor for BOMB magazine and has published articles, catalogue essays, and reviews for various publications and journals since 1989; www.shirleykaneda.com. Michael Kirk Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Rutgers University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; exhibitions: Norkse Grafikere, Oslo, Norway; Gimpel and Wietzenhoffer, New York; and ArtWalk, New York; collections: Brooklyn Museum, N.Y.; Library of Congress, Washington; Philadelphia Museum of Art; DeCordova and Dana Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts. Ross Knight Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., University of Minnesota at Minneapolis; exhibition venues include: Team Gallery, PS 1/ MoMA, Art Metropole, the Sculpture Center, Apex Art and Richard Telles Fine Art. Vivien Knussi Adjunct Instructor Ph.D., Columbia University; M.A., B.A., Tufts University; lectured at MoMA focusing on photography; also worked for six years as curator and head of acquisitions for the Dreyfus Mellon Fund; since completing her Ph.D. Knussi has begun writing a textbook on photography. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Geography, University of Chicago; M.A., M.L.S. Book Arts, Printmaking and Photography, University of Alabama; founded Kruty Editions in 1991 in Brooklyn, providing a studio for collaborative artists’ books, letterpress, printmaking, typographic design, and fine commercial letterpress printing. Alexander Kvares Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Painting, University of Kansas; M.F.A. Printmaking, University of Texas; exhibition venues include: Mulherin + Pollard, NY, Westbeth Gallery, NY; Beep Beep Gallery Atlanta, GA; the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, GA; Benjamin La Rocco Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.A., Middlebury College; represented by Janet Kurnatowski Gallery in New York and John Davis Gallery in Hudson; has exhibited in Europe and America; has been a visiting professor at Rutgers University and at Purchase College, and has lectured and been a visiting critic at Rutgers, Montclair, Hunter, and PS1 MoMA; currently teaches in the Fine Arts department of Pratt Institute; participated as a panelist at “Younger than Pontius Pilate” at The National Academy Museum, New York; recipient of a Marie Walsh Sharpe residency (2005–06) and the S.J. Wallace Truman Fund Award for Painting from the National Academy of Design Museum; is a contributing writer and editor at large for The Brooklyn Rail. David Lantow Visiting Associate Professor M.F.A., City University of New York, Brooklyn College; B.F.A., University of Iowa; exhibition venues include Exit Art, Ruby Gallery, Nurture Art; co-founded and curated exhibits at the former Cold Fish Art Space in Brooklyn, and was the artist liaison/Muse Fuse coordinator in 2001–02 for NURTUREart Non-Profit Inc.; from 2005–09 served as president of AGAST; since 2003 has taught printmaking at Brooklyn College; www. dlantow.com. Catherine Lecleire Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., University of Southern California; M.A.E., Art Education, Philadelphia College of Art; B.F.A., Philadelphia College of Art; B.A., Political Science, Ursinus College; selected solo and group exhibitions at Montclair Art Museum, Hunterdon Museum of Art, William Paterson University, College of New Jersey, University of Wisconsin, Dana Library, Center for Contemporary Printmaking, University Council on the Humanities; has taught at MIT’s Visual Arts Program, Hunter College, Bennington College, and Maryland Institute of Art. 212 Fine Arts Faculty Jenny Lee Patricia Madeja Nat Meade Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Sculpture, the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art; has exhibited extensively in galleries, arts organizations and museums; in fall 2002, had a retrospective at the Hoboken Historical Museum, sponsored by the NJ State Council for the Arts and the NJ Council for the Humanities, National Endowment for the Humanities; in 2001, her work was featured in the first-ever historical survey of 20th-century welded sculpture held at the Neuberger Museum; work is in public venues such as the Brooklyn Museum, the Newark Museum, and the Neuberger Museum of Art; private collections include DeMenil and Borgenicht-Brandt; www.ironmite.com. Associate Professor B.F.A., Pratt Institute; recipient of an American Vision Award, AJDC (American Jewelry Design Council), Saul Bell Award, Jewelry Arts Award, and Niche Award and featured in a variety of periodicals and books including Adorn, 500 Necklaces, Art Jewelry Today, The Art and Craft of Making Jewelry and American Couture Jewelry, and most recently The New Jewelers; a strong advocate for jewelry education, she has been teaching in the Fine Arts Jewelry department at Pratt Institute since 1998, was appointed jewelry coordinator in 2005, and received a full-time appointment in 2011. www.patriciamadeja.com. Assistant Chair, Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., University of Oregon; exhibited at Pierogi Gallery, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Spike Gallery, New York, Rogue Space, New York, Froelick Gallery, Portland, Ore.; Bernabe Somoza Fine Art, Houston; Karin Clarke Gallery, Eugene, Ore.; curated Artists Registries: Pierogi Flat Files; publications: Berlin Journal, Tin House, Portland Monthly, Northwest Review; www.natmeade.com. Marc Lepson Visiting Associate Professor M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 1997; B.A., English Literature, State University of New York at Albany, 1991; work has been included in exhibitions in New York; Chicago; San Francisco; Vienna; Berlin; and Torino, Italy, among others; recipient of a 2001 grant from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation; reproductions of his work have appeared in the September and October 2004 issues of Art in America; www.lepson.info. Frank Lind Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.A., Georgetown University; selected solo exhibitions: Recent Paintings, Gallery 210, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Ocean Paintings from Long Island, Henry Gregg Gallery, DUMBO, New York; selected group exhibitions: The New Hudson River School, Riverstone Arts, Haverstraw, N.Y.; Mermaids, Sideshow Gallery, Williamsburg, N.Y.; www.lindpaintings.com. Omar Lopez-Chahoud Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A.,Yale University School of Art; an independent international curator, recent exhibitions include: Untitled Art Fair at Art Basel Miami Beach, NY/Prague6, at Futura Contemporary Art Center, Prague, Czech Republic; co-curated Lush Life, which spanned nine galleries in New York; Salon 94, Invisible Exports, Lehman Maupin, Eleven Rivington, On Stellar Rays, Y Gallery, Sue Scott Gallery, and Collette Blanchard Gallery; and The Pipe and the Flow at Espacio Minimo in Madrid, Spain; has written essays for several publications including the catalogs for Dynasty (2006) and Rewind/ReCast/Review (2005); participated in curatorial panel discussions at Artists’ Space, Art in General, MoMA PS1, and The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City; was a guest critic at Art Omi in 2007; exhibitions have been reviewed in The New York Times, ArtForum, Village Voice, among many other publications. Ann Mandelbaum Adjunct Professor M.A., Media Studies, The New School; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; photographer, sculptor, and video artist who has exhibited internationally, including solo shows at The Grey Art Gallery, New York; Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, Ariz.; Galerie Francoise Paviot, Paris; Galerie Anita Beckers, Frankfurt, Germany; Westfalischer Kunstverein, Munster, Germany; Fotomuseum, Munich; Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt; Stadtgalerie Saarbruchen; Musée de l’Elysée, Lausanne, Switzerland; Canal Isabel II, Madrid; Kunsthalle Goeppingen, Germany; published in three hard cover monographs: Ann Mandelbaum (1994), and Ann Mandelbaum, New Work (1999), both published by Edition Stemmle, and Ann Mandelbaum, Thin Skin (2005), published by Hatje Cantz; lives in Costa Rica and New York; www. annmandelbaum.net. Dennis Masback Adjunct Professor B.F.A., M.F.A., Washington University School of Art; recipient of National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship; collections: Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design; Emory University; AT&T; Prudential Insurance Co.; Chemical Bank; and Fidelity Investments; publications: The New York Times, Artforum, ARTnews; represented by BerryHill Galleries, New York; www.dennismasback.com. J. Martin Mazzora Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., West Virginia University; M.F.A, American University, DC; co-founder of Cannonball Press; coordinator of Printmaking at Parsons The New School of Design, New York; curator/coordinator of the cross-institutional print exchange Swaptropolis. Dennis McNett Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; designer of board graphics for Anti-Hero skateboards; collaborates with Cannonball Press; master printer at Brand X editions; www.howlingprint.com. Jennifer Melby Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., Arcadia University; has taught at Yale University, LaGuardia Community College, Fairleigh Dickinson University, the Lower East Side Printshop, and the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop, and has been a guest lecturer at Brandeis University, Rhode Island School of Design, Lehman College, and The Cooper Union; currently teaches Printmaking at Pratt; for more than 25 years has operated her own studio which specializes in intaglio editions, and has worked there with many artists, including Donald Baechler, Brice Marden, Suzanne McClelland, Sean Scully, Joanne Greenbaum, Joan Snyder, Julia Jacquette, Red Grooms, and Amy Kao; prints from her studio have been acquired by contemporary collections including those of MoMA, The New York Public Library, Whitney Museum, Houston Museum of Fine Art, and Tate Gallery; in 2007 she was in residence at the American Academy in Rome on a visiting artist fellowship; www.jennifermelby.com. Ann Messner Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Pratt Institute; Henry Moore Foundation Post Graduate Fellow; solo exhibitions: Zilkha Gallery, Wesleyan University, Conn.; Dorsky Gallery, New York; Bath International Arts Festival, UK; Fawbush Gallery, New York; Worcester Art Museum, Mass.; Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Los Angeles; numerous public projects and installations include Eastern State Penitentiary, Philadelphia; Grey Art Gallery, NYU; Skulptur: Koln/Ehrenfeld, Cologne; awards: NEA Fellowship, New York Foundation for the Arts, Henry Moore International Fellowship; John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, Anonymous Was a Woman Award; Gottlieb Foundation Fellowship; Bunting Fellowship, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies, Harvard University; www.annmessner.net. Fine Arts Faculty 213 Curtis Mitchell Robert Morgan Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Sculpture, Yale University School of Art; M.A. Sculpture, Goddard College; solo exhibitions: PS1 MoMA Project Room, New York; Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh; Esso Gallery, New York; AC Projects, New York; KX Galerie, Hamburg, Germany; Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York; Galerie Marc Jancou, Zurich; White Columns, New York; selected group exhibitions: Modeling the Photographic: The End(s) of Photography, McDonough Museum of Art, Youngstown, Ohio; Leslie Tonkonow Gallery, New York.; Copilandia, Seville, Spain; Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York; Paolo Tonin Arte Contemporanea, Turin, Italy; Feigen Contemporary, New York; Dorsky Gallery Curatorial Projects, Long Island City, N.Y.; Contemporary Museum, Baltimore; essays and article written for: M/E/A/N/I/N/G and Lusitania; www.curtismitchellart.com. Adjunct Professor Ph.D., New York University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts; E.D.M., Northeastern University; B.F.A., University of Redlands. Aldrich Museum; Open Salvo, White Box, 1998; Bypass, Kunstmuseum-Bonn, 1997; Nancy Spero: Retrospective, New Museum of Contemporary Art; extensive service as resident and guest critic: RISD, Art OMI, Parsons The New School of Design; including lectures at Reykjavik National Museum, Iceland, and the Brooklyn Museum; selection panelist: ArtOmi International Residency Program and Henry Street Settlement Residency Program. John Monti Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.S., Painting, Portland State Universit; solo exhibitions include: Synthetic Pleasures, Bentley Projects, Phoenix, Ariz.; Fancy and Rondo, Elizabeth Harris Gallery, New York; Amatory Bodies, Sarah Moody Gallery of Art, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, and many group exhibitions; public art projects include Fancy for Boston; Changing Places, Metro Tech Center Brooklyn, N.Y.; Neuberger Museum of Art; Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute of Art; recipient of a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Grant, and New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship Grant; work is included in the collections of AT&T; the Arkansas Arts Center, the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, the Brooklyn Museum, the Castellini Art Museum of Niagara University, and Chase, among others; www.johnmonti.com. Donna Moran Professor M.F.A., Painting/Printmaking, Pratt Institute; B.A., Art Education, C. W. Post College; exhibitions include Instituto Cultural Peruano Norteamericano, Lima, Peru; Taller Galleria Forte, Spain; McGraw Gallery; the Rabbet Gallery; Art Source LA; collections include Noyes Museum, New Jersey State Museum of Art, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Hyatt Corporation, Johnson & Johnson; various solo and group shows, corporate and private collections; represented by the Rabbet Gallery, Art Source, LA; visiting artist: the Victorian College of Art, Melbourne, Australia; publications include Monoprinting (Jackie Newell, A & C Black, Great Britain); Water-Based Screen Printing (Steve Hoskins & C. Black, Great Britain); The Complete Printmaker (John Ross & Clare Romano, Free Press); www.dlmoran.com. Carlos Motta Visiting Associate Professor M.F.A., Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College; B.F.A., School of Visual Arts; multidisciplinary artist whose work draws upon political history in an attempt to create counter-narratives that recognize the inclusion of suppressed histories, communities, and identities. Work has been presented internationally in venues such as Tate Modern, London; The New Museum, the Guggenheim Museum and PS1 MoMA, New York; Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; Museo de Arte del Banco de la República, Bogotá; Museu Serralves, Porto, Portugal; National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens, Greece; CCS Bard Hessel Museum of Art, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; San Francisco Art Institute, and Hebbel am Ufer, Berlin. Pprepared a Façade Project for the Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros in Mexico City, was an artist in residency at the Institute for Art, Religion and Social Justice–Union Theological Seminary in New York in the spring 2013, and had a solo exhibition at Galeria Filomena Soares in Lisbon, Portugal, in May 2013. Graduate of the Whitney Independent Study Program, he was named a Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in 2008, and he received grants from Art Matters in 2008, New York State Council on the Arts in 2010, and the Creative Capital Foundation in 2012. Cyrilla Mozenter Adjunct Professor M.F.A., B.F.A., Pratt Institute; has exhibited at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, The Drawing Center, Brooklyn Academy of Music, and Neuberger Museum of Art; has been artist-inresidence at Dieu Donné Papermill, the Kohler Arts Center, and Instituto Municipal de Arte e Cultura-Rioarte, Rio de Janeiro; recipient of grants from NYFA and The Fifth Floor Foundation; represented in collections of the Arkansas Arts Center, Birmingham Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum, Hood Museum of Art, Walker Art Center, and Yale University Art Gallery; www.cyrillamozenter.com. Dominique Nahas Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; B.F.A., School of Visual Arts; independent curator and critic; contributor: Art in America, Flash Art, d’art Int’l, Artnet, and Trans; co-curator with artist Margaret Evangeline in upcoming One-to-One exhibition of contemporary work at the Rose Art Museum; selected exhibitions curated include: Inadmissible, HP Garcia Gallery New York; BROOKLYN!, Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art; ClenchClutchFlinch, Paul Rodgers, New York; Paradise 8, Exit Art, New York; Plural Speech, White Box; PopSurrealism, Mario Naves Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., University of Utah; recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the E.D. Foundation, the Sugarman Foundation, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation; his paintings and works-on-paper are represented by the Elizabeth Harris Gallery in Chelsea and have been covered by The New York Times, The New York Sun, the Village Voice, ArtCritical.Com, ArtNet and other publications; his criticism has been published in The New York Observer, Slate, The New Criterion, New Art Examiner, The Wall Street Journal, and City Arts; lives and works in New York City; www.mnaves.wordpress.com. Ross Neher Adjunct Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., Washington University School of Fine Arts; exhibitions include Mitchell Algus Gallery, New York; Howard Scott/M-13 Gallery, New York, NY; Through Our Eyes: Belfast/New York, Belfast, Northern Ireland; Painting Abstraction, New York Studio School, New York; Preview, Howard Scott Gallery, New York; The Fanelli Show, OK Harris Gallery, New York; Interior Landscapes: Art from the Collection of Clifford Diver, Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Del.; www.rossneher.com. Sarah Nicholls Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Sarah Lawrence; a visual artist who makes pictures with language, books with pictures, prints with type, and animations with words; often works with found language, historical research, and metal type, combining image, visual narrative, and time; has written a collection of self-help aphorisms, publishes a series of free informational pamphlets, and is currently working on a field guide to extinct birds; ran the studio programs at the Center for Book Arts in Manhattan for 12 years, organizing programs, publications, talks, and events; teaching workshops in letterpress; and running a residency program for emerging artists; has exhibited her prints and limited-edition artist books internationally; work is in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Oberlin College, the University of Pennsylvania, and Stanford University, among others. 214 Fine Arts Faculty Thirwell Nolen Catherine Redmond Mary Beth Rozkewicz Adjunct Associate Professor M.Arch., Georgia Institute of Technology; B.Arch., Auburn University; a studio artist who trained as a painter and architect, whose current body of work is composed of sculptural objects and architectural installations in clay and other materials; his work has been exhibited internationally and can be found in numerous private and public collections including the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (Smithsonian), New York; the Newark Museum, N.J.; the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, N.Y.; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the De Young Museum, San Francisco; other awards include NYFA Fellowship and NEA Fellowship; www.nolenstudios.com. Adjunct Associate Professor Art Students League of New York; Harpur College, SUNY; Cornell University; selected solo and group exhibitions at David Findlay Jr., New York; M.B. Modern, New York; Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, N.Y.; Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio; Babcock Galleries, New York; Cleveland Museum of Art; Jerry Soloman Gallery, Los Angeles; Jan Cicero Gallery, Chicago; collections include: Art Students League of New York, Butler Museum of American Art, Citibank of New York, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Dreyfus Corporation, Luther College Museum, Progressive Corporate Collection, and Reading Public Museum; www.catherineredmond.com. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., State University of New York; a studio jeweler working in sterling silver and gold vermeil, who frequently sandblasts intricate patterns on the surfaces, adding a subtle but eye-catching detail. Visiting Assistant Professor Works in sculpture with metals and other materials to create work that is sometimes environmental, sometimes performance, and often involves a lyrical dance with steel and stone; also designs and creates furniture and architectural metalwork. the Virginia Museum of Art, Richmond, Va.; the Whitney Museum Philip Morris Gallery, New York; and the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio; exhibited large-scale projects in Japan in 1999 and in 2003; more recently, she has been included in several international shows such as Sonsbeek 9, Arnhem, Holland; Regarding Beauty at the Hirshhorn Museum, Washington; Rapture at the Barbican Museum, London, England, New Material as New Media at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, and Dresscodes, St. Gallen, Switzerland; participated in a major survey exhibition called Dirt on Delight organized by the ICA Philadelphia, which traveled to the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; www. beverlysemmesstudio.com. Max Reinhardt Analia Segal Carla Shapiro John O’Connor Visiting Assistant Professor Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture Skowhegan; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.A., Theory, Criticism, and History of Art, Pratt Institute; B.A., Graphic Design, Westfield State College; exhibitions include: Pierogi Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY; So Different, So Appealing, Gramercy Park, New York; curated by Rachel Churner, The Death Affect, Artblog, New York; The Way Things Work, Athens Institute of Contemporary Art, Athens, Ga.; Spiral Bound, Notebooks from New York to San Diego, UC San Diego, Calif.; www.johnjoconnor.net Bethany Pelle Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Ceramics, Tyler School of Art; B.F.A., Ceramics, University of Miami; sculptor and installation artist whose exhibitions include: Give the Cat a Name, M.F.A. Thesis Exhibition, Temple Gallery, Philadelphia; BANG, Power Plant Productions, Philadelphia; Jumbalaya, Elkins Tyler Galleries, Philadelphia; Four from Philly, Cedar Crest College, Allentown, Pa.; www.bethanypelle.com. Sheila Pepe Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Tufts University; B.F.A., Massachusetts College of Art; selected solo exhibitions: Istanbul International Arts Fair; Carroll and Sons, Boston; Dust Gallery, Las Vegas; Fluent Collaborative, Austin, Texas; Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, Mass.; The Drawing Center and Susan Inglett Gallery, New York. Selected group exhibitions: Galleria NOPX, Turino, Italy; Participant, Inc., New York; Inman Gallery, Houston; Andrew Edlin Gallery, New York; Sue Scott Gallery, New York; Artisterium, Tbilisi, Georgia; Manheim Kunstverein, Germany; PS1 MoMA, New York; LACE, Los Angeles; Museum of Arts and Design, New York; Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art, Lake Worth, Florida. Grants and fellowships: Anonymous Was a Woman Award; Art Matters Grant; Joan Mitchell Foundation Artist Grant; Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award; Mary Ingraham Bunting Fellowship. Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., The School of the Art Institute of Chicago; B.F.A., University of Colorado at Boulder; www.maxreinhardtart.com. William Richards Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., University of New Mexico; M.A., University of Iowa; B.F.A., Pratt Institute; selected solo exhibitions: Nancy Hoffman Gallery, New York; Allen R. Hite Art Institute, University of Louisville, Ky.; Tomasulo Gallery, Union County College, Cranford, N.J.; Moravian College Gallery, Bethlehem, Pa.; selected group exhibitions: National Academy Museum, New York; Brooklyn Museum; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Va.; Art Institute of Chicago; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Kunsthalle, Nuremberg, Germany; Salas de Exposiciones de Bellas Artes, Madrid; NEA Grant and CAPS Grant; awarded a gold medal by the Society of Illustrators, 1968; Represented by Nancy Hoffman Gallery, New York, since 1974; works in the following public collections, among others: Whitney Museum of American Art, Art Institute of Chicago, National Museum of American Art, Washington; recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Creative Artists Public Service Program, New York. Howard Rosenthal Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; commissions from Snug Harbor Cultural Center in New York and Crosby Gardens in Toledo, Ohio; his work has been the subject of one-person exhibitions in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, San Diego, and Tokyo, and has been included in group exhibitions throughout the United States and Europe; a documentary film about his work has been broadcast nationwide by the Public Broadcasting System, and can currently be viewed on YouTube; reviews of his work have appeared in The New York Times, Newsday, Artsmedia, Art and Space Magazine, The Long Island Traveler Watchman, The News Review, Cover Magazine, and L Nine Magazine. Stuart Sachs Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Studio Art, New York University; B.A., Graphic Design, University of Buenos Aires; exhibitions: Gallery Kobo Chika, Tokyo, Japan; PS1 MoMA, Long Island City, N.Y.; DPM Gallery, Guayaquil, Ecuador; Galleri Tapper-Popermajer, Teckomatorp, Sweden; Galeria Alberto Sendros, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Plus Ultra Gallery, New York; Museo de Arte Moderno, Buenos Aires; Finesilver Gallery, San Antonio, Texas; Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, N.C.; Galeria Animal, Santiago, Chile; White Columns, New York; Dumbo Arts Center, New York; Centre de Récherche Imaginaire et Création, Chambery, France; awards: Guggenheim Foundation, PollockKrasner Foundation, New York Foundation for the Arts; public collections: El Museo del Barrio, New York; Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas; Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires; selected bibliography: Restroom Design (Loft), Made for Love (Stichting Kunstboek, Belgium, 2010); Simply Material (Victionary, Hong Kong, 2008); published by Die Gestalten Verlag GmbH & Co. KG Helsingborgs Dagblad; www.analiasegal.com. Beverly Semmes Visiting Professor M.F.A., Yale University School of Art; B.F.A., Boston Museum School; B.A., Art History, Boston Museum School; Skowhegan School of Art; her first exhibitions were two concurrent project rooms at PS1 MoMA and Artist’s Space in New York; other early exhibitions included a large installation at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem, N.C. and a room-scale work made for the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia; by the mid1990s, she was exhibiting work across the United States and in Europe; European projects at this time included solo shows at such major venues as the Camden Arts Centre in London; the Pecci Museum in Prato, Italy; and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin; also included in several important group shows early in her career, such as Plastic Fantastic Lover at the Blum Helman Warehouse in New York, Bad Girls at New York’s New Museum, and Bad Girls West at the UCLA Art Museum in Los Angeles; numerous solo museum shows, including major exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington; Adjunct Assistant Professor International Center of Photography; B.F.A., Syracuse University; Central London Polytechnic, London England; exhibitions include: Timeless Tasks, Texas Tech University, Lubbock Texas; Virtual Visits, Delhi Cultural Museum, Delhi, NY; Virtual Visits, The Eeph Gallery, Arkville, N.Y.; Obituaries to Prayer Flags, Pace University Gallery; Catskill Mountain Foundation Gallery, Hunter, N.Y.; Timeless Tasks, Teahouse Gallery, Rochester, N.Y.; DRESS, Hudson Opera House, Hudson, N.Y.; Mind/ Full, Working with artists, 910 Art Gallery, Denver; www.carlashapiro.com. Jean Shin Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; Shin’s work has been widely exhibited in major national and international museums, including in solo exhibitions at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art in Arizona (2010), Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington (2009), the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia (2006), and Projects at MoMA in New York (2004); other venues include the New Museum of Contemporary Art and the Museum of Arts and Design in New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Asia Society and Museum, The Brooklyn Museum, Sculpture Center, Socrates Sculpture Park, and Frederieke Taylor Gallery in New York; sitespecific permanent installations have been commissioned by the U.S. General Services Administration Art in Architecture Award, New York’s Percent for the Arts, and MTA Art for Transit; numerous awards, including the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Architecture/ Environmental Structures (2008) and Sculpture (2003), Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Biennial Art Award; works have been featured in many publications, including Frieze Art, Flash Art, Tema Celeste, Art in America, Sculpture Magazine, ARTnews, and The New York Times; www.jeanshin.com. Fine Arts Faculty 215 Gerald Siciliano Artist, Huntington Museum of Art W. Va.; 22 solo exhibitions and over 100 group exhibitions around the U.S.; collections: Rutgers University, University of Mississippi; New York Stock Exchange; PAFA, Lauren Rogers Museum, Laurel MS; Library of Congress; Kassel Documenta Archive; Koln Ludwig Museum; Stuttgart Staatsgalerie, Huntington Museum of Art, W. Va.; author: The Pen & Ink Book (Watson-Guptill); Circus Train (Abrams); The Train a work in series, Watercolor Magazine, Spring 2006; illustrated 27 children’s books, (Hon. Men. Orbis Pictus Award 2007); editorial illustrator for Time, Newsweek, Harper’s, The New York Times; Watergate courtroom artist for Newsweek; www. josasmith.com. Adjunct Associate Professor M.S., B.F.A., Pratt Institute; on completion of his studies at Pratt Institute, he began working in foundries, marble, and fabrication studios in New York and Tuscany on both his own work and that of a broad range of international sculptors; has maintained an ongoing record of exhibitions, sales, and commissions as well as pursuing projects in architecture, design, and sculpture restoration; has been an honored guest at international sculpture symposia in Korea and North Africa; teaching background includes appointments on all levels of education from elementary to post-graduate in a broad range of two- and three-dimensional media; class offerings include Life Study, Foundry, and Stone Carving; www. geraldsicilianostudio.com. Robbin Silverberg Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Sculpture and Art History, Princeton University; founding director of Dobbin Mill, a hand-papermaking studio, and Dobbin Books, a collaborative artist book studio; artwork is divided between artist books and installations; the work conceptually focuses on word cognition and interlinearity, with an emphasis on process and paper as activated substrate; has exhibited and taught extensively in the U.S., Canada, South Africa, South Korea, Mexico, and Europe; her artwork is found in numerous collections, such as the Museum Meermanno, The Hague, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, and Yale University’s Art of the Book; on the boards of the Center for Book Arts, Ampersand Foundation, Brooklyn Artist Alliance; and Alma on Dobbin; www. robbinamisilverberg.com. Keith Simpson Ceramics Technician, Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., the Ohio State University; awarded a residency at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts; his work is about craft, material consciousness, and taste; he contrasts fired ceramic materials with synthetic media, allowing them to play off one another as a type of warm-hearted cultural critique, which works with and against his own taste; www.keithwhitecloud.com. Joseph Smith Professor M.F.A., Painting, New York University; B.F.A., Graphic Arts and Illustration/Fine Arts, Pratt Institute; 1965–66: Drawing, Wagner College; 1969–71: Painting. Workshop, Art Alliance of Cent. Pa.; 1975: Visualization Workshop, Wainwright Center, Rye, NY; 1984: Painting, Richmond College, London; 1987–91: Painting and Drawing, ATI, Stocton State College, N.J.; 1990: Art Institute of Chicago, Oxbow, Mich.; 1992–98: Painting: MS Art Colony 2000; 2001: University of Rio Grande, graduate Children’s Book Illustrating, Visualization, Drawing; 1962 to present: Pratt Institute, Undergraduate: Painting, Drawing, Figure Drawing, Sculpture, Illustration and Symbolic Imagery; Sr. Ind. Proj. Graduate: Drawing Seminar, MFA Thesis Painting. 2007: Walter Gropius Master Judith Solodkin Visiting Associate Professor Solodkin was the first woman to graduate from the Tamarind Institute as a Master Lithographer; she founded Solo Impression, a publisher and printer of fine art multiples; works published have appeared in museums and exhibitions throughout the world, and can be found in private and public collections such as MoMA, the Metropolitan Museum, the Whitney Museum, the New York Public Library Print Collection, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Library of Congress, the National Gallery of Art, the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, and the Tate Gallery, London. Jane South Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Theater Set and Costume Design, School of Art, London; M.F.A. Painting and Sculpture, University of North Carolina at Greensboro; exhibiton venues include: Spencer Brownstone Gallery, The Aldrich Museum of Art, Sue Scott Gallery, The Drawing Center; received grants from the Joan Mitchelle Foundation, New York Foundation for the Arts, and Pollock Krasner Foundation; has been an artist in residence at the MacDowell Colony, Dieu Donné Workspace, and the Carmago Foundation. Tim Spelios Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Brooklynite Spelios takes photos, assembles collage, plays drums, cuts up sounds, makes sculptures, and builds cabinets; has shown his collage and installations at Exit Art, The Drawing Center, Sculpture Center, Smack Mellon Studios, Long Island University, Pierogi Gallery, and Parkers Box among others; has also taught at the University of Illinois, at the Phillips Collection in Washington; as part of the Friday Gallery Talks at the Hirshhorn Museum Spelios discussed Bruce Nauman; has played drums internationally with the bands No Safety and Chunk; during the burgeoning Williamsburg art scene of the ’90s Spelios, with Caroline Cox, co-founded and ran Flipside Gallery from 1996–2001, showing a wide range of innovative art forms; www.timspelios.com. 216 Fine Arts Faculty Joseph Stauber Emily Weiner Martha Wilson Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., SUNY at Purchase; B.F.A., Pratt Institute; master printer and chromiste at Brand-X Editions, N.Y., in collaboration with artists including: Chuck Close, Howard Hodgkin, Robert Motherwell, and Helen Frankenthaler; his mail art objects and collaborations have been sent around the world. Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., School of Visual Arts; B.A., Studio Art, Barnard College; a painter and a writer whose art reviews have appeared in Artforum.com, Time Out New York, Domus, ArtSlant, ARTnews, ducts.org, MUSEO, RES Art World/World Art (Turkey), Setup (Vancouver), and The Visual Arts Journal, among other publications; a guest instructor at Barnard College, and a workshop leader at Dia:Beacon; in 2012, she was a recipient of the Cooper Union Teaching Artist Residency, and has been an artist-in-residence at The Banff Centre in Alberta, Canada, and Camac Centre D’Art in Marnay-surSeine, France; www.emilyweiner.com. Visiting Associate Professor Wilson is a pioneering feminist artist and gallery director, who over the past four decades created innovative photographic and video works that explore her female subjectivity through roleplaying, costume transformations, and “invasions” of other people’s personae; she began making these videos and photo/text works in the early 1970s while in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and further developed her performative and video-based practice after moving in 1974 to New York, embarking on a long career that would see her gain attention across the U.S. for her provocative appearances and works; in 1976 she also founded and continues to direct Franklin Furnace, an artist-run space that champions the exploration, promotion, and preservation of artists’ books, installation art, and video, online and performance art, further challenging institutional norms, the roles artists play within society, and expectations about what constitutes acceptable art media; www.marthawilson.com. Jason Stopa Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Indiana University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; a painter, writer and curator living in Brooklyn, NY; recent exhibitions include Junction at Ed Thorp Gallery (New York) and The Brooklyn Zoo at Novella Gallery (New York; contributing writer to Art in America, Hyperallergic, Whitewall and The Brooklyn Rail; teaches at the School of Visual Arts and Pratt Institute. Anthony Tammaro Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Tyler School of Art; M.I.D., Domus Academy, Milan; B.F.A., The University of the Arts; a new media artist who works at the intersection of art, design, and craft; Tammaro’s most recognizable work leverages his expertise with 3-D software and additive manufacturing processes. He creates novel solutions to design problems related to the body as site. Selected exhibitions: Gallery Noel Guyomarch, Montreal; Friends of Carlotta Gallery, Zurich; Alliance, Philadelphia; Mulvane Art Museum, Topeka, Kan.; Sungkok Art Museum, Seoul, Korea; Facere Gallery, Seattle; Wexler Gallery, Philadelphia; CraftLand, Providence, R.I.; Quirk Gallery, Richmond, Va.; Velvet da Vinci Gallery, San Francisco; Sienna Gallery, Lenox, Mass.; Luke & Elroy Gallery, Pittsburgh, Pa.; State Museum of Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, Pa. Irvin Tepper Adjunct Professor M.F.A., University of Washington; B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; NEA artist fellowship and Agnes Bourne Fellowship Award in sculpture from the Djerassi Foundation; exhibitions: St. Louis Art Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; and Victoria and Albert Museum; collections: Victoria and Albert Museum; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Kunstmuseum, Bern, Switzerland; www.irvintepper.com. Christopher Verstegen Studio and Gallery Supervisor, Visiting Instructor B.A., The College of Wooster; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; current work is mostly sculptural and often consists of machines that perform simple tasks; the tasks are conceived from thoughts/ observations on the role(s) of mundane repetition in the human condition; currently lives and works in Brooklyn, N.Y.; www.christopherverstegen.com. Dina Weiss Assistant Chair, Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design; B.S., Studio Art, New York University; Weiss has held many positions in nonprofit arts education and museum education, as well as teaching and lecturing at universities and museums such as the Dia Art Foundation, The Drawing Center, the New Museum, Museum of Arts and Design, and Parsons The New School for Design; professional practice is in a variety of media with works in the Viewing Program slide registry at The Drawing Center; exhibition venues include the James Gallery at CUNY Graduate Center, New York; San Diego Contemporary Museum of Art; Mixed Greens Gallery, New York; City Without Walls, Newark, N.J.; Hudson Valley Contemporary Center for Art, Peekskill, N.Y.; The LAB, San Francisco; Untitled Space, New Haven, Conn.; Art in General, New York; artworks included in selected public collections at the Brooklyn Museum and the New York Public Library; www.dinaweiss.com. Christopher White Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Harvard University; numerous solo gallery and museum exhibitions; works in major public collections: Guggenheim Museum, Johnson Art Museum, and others; honors include Tiffany Award for Painting; nominee, National Artists Award; visiting artist, American Academy in Rome; criticism published in national arts journals; instructor/lecturer, Metropolitan Museum of Art; represented by Andre Zarre Gallery, New York; www.kitwhiteart.com. Rachel Wiecking Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Art History, Purchase College, New York; M.F.A., Studio Art, Purchase College, New York; B.F.A., Book Arts, Oregon College of Art and Craft, Portland, Ore.; B.A., American Studies, Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz; www.rachelwiecking.com/home.html. 217 Chris Wright Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Pratt Institute; B.F.A., Pacific NW College of Art; exhibitions: Hunter College; Martin Art Gallery, Muhlenberg College; New York University; Phillips de Pury and Company; Swiss InstituteContemporary Art; published: Contemporary American Oil Painting (Jillin Fine Arts Publishing House, Changchun, China); New American Paintings (Northeastern Edition) gallery affiliation: George Billis Gallery, New York; www.chriswrightpaintings.com. Robert Zakarian Professor B.F.A., M.F.A., Pratt Institute; exhibitions: Brooklyn Museum; Riverside Museum; Alan Stone Gallery, New York; Royal Mark. Katrin Zimmerman Visiting Assistant Professor M.A. Chinese Art and Korean Art, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK; B.A. Chinese Art and Archaelogy (Cum Laude), School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK; A.A.S. Jewelry Design, Fashion Institute of Technology; founder and CEO of Ex Ovo Inc., a jewelry brand which has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Contemporary Museum of Art, Chicago. Communications Design Faculty Santiago Piedrafita Chair, Associate Professor M.S., Communications Design, Pratt Institute; B.I.D., Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Before joining Pratt, Piedrafita was associate professor in the Department of Graphic and Industrial Design at the College of Design, North Carolina State University, teaching at both undergraduate and graduate levels. From 2006 to 2012, he served as head of the department. Piedrafita chaired the Design Department at MCAD, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, from 2004-2006. He was senior designer at the Walker Art Center’s Design Department. At the Walker, he designed a diverse array of exhibitions, communications, and publications for the museum’s multidisciplinary curatorial and institutional departments. In New York, he worked in renowned studios such as the Museum of Modern Art’s inhouse Design Department, J. Abbott Miller’s Design/ Writing/Research, and Chermayeff & Geismar Inc. Presently a solo practitioner, from 2002 to 2012 Piedrafita worked under the name TWO, a studio focusing on identity and editorial design projects for various design, architecture, and art-related cultural institutions. Barry Berger Visiting Associate Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; founder, owner, and creative director of Barry David Berger and Associates, Inc., established in 1977, specializing in merchandising, packaging, product design, graphic design, and commercial interiors; Fulbright Grant recipient, member of AIGA, IDSA, and APDF; had previously taught at Pratt for many years before taking a sabbatical. Warren Bernard Assistant Chair, Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Hampton University; M.S., Pratt Institute; currently freelances with Dwight Johnson Design while maintaining his established clients; has worked with Time Magazine and Vibe; several start-up magazines have solicited his help in development; has designed book covers for labels such as BET Books and Simon & Schuster Inc.; creates corporate identities including Abyssinian Development Corporation; has written for the AIGA’s Journal of Graphic Design; honored by Pratt as a Distinguished Student. Eric Bintner Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Missouri State University; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art; Eric is an animator, artist, designer, developer and musician; has worked for the past four years as a freelance motion graphics designer and interactive developer in New York; client list includes JPMorgan, Macys.com, The Rockefeller Group, Cushman & Wakefield, and Opie & Anthony. Jean Brennan David Frisco Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., University of California, Santa Cruz; B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; upon graduation from the Graduate Communications Design program went to work as a broadcast designer at Lee Hunt Associates, working with clients such as PBS, Oxygen, and Arte; continued with the LHA team after they were acquired by Razorfish in late 1999; in 2002, became the Nick Jr. Art Director, where she worked on in-house graphics for the 2–5 age programming of Nickelodeon; currently freelances as an art director in broadcast, online, and print projects. Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., University of Illinois at Chicago; M.F.A., Yale University; co-director of Design Corps, a studio course that encourages the relationship between design practice and design education, where Communications Design students provide pro-bono design work for nonprofit organizations; in his independent studio practice, has completed work for a variety of clients in the art, architectural, cultural, and nonprofit sectors including Pratt Institute, Pace/ MacGill Gallery, The College Art Association, Yale School of Architecture, TASC: The After-School Corporation, and the films Lumo, Fully Awake: Black Mountain College, The Situation, Chop Shop, and Man Push Cart. Tom Delaney Visiting Instructor Senior Design with Muts&Joy& Design and Identity Consultants; has extensive experience in the packaging design industry, including Senior Creative Director at EastWest Creative, Design Director at Deskey Associates, and designer for Charles Biondo Design Associates and ESPRIT de Corps. Antonio DiSpigna Professor B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; designer at Bonder and Carnase; Lubalin Smith and Carnase; in 1973, opened Artissimo, Inc.; in 1978 joined Herb Lubalin Associates as vice president and partner; in 1980 opened Tony Di Spigna, Inc.; has designed numerous typefaces, most notably Serif Gothic and exclusive typefaces for PBS Channel WNET 13, The Coca Cola Co., and The Louis Dreyfus Corp.; in 2007, became co-founder and design director of THINSTROKE, INC., a complete service design firm. Thomas Dolle Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; principal, Tom Dolle Design, a strategic design, marketing, and branding firm in New York; clients have included Citibank, Dun & Bradstreet, ESPN, Charles Schwab, Northern Trust, RH Donnelly, Verizon, Reed Elsevier, and Time Warner; Tom Dolle Design is now focusing on branding, communications, and packaging for retail, arts, and nonprofit organizations; recent projects include the Getty Trust, Doe Fund, Baruch College, Foundation Center, and National Urban Fellows. Tyra Nicole Dumars Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Northwestern State University; M.P.S., Pratt; design editor at Northwestern State University; brand designer at Plattform Advertising; founder and design strategist at tyra. nicole LLC, where her clients include American Cancer Society, Chimp Haven, ACE, ColgatePalmolive, Extra Space Storage and NAACP. Kevin Gatta Professor B.A., Rhode Island College; M.S., Pratt Institute; Pietrasanta Italian Studies Program, Providence College; design director, Gatta Design & Co., specializing in corporate communications, identity, and branding; design experience: the Pushpin Group, 1981–88; David Pocknell’s Company (Pushpin UK), 1984; Herb Lubalin Associates, 1979–81; author of Foundations of Graphic Design TE (Davis Publications, 1994); co-author of Foundations of Graphic Design, Communicating through Graphic Design (Davis Publications, 1990, 2009); Distinguished Teacher Award, 1997. J. Roger Guilfoyle Adjunct Professor, CCE B.A., Creighton University; has appeared on design and packaging panels in the U.S., Mexico, and Japan; has lectured before small and large design groups, including Carnegie-Mellon and Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum; has worked under grants from the NEA, the NEH, and the New York State Council on the Arts; his work has appeared in newspapers and magazines, including ID, Interiors, and USAir; has been on the Pratt faculty since 1968. J. Graham Hanson Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., Iowa State University; Graham Hanson, previously with Vignelli Associates, is principal of Graham Hanson Design, an internationally recognized multidisciplinary design agency active in all areas of strategic design. The firm collaborates with a diverse group of corporate clients and cultural institutions on a wide variety of integrated design projects. Long-time corporate clients include Saks Fifth Avenue, American Express, Dun and Bradstreet, and Macklowe Properties, a New York real estate developer. The firm works on a number of exhibition projects for museums and cultural organizations in the United States and abroad. 218 Communications Design Faculty William Hilson Eunsun Lee Kelli Miller Alan Rapp Pirco Wolfframm Adjunct Professor, CCE Originally trained in architecture, but turned to graphic design and illustration for professional focus; introduced desktop publishing to some of the largest ad agencies in NYC; as creative director to the HiFi Color Project, helped introduce the new HiFi Color printing techniques; was first to design and print using an experimental 7-colorant process, the first to use Pantone´s Hexachrome™ in a commercial application, and also the first designer to print using frequency-modulated (“stochastic”) screening systems. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., School of Visual Arts; M.S., Pratt Institute; in 2004, founded CMYK+WHITE, Inc., a multidisciplinary studio focusing on design solutions for interiors, fashion, print, and motion graphics; long-time corporate clients include Estée Lauder, Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., Hearst Magazines, Condé Nast, Hollywood Life, Fairchild Fashion Group and Meredith; previously worked as a senior art director at Glamour magazine, where her team directed photo shoots and developed the visual style of the magazine. Michelle Hinebrook Alex Liebergesell Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., College for Creative Studies; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art; has exhibited nationally in galleries and museums in New York, Washington D.C., Detroit, San Francisco, Chicago, and abroad in Copenhagen, Denmark; maintains a studio at XØ Projects Inc., Brooklyn; currently teaches and lectures at various institutions around the U.S. Associate Professor B.F.A., Kent State University; M.F.A., Yale University; principal, QNA Design, New York, providing web, brand, and communications solutions for corporate and institutional clients; previously held teaching appointments in graphic design at University of Akron and State University of New York at Purchase. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., College for Creative Studies; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art; independent art director and designer working in motion, digital media, and print design; work has run the gamut of independent print publications to startup websites to network branding; has worked on projects for Nickelodeon, Sundance Channel, Disney, TV Guide Network, PBS, Coke, Wrigley, Reuters, IFC, and MTV; as design director for Interbrand, has worked as art director for Thornberg and Forester and as art director at College for Creative Studies; artwork has been shown, performed, and screened internationally; has taught undergraduate classes at Pratt and College for Creative Studies; has lectured at Cooper Union, SVA, Portland State University, SUNY at Purchase, Maryland Institute College of Arts, and College for Creative Studies. Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A. Design Criticism, School of Visual Arts; B.A. English, Loyola Marymount University; editor, writer, and book developer, a former senior editor at Chronicle Books, San Francisco, where he acquired and developed dozens of titles in the art, architecture, design, and photography lists; former managing editor of the New City Reader, whose office operated on the gallery floor of the New Museum in fall 2010, and former U.S. editor of DomusWeb International in 2011; has taught at Parsons the New School of Design and leads a graduate thesis seminar at RISD; currently, he operates a visual book consultancy and packager, ARstudio, where he works with authors, visual artists, photographers, and designers to develop visual book projects and bring them to publication. Adjunct Associate Professor, C.C.E. M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts; C.C.E. in Visual Communication, Hochschule für Gestaltung, Offenbach (Germany); has gathered varied experiences to become a versatile “designist”; has lived and worked in Frankfurt, London, New York, and Bangkok; list of clients ranges from corporate juggernauts to niche cultures; while her passion and expertise lie in brand and identity development, has applied her research-based methodology across all media to projects from small scale to complex in scope; recipient of a Faculty Development Grant and her work as well as her writings about design have been published and exhibited internationally. Allen Hori Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A. University of Hawaii; M.F.A. Cranbrook Academy of Art; Fulbright recipient to study in the Netherlands; principal at Bates Hori, New York, a graphic design and visual research studio; his work has earned recognition from New York Type Directors Club, AIGA, American Center for Design, I.D. Magazine, Emigré, Eye, IDEA, and has appeared in many domestic and foreign exhibitions and publications; named an I.D. Top Forty Influential Designer; has lectured widely at design schools and professional symposia; currently a critic at Yale University School of Art; 2008 Frank Stanton Chair in Graphic Design at Cooper Union. Thomas Klinkowstein Adjunct Professor, CCE M.S., Syracuse University; President and Creative Director of Media A, LLC, an internationally recognized design and consulting group with clients such as Condé Nast, IBM and NASA; has spoken to over 100 business, political and academic groups; previously was a professor in the graphic design department at the West Brabant Art and Design College in the Netherlands. His work has been shown in art centers, museums and galleries throughout the world, including the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Venice Biennale in Italy. Gusty Lange Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., Denison University; M.S., M.P.S., Pratt Institute; has had several professions which have come together in her teaching in the Graduate Communications Design Department since 1985; her psychology background as an art therapist and design background as a graphic designer have unified her teaching of Visual Perception (focusing on perception, creative process, and archetypal symbolism in design and creativity development), as well as advising thesis students to develop their own vision and critical thinking. Brenda McManus Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Rutgers University; M.S., Pratt Institute; founding partner and creative director of the design firm BRED; previously design manager for Prudential Retirement, senior designer for Skouras Design, and designer for Leibowitz Communications, Inc.; has been recognized by Print, Graphis and HOW Magazine and the Art Directors Club, the Type Directors Club, the University and College Designers Association, the Museum Publications Design Competition, and the Creativity Design Competition; work has been included in the TDC46 Awards Exhibition, Summit AIGA/NY Exhibition, the 37th ADCNJ Awards Show, the UCDA Conference Exhibition and the American Association of Museum Design Exhibition; has also taught at Rutgers University and F.I.T. Scott Menchin Adjunct Associate Professor Pratt Institute; Arts Students League; as art director worked for HOW Magazine and Seven Days; as illustrator worked for Intel, Sun Microsytems, Toyota, Time, Newsweek, Esquire, Wired, GQ, Fast Company, Bloomberg, Saveur, Rolling Stone, The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Boston Globe; work has appeared in American Illustration, Print Magazine, The Society of Illustrators and The Society of Publication Designers; his first illustrated children’s book, Taking a Bath with the Dog and Other Things That Make Me Happy, won the Christopher Award and was voted “A Best Book of the Year” by The Bank Street College. 219 Katya Moorman Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., SUNY at Purchase; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art; co-founder and principal partner of Studio2k, a design and video studio that blurs the boundaries between art and design, materiality, and the ephemeral nature of technology; published and received awards from both Output06 design annual and I.D. Magazine; widely shown at PS122 and Williamsburg Art Nexus in New York City, as well as in Detroit, Durham, Toronto, and the Sarai New Media Center in India. Ann Morris Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Hunter College of CUNY; creative director, design; worked for 16 years in corporate America as creative director of TV Guide’s Advertising and Marketing Department; her own graphic design business has included a variety of clients: The New York Philharmonic at Lincoln Center, The Museum of the City of New York, Columbia University, The New York City Opera, Elizabeth Arden, The Alan Guttmacher Institute, Dunhill Tailors, The Learning Annex, Dino Di Laurentiis Productions, and Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Centers. Eric O’Toole Adjunct Assistant Professor, CCE B.I.D., Pratt Institute; Principal, Exhibit A Design Group; oversees all aspects of design and development work produced by his design firm for a broad array of cultural institutions and national parks across the country; his firm is the recipient of several awards for design excellence from professional design and museum organizations for his exhibition design work. Marc Rosen Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A., Carnegie Mellon University; M.S., Pratt Institute; president, Marc Rosen Associates. Andrew Shea Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Pittsburgh; M.F.A. Maryland Institute College of Art; founding partner at MANY, a multidisciplinary graphic design studio; his book, Designing for Social Change: Strategies for Community-Based Graphic Design was published by Princeton Architectural Press in 2012; has also written about design for numerous publications, including Core77, AIGA, Design Observer, Entrepreneurial Magazine, Designer’s Review of Books, and GOOD; solo and collaborative design work has been featured by Print, Fast Company, HOW, Communication Arts, Adbusters, and Metropolis Magazine, among others; he regularly speaks about design. Ryan Waller Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; M.F.A., Yale; joined Pratt after returning from a research fellowship in Switzerland on a Fulbright Award, École Cantonale d’Art de Lausanne, and Federal Office of Culture, Bern; received the Mark Whistler Memorial Prize at Yale; a Design Distinction Award from I.D. Magazine; an ADC Young Guns Award; and was recognized by Print magazine’s “20 Under 30”—the 20 best artists and designers under the age of 30, selected each year; clients have included The New York Times, Bloomberg, Virgin Records, Yale School of Art, Hunter-Gatherer—NYC & Co., Mother NY—Condé Nast, Art Director’s Club, Nike, MTV, Damiani; has taught at Pratt and held workshops at CalArts, RISD, and Yale. Alisa Zamir Professor B.A., Central School of Arts and Crafts—London; B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; Executive Vice President and Design Director at Taylor and Ives, Inc. since 1981; having worked as a design professional in Israel, London, and America, she has over four decades of experience as a designer of annual reports, corporate literature and corporate identity programs; graduated from the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London and earned her post-graduate degree from Pratt Insititute, where she has been a professor in the Graduate Design Department since 1971. Industrial Design Faculty Harvey Bernstein Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; design consultant whose practice spans the disciplines of interior, industrial, graphic, exhibit, and retail design; clients include JCPenney, Sony, Hallmark, Knoll, Chase, Calvin Klein, Speedo; recipient of numerous design awards: Gold and Silver Awards from IDSA and ID Magazine for product design, as well as awards for lighting design, retail, office, exhibit, and graphic design; exhibited at MoMA, Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum, and more; published in Architectural Record, Domus, Abitare, International Design, ID, The New York Times, Forbes, Journal, BusinessWeek, Metropolis, and the Design Encyclopedia of MoMA. Meri Bourgard-Rohrs Visiting Professor, CCE A.A., Suffolk Community College; B.A., Hunter College; M.F.A., Painting, Pratt Institute; teacher at Pratt Institute since 1985; faculty member in the Fashion Design, Industrial Design, Interior Design, and Architecture departments; worked as a graphic designer and illustrator for a variety of publications; studied and worked in a variety of media with such artists as Charles Reid, Jean Dobie, Louise Giles, Daniel Greene, Barbara Necchis, Jim Jensen, Frank Mason, Frank Webb, Lawrence Goldsmith, and Nathan Goldstein; featured in The New York Times, Arts & Antiques and more; has exhibited her work in galleries around the Northeast as well as Europe. Gina Caspi Visiting Professor B.A., Graphic Design, Hofstra University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; Caspi has been a professor in both Foundation 3-D and Graduate Industrial Design since 1986; was the first recipient of the Rowena Reed Kostellow Award, given for excellence in teaching three-dimensional design; participated in the Premio Internazionale di Scultura Gioia Lazzerini in Pietrasanta, Italy, where she was awarded a prize for her bronze and ruby sculpture, Torre di San Francesco. Gihyun Cho Adjunct Professor M.I.D., Syracuse University; industrial design educator, professional, and writer; has held the position of chief industrial designer at Bell Labs and Lucent Technologies and has served as a design consultant for Goldstar, Samsung America, Ken Carter, Loveland Toy, and the Kohl Group; during his time at Bell Labs he was awarded the AT Excellence Award, Distinguished Member of Technical Staff, Quality Award, and the Golden Thread Award; has been a visiting professor and lecturer at Korea National University of Art, Pratt Institute, CIDA in Taiwan, and The New School; holds seven design patents. 220 Industrial Design Faculty Kevin Crowley Colin Gentle Jay Levy Visiting Assistant Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; Lowell Technical Institute, polymer chemistry; has 40 years of experience in the design and manufacturing of deep-sea diving equipment, high-level radiation suits, proximity and approach fire suits, as well as chemical protective clothing; is also a lifelong shoe designer having designed both performance and fashion shoes for such companies as Converse, FILA, Wilson, Prince, and Keds in the U.S. and Geox and Block in Europe. Visiting Assistant Professor B. Eng., University of Connecticut; has worked with firms like SolidWorks Corporation, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, CADD Edge Inc., SA Baxter Architectural Hardware, and Hutzler Manufacturing; comprehensive background in 3-D CAD modeling technology, rendering expertise, and mechanical processes; serves as ProductSpark’s lead designer, where he is instrumental in developing new product lines, and providing SolidWorks 3-D CAD consulting services; work has been published in a variety of publications, including Array Magazine, House Beautiful, Dwell, Interior Design, Forbes Life, and CNBC; Certified SolidWorks Professional and a Certified SolidWorks Instructor. Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Arch., Columbia University; began his professional career working for 12 years under two men influential in 20thcentury art and design: the New York architect, Charles Gwathmey, and the esteemed Japanese sculptor, Isamu Noguchi; in 1996 Jay Levy Architects was established; the firm specializes in residential design and has been widely published; other personal pursuits include painting, sculpture, and as an educator at Pratt Institute, the study of abstract visual relationships. Lucia DeRespinis Adjunct Professor, CCE B.I.D., Pratt Institute; academic appointments: adjunct professor, 1995-present; selected awards, recognition, and published works: Metropolis magazine, Vitra Design Book Cold War Confrontations, Women Designers in the USA 1900–2000, ID Magazine Annual Review, Pratt Manhattan and Schafler Gallery, 20 Women in Design; Rowena Reed Kostellow Award (2007) for excellence in teaching; Three-Dimensional Design, Vitra Museum exhibition on George Nelson Office; Women Designers in the USA Exhibition, High Style: 20th Century American Designers in the USA; and High Style: 20th Century American Design, Whitney Museum Exhibition (aluminum clock). Peter Erickson Visiting Instructor A professional prop builder who lives in New York City, works out of a garage workspace in Brooklyn; is a professional maker of all sorts; freelance work includes the fabrication of custom furniture and props for advertising; teaches model-making processes at Pratt. Patrick Fenton Visiting Instructor B.A., Visual Communications, UCLA; M.F.A. Design, Stanford University; partner at Swayspace, a design studio that tackles a diverse array of design projects for a wide variety of clients, collaborating with technology companies, nonprofit organizations, hospitals, fashion designers, musicians, professors, artists, and publishers; portfolio includes design logos, marketing collateral, websites, user interfaces, books, CD cases, software packaging, tradeshow booths, and building signage. Mark Goetz Adjunct Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; design faculty since 1993; has taught Sophomore ID Studio, and has taught the Graduate Furniture Design Studio since 1997; he has organized several exhibitions of student work at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, Cologne Furniture Fair, as well as industry-sponsored projects with companies such as Herman Miller and Wilsonart; he is also the owner of TZ Design, an industrial design firm founded in 1988, which specializes in furniture for the retail, hospitality, and contract furniture industry. Bruce Hannah Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; his Hannah Desk System for Knoll named Design of the Decade by IDSA (1990); named first designer in residence at the CooperHewitt, National Design Museum (1992); awarded the Bronze Apple by IDSA for conference, Universal Design (1993); authored Access by Design with George Covington (John Wiley and Sons, 1996); received National Design Education Award from the IDSA (1998); Federal Design Achievement Award for exhibition Unlimited By Design (2000) named one of 12 most influential exhibitions by Metropolis magazine (2006); authored Becoming a Product Designer (John Wiley and Sons, 2004). Kate Hixon Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE Design principal of Hixon Design Consultants; teaches 3-D design fundamentals and studio classes at Pratt; her consultancy specializes in architectural branding, environmental design, exhibit and event design, editorial design, and graphic design, and has had a diverse body of clients, including Pfizer, FAO Schwarz, Eziba, Ernst & Young, GT Interactive, and the United Nations. Jong S. (Mark) Lim Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., Seoul National University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; Jong S. Lim (a.k.a. Mark Lim); “Glomar Explorer” ship project; First Place Award, Orange County Engineering Council (1977/1978); engineering specialist at Holmes and Narver Inc.; manager of industrial design research and development and author of design patents (U.S. and Europe) at the Conair Corporation; has exhibited at Gallery Korea, and Hyundai Art Gallery. Scott Lundberg Chair; Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE B.S., B.Arch., North Dakota State University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; a designer and educator who teaches industrial design at Pratt Institute and exhibit design at the Fashion Institute of Technology, he recently became IDSA section vice chair for communicative environments; designed the Gossner College Campanile in Bihar Ranchi, India; a shower shelf based on DARPA technology for Shelfworks; and a display-driven, wine-finding experience for Bottlerocket Wine & Spirit that got an A+ from Zagat. Frank Millero Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Molecular Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; has worked at the Exploratorium museum in San Francisco (1991–2001) where he developed numerous biology-based exhibits and programs, similar to the way his graduate thesis explored ways of connecting people to the natural world; has taught courses on color and ecological design since 2004; now a practicing designer currently focusing on tableware and table linens. Industrial Design Faculty 221 Katrin Mueller-Russo Martin Skalski Ignacio Urbina Polo Associate Professor Dipl Des, Industrial Design, Hochschule für Bildende Künste Hamburg, Germany; has practiced with Hoberman Associates as a design director, working on the Hoberman Sphere toy line, on educational applications; and as a consultant collaborating on foldable products for a major children‘s product manufacturer; in 1997, she founded Specific Objects Inc., an interdisciplinary, sustainability oriented design practice in New York; her work as been exhibited internationally and her awards include the Ideas Competition Design Plus at the Frankfurt International Fair Ambiente for her hearing aid design; with her partner, she was chosen as a finalist for the Newark Visitors Center competition in 2009. Professor B.A., University of Toledo; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; teaches transportation design, color theory, three-dimensional design, and drawing; director of Pratt Transportation Design Program; received grants from the NEA, Ford, General Motors, Honda, Mitsubishi, Subaru, and Daimler Chrysler; directed design projects for Northrup Grumman, BASF/Mearl, Black and Decker, NASA, NEC, Corning, Nissan, Ford, and GM. Associate Professor M.S., Product Engineering, Universidad Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil; Venezuelan industrial designer with over 20 years of experience specializing in the field of bionics: he has worked on consumer products, street furniture, signage systems, exhibition design, and visual communication systems for many companies, manufacturers, institutions, and government agencies; in the late 1980s worked at the prestigious Brazilian Laboratory of Industrial Design on Florianopolis Island where he had the opportunity to work in many different and diverse product design projects, as well as support his passion of surfing the waves; in 1999, while living in Caracas, he co-founded Metaplug, a multidisciplinary design firm and workshop; worked as an industrial designer in the foundation of La Estancia Art Center in Venezuela and the Andean Amazon Pavilion at the Aichi World Expo 2005 in Japan; former associate professor and director of Prodiseño, School of Visual Communication and Design in Caracas, where he was involved in academic projects and research in minimal structures, consumer products, interface and information design, and thesis projects; co-publisher of Objetual, a website focusing on design issues in Venezuela, he has published design articles in both national newspapers and specialized magazines; participates in projects and activities as advisor member of the IberoAmerican Design Biennial in Madrid. Rebeccah Pailes-Friedman Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A. Fashion Design, Pratt Institute; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; Computer Graphics and Graphic Design, School of Visual Arts; Millinery Design, Fashion Institute of Technology; experience as design director of Starter for Nike; Champion Athletic Apparel; C-9 by Champion for Target; Fila U.S.A.; accessories designer for Liz Claiborne, art director, Everlast, BUM Equipment, and Nautica kids; freelance product, graphic, and interior designer; has taught fashion and industrial design at Pratt since 1998. Jeanne Pfordresher Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Industrial Design, B.F.A., Sculpture, Cleveland Institute of Art; experienced in teaching product studios in the undergraduate, graduate, and design research classes; a founding partner of Hybrid Product Design and Development, her projects have included housewares, consumer electronics, personal care, medical devices, and sustainable transportation systems. Arthur Sempliner Adjunct Professor, CCE B.S. Industrial Design, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; M.B.A., Marketing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; has taught the Production Methods classes in the Industrial Design department for more than 15 years; varied work experiences early on in his career include being a designer at Dorwin Teague and later rising to the position of vice president; president of Construciones Sempliner in Spain for three years, before founding Chelsea Design Associates in New York; relationship with Pratt Institute began in 1969 when he was the assistant to Professor Gerald Gulotta, a visual literacy instructor; in 1995 developed and taught two Production Methods courses for the Industrial Design department; is recognized for his vast knowledge and experience in all areas of design and manufacturing; holds over 35 U.S. patents; winner of several awards including first prize at the Popai Show for his Vacuum Coffee Dispensing System; has worked on a large variety of projects in several different fields, including architecture, packaging design, exhibit design, point of purchase, and industrial design. Irvin Tepper Adjunct Professor, CCE M.F.A., University of Washington; B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; works are in many museum collections around the world including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Museum of Contemporary Art, Kunstmuseum, Bern, Switzerland; and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; work is the subject of a book, titled When Cups Speak: Life with the Cup—A 25 Year Survey (Silver Gate, 2002). William Jeffrey Tolbert Adjunct Associate Professor B.S. Biology, Millsaps College; B.F.A., Museum Art School; M.F.A., Yale University; a visual artist living in Brooklyn, N.Y. who has taught at Marylhurst College, Yale University, Parsons The New School for Design, Pratt Institute, and The Cooper Union; from 1993–2000, he was the president and owner of ArtPanel Inc., which manufactured high-quality wood supports for fine artists; since 2006, has been project manager for the Way2Go tandem car project; a revolutionary, lightweight, fuelefficient vehicle for the transportation industry; has exhibited his work in New York and across the country; in 2010, worked with Philip Riley at Skink Ink Editions to create a portfolio of giclée prints, which were featured in a group exhibition at Skink Ink Editions. Rebecca Welz Adjunct Professor, CCE Boston Museum School; B.A., Empire State College; is a sculptor represented by June Kelly Gallery in New York and galleries on the west coast; recipient of Pollock Krasner and ED Foundation grants; recipient of a fellowship at Urban Glass; founder of Association of Women Industrial Designers (AWID), mounting first exhibition of product design by women in the U.S., Goddess in the Details; published book on exhibition. Henry Yoo Adjunct Professor, CCE B.B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; has worked for BMW, Boeing, Chrysler, Pepsi, Proctor and Gamble, General Mills, Gucci, Herman Miller, McNeil Associates, Philip-Morris, Samsung, Timex, Victoria’s Secret, Warner Brothers, YSL, and Zegna. 222 Interior Design Faculty Doreen Adengo Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., Catholic University; M.Arch., Yale University; RA; project architect, Gruzen Samton Architects, currently working on the design and construction of affordable housing, educational, and government projects; one of her projects recently won a design excellence award from the U.S. General Services Administration; previously worked for Robert A.M. Stern Architects of New York City, Adjaye Associates of London, and Ellerbe Becket of Washington, D.C. Goil Amornvivat Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Carnegie Mellon University; M.Arch., Yale University. Brook Anderson Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., University of Kansas. Eric Ansel Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago; M.Arch., Pratt Institute; has worked as an architect at Cooper Robertson and Partners and at Selldorf Architects; as project architect, recently completed a two-year renovation of a historic two-family building in lower Manhattan; his paintings have been exhibited in New York and Atlanta. Tarek Ashkar Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.Arch., Harvard University; principal, Tarek Ashkar Studio. Francesca Bastianini Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Smith College; M.S., Lesley University; M.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design. Tania Branquinho Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., New York School of Interior Design; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Mary Burke Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Fordham University; M.S. Columbia University; B.Arch., City College School of Architecture; RA; directs Burke Design & Architecture PLLC in a broad range of architecturally based residential, hospitality, and commercial projects; registered architect who has practiced in the field of interior design and architecture for over 35 years; previously held leadership roles in prominent architecture firms including Cetra Ruddy, Gruzen Samton LLP, HOK, Swanke Hayden Connell, and Tihany International; led KPF Interior Architects’ Singapore office, designing major interior spaces for the headquarters of United Overseas Bank, designed by Kenzo Tange; then set up her own Singapore practice, Burke Design, providing interior architecture services throughout Asia and Australia; serves as vice president for design excellence of the AIA New York Chapter, after a five-year stint as the chair of the chapter’s Interiors Committee; former board member of the New York Chapter of IIDA, and is the 2012 chair of the Advisory Group for the Interior Architecture Knowledge Community of the AIA; serves annually as a juror in the Best of NeoCon competition in Chicago, and is a frequent contributor to design publications. Tania Chau Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Chicago; M.S., Pratt Institute; graduate of the Pratt Interior Design MS program; practicing Interior Design since 2005; currently a freelance designer providing design services directly to clients, as well as consulting with architecture firms; prior to working independently, was an interior designer and project manager with 212box Architecture in New York City, where she worked on a variety of high-end residential, commercial and retail projects; besides interior design, professional experience includes custom furniture, fixture and material design as well as construction administration and management. Der Sean Chou Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., New York University; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute; New York-based designer with professional experience in hospitality and highend residential projects; currently working as a designer at Jeffrey Beers International; past design experience includes work at Ajemian Design and Plan Architecture; in addition, worked for several years in the film industry as a 3-D and visual effects artist; graduate of Vancouver Film School where his work received honors and appeared in film festivals around the world. Melissa Cicetti Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; RA; principal, Studio Cicetti Architect PC; noteworthy projects include the Reece Murphy Residence in Cutchogue, N.Y., various projects for Richard and Clara Weyergraf Serra, and the Brant Foundation Art Study Center in Greenwich, Conn. (in conjunction with Gluckman Mayner Architects), where she was a project manager; former lead architect on all retail projects for fashion designer Helmut Lang, many of which won multiple awards; also a successful photographer/artist, whose book Marking the Land 1 (University of New Mexico Press, 2005) is a photographic essay exploring the interaction between land forms in the Southwest and the human-made interventions upon them; photographic works have been exhibited internationally, including at Ryerson University in Toronto and Go Fish Gallery in New York City. Interior Design Faculty 223 James Conti David C. Foley Sheryl Kasak Jason Livingston Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., Youngstown State University; M.F.A., Ohio State University; principal, Jim Conti Lightworks; clients include the N.Y.C. Department of Transportation, Battery Park Conservancy, Alliance for Downtown New York, and Great Park in Orange County, California; awards include the IES Lumen Award, Glowing Topiary Garden, IALD, IES, AIA award for Bronx Charter School for the Arts. Visiting Professor B.A., University of Pittsburgh; M.A., University of Illinois, Chicago; M.Arch., University of Notre Dame; RA; registered architect with expertise in the luxury retail and residential markets, whose studio, UR Design, also provides urban design services for urban and rural communities. Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design; M.S., Columbia University; founder, Interim Design, an architecture and interior design practice based upon her undergraduate thesis “An Interim Architecture,” which addressed the 15 Year War in Lebanon and the proceeding redevelopment of the center of Beirut; her practice focuses on the communication of information through spatial design and the notion that we are all living in an interim state, one which is constantly evolving and reacting to our surroundings and our lives; has worked for I.M. Pei and Rafael Vigñoly; represents Atelier Christian de Portzamparc in New York for U.S. projects; held the winning entry for the international theoretical competition Unbuilt Architecture with her Lightning House design in 1994 and has been published several times in Abstract, the Columbia University annual design publication. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Miami; M.F.A., New York University; LC; IES; IALD; principal, Studio T+L, LLC and an accomplished lighting designer in architecture and theater with over 20 years of experience; projects range from offices and libraries to historic buildings and unique installations; his work has been profiled in Lighting Design + Application and Lighting & Sound America; awards include a Lumen Citation and an International Illumination Design Award; he was a 2010 finalist in the ESTA Rock Our World Awards. James Counts Jr. Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Kansas State University; M.S., Columbia University. Annie Coggan Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Bennington College; M.Arch., Southern California Institute of Architecture. Wendy Cronk Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Washington University; M.Arch., Harvard University, RA; the work of Wendy Cronk Architect includes new construction, interior design, custom furniture design, and graphic design; her award-winning graphic design work was published in HOW magazine and Two-Color Graphics, and her design for a lighting fixture made out of a re-used industrial object was featured in the exhibition Artists Create Light; previously worked predominantly in the offices of Tsao & McKown and Toshiko Mori Architect; her design contributions were most notably recognized in A+U for the Taghkanic Residence for Toshiko Mori Architect. Ron Eng Visiting Assistant Professor B.S.A.D., M.Arch., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; RA; director of design at Formactiv: Architecture.Design.Technology. P.C. since 1999, completing projects at scales ranging from retail boutiques, galleries, and townhouses to large mixed-use and institutional projects primarily in the New York City area, though other sites have ranged from the Hollywood Hills to the Bund in Shanghai; prior to founding Formactiv, he worked in the offices of Rafael Vinoly Architects, Davis, Brody, Bond and Greenberg-Farrow Architects. Philip Farrell Adjunct Professor B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; in practice since 1978 with Farrell Design Associates, a firm that offers a broad range of professional services in both residential and commercial design; major organizations that have commissioned his firm include Citibank, Warner/Amex Communications, MCTV, Intelligent Office Franchise, Air France, Sony, Revlon, and AT&T; illustrated or contributed to a number of books, including Construction Materials for Interior Design (Watson-Guptill, 1989), Commonsense Design (Charles Scribner), Interiors for the Handicapped (Pantheon Press), Putting It All Together (Charles Scribner), and Space Planning Basics (John Wiley and Sons, 1992) Pavlina Gantcheva Visiting Assistant Professor B. Civil Eng., University of Architecture and Civil Engineering, Sofia, Bulgaria; B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University. Nicolas Guillin Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., École Supérieure de Création Industrielle Adam Hayes Visiting Instructor B.A., B.Arch, Rice University John Heida Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., University of Montana; B.Arch., California College of the Arts. Claudia Hernandez Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., California State Polytechnical; M.S., Columbia University; Plain Space Inc., Architecture and Design. Sarah Hill Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Parsons School of Design; M.S., Pratt Institute Lindsay Homer Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Bates College; M.S., Pratt Institute. Ben Howes Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.S., Stevens Institute of Technology. Latoya Nelson Kamdang Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Business Administration, Georgetown University; M.F.A., George Washington Univeersity; M.Arch. Real Estate Development, University of Pennsylvania; has been exploring different typologies within the interior design and architecture profession since 2000; has worked on projects in commercial, government, technology, institutional, retail, residential, exhibit, and museum design; major projects include U.S. Embassies overseas, National Museum of African American History and Culture, and Marc Jacobs International retail stores; intermediate architect for Jaklitsch Gardner Architects PC; coursework taught includes Colors & Materials; Structures; Digital Applications; Space, Tectonics, & Surfaces; and Design Studio; Certified Interior Designer (CID), NCIDQ Certified, and LEED AP BD+C. Ted Kilcommons Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Texas; designer, builder and teacher in New York City; founded Ted K Design (www.tedkdesign.com) in 2008 as a platform for thought-provoking design and timeless craftsmanship; work has appeared in Interior Design and Popular Mechanics magazines, where he is a contributing writer, and has been featured on numerous Best Of lists and blogs around the intertube; currently sits on the Board of Directors at Yestermorrow Design/ Build School (www.yestermorrow.org) and works as project supervisor for MG and Company (www.mgandcompany.com), a design-savvy construction firm that has served the NYC hospitality industry since 1918. Margaret Kirk Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Syracuse University; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Eugene Kwak Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Carnegie Mellon University; M.S., Columbia University; LEED AP; educator, architect, and an urban designer who works for Dattner Architects, focusing on technology-based green and sustainable public work including New Housing New York Legacy Project; his entry for the Reinventing Grand Army Plaza Competition was selected as one of the top 30 ideas to be included in a public exhibition, and his entry for Intersections: The Grand Concourse Beyond 100 also earned an Honorable Mention. Annie K. Kwon Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; GSAPP, B.S. & B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design Chelsea Limbird Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Brown University; M.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design. Jennifer Logun Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Gettysburg College; M.Arch., University of Florida. Cam Lorendo Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Parsons the New School for Design; design career as a carpenter and a contractor, which has proven invaluable in providing a working knowledge of methods and materials to his practice; principal work has been in the furniture industry where he has had extensive experience with Knoll, Herman Miller, Steelcase, Vecta, and DesignTex for whom he has worked nationally designing office systems display, showrooms, market events, new product introductions, and trade shows; commercial practice covers a broad spectrum of projects including office interiors, trading firms, advertising agencies, and restaurants; residential work has spanned the gamut from apartments to single-family homes in numerous locations throughout the United States. William Mangold Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, CUNY Graduate Center; has taught at Pratt since 2007, and is also an adjunct at Hunter College and Moore College of Art; as a Ph.D. candidate in the Environmental Psychology program at CUNY Graduate Center his research looks at the role institutions play in architectural production and utopian visions for transforming the social and spatial environment; he has had various papers accepted for publication and is currently preparing an edited volume bringing together key readings related to space and place; as a designer, he has worked on a number of renovation and adaptive reuse projects, including the ongoing renovation of an 1872 row house where he lives with his family. 224 Interior Design Faculty T. Camille Martin Joseph E. Nocella J. Woodson Rainey Acting Assistant Chair B.A., Miami University; M.Arch., Washington University; principal, TCM Studio, Brooklyn, N.Y. Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., University of Missouri; M.Arch, The University of Kansas; RA, AIA, LEED AP; practicing architect, focusing on BIM technologies, since 1996; previously worked for architectural firms SOM, HOK, NBBJ, and FXFowle. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., B.Arch., University of Utah. Anthony Mekel Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; professional career has focused on corporate interior design with an expertise in the application of digital design tools for the process; has worked as a senior designer and project manager at Mancini-Duffy, The Phillips Group, and most recently at HOK. Francine Monaco Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., University of Cincinnati; RA; registered architect in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey, whose work includes projects in the United States and Europe; more than 25 years of experience in architecture as well as interior design; her early work as a project architect for a highly respected architectural firm designing homes and apartments was followed in 1989 by a position as project architect for the in-house design department of the Guggenheim Museum; as a member of the museum’s planning team her focus was in orchestrating several design projects of the museum’s expansion in New York City; she designed and supervised the creation of administrative office space within newly excavated space at the original Frank Lloyd Wright museum building; over the years, she has pursued a mixture of residential and non-residential work; her increasing focus on the intersection between architecture and interior design led her to establish D’Aquino Monaco in 1997 with Carl D’Aquino; she was inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame in 2007. John Nafziger Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Franklin & Marshall College; M.Arch. II, Yale University; principal and co-founder of Bigprototype, a Brooklyn-based design firm dedicated to testing, research and play; formed in 2004, Bigprototype is a tactile, hands-on practice that operates at the intersection of design and building; also co-founder of Littleprototype, a design studio focused on product and furniture design; originally from Jos, Nigeria, has lived and traveled extensively in the Middle East, Caribbean and Asia and draws on a broad range of experiences to inform his design collaborations; exhibitions of work with Bigprototype include Made in New York at the Museum of the City of New York, M+D+F at Design Within Reach, and the Bernhardt Design Studio emerging designers exhibition. Robert Nassar Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Syracuse University; principal, Robert Nassar Design, New York. Tetsu Ohara Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., University of California at Berkeley; Certificate of Architecture, Harvard University; principal designer, SpatialDesignStudio, Inc. in N.Y.C.; has engaged in design projects in both the East and West ranging from product design, exhibition design, interior design, to architectural services; recently published project includes Japan Brand Unfolding exhibition with Japanese Ministry of Trade at Felissimo Design House in Manhattan. Jon Otis Professor B.A., Moravian College; M.S., University of Massachusetts; principal, OlA – Object Agency, a multidisciplinary design studio and design strategy agency, whose work ranges from interior architecture and design, exhibition design, branding and visual communications, product design and consulting; clients have included Tandus Flooring, George Nakashima Woodworker, Scotts Inc., Vitra Design Museum, Corning Glass, Contract Design, Tuva Looms, and World Moto Cross; recipient of Fulbright and Lusk fellowships to Italy; named Most Admired Educator in Interior Design in DesignIntelligence in 2009. Danny Ka Ho Pang Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute; upon graduation, began working at Glen & Company as an interior designer focusing on hospitality design; in 2008, joined Lee H. Skolnick Architecture + Design Partnership, where he worked on various projects in different disciplines including interior design, exhibit design and graphic design; in 2012, began working in retail design by joining Saks Fifth Avenue OFF 5TH as a manager of store planning and design; currently the Director of Store Planning and Design at Saks Fifth Avenue OFF 5TH. Andrew Pettit Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; RA; principal, Andrew L. Pettit, Architect; firm’s work encompasses many residential and renewal projects from single-family homes and brownstone restorations to multi-family dwelling complexes; projects completed or in process include renovated lofts, commercial offices, and custom residences as well as industrial adaptive re-use projects and restaurants, a nightclub, and other hotel and hospitality lifestyle designs, commercial retail outlets, and high-end design fashion shops; clients include several corporate groups from General Electric Plastics Division to a major international publishing firm, an international insurance company, a private legal firm, and a specialty paper goods manufacturer; restored Memorial Hall on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus with Philip Farrell. Eduardo Rega Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.A.A., Polytechnic University of Madrid; M.S., Columbia University. Christian Rietzke Visiting Assistant Professor Diplom-Ingenieur, University of Applied Sciences, Münster, Germany; M.Arch., Pratt Institute; project manager, McKay Architecture/Design; has designed several single-family residences located in the area of New Paltz, N.Y., informed by the principles of sustainability and has managed the construction of several full building conversions in Lower Manhattan and Newark, New Jersey; has worked for a variety of firms in Germany, Sweden, and Spain on large-scale hotels, shopping centers, and industrial complexes; work has been published in Domus and ICON Magazine. Rachely Rotem Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch. (Cum Laude), Israel Institute for Technology; M.S., Columbia University; leads MODU with years of experience working at a diverse range of project types and scales; in 2004, won the “Catch the Light” international competition for the Athens Olympic Games; has won several international design competitions and awards for projects in North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East; before starting solo practice in 2009, worked for established architecture practices in both Tel Aviv and New York, where she was a Project Manager for Leslie Gill Architect; at Columbia University, she was awarded both the Lowenfish Prize and the William Kinne Fellows Prize; currently teaching advanced design studios at the Rhode Island School of Design; previously taught at the University of Pennsylvania and Cornell University; LEED Accredited Professional in building design and construction and Associate AIA member. Mary-Jo Schlachter Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania; RA; USGBC committee member; co-founder, d3, an organization committed to advancing innovative positions in art, architecture, and design by providing a collaborative environment for artists, architects, designers, and students from throughout New York City though a program of exhibitions, events, competitions, and publications; prior to independent practice as MJIT Studio, she worked extensively in affordable housing and high-end residential design in various New York architectural firms including Beth Cooper Lawrence, Raffaella Bortoluzzi, and Bruno Kearney; her architectural and installation work has been exhibited in Philadelphia, New York, and Savannah. Interior Design Faculty 225 Irina Schneid Hazel Siegel Myonggi Sul B. Arch., M.Arch., Cornell University; architect, educator, and principal of an interdisciplinary design lab: SCH+ARC Studio; research, teaching, and practice are focused on activating drawing as a generative tool in the production of spatial relations; primarily based in New York, has lectured and taught internationally; recent teaching appointments include Barnard College of Columbia University, Pratt Institute, Tyler School of Art, and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) in Melbourne, Australia; work has been featured in Designboom, Archdaily, and Possible City; SCH+ARC Studio’s Pop-Up Playhouse was recently named finalist by BTI in their international PLAYscapes competition; engaged in projects of all scales, SCH+ARC has completed the design and construction of several collaborative retail projects in New York and Las Vegas. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Skidmore College; M.F.A., Hunter College, City University of New; Atelier Hazel Siegel Ltd. Professor B.A., Valparaiso University; M.S., Pratt Institute; interior designer in New York City for over 20 years; principal, Myonggi Sul Design, which provides interior design services to corporations, high-end residences, and major architectural firms; previous appointments include director of interior design at Marcel Breuer Associates, and work as an associate at GN Associates/Carol Groh and Associates, where her creative skills and leadership were instrumental in the firm’s recognition as the 1988 Designer of the Year by Interiors magazine; has taught at both Hongik University and Gunguk University in Seoul, Korea, as a visiting professor. Deborah Schneiderman Associate Professor B.S., Cornell University; M.Arch., SCI-Arch; RA; LEED AP; principal, deSc Architecture/Design/ Research; projects include residential design, exhibition design such as the Empire State Building audio tour and kiosk, and collaborative work with the artists Kristin Jones and Andrew Ginzel on Polarities at the Kansas City International Airport and Metronome at Union Square in New York City; previously taught at Parsons The New School for Design and Arizona State University; author of the upcoming books Inside Prefab (Princeton Architectural Press, 2012) and Integrating Sustainability in Design Education (with Jacques Giard in 2013); articles have appeared in Interiors: Design, Architecture and Culture; Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal; Home Cultures: The Journal of Architecture Design and Domestic Space; and International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability. Corie Sharples Visiting Assistant Professor Founding Principal of SHoP; oversees the firm’s Interior Design Group; in this role, she is integral to the creation of comprehensive, integrated solutions that consider all aspects of a design together; from the functional and experiential arrangements of space, the choreography of movement throughout a building and the character of spaces inside and out, to the design and detailing of bespoke elements tailored to fit the specific needs of each project; SHoP’s interior design projects exemplify the firm’s emphasis on “performative environments,” taking into consideration patterns of use, material and spatial efficiencies, all the factors of a space that are only apparent when one is able to look at its entire context, whole; her attention to detailing and materiality comes from a deep understanding and passion for craft that, when coupled with SHoP’s expertise in digital fabrication and construction technology, results in smart, sophisticated and beautiful work. Andrew Simons Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Carnegie Mellon University; partner, Emphasis Design. Darius Somers Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch, Pratt Institute; M.S. Architectural Design, Columbia University; received several prestigious awards for academic excellence, namely; the Pratt Patron’s Scholarship, the highest prize awarded to a student at Pratt’s School of Architecture, and the Willam Kinnie Fellow Prize from Columbia University; shortly after graduating from Pratt, produced designfocused conversations; the “Designing an Enduring Legacy” symposium in conjunction with the Black Alumni Association and Pratt Institute School of Architecture, and “Design Generation 2.0” in partnership with The Architect’s Newspaper, where he is currently an editorial board member; worked under the leadership of distinguished architects and educators: the late Charles Gwathmey at Gwathmey Siegel and Associates Architects, and David Adjaye at Adjaye Associates in New York City; currently working at a small practice led by architect Mario Gooden; managing an 8,000-square-meter, mixed-use development in Johannesburg, South Africa. Sarah Strauss Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Duke University; M.Arch., Yale University; founder, Bigprototype (2004), a practice that operates at the intersection of design and building, harnessing interests in making, testing, research, and play, with offices in Brooklyn, N.Y. and Rincon, Puerto Rico; also founded LittlePrototype, a furniture and product design company located in Brooklyn, and Collider, an installation art project with Lia Halloran that travels between New York City and Los Angeles. Keena Suh Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; M.Arch., Columbia University; RA; architect, Reddymade Design, New York City; professional experience includes a broad range of architecture and interior projects including affordable housing, high-end residential projects, retail, and hospitality designs. Madeleine Taylor Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design; M.S., Columbia University; RA; principal, boutique architecture and interior design studios MMTNYC, New York City and MMTSLC, Salt Lake City; has served as director of operations at Ace Gallery in New York City, and worked as a designer at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, LLP. Karin Tehve Acting Chair B.Arch., Pennsylvania State University; M.Arch., Harvard University RA; architect and founder, KT3Dllc. (2001), a small interdisciplinary practice pursuing projects in architecture, interiors, multimedia design and site-specific art; awards include a 2009 Building Brooklyn Award and a 2009 Lumen Citation and Regional Award (with Linnaea Tillett) for This Way, a permanent light installation under the Brooklyn Bridge; recent projects include a test-kitchen for Every Day with Rachael Ray magazine and collaboration with Linnaea Tillett Lighting Design on a permanent light installation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Jack Travis Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., Arizona State University; M.Arch., University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; RA; since establishing his namesake design studio in 1985, has completed proposals or has been involved in over 100 projects of varying scope and size; to date, the firm has completed several residential interiors projects for such notable clients as Spike Lee, Wesley Snipes, and John Saunders of ABC sports; commercial and/or retail interiors clients have included Giorgio Armani, Cashmere Cashmere, and the Sbarro family of the famed pizza parlors; Travis encourages investigation into black history where appropriate and includes forms, motifs, materials, and colors that reflect this heritage in his work; interests have broadened in recent years to include design issues not only concerning cultural content but sustainability in environmental design as well as alternative educational practices that seek to ensure the entrance of more students of color into the profession; editor, African American Architects: In Current Practice, (Princeton Architectural Press, 226 Interior Design Faculty 1991) the first publication to profile the work of black architects in the United States; in 2004, he received his Fellowship in the AIA, and in 2006 was inducted into the Council of Elders of the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA), the highest honor that each organization bestows upon its individual members. materials, such as hardwoods, cork, glass, metals, which are then used with resins, carbon fiber, new technologies and methods, allowing thin profiles, fluid forms and tactile, resilient surfaces; some of the materials Walz has developed have been patented; recipient of the Rome Prize for work in design; in the Interior Design Hall of Fame; art and designs have been exhibited in galleries and museums in North America and Europe and work is regularly in design publications. Loukia Tsafoulia Visiting Assistant Professor Diploma in Architecture Engineering, School of Architecture, National Technical University of Athens; MSAAD, Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University; registered architect TEE-TCG, received fellowship from the Gerondelis Foundation; obtained her professional degree and first M.Arch. from the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA), spending one year as an exchange student at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal; co-founder of PLB studio based in New York as well as an Adjunct Professor at the City University of New York, Architectural Department of Technology; a founder partner of Fabula & Syuzhet, a new experimental platform based on the production of body and space embellishments; from 2010 to 2013 led the Architectural Section for Studio Dror, managing a variety of architectural and urban design projects as well as architectural competitions; also employed by LEESER Architecture in New York City and has collaborated with SO-IL / Solid Objectives for the construction of Sukkah City pavilion proposal in New York; also worked with Jorge Otero-Pailos on the research and design development of a proposal for the “Ancient” Acropolis Museum; from 2006 to 2009 joined the Laboratory of Urban Environment, Department of Urban and Regional Planning (NTUA) as a researcher for the Collaborative Environmental Regeneration of Port Cities Eleufsina Bay and the Mines of Aegean and Industrial Heritage Record programs; in parallel, worked as an architect for Karakosta E. Architectural office in Athens for a couple of years of intense architectural practice; work has been published and exhibited in international design fairs, the London 3-D print show and ICFF in New York, among others. Kevin Walz Visiting Associate Professor Pratt Institute; the New York Studio School; artist and designer; recently returning from two decades in Rome, Walzworkinc, his design firm is located in New York; known for his spatial design projects, employing innovative spatial relationships, materials and processes borrowed from other disciplines, notably those from industry, fine art and craft; artwork, which focuses on perception and form; and signature collections of products; also lectures and teaches at university programs in Europe and the U.S.; has designed many signature product lines of lighting, carpets, fabrics, wall coverings, bath fixtures and fittings, and furniture; furniture designs begin with an interaction of fine natural William Watson Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Princeton University; M.Arch., University of Texas at Austin; principal, Castro Watson, whose work includes residential and design build projects as well as winning entries to design competitions; Speak Up for Small Farms, Stored Potential Competition, in Omaha, Nebraska, was the winning entry in 2010. Henry Weintraub Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; M.Arch., Harvard University; professional work has included residential, townhouse renovations to rooftop additions, to office and gallery renovations for offices such as Ennead, Spivak Architects, and Daniel Rowen Architects. Alexandra Griffith Winton Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Smith College; M.A., Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts. Piotr Woronkowicz Visiting Instructor B.S. Product Design (Honors), Art Center College of Design; an industrial designer who specializes in 3-D technology and manufacturing as a process to achieve unexplored design potential and problem-solving in various disciplines of design from furniture to Interiors; before Joining Frog Design in 2014, worked as a senior designer at Pentagram for Paula Scher and worked with other studios and clients such as Jeffrey Bernett, Don Chadwick, Jorge Pardo, Design Within Reach, Herman Miller, Boffi, to name a few; born in Gdansk Poland; has lived in various places around the world including Milan, Italy, Vancouver, Canada, Tokyo, Japan, Los Angeles, California before finally settling down in New York City in 2007; work can be seen in galleries throughout the country; recent recipient of a Spark award; work has been published in international magazines and newspapers including Wallpaper, Surface, the Los Angeles Times, Elle Décor, and ID. 227 Corey Yurkovich Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Kent State University; M.S., Harvard University; a New York-based designer working at the intersection of architecture, exhibition design, product and furniture development, and brand environments; has a wide variety of design and production experiences—from initial creative strategy through to construction management and hands-on fabrication—which have provided him the opportunity to work closely with a range of clients and collaborators; currently seeks to integrate traditional craft-based production methods with advanced digital fabrication to produce projects and experiences that are conceptually rich, rigorously designed, and efficiently constructed. Edwin Zawadzki Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Yale University; before architecture school, worked at The New Yorker magazine and later with Lazard Frères in Paris and Moscow during the exuberant period of perestroika; after grad school, worked at the NY office of Perkins and Will on a variety of educational and healthcare projects, as well as an urban master plan for the city of Beirut in collaboration with the offices of Fred Koetter; in 2000 he and Mason Wickham founded In Situ Design, recently named one of the top 50 design firms in NYC by NY Spaces magazine; In Situ Design specializes in boutique hotels as well as residential work (insitudesign.com); currently teaches the first-year graduate design studio; previously taught in the undergraduate program Michael Zuckerman Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., B.Arch., City College of New York; RA, LEED AP; principal, G.V.Z. Architects; recent work includes projects for Saint Ann’s School, Enterprise Lighting Sales, Arcus Foundation, Harlem United, The Bell House, as well as many residential clients; prior work included designing lobbies for residential co-ops and retail stores and collaborating on restaurants, residences, and offices with Judith Stockman and Associates, The George Office, and Richard Bloch Architect; has designed custom light fixtures and furniture during the course of various projects; formerly, project architect, project manager, and senior designer with the firm of Jack L. Gordon Architects (1974–1983), responsible for many projects of varying scope and complexity including building renovations and new construction. Library and Information Science Faculty Selenay Aytac Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Information Science, Long Island University, C.W. Post Campus; M.B.A., Business and Total Quality Management, Isik University; B.L.S., Istanbul University. Virginia Bartow Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Columbia University; B.A., William Smith College; curator of the George Arents Collection and head of Special Collections Cataloging, the New York Public Library. Carrie Banks Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Queens College, City University of New York; Supervising Librarian, Child’s Place for Children with Special Needs, Brooklyn Public Library. Johanna Bauman Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Queens College, City University of New York; M.A., Ph.D., Art History, University of Virginia; B.A., History, George Mason University; Visual Resources Curator, Pratt Institute. Jason Baumann Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Queens College, City University of New York; M.F.A., City College of New York; B.A., Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts; Special Assistant to the Director, NYPL Research Libraries. Anthony Cocciolo Tula Giannini Assistant Professor Ed.D., Ed.M., M.A., Communication, Computing and Technology in Education, Teachers College, Columbia University; B.S., Computer Science, University of California at Riverside; research interests are in the uses of emerging information and communications technologies (ICTs) to enhance libraries and education, especially in the social, cognitive and affective dimensions of learning and knowledge construction in digital environments; former head of technology for the Gottesman Libraries at Teachers College, Columbia University. Dean of the School of Information and Library Science Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; M.L.S., Rutgers University; M.M., B.M., Manhattan School of Music; an interdisciplinary researcher, Dr. Giannini is a leading scholar in French woodwind instruments and cultural heritage in the digital world across libraries, museums and archives. Recent publications include: 22 articles in Groves Music Online (2013); the book Great Flute Makers of France, published in Japanese in 2007, described in Choice as “a model of archival research for all graduate students”; “Core Competencies for Art Museum Librarianship,” ARLIS; and “Frédéric Triebert, Designer of the Modern Oboe,” Pendragon. She is writer and project director for two current IMLS grants partnering with leading NYC cultural institutions (see www. brooklynvisualheritage.org and www.nyarc.org/ content/imls-funds-pratt-and-nyarc-partnership). Anthony Cucchiara Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; M.B.A., Long Island University at Brooklyn; B.A., St. Francis College; Archivist and Associate Librarian for Distinctive Collections and Information Services, Brooklyn College, CUNY. Deirdre Donohue Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., State University of New York at New Paltz; Librarian, International Center of Photography. Emily Drabinski Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Syracuse University; M.A., Composition and Rhetoric, Long Island University; B.A., Political Science, Columbia University. Terence Fitzgerald Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., English, Iona College. Nancy Friedland Visiting Professor M.S., Library Science, Simmons College; B.A., History, Boston University. Visiting Associate Professor M.L.S., Rutgers University; M.A., New York University; B.A., University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Head, Butler Library Media Center, Butler Library, Columbia University. Helen-Ann Brown-Epstein Barbara Genco John N. Berry III Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., B.S., University of Maryland at College Park; M.S., University of Pennsylvania; Education and Outreach Head, Weill Cornell Medical Library. Charles Cuykendall Carter Visiting Instructor M.S.L.I.S., Long Island University; M.F.A., Creative Writing, New York University; B.A., English, Emory University; Bibliographer, the Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle, New York Public Library. Visiting Associate Professor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Canisius College; Director, Collection Development, Brooklyn Public Library. Sharareh Goldsmith Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Mt. Holyoke College; Advanced Certificate in Library and Information Studies, Pratt Institute. Joshua Hadro Visiting Instructor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Philosophy, Columbia University; executive editor, digital products, Library Journal and The Horn Book. Alexis Hagadorn Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Columbia University, Advanced Certificate in Library and Archives Conservation, Columbia University; B.A., Barnard College; head of conservation, Columbia University Libraries. Jessica Lee Hochman Assistant Professor Ph.D., Philosophy and Education and Cultural Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University; Diversity Fellow 2001–2003; M.A., Instructional Technology and Media in the Program of Scientific Foundations. Jennifer Hoffman Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Higher Education, M.L.S., M.A., Art History; University of North Texas; B.A., Fine Art and English Literature, Hardin-Simmons University. David Alan Hollander Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., Fordham University; M.L.S., Pratt Institute; Law and Legal Studies Librarian, Princeton University Library. 228 Library and Information Science Faculty Jennifer Hubert-Swan David Marcinkowski Deborah Rabina Brooke Watkins Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Wayne State University; B.A., English, Olivet Nazarene University; Library Department chair, Little Red School House and Elisabeth Irwin High School. Visiting Associate Professor M.A., Media Studies, The New School; B.A., Philosophy and Religion, Kean University; associate professor, Associate Degree Program, Pratt Institute; associate director of Computing Services, Pratt Institute, Manhattan campus. Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Certificate in Museum Studies, Pratt Institute; M.F.A., Creative Writing, Brooklyn College, City University of New York; B.A., English Literature and Creative Writing, Ohio University; librarian, General Research Division, Steven A. Schwarzman Building, New York Public Library. Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., English and Drama, University of Georgia; assistant director for young adult programs, New York Public Library. Associate Professor Ph.D., Rutgers University; areas of specialization include reference resources (general, legal, government), information law and policy, government and NGO information sources and scholarly communications; research focuses on two major areas: how democratic micro and macro organizations form and harbor information policies that stem from and support their perception of democracy, and the role of evolving patterns of scholarly communications in academic and research environments. Seoud M. Matta Sarah Jewell Visiting Assistant professor M.L.I.S., Rutgers University; B.S., Biology; The College of New Jersey. Jesse Karp Visiting Instructor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Journalism, New York University; early childhood and interdimensional librarian, Little Red School House and Elisabeth Irwin High School. Matthew Knutzen Assistant Professor M.F.A., Abstract Cartography and Artists’ Books, Pratt Institute; B.A., Geography, University of California at Berkeley; geospatial librarian, New York Public Library. Elizabeth Kroski Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.L.I.S., Long Island University at Post; B.A., Anthropology, Mount Holyoke College; Manager of Information Systems, New York Law Institute. Tonya Leslie Visiting assistant Professor M.A., Education, New York University; B.A., Education, State University of New York at New Paltz. Irene Lopatovska Assistant Professor Ph.D., Information Science, Rutgers University; M.L.S., University of North Texas; B.S., Kiev State University. Laura Lutz Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., University of Arizona; B.A., English, Willamette University; consultant, Scholastic Book Clubs. Craig MacDonald Assistant Professor Ph.D., Information Studies, Drexel University; M.S., Applied and Mathematical Statistics, Rutgers University; B.A., Statistics, The College of New Jersey. Susan L. Malbin Visiting Instructor Ph.D., Comparative History, Brandeis University; M.L.S., State University of New York at Albany; B.A., History, Barnard College; director of library and archives, American Jewish Historical Society. Hillias Martin 229 Christopher Weller Caroline Romans Visiting Instructor M.L.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Area Studies – Asia, Trinity College; consultant in information architecture, UX design and linked data, Chris Weller Consulting. Dean Emeritus D.L.S., Columbia University. Visiting Professor M.L.S., Drexel University. Kevin B. Winkler Abigail Meisterman Charles Rubenstein Visiting Instructor M.L.S., Queens College, City University of New York; B.A., Dance and English, Rutgers University; metadata specialist, New York Public Library. Matthew Miller Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute; M.S., History of Art, Pratt Institute; B.A., History of Art, The Ohio State University. Jacob Nadal Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Indiana University at Bloomington; director of library and archives, Brooklyn Historical Society, Lisa Norberg Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Indiana University; B.A., Political Science, University of Wyoming; dean, Barnard Library and Academic Information Services. Maria Cristina Pattuelli Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; advanced degree (master’s equivalent) in Cultural Heritage Studies, University of Bologna, Italy; advanced degree (master’s equivalent) in Philosophy, University of Bologna, Italy. Slava Polishchuk Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., B.A., Brooklyn College, City University of New York; conservator, Library Archives and Special Collections, Brooklyn College Library, City University of New York. Professor Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute NY; M.L.S., Pratt Institute; M.S., Polytechnic Institute Brooklyn; B.S., Richmond College, CUNY; visiting professor of engineering at the Institute for Research and Technology Transfer, Farmingdale State College (SUNY); elected to the IEEE Board of Directors serving as Director Elect in 2008–2009 and then as Director 2010–2011. Margaret Smith Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.L.I.S., Syracuse University; M.A., Evolutionary Biology; B.A., Physics & Studio Art, Rice University. Kenneth Soehner Visiting Associate Professor M.L.S., M.A., Columbia University; B.A., New York University; chief librarian, Arthur K. Watson Library, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Chris Alen Sula Assistant Professor Ph.D., Certificate in International Technology and Pedagogy; M.Phil., Philosophy, The Graduate Center, City University of New York; B.A., Philosophy and English, Augustana College. Elise Taylor-Swee Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute. Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Long Island University; B.A., Geography, University of Washington. Kyle Triplett Visiting Instructor M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute; B.S., Political Science, Grand Valley State University; rare books librarian, New York Public Library. Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Columbia University; M.A., Hunter College, City University of New York; B.A., San Diego State University. History of Art and Design Faculty Sonya Abrego Visiting Instructor Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center M.Phil, Decorative Arts, Design History and Material Culture Studies, Bard Graduate Center; a Ph.D. candidate specializing in 20th-century fashion, currently completing a dissertation on western wear in the postwar United States; work focuses on the interconnections between fashion and popular culture, specifically music and film; she has presented papers in New York, Montreal and San Francisco, worked with the costume collections at the Museum of the City of New York and the Metropolitan’s Costume Institute; she is the recipient of graduate fellowships from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bonnie Cashin Foundation and the Autry National Center; she is a senior editor at Worn Fashion Journal and works in the vintage clothing market. Kelly Rae Aldridge Visiting Instructor B.A., Art History, Colorado State University; M.A., Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University; conducts research on the place of food in art with particular focus on contemporary collaborative interdisciplinary projects; currently working on a dissertation, “Crumbs from the Revolutionary Table,” that examines art practices that focus on the table as a critical site of physical consumption, sensuous encounter, social production, and material exchange; Instructor at Stony Brook University; was Session Chair at the Association of Art Historians and has presented papers at CAA and other venues. Lisa Banner Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; art historian and curator; publications include Spanish Drawings in the Princeton University Art Museum (Yale University Press, 2013), and The Religious Patronage of the Duke of Lerma (Ashgate, 2009); has lectured on old master drawings at the Frick Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Morgan Library, Courtauld Institute, and the Meadows Museum; as a curator she has worked with the Frick Collection (The Spanish Manner: Drawings from Ribera to Goya, 2010-2011), the Museo del Prado (Dibujos del Siglo de Oro en la Coleccion de la Hispanic Society of America, 2006), the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya, and the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU. Ágnes Berecz Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Université Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne); teaches modern and contemporary art history; Associate Professor at Christie’s Education; lectures at the Museum of Modern Art; writings have appeared in Art Journal, Art in America, Artmargins and the Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin as well as in European and US exhibitions catalogs; recent work includes the two-volume monographic study, Simon Hantaï, and the essay, “The Event of Painting,” written for Judit Reigl’s retrospective at the Ludwig Museum in Budapest; review articles for Muérto, the Budapest-based art monthly, include “Thomas Hirschhorn’s Gramsci Monument,” and “American Traumspiel: Mike Kelley”; she is working on a book titled Paint No More: France, 1948-1982. Sam Bryan Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.A., Howard University; D.A., History, Carnegie-Mellon University; filmmaker and film archivist who specializes in documentary film and criticism; has taught courses in film history and production at Brooklyn College, Fordham University and at Pratt since 1983; since 1960 he has filmed for the International Film Foundation in Africa and South America; his films have been shown at the American Film Festival, at the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art; past president of the New York Film Council and executive Director of the International Film Foundation. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A., Art History, Advanced Certificate in Art Conservation, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; conservator of modern and contemporary art and technical art historian; works for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and lectures on art history conservation at New York University, Sotheby’s Institute of Art, City College of New York, and Museum of Modern Art; a specialist in American and European Post-war art, research includes 20th-century painting materials and techniques and conservation of monochrome paintings; selected publications: “Taoism in the Work of Agnes Martin,” Kunst Nu, “Laser Cleaning of a Study Painting by Ad Reinhardt and the Analysis/Assessment of the Surface after Treatment,” Modern Paints Uncovered; Selected Awards: Samuel H. Kress Foundation grant; Dedalus Foundation grant. 230 History of Art and Design Faculty Ed DeCarbo Mary Douglas Edwards Frima Fox Hofrichter Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., University of Chicago; M.A., Ph.D., Indiana University; concentration is art and aesthetics in post-colonial societies with foci in traditional and contemporary arts; field research in aesthetics in a traditional multicultural society in West Africa and in the Pacific (Moana) in contemporary arts; his courses survey the traditional and contemporary arts of Africa and the Pacific, and consider the theories and methods of analysis that are applied to the post-colonial world; he serves as a consultant to the College Board effort to globalize the Advanced Placement Curriculum in Art History; was Director of Education at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, and served as a senior university administrator for many years. Adjunct Professor M.L.S., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University; publications include Wind Chant and Night Chant Sand Paintings, articles in Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Studies in Iconography, Source: Notes in the History of Art, Il Santo: rivista francescana, Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, and elsewhere; co-edited and wrote portions of Gravity in Art: Essays on Weight and Weightlessness in Painting, Sculpture and Photography; chaired sessions and read papers at meetings of CAA; SECAC; International Congress on Medieval Studies; awards include Samuel H. Kress Dissertation Fellowship, NEH Travel to Collections Grant, Delmas Foundation Grant; past president, 14th-Century Society; former member, Executive Council of Southeastern Medieval Association; two-term associate, editorial board, Medieval Perspectives. Professor Certificate in Fine and Decorative Art Appraisal, Pratt Institute—in collaboration with the American Society of Appraisers; M.A. Hunter College; Ph.D. Rutgers University; issues of gender and class have informed her work; she is the author of a monograph on the 17th-century Dutch artist, Judith Leyster; numerous articles within Dutch art and feminist/gender studies; organized several Dutch exhibitions; and is currently working on the theme of old women; contributor to Janson’s History of Art: The Western Tradition (for the Baroque and Rococo sections); was Dutch Book Review Editor (2008-2013) for the Historians of Netherlandish Art (HNA); a member of the College Art Association’s Committee on Women in the Arts and Chair, Jury for the Distinguished Feminist Award (2012). Eva Díaz Assistant Professor M. A., Ph.D., Princeton University; her book The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College will soon be released by the University of Chicago Press; the project examines how an interdisciplinary group of artists at Black Mountain proposed new models of art and focuses on three Black Mountain teachers in the late 1940s and early 1950s: Josef Albers, John Cage, and Buckminster Fuller; writing appears in magazines and journals such as The Art Bulletin, Art Journal, Art in America, Cabinet, The Exhibitionist, Frieze, Grey Room, October, and Tate Etc. and she is a regular contributor to Artforum; she was recently awarded a Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation Art Writers Grant to research for her book about Buckminster Fuller’s work, titled The Fuller Effect: The Critique of Total Design in Postwar Art. Dorothea Dietrich Chair and Professor B.A., M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University; primary research areas: the Weimar Republic and post1945 German art and culture; publications include: The Collages of Kurt Schwitters: Tradition and Innovation (Cambridge U. Press) and German Drawings of the 60s (Yale U. Art Gallery), and numerous contributions to exhibition catalogues and scholarly volumes in the United States and Europe; was Chair of Arts and Humanities at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, and Curator of Prints and Drawings and Director of the Morse Research Center at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers; taught at Princeton University and held visiting appointments at Yale, MIT, Duke, Washington University, Boston University, and Bryn Mawr College; recently was a Senior Research Fellow at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, England. Charles Eppley Visiting Instructor B.A., Art History and Music, Hiram College; M.A., Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University; focuses on site-specific art, sound, and new media; completing a dissertation on “Un-Fixed Media: Site-Specificity and Materiality in the Work of Max Neuhaus”; has organized a panel on Soundsites at the Southeastern College Art Conference, and presented papers on sound art and Max Neuhaus at various venues; also teaches at Stony Brook University. Diana Gisolfi Professor B.A., Radcliffe/Harvard; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago; research focus is on Cinquecento art in Venice and the Veneto, including religious and political context and artistic practice; developed and directs the Pratt in Venice program; lectures and chairs sessions regularly at CAA and RSA and at international conferences; contributed essays to three international exhibitions on Paolo Veronese: Venice 2011, Sarasota,FL 2012-13, Verona 2014; publications include: The Rule, The Bible, and the Council: The Library of the Benedictine Abbey at Praglia (CAA Monograph Series); On Classic Ground, Caudine Country (Illustrations), and articles in: Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin, Artibus et Historiae, Arte Veneta, The Art Bulletin, The Dictionary of Art (Oxford Art Online), Renaissance Quarterly, Burlington Magazine, caareviews.org. Dimitri Hazzikostas Assistant Professor M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University; has done archeological field work in Greece and published in the Encyclopedia of Comparative Iconography; awards include Sears Distinguished Professor 1991, Whiting Fellowship. Heather Horton Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., DePauw University; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, NYU; current research focuses on questions of authorship, originality, and imitation, especially in the career of the pivotal writer and architect Leon Battista Alberti; recently published a new interpretation of Alberti’s treatises on painting and is completing a book manuscript titled Leon Battista Alberti and the Renaissance Crisis of the Author; has taught at New York University, The City University of New York, Purchase College, and The Cloisters Museum, where she remains a frequent guest lecturer. Susan Karnet Visiting Instructor B.F.A., The School of Visual Arts, New York City; M.F.A., Hunter College, CUNY; a painter and sculptor; has exhibited work in Chelsea, the East Village, 57th Street, Brooklyn, New Jersey, Europe and Africa; work has been reviewed in The New York Times; has taught at a number of schools in New York, New Jersey; and Cairo, Egypt; including Parsons, New York University, and The School of Visual Arts; she is interested in Modern and Contemporary Art, sculpture, and Egyptian Art. Dara Kiese Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Modern History, University of Minnesota; M.Phil., Art History, CUNY Graduate Center; Ph.D., Art History, CUNY Graduate Center; research centers around the artistic and architectural avant-gardes in Weimar Germany, with focus on the Bauhaus; received a number of grants, including a Fulbright fellowship to Berlin and a Getty research travel grant; worked as a Curatorial Assistant in the Architecture and Design Department at the Museum of Modern Art; presented papers on architectural and design pedagogies at conferences and symposia including the College Art Association and the Bauhaus Universität Weimar; has published essays on the Bauhaus. History of Art and Design Faculty 231 Vivien Knussi Anca Lasc William Lorenzo Adjunct Instructor B.A., M.A.,Tufts University; Ph.D., Columbia University; studied American Art and Photography at Columbia University; was a Lecturer at the Museum of Modern Art through the Department of Photography; assembled and catalogued two major corporate collections, The Dreyfus Fund and McFrank and William Advertising Agency; with the insight she gained into emerging photographers that were featured in both, she has specialized in teaching Contemporary Photography at Pratt; currently writing a book on the subject; has written catalog essays and most recently translated a German essay on “Deconstructed Poetry” for Les Figues Press. Assistant Professor B.A., History and Theory of Art and Literature, Jacobs University Bremen, Germany; M.A., Art History, Ph.D., Art History, University of Southern California; studies the invention and commercialization of the modern French interior and the development of the professions of interior designer and commercial window dresser; received numerous grants, including a NEH Summer Institute Grant at the Bard Graduate Center, and published essays in the Journal of Design History and Interiors: Design, Architecture, Culture; Designing the French Interior, coedited with Georgina Downey and Mark Taylor, is forthcoming from Bloomsbury Publishing in 2015; she has presented papers at various conferences, including the College Art Association, Society of Architectural Historians, Society for French Historical Studies, and Interior Design Educators Council’s annual meetings. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Brooklyn College; independent artist, researcher, film archivist, and programmer; publications include museum notes and articles in Animation Magazine, AnimaFilm, and others; author of Lillian Friedman Astor—Pioneer Woman Animator; Executive Board Member ASIFA-East, The International Animated Film Association; curator, Animation Over Broadway, Museum of Modern Art, February 1993; other areas of interest: film and illustration. Gayle Rodda Kurtz Assistant Chair, Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Stanford University; M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., CUNY Graduate Center; specializes in 18thand 19th-century European art; was a contractual lecturer at The Metropolitan Museum of Art with a focus on the African Art Galleries from 1995 to 2013; Associate of Zeteo Journal (zeteojournals. com) where she is a contributing editor and writer; has presented papers at the 19th-Century Studies Association; taught at Caldwell College, Hunter College, and New York City College of Technology, CUNY; received a Graduate Teaching Fellowship from CUNY Graduate Center. Marilyn Kushner Visiting Professor B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee; Ph.D., Modern Art, Northwestern University; Curator and Head of the Department of Prints, Photographs and Architectural Collections at the New-York Historical Society (2006-present); previously was chair of the Department of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs and Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Brooklyn Museum (19942006); has also served as Curator of Collections at the Montclair Art Museum, New Jersey, and Research Associate at the Whitney Museum of American Art; has published and lectured extensively on works on paper and has served on juries and guest-curated exhibitions nationwide. Thomas La Padula Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Parsons School of Design; M.F.A., Syracuse University; for more than 36 years, he has illustrated for national and international magazines, advertising agencies and publishing houses; is the illustration coordinator for the undergraduate Communication Design Department at Pratt Institute where he teaches both reflective and digital illustration. Jacob Lewis Visiting Instructor M.A., History of Art, Williams College; Ph.D., Art History, Northwestern University; specializes in 19th-century French photography and art; his dissertation addressed the role of instantaneity and reproducibility in the photography of Charles Nègre (1820–1880) ; he is a former Coleman Fellow in the Department of Photographs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Blum/Model Fellow at the National Gallery of Canada. Rael Lewis Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Swarthmore College; Ph.D., Stanford University; specialist in 19th- and 20th-century art with a focus on fin-de-siècle visual culture; currently writing a book on the imagery of absinthe and intoxication in modern Paris; before coming to Pratt, he taught at UCLA, Bowdoin College, Villanova University, and the Claremont Colleges. Michele Licalsi Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Institute of Fine Arts with Certificate in Art Conservation, New York University; studied art at the New York Academy of Art, the Art Students’ League, and the National Academy of Design; has been teaching drawing, color and composition at the National Academy of Design from 1994 to the present; taught fresco painting at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, NYU from 1993 to 2005; has also worked in art conservation at the Brooklyn Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art; has worked as a conservator on sites in Florence, Rome, Parma, and Sardis. Elizabeth Meggs Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Communications Arts and Design, Illustration, Virginia Commonwealth University; illustrator, writer, designer of paintings, photography and hand-bound artist books; graphic designer (Hearst’s Victoria) and writer for the Los Angeles Daily News; has worked at Pierogi Gallery and taught at BBG, VCU, Pratt and NYCCT; exhibitions include: ISE Cultural Foundation, Los Angeles Center for Digital Art, Mariner’s Museum, Firehouse Art Collective, Anderson Gallery, Target Gallery/Torpedo Factory, Galapagos Art Space, Edward Hopper House, Pratt Dean’s Gallery, Lincoln Center, and Brooklyn Museum’s Go! Brooklyn; selectee, NYC Center for Book Arts’ Letterpress Printing/Fine Press Publishing Seminar for Emerging Writers; recipient, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Fellowship/Drawing. Juan Monroy Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Film Studies, University of California at Santa Barbara; M.A., Cinema Studies, Ph.D. candidate, Cinema Studies, New York University; scholar of film, television and media studies, specializing in history, technology, and cultural impacts of US film and television; doctoral candidate in the Department of Cinema Studies at NYU, writing a dissertation on television, Latin America, and economic development in the 1960s; teaches film and media classes at Fordham University, Lincoln Center, CUNY Queens College, and Pratt Institute; since 2009, has also worked as a video and digital media librarian and database technician at NYU-TV. Marsha Morton Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; books include Max Klinger and Wilhelmine Culture: On the Threshold of German Modernism (Ashgate 2014), the co-edited anthology The Arts Entwined: Music and Painting in the 19th-Century (Garland 2000), and Pratt and Its Gallery: The Arts & Crafts Years (1999); has published numerous essays on 19th-century German and Austrian art, many with a focus on interdisciplinary topics (cultural history, Darwinism, music, and ethnography) and artists and critics such as Alois Riegl, Gustav Klimt, Klinger, Alfred Kubin, Max Beckmann, and Max Liebermann; currently serving her second term as President of the Historians of German and Central European Art (HGCEA). 232 History of Art and Design Faculty Evan Neely Katarina V. Posch Elizabeth St. George Bor-Hua Wang Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Fine Arts, Parsons The New School of Design; M.Phil., M.A., Ph.D., Art History, Columbia University; studied 20th-century and Northern European Renaissance Art, as well as postEnlightenment political and aesthetic theory; most recent work investigates the relationships between 19th-century American literature and 20th-century painting and new genres; has taught courses at Columbia University, Parsons School of Design, and the Museum of Modern Art, on modern and postmodern art, the history of ethical and political theory, and Enlightenment aesthetics; currently Core Lecturer for Art Humanities at Columbia University in addition to teaching at Pratt. Associate Professor M.A., University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria; Ph.D., Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music, Japan; design historian specializing in intercultural themes; teaches and publishes on Japanese, European and American design in a sociohistorical context; publications cover issues relating to design and material culture, from cross-cultural comparisons (Changing Worlds, Changing Designs, MAK, Vienna, 2012) to feminist approaches (“The Seen and the Hidden. [Dis] covering the Veil,” Austrian Cultural Forum New York, 2007; has written monographs and exhibition catalogues and curated for major museums including the Pompidou Center in Paris (Portrait d’une Collection, 1995), the Vitra Design Museum in Germany (Isamu Noguchi – Sculptural Design, 2001) and the Noguchi Museum in New York. Visiting Instructor B.A., Kent State University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center; specializes in late 19thand 20th-century architecture and design; has been an invited speaker at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and has served as a research assistant for the Bard Graduate Center’s exhibitions on Knoll textiles (2011), Artek and Alvar Aalto (forthcoming), and the architect and designer, William Kent (forthcoming); her dissertation explores interwar architecture and design and themes of modern living in the former Czechoslovakia; she is broadly interested in how design is used to construct modes of cultural interaction and identity, and how modernism and notions of modernity were used to disseminate social, political, and cultural reform in America and Europe. Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Kansas; Ph.D., Columbia University; a specialist in Chinese painting and calligraphy of the Song dynasty; areas of research include: Contemporary Chinese Art; Buddhist Art of Southeast Asia and Western art theory; curator of Contemporary Korean Art, Abstract Chinese Art, for Taipei Fine Art Museum; she presented “Pan Yuliang’s Life and Art: Alienation to Freedom of Expression,” CAA, 2001. Elena Rossi-Snook Jack Toolin Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Cinema, State University of New York at Binghamton; M.A., Film Archiving, University of East Anglia; archivist for the Reserve Film and Video Collection of The New York Public Library; Director of the Board, Association of Moving Image Archivists; Chair, AMIA Film Advocacy Task Force; selected publications include: “Persistence of Vision: Public Library 16mm Film Collections in America,” The Moving Image, “Continuing Ed: Educational Film Collections in Libraries and Archives,” Learning With the Lights Off: a Reader in Educational Film; selected awards: 2002 recipient of the Kodak Fellowship in Film Preservation; Other: Producer, Why We Film 16mm series; Documentary film We Got the Picture made official selection of the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Photography, Ohio University at Athens; M.F.A., Photography, Performance, and Installation, San Jose State University; artist working in new media, digital imaging, and performance; his work considers contemporary life in light of the changing political, economic, and technological landscape; individual and collaborative work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including San Francisco Camerawork; The Walker Art Center; the Whitney Museum of American Art (2002 Whitney Biennial); and the Museo Nacional de Bellas Arte, Buenos Aires, Argentina; he has performed in the San Francisco Bay Area, New York, Pittsburgh, Reno, Phoenix, Hong Kong, and Linz, Austria; commissions include the Walker Art Center and the Whitney Museum of American Art; he has lectured nationally and internationally. v Nicholas Parkinson Visiting Instructor B.A., Philosophy, DePauw University; M.A., Philosophy, Ph.D. candidate, Art History & Criticism, Stony Brook University; Ph.D. candidate at Stony Brook University, where is he completing his dissertation on the popular and critical reception of Nordic art in 19th-century France; areas of research interest include imaginary geographies of the 19th century, fin-de-siècle art and culture, and the history of art criticism; an active member of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study; his most recent publication, “De Chirico and the Finde-Siècle,” will be printed in Symbolist Roots of Modern Art in 2015. Joyce Polistena Adjunct Professor M.A., Art History, Hunter College; Ph.D., M. Phil., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York; Certificate TESOL, Columbia University; Certificate in 19th-century British History, Oxford University. Primary research areas are 19th- and early 20th-century European and American Art, with emphasis on French Romanticism; publications include The Religious Paintings of Eugène Delacroix (Mellen, 2008) and contributions to scholarly volumes: NCAW; Bulletin du Société des Amis du Musée Nationale Eugène Delacroix; The Van Gogh Museum Journal; current research involves artists’ activism and political prints as well as ongoing research about French Romanticism; appointed Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at The College of The Holy Cross (20142015); has served on the Board of Directors of ASCHA; has organized several symposia on 19thcentury Romantic Art. Ann Schoenfeld Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York; received a CUNY Dissertation Fellowship; work includes Lecturer, SUNY Purchase, and Nominator for the Joan Mitchell Foundation for Painting and Sculpture; has published in M/E/A/N/I/N/G: An Anthology of Artist’s Writings, Theory, and Criticism, i-D, Eye. Dorothy Shepard Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., Southern Methodist University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; received an AAUW American Fellowship and a Haakon Traveling Fellowship; invited lectures include: CAA, Kalamazoo and Medieval Academy; Symposia on History of the Bible held at Barnard, Rutgers, and Princeton Universities; published in Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia; Rutgers Art Review; The Apocalypse in Word and Image; and Canterbury and the Medieval Bible. 233 Alice Walkiewicz Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Kansas; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York; specializes in 19th-century art from Europe and the United States; current research focuses on issues of gender and labor, and the way that anxieties about these issues are addressed through visual culture (both in fine art and popular imagery) within a transnational (and transatlantic) context; her dissertation explores these concerns by examining representations of the archetypal figure of the exploited, laboring seamstress in England, France, and the United States in the late 19th century within the context of the rising labor movement; has taught at Parsons The New School for Design as well as Pratt Institute. Sarah Wilkins Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Vanderbilt University; M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; specializes in Italian late medieval and Renaissance art, with interests in mendicant patronage, Angevin Naples, and the cult of the saints; awards include a Fulbright fellowship and a Mellon Finishing Grant; publications include “Imaging the Angevin Patron Saint: Mary Magdalen in the Pipino Chapel in Naples” (2012) and “Adopting and Adapting Formulas: The Raising of Lazarus and Noli me tangere in the Arena Chapel in Padua and the Magdalen Chapel in Assisi” (2013); has presented papers at conferences including Kalamazoo and RSA; currently chair of the Italian Art Society’s Emerging Scholars Committee. Karyn Zieve Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Wellesley College ; M.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; specialist in 19th- and early 20thcentury art, with a focus on Eugène Delacroix, orientalism, the history of photography and the graphic arts; in addition to teaching at various NYC institutions and museums, she has written about and organized exhibitions of prints, drawings and photographs on various topics; presently she is working on a manuscript based on her work on Delacroix and images of the East. Media Studies Faculty Jonathan Beller Professor Ph.D., Duke University, B.A., Columbia University; Is the author of The Cinematic Mode of Production: Attention Economy and the Society of the Spectacle; and Acquiring Eyes: Philippine Visuality, Nationalist Struggle and the World Media System; and editor of Feminist Media Theory (a special issue of The Scholar and Feminist Online). His current book projects include The Rain of Images and Computational Capital. Beller also serves on the Editorial Collective of Social Text, and is the current director of The Graduate Program in Media Studies. Stephanie Boluk Assistant Professor Ph.D. University od Florida, M.A. McGill University, B.A. Concordia University. Pursues research located at the intersection of game studies, media archeology, and the digital humanities. From the “audiogames” invented by blind (and blindfolded) players to perspectival shifts in the spatial logic of first-person shooters and from the history of Super Mario modifications to the virtual currency and player-based production in competitive e-sports, Boluk’s forthcoming book Metagames explores alternative histories of play. See stephanieboluk.com for more information. Allen Feldman Visiting Professor M.A., Ph.D. New School for Social Research; Internationally praised ethnographies engage the embodied political subject as a media skin shaped by a politics of light/nonlight. He is concerned with the affective fabric of mediatic life, nonlife and post-life as a politics of design. His forthcoming book Archives of the Insensible interfaces the aesthetics, technicity and mediatics of power, war and resistance through the concept of the photopolitical. Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D., Stanford University; B.A. Manchester College; Directs Poetics Lab at Pratt. His work focuses on poetics in an expanded sense, especially via the study of emergence, complexity and systems. He is the author of several books, most recently a digital book, Poetics as a Theory of Everything, forthcoming in 2015. Mendi Obadike Assistant Professor B.A., Spellman, Ph.D., Duke; works at the intersection of sound and language. She has published four books—Armor and Flesh (2004), Phonotype (2012), Four Electric Ghosts (2014), and Big House / Disclosure (2014)—and released three albums—The Sour Thunder: An Internet Opera (2004), Crosstalk: American Speech Music (2008), and Big House / Disclosure (2014). Her conceptual media artworks have been exhibited widely. Her awards include a Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship, a postdoctoral fellowship in Race and Ethnicity at Princeton University, and a residency at the Tribeca Performing Arts Center. Minh-Ha Pham Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley; has previously taught at NYU and Cornell University. She has published numerous scholarly articles including pieces in positions, Signs, and Camera Obscura while also authoring pieces in her capacity as a public intellectual in Salon, Huffington Post, and Ms. She curates a Tumblr project, “Of Another Fashion,” a digital archive of the fashion histories of U.S. women of color, and co-writes the critical fashion blog Threadbared. She is finishing a book titled Work of Art: Personal Style Blogs and the Making of DIY Race, which analyzes what she terms the “fashion media complex,” including how labor, race, gender, and other factors create and are created by this complex. Ethan Spigland Professor M.F.A., Tisch School of the Performing Arts, Maîtrise University of Paris VIII; is an awardwinning screenwriter, filmmaker, visual artist, critic, and curator. He has written and directed numerous films including The Archive, which is currently in postproduction. He completed two short films in collaboration with renowned architect Steven Holl. One of these, Luminosity Porosity, formed part of an installation at the Gallery Ma in Tokyo, Japan. His ongoing project, Elevator Moods, was featured in the Sundance Film Festival and South By Southwest, and won the prestigious Webby Award in the Broadband Category. His short film, The Strange Case of Balthazar Hyppolite, won the Gold Medal in the Student Academy Awards, among other honors. He collaborated with Malcolm McLaren on numerous short films, and on the video installation, Shallow, which opened at the I-20 Gallery in New York and was featured in Art Basel. Christopher Vitale Associate Professor Ph.D. New York University; B.A. SUNY Binghampton; Teaches the intersection of philosophy, film, and media. Networkologies (Zero Books, 2014) links together the study of networks in a wide variety of fields, including artificial intelligence, cutting-edge ‘soft’-computation, neuroscience, complex systems science, economics, social and political networking, and beyond. An avid blogger on topics ranging from networks to philosophy, sexuality, and politics, Chris posts his work on his website, networkologies.wordpress.com. Courses include Contemporary Experimental Narrative Cinema, Theories of Networks, Deleuze and Cinema, Bodies/ Boundaries/ Power, Psychoanalytic Film Theory, Modernism/ Postmodernism. 234 235 Performance and Performance Studies Faculty Lisabeth During Jennifer Miller Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London, London, U.K.; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K. Donald Andreasen James Hannaham Associate Professor Circus Amok founder and artistic director Jennifer Miller has been working with alternative circus forms, theater, and dance, for over 20 years. Her work with Circus Amok was awarded a “Bessie” in 1995 and an OBIE in 2000. Circus Amok is the subject of a French documentary film, Un Cirque a New York (2002) and Brazilian documentary, Juggling Politics (2004). She has taught at California Institute of the Arts, New York University, and the University of California at Los Angeles. Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., New School; Don earned his Masters of Fine Arts degree in Playwriting from the Actors Studio, New School University. He has had one-act plays produced at the HERE Theatre and Access Theatre in New York City and was cowriter of a short film produced by Fox Searchlab Pictures. Don has also worked as a voice-over artist doing various commercial work in addition to network television. Youmna Chlala Associate Professor M.F.A. California College of the Arts; B.A. University of California at Santa Cruz; Youmna Chlala is a writer, an artist, and the founding editor of Eleven Eleven {1111} Journal of Literature and Art. She is the author of the poetry manuscript The Paper Camera, and recipient of the 2009 Joseph Henry Jackson Award. Chlala’s prose and poetry has appeared widely, including in Guernica, Bespoke, CURA, XCP: Journal of Cross-Cultural Poetics, MIT Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, and in the book Nation, Gender, and Belonging: Arab and Arab American Feminist Perspectives. She has exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Arts London, Rotterdam International Film Festival, Camera Austria, MOCAD, and San Jose Museum of Art and participated in the Performa Biennial and roaming Tehran Biennale. Recent solo exhibitions include the Cultuurcentrum, Belgium, and Art in General, New York. Chlala has been awarded residencies and fellowships from the Henie Onstad Art Centre Norway, Headlands Center for the Arts, Hedgebrook, CAMAC: Center for Art and Technology, Fine Arts Work Center Provincetown, Triangle Arts Fund, European Cultural Foundation, and Goethe-Institut Cairo. She holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the California College of the Arts. www.youmnachlala.com. Steven Doloff Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., State University of New York at Stony Brook; M.Phil., City University of New York Graduate Center; Ph.D., City University of New York Graduate Center; TESOL Certificate, Columbia University Teachers College; Steven Doloff was named a Pratt Institute Distinguished Professor (2001–02) and received the Institute’s Student Government Association Faculty Excellence Award in 1990. James Hannaham, author of the novel God Says No (McSweeney’s), has published stories in One Story, Fence, Open City, The Literary Review, and BOMB. For over 20 years, he has contributed reviews and profiles, etc. to the Village Voice and other publications, including Spin, Out, and Details. He co-founded the performance group Elevator Repair Service and worked with them from 1992 to 2002, and he has collaborated with Ralph Lemon, Kara Walker, Diller+Scofidio, The Wooster Group, Clarinda Mac Low, and others. More recently he has exhibited text-based visual art at Samsøn Projects in Boston, Rosalux Gallery in Minneapolis, 490 Atlantic in Brooklyn, and at the Center for Emerging Visual Artists in Philadelphia. His upcoming second novel is entitled Delicious Foods. He has also taught creative writing at The New School and Columbia University. www. jameshannaham.com. Ann Holder Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College May Joseph Professor, Global Studies Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D., Stanford University; Ira Livingston’s primary field is cultural theory. He is the author of Between Science and Literature: An Introduction to Autopoetics (2006) and Arrow of Chaos: Romanticism and Postmodernity (1997), and coeditor of Posthuman Bodies (1995, with Judith Halberstam) and Poetry and Cultural Studies: A Reader (2009, with Maria Damon). Tracie Morris Tracie Morris is a poet, performer and scholar. She holds an M.F.A. in poetry from Hunter College, a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from New York University and has trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). Her latest poetry collection is Rhyme Scheme (Zasterle Press, 2012) with several books and recordings forthcoming. Tracie frequently tours as a sound poet/vocalist around the country and internationally and collaborates often with other experimental artists. She is Professor of Performance and Performance Studies at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. www. traciemorris.com. Mendi Obadike Mendi Lewis Obadike is an artist and scholar who works across media. She is the author of Armor and Flesh (Lotus Press), which won the Naomi Long Madgett Prize, Phonotype (writings on audio art), and the forthcoming books Big House / Disclosure and Four Electric Ghosts (1913 Press). Mendi collaborates with her husband Keith Obadike. Their 2001 work Blackness for Sale has been widely cited in the press and in new media art surveys. Recent installations include Big House / Disclosure, American Cypher (Studio Museum in Harlem & Samek Art Gallery of Bucknell University), and African Metropole (MoCADA & Pascal Gallery of Ramapo College). Other conceptual media artworks have been commissioned by and exhibited at the Whitney Museum, the New Museum, Yale University, Electronic Arts Intermix and the New York African Film Festival, among other institutions. Their albums include The Sour Thunder, an Internet Opera (Bridge Records, 2004) and Crosstalk: American Speech Music (Bridge Records, 2008). Mendi has been awarded a Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship and a postdoctoral fellowship in Race and Ethnicity from Princeton University, as well as fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation for Poetry and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Mendi is a poetry editor at Fence Magazine and an Assistant Professor in Humanities and Media Studies at Pratt Institute. She earned a B.A. in English from Spelman College and a Ph.D. in literature from Duke University. www.obadike.com. Writing Faculty Youmna Chlala Associate Professor M.F.A., California College of the Arts; B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz; Youmna Chlala is a writer, an artist, and the founding editor of Eleven Eleven {1111} Journal of Literature and Art. She is the author of the poetry manuscript The Paper Camera, and recipient of the 2009 Joseph Henry Jackson Award. Chlala’s prose and poetry has appeared widely, including in Guernica, Bespoke, CURA, XCP: Journal of Cross-Cultural Poetics, MIT Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, and in the book Nation, Gender, and Belonging: Arab and Arab American Feminist Perspectives. She has exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Arts London, Rotterdam International Film Festival, Camera Austria, MOCAD, and the San Jose Museum of Art and participated in the Performa Biennial and roaming Tehran Biennale. Recent solo exhibitions include the Cultuurcentrum, Belgium, and Art in General, New York. Chlala has been awarded residencies and fellowships from the Henie Onstad Art Centre Norway, Headlands Center for the Arts, Hedgebrook, CAMAC: Center for Art and Technology, Fine Arts Work Center Provincetown, Triangle Arts Fund, European Cultural Foundation, and Goethe-Institut Cairo. She holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the California College of the Arts. www.youmnachlala.com. Laura Elrick Assistant Professor B.A., University of Southern California; M.A., New York University; Laura Elrick is the author of three books of poetry, including Propagation (Kenning Editions, 2012), Fantasies in Permeable Structures (Factory School, 2005), and sKincerity (Krupskaya, 2003). Her psychogeographically inspired research and performance works include the oppositional cartography Blocks Away, exhibited at the Skybridge Art & Sound Space in 2010, and the video-poem Stalk, commissioned by the Positions Colloquium in Vancouver in 2008 and exhibited in the SocialEnvironmental Aesthetics Series at Exit Art (New York, 2009) and the Rustbelt Sightsound Collision at the SPACES gallery (Cincinnati, 2013). A sound work, 5 Audio Pieces for Doubled Voice, was commissioned by New Langton Arts for the Performance Writing Series in San Francisco in 2005. Her work also appears in several anthologies, including Viz. Inter-Arts Intervention: A Trans-Genre Anthology (forthcoming), Against Expression: An Anthology of Conceptual Writing, and Eco Language Reader, and has been translated into Spanish, French, Italian and Norwegian. James Hannaham Rachel Levitsky Associate Professor M.F.A., University of Austin, Texas; B.A., Yale University; James Hannaham, author of the novel God Says No (McSweeney’s), has published stories in One Story, Fence, Open City, The Literary Review, and BOMB. For over 20 years, he has contributed reviews and profiles, etc. to the Village Voice and other publications, including Spin, Out, and Details. He co-founded the performance group Elevator Repair Service and worked with them from 1992 to 2002, and he has collaborated with Ralph Lemon, Kara Walker, Diller+Scofidio, The Wooster Group, Clarinda Mac Low, and others. More recently he has exhibited text-based visual art at Samsøn Projects in Boston, Rosalux Gallery in Minneapolis, 490 Atlantic in Brooklyn, and at the Center for Emerging Visual Artists in Philadelphia. His upcoming second novel is entitled Delicious Foods. He has also taught creative writing at The New School and Columbia University. www. jameshannaham.com. Associate Professor M.F.A., Naropa University; M.A., B.A., State University of New York at Albany; Rachel Levitsky is the author of a novel, The Story of My Accident Is Ours (Futurepoem, 2013), two books of poetry, Under the Sun (Futurepoem, 2003) and Neighbor (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2009) and a number of chapbooks including Renoemos (Delete, 2010). She is a member of the Belladonna* Collaborative, a feminist avant-garde hub for interventions in writing, reading, engaged discourse, and activism. In 2010 with Christian Hawkey, she started The Office of Recuperative Strategies, a mobile research unit variously located in Amsterdam, Berlin, Boulder, Brooklyn, Cambridge, New York City, and Leipzig. She lives in Brooklyn. Christian Hawkey Professor B.A., Pepperdine University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts at Amhurst. Has written two full-length poetry collections: The Book of Funnels (Wave Books, 2005) and Citizen Of (Wave, 2007); four chapbooks: Hour Hour (Delirium Press, 2005), Petitions for an Alien Relative (Hand Held Editions, 2009), Ulf (Factory Hollow Press, 2010), and Sonette mit Elizabethanischem Maulwurf (hochroth verlag, 2010); the cross-genre book Ventrakl (2010, Ugly Duckling Presse); and (with Uljana Wolf) Sonne from Ort, a collaborative bilingual erasure (kookbooks verlag, Berlin, 2013); he has received a Creative Capital Innovative Literature Award (2006) and a DAAD Artist-in-Berlin Fellowship (2008); he translates contemporary German-language poetry and prose, and his work has been translated into over a dozen languages; he is an officer of the Office of Recuperative Strategies. Samantha Hunt Professor M.F.A., Warren Wilson College; B.A., University of Vermont; Samantha Hunt’s novel about Nikola Tesla, The Invention of Everything Else was a finalist for the Orange Prize and winner of the Bard Fiction Prize. Her first novel, The Seas, won a National Book Foundation award for writers under 35. Hunt’s work has been published in The New Yorker, McSweeney’s, The New York Times, Tin House, A Public Space, Cabinet, Blind Spot, The London Times, and in a number of other fine publications. Her books have been translated into 10 languages. She has performed with Jim Jarmusch and Luc Sante at All Tomorrow’s Parties, at Los Angeles’s Hammer Museum and REDCAT, with the National Theater of the United States of America (NTUSA) at PS122, in the PEN/Faulkner Reading Series, at Seattle’s Bumbershoot Festival, and as part of BAM’s Next Wave Festival. Her work has been performed on WBEZ’s This American Life and on WNYC’s Selected Shorts program. A novel titled Mr. Splitfoot and a collection of short fictions titled Beast and Other Stories are forthcoming. www.samanthahunt.net. Tracie Morris Professor Ph.D., M.A., New York University; M.F.A., B.A., Hunter College; Tracie Morris is a poet, performer and scholar. She holds an M.F.A. in poetry from Hunter College, a Ph.D. in Performance Studies from New York University and has trained at The Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). Her latest poetry collection is Rhyme Scheme (Zasterle Press, 2012) with several books and recordings forthcoming. Tracie frequently tours as a sound poet/vocalist around the country and internationally and collaborates often with other experimental artists. She is Professor of Performance and Performance Studies at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. www.traciemorris.com. Anna Moschovakis M.F.A., Bard College, B.A., University of California at Berkeley. Anna Moschovakis is the author of two books of poetry, You and Three Others Are Approaching a Lake and I Have Not Been Able to Get through to Everyone, and the translator of several novels from the French, most recently The Jokers, by Albert Cossery. She is a longtime member of the Brooklyn-based publishing collective Ugly Duckling Presse. 236 Mendi Obadike Associate Professor Ph.D., Duke University; B.A., Spelman College; Mendi Lewis Obadike is an artist and scholar who works across media. She is the author of Armor and Flesh (Lotus Press), which won the Naomi Long Madgett Prize, Phonotype (writings on audio art), and the forthcoming books Big House / Disclosure and Four Electric Ghosts (1913 Press). Mendi collaborates with her husband Keith Obadike. Their 2001 work Blackness for Sale has been widely cited in the press and in new media art surveys. Recent installations include Big House / Disclosure, American Cypher (Studio Museum in Harlem & Samek Art Gallery of Bucknell University), and African Metropole (MoCADA & Pascal Gallery of Ramapo College). Other conceptual media artworks have been commissioned by and exhibited at the Whitney Museum, the New Museum, Yale University, Electronic Arts Intermix and the New York African Film Festival, among other institutions. Their albums include The Sour Thunder, an Internet Opera (Bridge Records, 2004) and Crosstalk: American Speech Music (Bridge Records, 2008). Mendi has been awarded a Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship and a postdoctoral fellowship in Race and Ethnicity from Princeton University, as well as fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation for Poetry and the New York Foundation for the Arts. Mendi is a poetry editor at Fence Magazine and an Assistant Professor in Humanities and Media Studies at Pratt Institute. She earned a B.A. in English from Spelman College and a Ph.D. in literature from Duke University. www.obadike.com Liberal Arts Faculty Andrew W. Barnes Dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Gloriana Russell Assistant to the Dean Intensive English Channing Burt Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., French and Romance Philology, Columbia University; M.A.TESOL, Teachers College, Columbia University; over the past 15 years, she has taught ESL to adults in academic and university settings in Germany and New York City, including Friedrich Schiller University, Columbia University, and New York University; she is also a certified Bikram yoga instructor teaching at studios throughout Brooklyn and Manhattan. Diane Cohen Visiting Instructor Maura Conley Tutor, Writing, Thesis Rachid Eladlouni Assessment and Educational Technology Coordinator; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., Ibn Tofail University (Morocco); M.A., Hunter College. Cynthia Elmas Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., French Literature, Rutgers University; M.A.,TESOL, Hunter College; graduate studies, Art History, Rutgers University; she has over 15 years of experience teaching ESL to adults in New York and was also Assistant Editor for the multidisciplinary journal, RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics for eight years; in addition to ESL, she is also a dancer who performs regularly in the New York area. Nada Gordon CEP Coordinator, Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., University of California at Berkeley; has almost three decades of experience teaching English as a Foreign Language, including 11 years in Tokyo, Japan; she is the author of seven books of poetry, including Vile Lilt, Scented Rushes, and Folly; she has performed her works internationally, and her poems have been translated into several languages including Hebrew, Icelandic, Japanese, and Burmese. Liberal Arts Faculty 237 Humanities and Media Studies Thomas Healy Allegra Marino Shmulevsky Gloria Steil Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., University of Ireland; certificate in TEFL, Galway Language Centre, Ireland; has studied at the Takabijustu School of Art, Tokyo and the Massachusetts Institute of Art, Boston; has taught English in Ireland, Japan and the U.S.; since 1992, has worked on a number of curriculum development projects, involving English for academic purposes in Japan and Korea, English language training for the Beijing Olympic Games 2008, and in middle schools in the People’s Republic of China; he has conducted in-service teacher training in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Brazil; with Ken Wilson, he is the author of First Choice, an integrated skills course book (Oxford University Press). Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., Applied Linguistics, Teachers College, Columbia University; B.A., French Language and Literature, English Literature, and Studio Art, Tulane University; in addition to studying visual art in New Orleans, Paris and Rome, she has served as Visual Arts editor of the Tulane Review, a literary arts publication; she has taught French in the New Orleans public school district, and served as a new teacher selector for TeachNOLA TNTP Teaching Fellows; in New York, she has worked as a mentor for the Teachers College, Columbia University TESOL Certificate Program, and as Program Associate in the Art and Art Education Program at the same institution; she has been teaching ESL in New York since 2010, and in the IEP at Pratt Institute since 2012; she feels fortunate to learn more about art, architecture and design through her talented students. Adjunct Instructor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.A., New York University; taught English in Tokyo for the Japanese Ministry of Education, a summer intensive course in English literature and composition in Seoul, and English literature at the College of New Rochelle, Medgar Evers College, Hostos Community College, and Borough of Manhattan Community College. Kimberly Kern Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., TESOL, Hunter College (CUNY); B.F.A., Art History, University of Texas at Austin; began teaching ESL as a volunteer in 2003 through an organization called Literacy Austin; after living and working abroad in Guatemala for two years, she was accepted into the NYC Teaching Fellow Program to teach ESL in the NYC public schools; six years later, she joined the State Department as an English Language Fellow in Tegucigalpa, Honduras where she conducted in-service teacher training; she currently teaches in the IEP Program at Pratt and in the Teaching and Curriculum Department at Hunter College; outside of the TESOL field she is a bike activist, avid reader, and Master Composter. Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Assistant Professor Fanny Lao IEP & CEP Enrollment & Advisement Coordinator B.A., Connecticut College; M.A., International Education, New York University; she grew up in Guangdong, China and has been exposed to students from around the world since she attended an international high school in New York and throughout her academic career at Connecticut College and New York University; she studied abroad in the Czech Republic; she has been working in the education field for more than five years. Darleen Lev Lecturer, Intensive English M.F.A., Fiction Writing, University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop; somehow this led to teaching English in South Korea, which led to teaching English to international students at Parsons the New School for Design; certification in the methodology of teaching English as a foreign language was achieved with INTESOL in Prague in 2007; in Spring 2012, she started teaching in the IEP at Pratt; she has published fiction and poetry in various journals before focusing her energies on a novel that has gone through several incarnations, the most recent of which is titled No Man’s Land; winning a Bread Loaf Bakeless Camargo Residency Fellowship in 2014 brought her that much closer to meeting the deadline to complete it in 2015. Helen McNeil Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., TESOL, New York University; ESL certificate, The New School for Social Research; taught in the summer program at Nanjing University, China in 1993; won her M.A. in TESOL from New York University in 1998 while teaching in their intensive English program; has also taught at Columbia University, LaGuardia Community College, and Borough of Manhattan Community College; she has been teaching at Pratt for the past 10 years in the IEP and more recently has taught in the CEP; she is currently singing in a chorus which performed in Carnegie Hall in 2007; she sings in the Park Slope Singers and performs in concerts in and around the Brooklyn area. Jon Pauley Lecturer, Intensive English Eric Rosenblum Visiting Instructor, Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., English, Ohio University; M.F.A., Fiction Writing, Syracuse University; his fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Guernica Magazine, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Reader. Nancy Seidler Director, Intensive English B.A., Brooklyn College; M.A.,TESOL, Monterey Institute of International Studies; she was an exchange student at the University of Paris and taught at the Sichuan Union University in China; she has been working at Pratt since 1999, where, in addition to administering various aspects of the IEP and CEP, she has taught in the Intensive English Program and the English Department and has tutored in the Writing and Tutorial Center; during all this time, she has learned a great deal about art, design and architecture, and has wholly enjoyed working with the international students at Pratt. Sam Tomasello Lecturer, Intensive English B.F.A., Academy of Art University; CELTA, University of Cambridge; book illustrator: Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Gardening with Children, Mother Sea Turtle, and Down by the Pond; illustrator for New York Botanical Gardens, Oxford University Press, Macmillan/McGraw-Hill, The New York Times Magazine and OpEd page, BusinessWeek, the Washington Post, Boston Globe, Nickelodeon, Encyclopedia Britannica, and New York Magazine; graphic design work for: Arthur Ashe Institute of Urban Health, Price Waterhouse, Maybelline, M&M/Mars Inc., DeBeers, Cablevision Optimum Online, Time Warner, AT&T, and American Museum of Natural History; exhibitions: Flushing Hall of Science; International Art and Science Collaboration Digital Print Exhibition; Guild of Natural Science Illustrators; Brooklyn Public Library; awards: Print Magazine for Art Direction; Garden Writers Association Silver Award of Achievement; Avery and Jules Hopwood Award for Poetry; teach Business English at Brooklyn Public Library; taught ESL in Japan for three years; taught Visual Arts in NYC Public Schools and juvenile detention sites in NYC for two years; taught Citizenship and Art/ESL at Queens Public Library for two years; taught writing to adult students in reentry at College Initiative, a nonprofit organization in NYC; in a parallel universe, she is a jewelry designer and spends her free time doing Maedeup, the art of Korean knotting. Nichole Van Beek Lecturer, Intensive English Dena Al-Adeeb Visiting Instructor Donald Andreasen Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Playwriting, Actors Studio, The New School; has had one-act plays produced at the HERE Theatre and Access Theatre in New York City and was co-writer of a short film produced by Fox Searchlab Pictures; has also worked as a voice-over artist doing various commercial work in addition to network television. Saul Anton Adjunct Assistant Professor Emily P. Beall Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Washington, B.A., University of California at Berkeley; academic interests include 20th- and 21st-century experimental poetry and poetics, with a focus on experimental writing by women; a poet herself, she is also interested in the intersections of poetics and modern dance, and the ways that such intersections generate concepts of space, meaning, and the body. Jonathan Beller Professor B.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Duke University; interests: media theory, Marxism, critical race theory, cinema, media archaeology, decolonization, aesthetics and politics, feminism, third cinema, Philippine culture and politics. Caterina Bertolotto Visiting Associate Professor Laurea in Pedagogia, University of Turin, Italy; has received eight certificates in different language teaching methodologies in both Italy and in New York, as well as a Distinguished University Teaching Award from The New School; author of four books, two audio and two PowerPoint CDs; has also taught seminars to language teachers and undergraduates at The New School, Sarah Lawrence College, Montclair State University, Eugene Lang, and Baruch College. 238 Liberal Arts Faculty Stephanie Boluk Maria Damon Sacha E. Frey Assistant Professor Chair, Humanities and Media Studies Adjunct Instructor Warren Burdine Amanda Davidson John Gendall Visiting Assistant Professor Visiting Assistant Professor Visiting Instructor Melissa Buzzeo Pierre Alexandre de Looz Daniel Gerzog Visiting Assistant Professor Visiting Assistant Professor Diana Cage Don Doherty Visiting Assistant Professor Visiting Instructor; Tutor B.A., Hunter College, City University of New York; New York University; has been an instructor at Pratt since 1996, teaching Freshman Composition and Literature and English as a Second Language; he did Foundation Year at Pratt before moving into a Liberal Arts program at Hunter College, so Pratt was his first home-away-from-home; his interests include writing short fiction, writing and producing music, video production, animation, collage and drawing; he rides an Alien Workshop deck with Tensor trucks and Darkstar wheels; his YouTube account is papakilatube. Philip Carroll Visiting Instructor Lis Cena Visiting Assistant Professor Peter Chamedes Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., English Literature; a person with ‘60s values and an abiding love of literature and art; following a doctorate in English Literature (poetry), family obligations redirected him into an extended career in advertising; this was at last succeeded by a return to scholarship and pedagogy; his students have ranged from at-risk adolescents to aspiring artists (including many remarkable Pratt scholars); his consuming interests include his two babies, poetry, contemporary art, and African art. Youmna Chlala Associate Professor Diane Cohen Visiting Instructor Ellen Conley Adjunct Assistant Professor M.S., Wagner College; B.A., Pennsylvania State University; MTMS ASCP, Jefferson Medical College; a published writer of four books with national reviews: The Chosen Shore (Univ. of Calif. Press), Bread and Stones (Mercury House), Soon to Be Immortal (St. Martin’s Press) and Soho Madonna (Avon Original Fiction). Kathryn Cullen-DuPont Assistant Chair M.F.A., Goddard College, B.A., New York University; the author of a number of books including, most recently, Human Trafficking (2009); she is also the Lead Steward of the Clockhouse Writers’ Conference and publisher of Clockhouse, a literary journal published by the Clockhouse Writers’ Conference in partnership with Goddard College; she is currently working on a book about women and religion. Steven Doloff Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., Stony Brook University; M.phil.; Ph.D., City University of New York Graduate Center; TESOL Certificate, Columbia University Teachers College; was named a Pratt Institute Distinguished Professor (2001–02) and received the Institute’s Student Government Association Faculty Excellence Award in 1990. Claire Donato Visiting Assistant Professor Thom Donovan Visiting Instructor Rachid Eladlouni Visiting Assistant Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English Laura Elrick Assistant Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English; Tutor B.A., Rhetoric and Communication, University of Southern California; teaches in the English and Humanities Department and the Intensive English Program; she has published four books of poetry and numerous essays on contemporary literature, culture, and politics, and regularly performs her work nationally; she is currently pursuing a Masters in Liberal Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center in Manhattan; her interests include the intersection between poetics and the production of social space, spatiality, and scale. Professor B.A., M.A., A.B.D., New York University; has been teaching at Pratt since 1959; he is currently working with his second generation of fledgling artists, designers and architects, introducing them to the joys and stimulations of good reading and clear expression; he also supervises thesis corollary statements in the MFA program. Amy Guggenheim Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., B.S., New York University; filmmaker and writer; her work in theater and film focuses on violence, intimacy, and sexuality, and has been presented internationally with support from the New York State Council on the Arts, the American Embassy, Fulbright Foundation, Mellon Fund, and others; her work has been published in American Letters and Commentary, and in the Italian literary journal Storie; her 2008 artistic residency in Japan—in development for her first feature film— relates to her work as founder of the Center for Artistic Engagement. Paul Haacke Visiting Assistant Professor Christian Hawkey Professor B.A., Pepperdine University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts; author of three award-winning books of poetry, including The Book of Funnels (Wave Books, 2004), which won the 2006 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, Hour Hour (Delirium Press, 2005), and Citizen Of (Wave Books, 2007); his poems have appeared in Conjunctions, Volt, Denver Quarterly, Tin House, Crowd, BOMB, Chicago Review, and Best American Poetry; he has received awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Poetry Fund, and in 2006 he received a Creative Capital Innovative Literature Award; in 2008, he was a DAAD Artistin-Berlin Fellow. Liberal Arts Faculty 239 Jeffrey Hogrefe Susan Bee (Laufer) Uche Nduka Associate Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; an author, architectural critic, and coordinator of the Pratt School of Architecture’s Writing Program: Language/Making; he is a studio critic at Parsons The New School for Design, The Cooper Union, and Columbia; a contributor to Harper’s, The New Yorker, Smithsonian, New York Observer, Washington Post and Vanity Fair; and the author of O’Keeffe: The Life of an American Legend, a biography focused on the artist’s rights of seclusion and personal identity politics. Visiting Associate Professor Visiting Assistant Professor Rachel Levitsky Mendi Lewis Obadike Associate Professor M.F.A., Naropa University, B.A., State University of Albany; her first full-length volume, Under the Sun, was published by Futurepoem books in 2003; she is the founder and co-director of Belladonna*, an event and publication series of feminist avant-garde poetics; she is also the author of five chapbooks of poetry, Dearly (a+bend, 1999), Dearly 356, Cartographies of Error (Leroy, 1999), The Adventures of Yaya and Grace (PotesPoets, 1999), 2(1×1) Portraits (Baksun, 1998), and a series of poetry plays. Assistant Professor Ph.D., Duke University. Samantha Hunt Professor M.F.A., Warren Wilson College; the author of two books, The Seas—for which she was awarded a National Book Foundation award for writers under 35—and The Invention of Everything Else, a novel about the life of Nikola Tesla; her stories have appeared in The New Yorker, McSweeney’s, A Public Space, Cabinet, Seed Magazine and on the radio program This American Life. Dexter Jeffries Adjunct Instructor B.A., Queens College, City University of New York; M.A., City College of New York; Ph.D., City University of New York, Graduate Center; born and raised in New York City; in between his academic studies he was a taxi driver and served in a United States Army combat engineer battalion in West Germany; he came to Pratt in 1993, and in 1996, in conjunction with the Media Arts department, he produced and directed the documentary film, What’s Jazz?; in 2003, Kensington Press published his autobiographical memoir, Triple Exposure: Black, Jewish and Red in the 1950s; he lives in Brooklyn. Ellen Levy Visiting Associate Professor Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D., Stanford University; his primary field is cultural theory; author of Between Science and Literature: An Introduction to Autopoetics (2006) and Arrow of Chaos: Romanticism and Postmodernity (1997); coeditor of Posthuman Bodies (1995, with Judith Halberstam) and Poetry and Cultural Studies: A Reader (2009, with Maria Damon). Jennifer Miller Visiting Instructor Associate Professor Circus Amok founder and artistic director; has been working with alternative circus forms, theater, and dance for more than 20 years; her work with Circus Amok was awarded a “Bessie” in 1995 and an OBIE in 2000; Circus Amok is the subject of a French documentary film, Un Cirque á New York (2002) and a Brazilian documentary, Juggling Politics (2004); has taught at California Institute of the Arts, New York University, and University of California at Los Angeles. Adeena Karasick Tracie Morris Visiting Assistant Professor Jeffrey T. Johnson Kwame Heshimu David D. Kim Visiting Instructor; Tutor B.A., English (specialization in writing), New York University; he grew up in the shadow of the Blue Mountain; son of a Cuban expatriate, and with a mother who was a descendant of Jamaican maroons, he spent his childhood in one of the most inaccessible communities on the island; his grandfather, a saxophonist with dance bandleader Ray Coburn, frequently accompanied Rastafarian drummers; he not only became enthralled with the music, but with the Rastafarian vocabulary, or Iyaric, an intentionally created dialect of English, reflecting their desire to take forward language and confront Babylon system; his romance with word, sound, and power had begun. Visiting Instructor Professor Ph.D., Performance Studies, New York University; M.F.A., Poetry, Hunter College, City University of New York; an interdisciplinary poet who has worked extensively as a sound artist, writer, and multimedia performer; her installations have been presented at the Whitney Biennial and the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning. Elizabeth Knauer Cecilia Muhlstein Sean Kelly Visiting Instructor B.A., Loyola College University of Montreal. Visiting Assistant Professor Christoph Kumpusch Adjunct Assistant Professor Krystal Languell Visiting Assistant Professor Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., B.A., California State University at Los Angeles; born in Texas, but grew up in Los Angeles; her work and interests reside in fiction, critical theory, art, and eco-poetics; her current work can be found in the pages of NYArts magazine and in the archives of Safe-T-Gallery. Robert Obrecht Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Sarah Lawrence; TESOL Certificate, Columbia University Teachers College; born in New York City in 1951; compositions have premiered in New York at Lincoln Center’s State Theater and Alice Tully Hall, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Merkin Hall and LaMama E.T.C., among others; he has scored exhibition videos for the Museum of Modern Art, the American Museum of Natural History, the Jewish Museum, and the Queens Museum of Science; his theme song for the Disney/Henson Bear in the Big Blue House is broadcast worldwide; has been teaching at Pratt since 1988. Kristin Pape Adjunct Assistant Professor Jean-Paul Pecqueur Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., University of Washington; B.A., Evergreen State College; a poet and writing instructor who has published poems, critical reviews, and essays in a number of national publications; has taught creative writing, critical writing, and literature courses at The University of Washington and the University of Arizona’s Poetry Center; has been teaching Introduction to Literary and Critical Studies courses at the Pratt Institute since 2006; his first book of poems, The Case Against Happiness, was the winner of Alice James Books’ Kinerth Gensler award in 2006. Alba Potes Visiting Assistant Professor D.M.A. in Composition, Temple University; Alba Potes was born in Colombia; her compositions have been performed by the Montreal Chamber Orchestra, National Symphony of Colombia, Darmstadt 2000 Internationale Ferienkurse für Neue Musik, the Institute for New Music in Freiburg, The New York New Music Ensemble, and by music festivals in Latin America, South Korea, Germany, Canada, and the USA; connected to her creative work based on Spanish literature, she has also taught Spanish in CUNY and Columbia University; she teaches music at the Mannes College of Music, College Preparatory Division. Evan Rehill Adjunct Instructor Eric Rosenblum Visiting Instructor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., English, Ohio University; M.F.A., Fiction Writing, Syracuse University; fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Guernica Magazine, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Reader. 240 Liberal Arts Faculty Eliza Schrader Christopher Vitale Aman Gill Ágnes Mócsy Visiting Instructor Associate Professor B.A., State University of New York at Binghamton; Ph.D., New York University; areas of specialization include continental philosophy, comparative modernist literary and cultural studies, psychoanalysis, queer studies, theories of race and ethnicity, radical political thought, and film and film theory; currently writing a book about complexity studies and theories of networks; has taught at New York University, University of California at Berkeley, and Hunter College. Assistant Professor B.S., Integrative Biology and History, University of California at Berkeley; Ph.D. candidate in Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University. Associate Professor Ph.D., University of Minnesota; M.Sc., University of Bergen, Norway; performs research on the fundamental nature of matter, specifically on the interactions of subatomic particles within the nucleus of the atom; she has held research positions at the Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen; Theoretical Physics Institute, Frankfurt; and Brookhaven National Laboratory; teaches Introductory Physics and Astronomy. Sharon Snow Visiting Instructor B.A., Vassar College; M.A., French Literature, Columbia University; spent her junior year in Paris, and following graduation, received a fellowship to study at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland; after receiving her Masters in French at Columbia, she worked at an art gallery and for the United Nations; she taught at Manhattan’s Hewitt School for 14 years and is now visiting instructor at Pratt and at St. Joseph’s College. Ethan Spigland Associate Professor B.A., Yale University; M.F.A., New York University; Maîtrise, University of Paris VIII; has made numerous films and media works including: Luminosity Porosity, based on the work of architect Steven Holl, Elevator Moods, featured in the Sundance Film Festival, and The Strange Case of Balthazar Hyppolite, which won the Gold Medal in the Student Academy Awards. Gloria Steil Adjunct Instructor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.A., New York University; taught English in Tokyo for the Japanese Ministry of Education, a summer intensive course in English literature and composition in Seoul, and English literature at the College of New Rochelle, Medgar Evers College, Hostos Community College, and Borough of Manhattan Community College. Yijue Sun Visiting Assistant Professor Holly Tavel Visiting Instructor Barbara Turoff Adjunct Assistant Professor Ph.D., New York University; Laurea, Universita di Bologna Suzanne Verderber Associate Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania; teaching and research focus on the relationship between subjectivity and power, and on the relation between pre-modern periods (medieval, Renaissance, Baroque) and contemporary concerns; specific fields of study include politics, literature, art, critical theory, philosophy, religion, and psychoanalysis. Elizabeth Williams Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A., Columbia University; B.A., Middlebury College. Thad Ziolkowski Coordinator, The Writing Program, Professor B.A., George Washington University; Ph.D., Yale University; the author of a novel, Wichita, a memoir, On a Wave, and a collection of poems, Our Son, the Arson; his journalism has appeared in The New York Times, Slate, Bookforum, Travel & Leisure, and the Village Voice; among other honors, he is the recipient of a fellowship from the John S. Guggenheim Foundation. Mathematics and Science Damon Chaky Associate Professor B.S., Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; research focuses on the sources, transport and fate of pollutants in the urban environment, particularly that of New York City. He regularly teaches Ecology for Architects, Toxics and the elective course Science and Society. Dr. Chaky is active in Sustainable Pratt, a group of students, faculty and staff that works to position Pratt as a leader in sustainable, ecologically-aware design and architecture. Barbara Charton Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Brooklyn College; M.S., M.L.S., Adv. Cert., Pratt Institute; Barbara Charton is still doing chemistry and extending it in several new directions—into art conservation and environmental studies. Eleonora Del Federico Professor Ph.D., University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Licenciada (equivalent to M.S. degree), University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Anatole Dolgoff Adjunct Professor M.S., Miami University; B.S., Hunter College, CUNY. Margaret Dy-So Assistant to the Chair Christopher Jensen Associate Professor B.A., Pomona College; Ph.D., Stony Brook University; he teaches courses in Ecology, Human Evolution, and the Biology of Cooperation. He is active in Sustainable Pratt’s efforts to bring ecologically conscious practices to our campus and beyond. Those activities are complemented by his research, which focuses on the stability of systems of interacting organisms. Cindie Kehlet Associate Professor Ph.D., M.S., University of Aarhus; teaches Introductory Science and the Chemistry of Pigments; her research interests are in the field of Conservation Science. Steve Kreis Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., University of Missouri; M.A., Hunter College, City University of New York. Richard Leigh Visiting Professor B.A., Oberlin College; Ph.D., Columbia University; PE (Mechanical), New York State LEED AP; practiced laser spectroscopy at City College of NY and l’École Normale Supérieure (Paris); joined Brookhaven National Laboratory and switched to energy analysis and development of energyefficient technologies; taught full time at Pratt 1987–93; back to BNL, acquired NYS Professional Engineering license; then into the nonprofit sector first as Senior Engineer at the Community Environmental Center, making existing and new buildings more energy-efficient in the NYC metro area, now as director of advocacy and research at the Urban Green Council, (NY Chapter of the US Green Building Council, managers of LEED), working to improve energy efficiency in building codes and on worker education. Jemma Lorenat Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., San Francisco State University; M.A., CUNY Graduate Center; Ph.D. candidate in History and Math, Simon Fraser University and Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris. Tiffany Liu Lab Technician Mark Rosin Assistant Professor M.S., Physics, Bristol; Ph.D., Applied Mathematics, Cambridge University; research is in computer algorithms for fusion energy and in mathematical modeling for astrophysics and diodes; director of Guerilla Science, an organization dedicated to mixing science with art, music and play. Carole Sirovich Liberal Arts Faculty 241 Social Science and Cultural Studies Paul Dambowic Sameetah Agha Mareena Dareedia Associate Professor, History B.A., Smith College; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University. Dory Aghazarian Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Columbia University; M.A., Fordham University; Ph.D. Candidate, Graduate Center, City University of New York. Alheli Alvarado-Diaz Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Johns Hopkins University; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University. Robert Ausch Chair B.S., Brooklyn College; M.S., Ph.D., New York University. Adjunct Associate Professor, Psychology B.A., New York University; M.A., City College, City University of New York; Ph.D., Graduate Center, City University of New York. Gerson Sparer Josh Blackwell Professor B.S., Brooklyn College; M.S., Ph.D., Courant Institute. Oscar Strongin Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Columbia University; Independent Consulting Geologist engaged in oil/gas development as well as environmental impact of extraction of unconventional fossil fuel resources; also served as Energy Consultant to U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce. Vincent Tedeschi Visiting Instructor M.S., B.A., Stony Brook University. James Wise Visiting Instructor B.A., Hunter College; M.A., Brooklyn College. Daniel Wright Assistant Professor Ph.D., Stanford University; M.S., University of California at San Diego; B.S., Pennsylvania State University. Visiting Instructor, Fashion and Design History B.A., Bennington College; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Francis Bradley Adjunct Instructor B.A., New York University; M.A., Yale University. Visiting Instructor, Cinema Studies B.F.A., York University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Oberlin College; M.A., Institute of Fine Arts at New York University. Lisabeth During Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London, London, U.K.; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K. Barbara Duarte Esgalhado Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., Columbia University. John Frangos Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Queens College; M.A., C.W. Post Campus, Long Island University; Ph.D., New York University. Eric Godoy Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Madison. Assistant Chair and Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Rollins College; M.A., Ph.D. The New School for Social Research. B. Ricardo Brown P.J. Gorre Coordinator, Critical and Visual Studies and Professor, Cultural Studies B.A., Simon’s Rock College of Bard; M.A., Syracuse University; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Monica A. Grandy Josiah Brownell Coordinator, World History Program and Assistant Professor, History B.A., Western Michigan University; M.A., London School of Economics; J.D., University of Virginia Law School; Ph.D. Political Science, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Tom Buechele Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Villanova University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, The New School for Social Research. Visiting Assistant Professor, Psychology B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; Ph.D., City University of New York. Mitchell Harris Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.F.A., State University of New York at Purchase; M.A., M.Phil, City University of New York. Gabriel Hernández Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies B.A., State University of New York at Purchase; M.A., Queens College, City University of New York; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Visiting Instructor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, State University of New York at Stony Brook. Caitlin Cahill Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College. Assistant Professor, Politics and Geography B.A., Middlebury College; M.A., Hunter College; M.Phil., Ph.D., Graduate Center, City University of New York. Ann Holder Travis Holloway Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Belmont College; M.A., Boston College, M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., State University of New York at Stony Brook. 242 Liberal Arts Faculty Estelle Horowitz Gerald Levy Ritchie Savage Professor Emerita, Economics Visiting Instructor, Economics B.A., New York University; M.A., The New School for Social Research. Visiting Instructor, Sociology B.S., Bradley University; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Luka Lucic Michelle Standley Assistant Professor, Psychology and Diaspora Studies B.A., City College of New York; M.Phil., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Brigham Young University; Ph.D., New York University. Gregg M. Horowitz Chair and Professor of Philosophy B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.A., Boston University; Ph.D., Rutgers University. May Joseph Professor, Global Studies B.A., M.A., Madras Christian College; M.A., Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara. Svetlana Jovic Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., M.A., University of Belgrade, Serbia; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Shelley Juran Professor, Psychology B.A., M.A., Brooklyn College; Ph.D., City University of New York. John McGuire Adjunct Instructor, Philosophy B.A., New York University; M.A., The New School University. Erum Naqvi Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.Sc. Hons., Philosophy and Economics, London School of Economics; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Temple University. Darini Nicholas Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Columbia University; M.S., School of Social Work, Columbia University. Adjunct Instructor, Anthropology B.A., University of Louisville; M.A., Goddard College (Kentucky); Ph.D., The New School University. Josh Karant Cheol-Soo Park Marina Kaneti Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy and Food Studies B.A., Pomona College, M.A., The New School; M.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., University of Maryland. Visiting Instructor, Economics B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Seoul National University; Ph.D., The New School University. Kathleen C. Kelley Professor Emeritus, History B.A., Brooklyn College; M.B.A., J.D., New York University. Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., St. John’s College; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Todd Kesselman Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Trinity College; M.A. The New School for Social Research. Annie Khan B.A., Columbia University; M.A., City College of New York; Ph.D. candidate, State University of New York at Stony Brook. Hunter Kincaid Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.S., University of Washington; M.A., University of Chicago. Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies Ph.D. candidate, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University. Irving Perlman Robert Richardson Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wheaton College; M.A., ABD, Pennsylvania State University. Uzma Z. Rizvi Assistant Professor, Anthropology and Urban Studies B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. John Santore Professor Emeritus, History B.A., M.A., Temple University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Zachary Sapolsky Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., University of Rochester; M.A., Ph.D., Long Island University. Jeff Surovell Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. Jennifer Telesca B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., University of Connecticut at Storrs; M.A., Ph.D., New York University. Critical and Visual Studies Sameetah Agha Associate Professor, History B.A., Smith College; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University. Josh Blackwell Visiting Instructor, Fashion and Design History B.A., Bennington College; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Francis Bradley Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Madison. B. Ricardo Brown Adjunct Assistant Professor, Sociology B.A., Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey; M.A., Ph.D., The New School University. Coordinator, Critical and Visual Studies and Professor, Cultural Studies B.A., Simon’s Rock College of Bard; M.A., Syracuse University; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Paul Schweigert Josiah Brownell Kumru Toktamis Visiting Instructor, History B.S., North Carolina State University; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Noah Simmons Visiting Instructor, History Licence Histoire de l’Art et d’Archéologie, Maîtrise Histoire de l’Art et d’Archéologie, Sorbonne Paris IV-Université de Paris; M.A., Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Basil Tsiokos Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Stanford University; M.A., New York University. Murtaza Vali Coordinator, World History Program and Assistant Professor, History B.A., Western Michigan University; M.A., London School of Economics; J.D., University of Virginia Law School; Ph.D., Political Science, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Tom Buechele Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies B.A., State University of New York at Purchase; M.A., Queens College; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Caitlin Cahill Assistant Professor, Politics and Geography B.A., Middlebury College; M.A., Hunter College; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Visiting Instructor, Art Theory B.S., The Johns Hopkins University; M.A., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Mareena Dareedia Zhivka Valiavicharska Corey D’Augustine Assistant Professor, Social and Political Theory B.A., M.A., National Academy of Arts, Sofia, Bulgaria; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Ron Van Cleef Visiting Instructor, History A.B., Syracuse University, Maxwell School of Citizenship; M.A., City College of New York; Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University . Visiting Instructor, Cinema Studies B.F.A., York University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Liberal Arts Faculty 243 Gabriel Hernández Darini Nicholas Visiting Instructor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, State University of New York at Stony Brook. Adjunct Instructor, Anthropology B.A., University of Louisville; M.A., Goddard College; Ph.D. Candidate, The New School University. Ann Holder Uzma Z. Rizvi Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College. Assistant Professor, Anthropology and Urban Studies B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Travis Holloway Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Belmont College; M.A., Boston College, M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., State University of New York, Stony Brook. Gregg M. Horowitz Chair and Professor of Philosophy B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.A., Boston University; Ph.D., Rutgers University. May Joseph Professor, Global Studies B.A., M.A., Madras Christian College; M.A., Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara. Shelley Juran Professor, Psychology B.A., M.A., Brooklyn College; Ph.D., City University of New York. Josh Karant Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy and Food Studies B.A., Pomona College, M.A., The New School; M.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., University of Maryland. Kathleen C. Kelley Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., St. John’s College; M.A. and Ph.D. candidate, The New School for Social Research. Todd Kesselman Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Trinity College; M.A., The New School for Social Research. Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Oberlin College; M.A., Institute of Fine Arts at New York University. Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies Ph.D. candidate, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University. Lisabeth During Luka Lucic Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University. Barbara Duarte Esgalhado Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Eric Godoy Assistant Chair and Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Rollins College; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Assistant Professor, Psychology and Diaspora Studies B.A., City College of New York; M.Phil., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Erum Naqvi Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.Sc. Hons., Philosophy and Economics, London School of Economics; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Temple University. Ritchie Savage Visiting Instructor, Sociology B.S., Bradley University; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Jennifer Telesca Assistant Professor B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., University of Connecticut at Storrs; M.A., Ph.D., New York University. Kumru Toktamis Adjunct Assistant Professor, Sociology B.A., Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey; M.A., Ph.D., The New School University. Basil Tsiokos Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Stanford University; M.A., New York University. Murtaza Vali Visiting Instructor, Art Theory B.S., The Johns Hopkins University; M.A. Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Zhivka Valiavicharska Assistant Professor, Social and Political Theory. B.A., M.A., National Academy of Arts, Sofia, Bulgaria; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Sal A. Westrich Professor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., University of Wisconsin; M.A., Harvard University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Rebecca Winkel Visiting Assistant professor, Psychology M.A. Columbia University; M.A., Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary; Ph.D., The New School for Social Research Iván Zatz Díaz Associate Professor, Globalization B.A., State University of New York at Purchase; M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Carl Zimring Associate Professor, History and Sustainability B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz; M.A., Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University. 244 Liberal Arts Faculty History of Art and Design Ágnes Berecz Ed DeCarbo Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Université Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne); teaches modern and contemporary art history; Associate Professor at Christie’s Education; lectures at the Museum of Modern Art; writings have appeared in Art Journal, Art in America, Artmargins and the Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin as well as in European and U.S. exhibition catalogs; recent work includes the two-volume monographic study, Simon Hantaï, and the essay, “The Event of Painting,” written for Judit Reigl’s retrospective at the Ludwig Museum in Budapest; review articles for Muérto, the Budapest-based art monthly, include “Thomas Hirschhorn’s Gramsci Monument,” and “American Traumspiel: Mike Kelley”; she is working on a book titled Paint No More: France, 1948-1982. Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., M.A., Indiana University; concentration is art and aesthetics in post-colonial societies with foci in traditional and contemporary arts; field research in aesthetics in a traditional multicultural society in West Africa and in the Pacific (Moana) in contemporary arts; his courses survey the traditional and contemporary arts of Africa and the Pacific, and consider the theories and methods of analysis that are applied to the post-colonial world; he serves as a consultant to the College Board effort to globalize the Advanced Placement Curriculum in Art History; was Director of Education at the National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, and served as a senior university administrator for many years. Sam Bryan Eva Díaz Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.A., Howard University; D.A., History, Carnegie-Mellon University; filmmaker and film archivist who specializes in documentary film and criticism; has taught courses in film history and production at Brooklyn College, Fordham University and at Pratt since 1983; since 1960 he has filmed for the International Film Foundation in Africa and South America; his films have been shown at the American Film Festival, at the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art; past president of the New York Film Council and executive Director of the International Film Foundation. Assistant Professor M.A., Ph.D., Princeton University; her book The Experimenters: Chance and Design at Black Mountain College will soon be released by the University of Chicago Press; the project examines how an interdisciplinary group of artists at Black Mountain proposed new models of art and focuses on three Black Mountain teachers in the late 1940s and early 1950s: Josef Albers, John Cage, and Buckminster Fuller; writing appears in magazines and journals such as The Art Bulletin, Art Journal, Art in America, Cabinet, The Exhibitionist, Frieze, Grey Room, October, and Tate Etc. and she is a regular contributor to Artforum; she was recently awarded a Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation Art Writers Grant to research for her book about Buckminster Fuller’s work, titled The Fuller Effect: The Critique of Total Design in Postwar Art. Sonya Abrego Visiting Instructor Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center; M.Phil, Decorative Arts, Design History and Material Culture Studies, Bard Graduate Center; a Ph.D. candidate specializing in 20th-century fashion, currently completing a dissertation on western wear in the postwar United States; work focuses on the interconnections between fashion and popular culture, specifically music and film; she has presented papers in New York, Montreal and San Francisco, worked with the costume collections at the Museum of the City of New York and the Metropolitan’s Costume Institute; she is the recipient of graduate fellowships from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bonnie Cashin Foundation and the Autry National Center; she is a senior editor at Worn Fashion Journal and works in the vintage clothing market. Kelly Rae Aldridge Visiting Instructor B.A., Art History, Colorado State University; M.A., Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University; conducts research on the place of food in art with particular focus on contemporary collaborative interdisciplinary projects; currently working on a dissertation, “Crumbs from the Revolutionary Table,” that examines art practices that focus on the table as a critical site of physical consumption, sensuous encounter, social production, and material exchange; Instructor at Stony Brook University; was Session Chair at the Association of Art Historians and has presented papers at CAA and other venues. Lisa Banner Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; art historian and curator; publications include Spanish Drawings in the Princeton University Art Museum (Yale University Press, 2013), and The Religious Patronage of the Duke of Lerma (Ashgate, 2009); has lectured on old master drawings at the Frick Collection, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Morgan Library, Courtauld Institute, and the Meadows Museum; as a curator she has worked with The Frick Collection (The Spanish Manner: Drawings from Ribera to Goya, 2010-2011), the Museo del Prado (Dibujos del Siglo de Oro en la Coleccion de la Hispanic Society of America, 2006), the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya, and the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A., Art History, Advanced Certificate in Art Conservation, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; conservator of modern and contemporary art and technical art historian; works for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and lectures on art history conservation at New York University, Sotheby’s Institute of Art, City College of New York, and Museum of Modern Art; a specialist in American and European postwar art, research includes 20th-century painting materials and techniques and conservation of monochrome paintings; selected publications: “Taoism in the Work of Agnes Martin,” Kunst Nu, “Laser Cleaning of a Study Painting by Ad Reinhardt and the Analysis/Assessment of the Surface after Treatment,” Modern Paints Uncovered; selected awards: Samuel H. Kress Foundation grant; Dedalus Foundation grant. Dorothea Dietrich Chair and Professor B.A., M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University; primary research areas: The Weimar Republic and post-1945 German art and culture; publications include: The Collages of Kurt Schwitters: Tradition and Innovation (Cambridge U. Press) and German Drawings of the ´60s (Yale U. Art Gallery), and numerous contributions to exhibition catalogues and scholarly volumes in the United States and Europe; was Chair of Arts and Humanities at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, and Curator of Prints and Drawings and Director of the Morse Research Center at the Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers; taught at Princeton University and held visiting appointments at Yale, MIT, Duke, Washington University, Boston University, and Bryn Mawr College; recently was a Senior Research Fellow at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds, England. Liberal Arts Faculty 245 Mary Douglas Edwards Frima Fox Hofrichter Vivien Knussi Adjunct Professor Ph.D., M.L.S., M.A., Columbia University ; publications include Wind Chant and Night Chant Sand Paintings, articles in Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Studies in Iconography, Source: Notes in the History of Art, Il Santo: rivista francescana, Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte, and elsewhere; co-edited and wrote portions of Gravity in Art: Essays on Weight and Weightlessness in Painting, Sculpture and Photography; chaired sessions and read papers at meetings of CAA; SECAC; International Congress on Medieval Studies; awards include Samuel H. Kress Dissertation Fellowship, NEH Travel to Collections Grant, Delmas Foundation Grant; past president, 14th-Century Society; former member, Executive Council of Southeastern Medieval Association; two-term associate, editorial board, Medieval Perspectives. Professor M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., Rutgers University, Certificate in Fine and Decorative Art Appraisal, Pratt Institute—in collaboration with the American Society of Appraisers; Issues of gender and class have informed her work; she is the author of a monograph on the 17th-century Dutch artist, Judith Leyster; numerous articles within Dutch art and feminist/gender studies; organized several Dutch exhibitions; and is currently working on the theme of old women; co-author of Janson’s History of Art: The Western Tradition (for the Baroque and Rococo sections); was Dutch Book Review Editor (2008-2013) for the Historians of Netherlandish Art (HNA); a member of the College Art Association’s Committee on Women in the Arts and Chair, Jury for the Distinguished Feminist Award (2012). Adjunct Assistant Instructor B.A., M.A.,Tufts University; Ph.D., Columbia University; studied American Art and Photography at Columbia University; was a Lecturer at the Museum of Modern Art through the Department of Photography; assembled and catalogued two major corporate collections, The Dreyfus Fund and McFrank and William Advertising Agency; with the insight she gained into emerging photographers that were featured in both, she has specialized in teaching Contemporary Photography at Pratt; currently writing a book on the subject; has written catalogue essays and most recently translated a German essay on “Deconstructed Poetry” for Les Figues Press. Charles Eppley Visiting Instructor B.A., Art History and Music, Hiram College; M.A., Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University; focuses on site-specific art, sound, and new media; completing a dissertation on “Un-Fixed Media: Site-Specificity and Materiality in the Work of Max Neuhaus”; has organized a panel on Soundsites at the Southeastern College Art Conference, and presented papers on sound art and Max Neuhaus at various venues; also teaches at Stony Brook University. Diana Gisolfi Professor B.A., Radcliffe/Harvard; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago; research focus is on Cinquecento art in Venice and the Veneto, including religious and political context and artistic practice; developed and directs the Pratt in Venice program; lectures and chairs sessions regularly at CAA and RSA and at international conferences; contributed essays to three international exhibitions on Paolo Veronese: Venice 2011, Sarasota, FL 2012-13, Verona 2014; publications include: The Rule, the Bible, and the Council: The Library of the Benedictine Abbey at Praglia (CAA Monograph Series); On Classic Ground, Caudine Country (Illustrations), and articles in: Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin, Artibus et Historiae, Arte Veneta, The Art Bulletin, The Dictionary of Art (Oxford Art Online), Renaissance Quarterly, Burlington Magazine, caareviews.org. Dimitri Hazzikostas Assistant Professor M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University; has done archeological field work in Greece and published in the Encyclopedia of Comparative Iconography; awards include Sears Distinguished Professor 1991, Whiting Fellowship. Heather Horton Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., DePauw University; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; current research focuses on questions of authorship, originality, and imitation, especially in the career of the pivotal writer and architect Leon Battista Alberti; recently published a new interpretation of Alberti’s treatises on painting and is completing a book manuscript titled Leon Battista Alberti and the Renaissance Crisis of the Author; has taught at New York University, the City University of New York, State University of New York at Purchase, and The Cloisters Museum, where she remains a frequent guest lecturer. Susan Karnet Visiting Instructor B.F.A., The School of Visual Arts, New York University; M.F.A., Hunter College, CUNY; a painter and sculptor; has exhibited work in Chelsea, the East Village, 57th Street, Brooklyn, New Jersey, Europe and Africa; work has been reviewed in The New York Times; has taught at a number of schools in New York, New Jersey; and Cairo, Egypt; including Parsons, New York University, and The School of Visual Arts; she is interested in Modern and Contemporary Art, sculpture, and Egyptian Art. Dara Kiese Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Modern History, University of Minnesota; M.Phil., Art History, Ph.D., Art History, The Graduate Center, City University of New York; research centers around the artistic and architectural avant-gardes in Weimar Germany, with focus on the Bauhaus; received a number of grants, including a Fulbright fellowship to Berlin and a Getty research travel grant; worked as a Curatorial Assistant in the Architecture and Design Department at the Museum of Modern Art; presented papers on architectural and design pedagogies at conferences and symposia including the College Art Association and the Bauhaus Universität Weimar; has published essays on the Bauhaus. Gayle Rodda Kurtz Assistant Chair, Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Stanford University; M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., CUNY Graduate Center; specializes in 18thand 19th-century European art; was a contractual lecturer at the Metropolitan Museum of Art with a focus on the African Art Galleries from 1995 to 2013; Associate of Zeteo Journal (zeteojournals. com) where she is a contributing editor and writer; has presented papers at the 19th-Century Studies Association; taught at Caldwell College, Hunter College, and New York City College of Technology, CUNY; received a Graduate Teaching Fellowship from CUNY Graduate Center. Marilyn Kushner Visiting Professor B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee; Ph.D., Modern Art, Northwestern University; Curator and Head of the Department of Prints, Photographs and Architectural Collections at the New York Historical Society (2006-present); previously was chair of the Department of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs and Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Brooklyn Museum (19942006); has also served as Curator of Collections at the Montclair Art Museum, New Jersey, and Research Associate at the Whitney Museum of American Art; has published and lectured extensively on works on paper and has served on juries and guest-curated exhibitions nationwide. Thomas La Padula Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Parsons School of Design; M.F.A., Syracuse University; for more than 36 years, he has illustrated for national and international magazines, advertising agencies and publishing houses; is the illustration coordinator for the undergraduate Communications Design Department at Pratt Institute where he teaches both reflective and digital illustration. 246 Liberal Arts Faculty Anca Lasc William Lorenzo Evan Neely Assistant Professor B.A., History and Theory of Art and Literature, Jacobs University Bremen, Germany; M.A., Art History, Ph.D., Art History, University of Southern California; studies the invention and commercialization of the modern French interior and the development of the professions of interior designer and commercial window dresser; received numerous grants, including a NEH Summer Institute Grant at the Bard Graduate Center, and published essays in the Journal of Design History and Interiors: Design, Architecture, Culture; Designing the French Interior, coedited with Georgina Downey and Mark Taylor, is forthcoming from Bloomsbury Publishing in 2015; she has presented papers at various conferences, including the College Art Association, Society of Architectural Historians, Society for French Historical Studies, and Interior Design Educators Council’s annual meetings. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Brooklyn College; independent artist, researcher, film archivist, and programmer; publications include museum notes and articles in Animation Magazine, AnimaFilm, and others; author of Lillian Friedman Astor—Pioneer Woman Animator; Executive Board Member ASIFA-East, The International Animated Film Association; curator, Animation over Broadway, Museum of Modern Art, February 1993; other areas of interest: film and illustration. Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Fine Arts, Parsons School of Design; M.Phil., M.A., Ph.D., Art History, Columbia University; studied 20th-century and northern European Renaissance art, as well as postEnlightenment political and aesthetic theory; most recent work investigates the relationships between 19th-century American literature and 20th-century painting and new genres; has taught courses at Columbia University, Parsons The New School of Design, and the Museum of Modern Art, on modern and postmodern art, the history of ethical and political theory, and Enlightenment aesthetics; currently Core Lecturer for Art Humanities at Columbia University in addition to teaching at Pratt. Jacob Lewis Visiting Instructor M.A., History of Art, Williams College; Ph.D., Art History, Northwestern University; specializes in 19th-century French photography and art; his dissertation addressed the role of instantaneity and reproducibility in the photography of Charles Nègre (1820–1880); he is a former Coleman Fellow in the Department of Photographs of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Blum/Model Fellow at the National Gallery of Canada. Rael Lewis Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Swarthmore College; Ph.D., Stanford University; specialist in 19th- and 20th-century art with a focus on fin-de-siècle visual culture; currently writing a book on the imagery of absinthe and intoxication in modern Paris; before coming to Pratt, he taught at UCLA, Bowdoin College, Villanova University, and the Claremont Colleges. Michele Licalsi Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Institute of Fine Arts with Certificate in Art Conservation, New York University; studied art at the New York Academy of Art, the Art Students’ League, and the National Academy of Design; has been teaching drawing, color and composition at the National Academy of Design from 1994 to the present; taught fresco painting at the Conservation Center, Institute of Fine Arts, NYU from 1993 to 2005; has also worked in art conservation at the Brooklyn Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art; has worked as a conservator on sites in Florence, Rome, Parma, and Sardis. Elizabeth Meggs Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Communications Arts and Design, Illustration, Virginia Commonwealth University; illustrator, writer, designer of paintings, photography and hand-bound artist books; graphic designer (Hearst’s Victoria) and writer for the Los Angeles Daily News; has worked at Pierogi Gallery and taught at BBG, VCU, Pratt and NYCCT; exhibitions include: ISE Cultural Foundation, Los Angeles Center for Digital Art, Mariner’s Museum, Firehouse Art Collective, Anderson Gallery, Target Gallery/Torpedo Factory, Galapagos Art Space, Edward Hopper House, Pratt Dean’s Gallery, Lincoln Center, and Brooklyn Museum’s Go! Brooklyn; selectee, NYC Center for Book Arts’ Letterpress Printing/Fine Press Publishing Seminar for Emerging Writers; recipient, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Fellowship/Drawing. Juan Monroy Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Film Studies. University of California at Santa Barbara; M.A., Cinema Studies, Ph.D. candidate, Cinema Studies, New York University; scholar of film, television and media studies, specializing in history, technology, and cultural impacts of U.S. film and television; doctoral candidate in the Department of Cinema Studies at NYU, writing a dissertation on television, Latin America, and economic development in the 1960s; teaches film and media classes at Fordham University, Lincoln Center, CUNY Queens College, and Pratt Institute; since 2009, has also worked as a video and digital media librarian and database technician at NYU-TV. Marsha Morton Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; books include Max Klinger and Wilhelmine Culture: On the Threshold of German Modernism (Ashgate 2014), the co-edited anthology The Arts Entwined: Music and Painting in the 19th Century (Garland 2000), and Pratt and Its Gallery: The Arts & Crafts Years (1999); has published numerous essays on 19th-century German and Austrian art, many with a focus on interdisciplinary topics (cultural history, Darwinism, music, and ethnography) and artists and critics such as Alois Riegl, Gustav Klimt, Klinger, Alfred Kubin, Max Beckmann, and Max Liebermann; currently serving her second term as President of the Historians of German and Central European Art (HGCEA). Nicholas Parkinson Visiting Instructor B.A., Philosophy, DePauw University; M.A., Philosophy, Ph.D. candidate, Art History and Criticism, Stony Brook University; Ph.D. candidate at Stony Brook University, where is he completing his dissertation on the popular and critical reception of Nordic art in 19th-century France; areas of research interest include imaginary geographies of the 19th century, fin-de-siècle art and culture, and the history of art criticism; an active member of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study; his most recent publication, “De Chirico and the Finde-Siècle,” will be printed in Symbolist Roots of Modern Art in 2015. Joyce Polistena Adjunct Professor M.A., Art History, Hunter College; Ph.D., M.Phil., The Graduate Center of the City University of New York; Certificate TESOL, Columbia University; Certificate in 19th-century British History, Oxford University; primary research areas are 19th- and early 20th-century European and American Art, with emphasis on French Romanticism; publications include The Religious Paintings of Eugène Delacroix (Mellen, 2008) and contributions to scholarly volumes: NCAW; Bulletin du Société des Amis du Musée Nationale Eugène Delacroix; The Van Gogh Museum Journal; current research involves artists’ activism and political prints as well as ongoing research about French Romanticism; appointed Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at The College of The Holy Cross (20142015); has served on the Board of Directors of ASCHA; has organized several symposia on 19thcentury Romantic Art. Liberal Arts Faculty 247 Katarina V. Posch Elizabeth St. George Sarah Wilkins Associate Professor M.A., University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria; Ph.D., Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music, Japan; design historian specializing in intercultural themes; teaches and publishes on Japanese, European and American design in a socio-historical context; publications cover issues relating to design and material culture, from cross-cultural comparisons (Changing Worlds, Changing Designs, MAK, Vienna, 2012) to feminist approaches (“The Seen and the Hidden. [Dis]covering the Veil,” Austrian Cultural Forum New York, 2007); has written monographs and exhibition catalogues and curated for major museums including the Pompidou Center in Paris (Portrait d’une Collection, 1995), the Vitra Design Museum in Germany (Isamu Noguchi—Sculptural Design, 2001) and the Noguchi Museum in New York. Visiting Instructor B.A., Kent State University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center; specializes in late 19thand 20th-century architecture and design; has been an invited speaker at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and has served as a research assistant for the Bard Graduate Center’s exhibitions on Knoll textiles (2011), Artek and Alvar Aalto (forthcoming), and the architect and designer William Kent (forthcoming); her dissertation explores interwar architecture and design and themes of modern living in the former Czechoslovakia; she is broadly interested in how design is used to construct modes of cultural interaction and identity, and how modernism and notions of modernity were used to disseminate social, political, and cultural reform in America and Europe. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Vanderbilt University; M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey; specializes in Italian late medieval and Renaissance art, with interests in mendicant patronage, Angevin Naples, and the cult of the saints; awards include a Fulbright fellowship and a Mellon Finishing Grant; publications include “Imaging the Angevin Patron Saint: Mary Magdalen in the Pipino Chapel in Naples” (2012) and “Adopting and Adapting Formulas: The Raising of Lazarus and Noli Me Tangere in the Arena Chapel in Padua and the Magdalen Chapel in Assisi” (2013); has presented papers at conferences including Kalamazoo and RSA; currently chair of the Italian Art Society’s Emerging Scholars Committee. Elena Rossi-Snook Jack Toolin Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Cinema, State University of New York at Binghamton; M.A., Film Archiving, University of East Anglia; archivist for the Reserve Film and Video Collection of the New York Public Library; Director of the Board, Association of Moving Image Archivists; Chair, AMIA Film Advocacy Task Force; selected publications include: “Persistence of Vision: Public Library 16mm Film Collections in America,” The Moving Image, “Continuing Ed: Educational Film Collections in Libraries and Archives,” Learning With the Lights Off: a Reader in Educational Film; selected awards: 2002 recipient of the Kodak Fellowship in Film Preservation; Other: Producer, Why We Film 16mm series; Documentary film We Got the Picture made official selection of the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Photography, Ohio University at Athens; M.F.A., Photography, Performance, and Installation, San Jose State University; artist working in new media, digital imaging, and performance; his work considers contemporary life in light of the changing political, economic, and technological landscape; individual and collaborative work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including San Francisco Camerawork;the Walker Art Center; the Whitney Museum of American Art (2002 Whitney Biennial); and the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires, Argentina; he has performed in the San Francisco Bay area, New York, Pittsburgh, Reno, Phoenix, Hong Kong, and Linz, Austria; commissions include the Walker Art Center and the Whitney Museum of American Art; he has lectured nationally and internationally. Ann Schoenfeld Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York; received a CUNY Dissertation Fellowship; work includes Lecturer, SUNY at Purchase, and Nominator for the Joan Mitchell Foundation for Painting and Sculpture; has published in M/E/A/N/I/N/G: An Anthology of Artist’s Writings, Theory, and Criticism, i-D, Eye. Dorothy Shepard Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., Southern Methodist University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; received an AAUW American Fellowship and a Haakon Traveling Fellowship; invited lectures include: CAA, Kalamazoo and Medieval Academy; Symposia on History of the Bible held at Barnard, Rutgers, and Princeton Universities; published in Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia; Rutgers Art Review; The Apocalypse in Word and Image; and Canterbury and the Medieval Bible. Alice Walkiewicz Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Kansas; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, City University of New York; specializes in 19th-century art from Europe and the United States; current research focuses on issues of gender and labor, and the way that anxieties about these issues are addressed through visual culture (both in fine art and popular imagery) within a transnational (and transatlantic) context; her dissertation explores these concerns by examining representations of the archetypal figure of the exploited, laboring seamstress in England, France, and the United States in the late 19th century within the context of the rising labor movement; has taught at Parsons The New School for Design as well as Pratt Institute. Bor-Hua Wang Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Kansas; Ph.D., Columbia University; a specialist in Chinese painting and calligraphy of the Song dynasty; areas of research include: Contemporary Chinese Art; Buddhist Art of Southeast Asia and Western art theory; curator of Contemporary Korean Art, Abstract Chinese Art, for Taipei Fine Art Museum; she presented “Pan Yuliang’s Life and Art: Alienation to Freedom of Expression,” CAA, 2001. Karyn Zieve Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Wellesley College; M.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University; specialist in 19th- and early 20thcentury art, with a focus on Eugène Delacroix, orientalism, the history of photography and the graphic arts; in addition to teaching at various NYC institutions and museums, she has written about and organized exhibitions of prints, drawings and photographs on various topics; presently she is working on a manuscript based on her work on Delacroix and images of the East. The Writing Program Priscilla Becker Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., Columbia University; Becker’s first book of poems, Internal West, won The Paris Review book prize, and was published in 2003. Her poems have appeared in Fence, Open City, The Paris Review, Small Spiral Notebook, Boston Review, Raritan, American Poetry Review, Verse, and The Swallow Anthology of New American Poets; her music reviews in The Nation and Filter Magazine; her book reviews in The New York Sun; and her essays in Cabinet magazine and Open City. Her essays have also been anthologized by Soft Skull Press, Anchor Books, and Sarabande. She teaches poetry at Pratt Institute, Columbia University, and in her apartment. Her second book, Stories That Listen, was released by Four Way Books in 2010. Christopher Bollen Visiting Instructor B.A., Columbia University; Bollen is the author of the novels Lightning People (2011) and Orient, forthcoming in 2015. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Artforum, The Believer, the Paris Review, GQ, and Details. He is currently the editor at large of Interview magazine. 248 Liberal Arts Faculty Gabriel Cohen John Glassie Christian Hawkey Visiting Instructor B.A., Wesleyan University; Gabriel Cohen is the author of five novels and a nonfiction book and has written for The New York Times, Poets and Writers, Shambhala Sun, Gourmet.com, Time Out New York, and many other publications; he has taught fiction and nonfiction writing at New York University, mentors writing students at the New School, and lectures and gives workshops frequently; his website is www. gabrielcohenbooks.com. Visiting Instructor B.A., The Johns Hopkins University; is a former contributing editor for The New York Times Magazine, where for several years he edited the weekly “Lives” column; he has written for The New York Times, The Believer, Salon, Wired, The Dallas Morning News, and The Atlanta JournalConstitution, among other publications, and is the author of a non-fiction book about a 17th-century polymath, published in the fall of 2012; as well as the author of a book of photographs, Bicycles Locked to Poles (McSweeney’s, 2005). Professor The author of three award-winning books of poetry, including The Book of Funnels (Wave Books, 2004), which won the 2006 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, HourHour (Delirium Press, 2005), and Citizen Of (Wave Books, 2007); his poems have appeared in Conjunctions, Volt, Denver Quarterly, Tin House, Crowd, BOMB, Chicago Review, and Best American Poetry; he has received awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Poetry Fund, and in 2006 he received a Creative Capital Innovative Literature Award; in 2008, he was a DAAD Artist-in-Berlin Fellow. Jon Cotner Visiting Instructor B.A. Humanities, Shimer College; M.A., St. John’s College; Ph.D. candidate in Poetics, SUNY at Buffalo. Professor Cotner is co-author of Ten Walks/Two Talks (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2010) and has worked on a collaboration titled Conversations over Stolen Food and projects for The Believer, the BMW Guggenheim Lab, Elastic City, and the Poetry Society of America. Steven Doloff Professor, Lecturer in Intensive English B.A., Stony Brook University; was named a Pratt Institute Distinguished Professor (2001–2002) and received the Institute’s Student Government Association Faculty Excellence Award in 1990. Laura Elrick Assistant Professor Author of three books of poetry, including Propogation (Kenning Editions, 2012), Fantasies in Permeable Structures (Factory School, 2005) and sKincerity (Krupskaya, 2003). Her psychogeographically-inspired research and performance works include the oppositional cartography Blocks Away, exhibited at the Skybridge Art and Sound Space in 2010, and the video-poem Stalk, commissioned by the Positions Colloquium in Vancouver in 2008 and exhibited in the Social Environmental Aesthetics Series at Exit Art (New York, 2009) and the Rustbelt Sightsound Collision at the SPACES gallery (Cincinnati, 2013), A sound work, 5 Audio Pieces Doubled Voice was commisioned by new Langton Arts for the Performance Writing Series in San Francisco in 2005. Her work also appears in several anthologies, including Viz. Inter-Arts Intervention: A Trans-Genre Anthology (forthcoming), Against Expression: Anthology of Conceptual Writing, and Eco Language Reader, and has been translated into Spanish, French, Italian and Norwegian. Wes Enzinna Visiting Instructor B.A., Temple University; M.A., University of California at Berkeley; writer whose reportage and essays appear in The New York Times Magazine, Harper’s, London Review of Books, Mother Jones, The Nation, and n+1; also a filmmaker who regularly produces documentaries for Vice, where he is a senior editor. David Gordon Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Writing, M.A., English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University; David Gordon was born in New York City. He attended Sarah Lawrence College and has worked in film, fashion, and publishing. His first novel, The Serialist, was published by Simon and Schuster in March 2010. Jason Helm James Hannaham Samantha Hunt Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., Creative Writing, Sarah Lawrence College; first book, Exposure, a YA sci-fi fantasy novel, is currently on the market; he is at work on a collection of short stories about mid-’90s gutterpunk culture in Minneapolis. Liberal Arts Faculty 249 Sean C. Kelly Anna Moschovakis Justin Taylor Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Montreal; was editor of National Lampoon and a founding editor of Heavy Metal; he has been a staff writer for Saturday Night Live, and as a freelance writer he has written for numerous television productions and for periodicals, including Bazaar, Colors, Interview, Playboy, Spy, The Village Voice, and The New York Times; he is the author and editor of numerous books and anthologies. Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A., Bard College; she is the author a book of poems, I Have Not Been Able to Get through to Everyone, and a translator of poetry, fiction, and theory from the French; she is also an editor, designer, and printer at Ugly Duckling Presse, a nonprofit publishing collective based in Brooklyn; she is pursuing graduate studies in comparative Literature at the CUNY Graduate Center. Rachel Levitsky Cecilia Muhlstein Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Florida; M.F.A., The New School. author of the story collection Everything Here Is the Best Thing Ever (Harper’s Perennial, 2010) and the novel The Gospel of Anarchy (Harper’s Perennial, 2011); he is the editor of The Apocalypse Reader, Come Back Donald Barthelme, and co-editor (with Eva Talmadge) of The Word Made Flesh: Literary Tattoos from Bookworms Worldwide (Harper’s Perennial, 2010); with Jeremy Schmall, he publishes The Agriculture Reader, a limitededition arts annual. Assistant Professor M.F.A., Naropa University, B.A., State University of Albany; her first full-length volume, Under the Sun, was published by Futurepoem books in 2003; she is the founder and co-director of Belladonna*, an event and publication series of feminist avant-garde poetics; she is also the author of five chapbooks of poetry, Dearly (a+bend, 1999), Dearly 356, Cartographies of Error (Leroy, 1999), The Adventures of Yaya and Grace (PotesPoets, 1999), 2(1×1) Portraits (Baksun, 1998), and a series of poetry plays. Adjunct Assistant Professor, Tutor California State University at Los Angeles; Cecilia was born in Texas, but grew up in Los Angeles; her work and interests reside in fiction, critical theory, art, and eco-poetics; her current work can be found in the pages of NYArts magazine and in the archives of Safe-T-Gallery. Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University; M.F.A., University of Texas; first novel, God Says No (McSweeney’s, 2009), was a finalist for a Lambda Book Award, named an honor book by the American Library Association’s Stonewall Book Awards, a semi-finalist for a VCU Cabell First Novelist Award, and made the shortlist for the Green Carnation Prize in the U.K.; his stories have been published in The Literary Review, Open City, JMWW, One Story, and will soon appear in Fence; his criticism and journalism have appeared in The Village Voice, Spin, and Salon.com, where he was on staff, and have been reprinted in Best African American Essays 2009 and Best Sex Writing 2009; he has received fellowships from The MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, The Blue Mountain Center, The Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts, Chateau de Lavigny, Fundación Valparaíso, Bread Loaf, and a NYFFA Fellowship in Fiction. Associate Professor M.F.A., Warren Wilson College; second novel The Invention of Everything Else (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008) was a finalist for the Orange Prize and winner of the Bard Fiction Prize; her first novel, The Seas (Picador, 2005) won a National Book Foundation award for writers under 35; work has appeared in The New Yorker, McSweeney’s, A Public Space, Cabinet, Esquire, jubilat, The Believer, Blind Spot, Tin House, New York Magazine, on the radio program This American Life and in a number of other fine publications. Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Marymount Manhattan College; stories have appeared in A Public Space, Ploughshares, The Paris Review, and are collected in the book Double Happiness; her novel is Wavemaker II (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2002). Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Columbia University; B.A., University of Minnesota; novel Tiger in a Trance was a New York Times Notable Book; his short fiction has appeared in Tin House, Meridian, HOW Journal, Nerve, Outerbridge, On the Rocks, The KGB Bar Fiction Anthology, and others. Ryan Fischer-Harbage Lucy Ives Tracie Morris Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Kalamazoo College; M.F.A., Bennington College; a literary agent who runs the FischerHarbage Agency, represents several New York Times bestselling authors and has placed books with all major publishers in the U.S. and the U.K.; he previously served as an editor at Simon and Schuster, Little, Brown and Company as well as The Penguin Group (U.S.A.). Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Harvard; M.F.A., University of Iowa; editor of Triple Canopy and the author of four collections of poetry and prose; in spring 2015, Little A will re-issue her novel, nineties. Professor B.A., M.F.A., Hunter College; M.A., Ph.D., New York University; a multidisciplinary poet, performer, and scholar who works extensively as a sound artist, writer, bandleader, and actor; her installations have been presented at the Whitney Biennial, Ronald Feldman Gallery, the Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, and the New Museum; she recently completed her latest poetry manuscript, “Rhyme Scheme” and is working on an academic work, “Who Do with Words” on the significance of philosopher J.L. Austin; she is also developing two audio projects: an untitled CD with music with her band and another CD in collaboration with composer Elliott Sharp. Mary-Beth Hughes Caitlin Kelly Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Toronto; author of Malled: My Unintentional Career in Retail and Blown Away: American Women and Guns; former reporter for The Globe and Mail, Montreal Gazette and New York Daily News, she has reported from the Arctic Circle, Denmark, Sicily and Fiji; she is a winner of a Canadian National Magazine Award for humor and writes frequently for The New York Times; her blog, www.broadsideblog.wordpress.com, has more than 12,000 readers worldwide. Robert Lopez Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., The New School for Social Research; is the author of two novels, Part of the World (Calamari Press, 2007) and Kamby Bolongo Mean River (Dzanc Books, 2009), and a collection of stories, Asunder (Dzanc Books, 2010); he has taught at The New School and Columbia University and is a 2010 New York Foundation for the Arts fellow in fiction. Max Ludington Shelly Oria Visiting Professor B.A., Tel Aviv University; M.F.A., Sarah Lawrence College; fiction has appeared in McSweeney’s, Quarterly West, cream city review, and fivechapters; she is a recipient of the 2008 Indiana Review Fiction Prize among other awards and curates the monthly series “Sweet! Actors Reading Writers.” Her first novel is New York 1, Tel Aviv 0. Eric Rosenblum Visiting Instructor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., English, Ohio University; M.F.A., Creative Writing-Fiction, Syracuse University; fiction and non-fiction have appeared in Guernica Magazine, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Reader. Jonathan Santlofer Visiting Professor B.F.A., Boston University School of the Arts; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; is the author of five bestselling crime novels, short stories in many anthologies and collections, winner of the Nero Wolfe Award for Best Crime Novel, co-author/ contributor to The Dark End of the Street anthology (Bloomsbury USA, 2010); recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts grants, Rome Prize; and on the board of directors of Yaddo, the oldest arts community in the United States. Holly Tavel Visiting Instructor B.A., The New School; M.F.A., Brown University; recipient of a 2009 Fulbright Scholarship in Creative Writing to the Czech Republic. Johnny Temple Visiting Instructor B.A., Wesleyan College; publisher and editorin-chief of Akashic Books, an award-winning Brooklyn-based independent company dedicated to publishing urban literary fiction and political nonfiction; he won the 2013 Ellery Queen Award, the American Association of Publishers’ 2005 Miriam Bass Award for Creativity in Independent Publishing, and the 2010 Jay and Deen Kogan Award for Excellence in Noir Literature; teaches courses on the publishing business at Wilkes University and Wesleyan University and is the chair of the Brooklyn Literary Council, which works with Brooklyn’s borough president to plan the annual Brooklyn Book Festival; he also plays bass guitar in the band Girls Against Boys, which has toured extensively across the globe and released numerous albums on independent and major record companies; he has contributed articles and political essays to various publications, including The Nation, Publishers Weekly, AlterNet, Poets & Writers, and BookForum. Ellery Washington Associate Professor D.E.U.G., Sorbonne University, Paris, France; writing has appeared in the French publication Nouvelles Frontières, Out Magazine, The Berkeley Fiction Review and various literary anthologies, including Griots Beneath the Baobab (IBWA Press), Geography of Rage (RGB Publisher), and State by State (Harper Collins); he is a recipient of the PEN Center West–Rosenthal Emerging Voices Fellowship and the IBWA Best Short Fiction Award. 250 Liberal Arts Faculty 251 Graduate Admissions Uljana Wolf Visiting Instructor Magister, Humboldt University, Berlin; a German poet and translator based in Brooklyn and Berlin; she has published four books of poetry in German, and three chapbooks in English translated by Nathaniel Otting (Nor By Press), Susan Bernofsky (UDP) and Monika Zobel (Belladonna*); translates numerous English-language poets into German, among them Matthea Harvey, Erin Mouré, John Ashbery, Yoko Ono, and Cole Swensen, and she also translates into German from the Polish, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Slovenian, and Spanish; her own work has been translated into more than 13 languages. Thad Ziolkowski Coordinator, The Writing Program; Professor B.A., George Washington University; Ph.D., Yale University; author of a novel, Wichita, a memoir, On a Wave, and a collection of poems, Our Son, the Arson.; his journalism has appeared in the New York Times, Slate, Bookforum, Travel & Leisure, and the Village Voice; among other honors, he is the recipient of a fellowship from the John S. Guggenheim Foundation. Gina Zucker Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Washington University; M.F.A., The New School; has published fiction and nonfiction in magazines and journals such as Tin House, Salt Hill, The Chicago Sun-Times, The New York Post, Elle, Glamour, GQ, Rolling Stone, Redbook, and Cosmopolitan, as well as on various online journals. Her writing has been anthologized in two collections: ALTARED (Vintage, 2007) and BEFORE (Overlook Press, 2006); she is a recipient of a Vermont Studio Center Fellowship and a New School Merit Scholarship. Writing and Tutorial Center Randy Donowitz Director of the Writing and Tutorial Center Terri Bennett Tutor Priya Chandrasekoran Tutor, Writing, Thesis Applications are welcome from all Guided Campus Tours Graduate Admissions Assistant to the Director qualified students, regardless of Guided campus tours of the Brooklyn All applicants to graduate programs at Maura Conley age, sex, religion, race, color, creed, campus are scheduled Monday and Pratt must have received a bachelor’s Tutor, Writing, Thesis national origin, or disability. Admissions Friday at 10 AM, 12 PM, and 2 PM. Tuesday degree from an accredited institution Brian Cook committees base their decisions on and Thursday tours are scheduled at in the United States or have been a careful review of all credentials 10 AM and 2 PM. Schedule a campus tour awarded the equivalent of the submitted by the applicant. Although online at www.pratt.edu/visit, call the bachelor’s degree from an international Elizabeth (Lol) Fow admission standards at Pratt are high, Office of Admissions at 718.636.3779 or institution of acceptable standards. Adjunct Instructor, Tutor, Thesis, Graduate Writing extraordinary talent may sometimes 800.331.0834, or email us at visit@pratt. International students should see offset a lower grade point average or edu. Prospective graduate applicants or the international student section for test score. If a student is not accepted, students are encouraged to contact their additional requirements. this decision is not a negative reflection academic department directly to discuss Tutor, Writing, Thesis, Conversation on the student’s chances for successful the program and see the facilities. Joseph Herzfeld completion of similar studies at another Diane Cohen Tutor Amanda Davidson Tutor Dominica Giglio Tutor, Writing, Art History Heather Green Lecturer Intensive English, Tutor, Writing Kwame Heshimu Visiting Instructor, Tutor, Writing Cecilia Muhlstein Adjunct Assistant Professor, Tutor, Writing, Thesis Evan Rehill Visiting Instructor, Tutor, Writing, Thesis Zachary Slanger Deadline for Applications Completed applications for most institution, nor does it preclude Graduate Merit-Based Scholarships programs (including letters of reference, the student’s eventual admission to Incoming students will be evaluated by statement of purpose, transcripts, the Institute. their academic department for merit- and portfolio) should be submitted based scholarships upon acceptance. by January 5 for fall entrance. Some open weekdays from 9 AM to 5 PM from Beginning with fall 2014 incoming programs will accept applications after September through May, and from 9 AM students, these are renewable for the the deadline if there is room. See the to 4 PM during June, July, and August. duration of the program with a 3.0. There department requirements section is no application form. Assistantships are on page 253 for specific deadline awarded to some second-year students. information as well as for programs that The Office of Graduate Admissions is Tutor accept students in the spring. Applicants Vice President For Enrollment Graduate Admissions Counselor Office of Admissions Judith Aaron Russell Tyler Myrtle Hall, 2nd floor 718.636.3743 718.636.3551 Tel: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 [email protected] [email protected] Fax: 718.399.4242 www.pratt.edu/admissions Director of Graduate and Graduate Admissions Counselor International Admissions Brian Mulroney Questions? Young Joo Hah 718.230.6887 Ask Pratt’s “Virtual Advisor” 718.636.3683 [email protected] at www.pratt.edu/ask [email protected] 252 Graduate Admissions for the spring semester must apply by 2.Unofficial transcripts from all application deadline. It generally takes Mailing Documents: submit any print School of Architecture Willoughby Ave, Brooklyn, NY.) four to six weeks to receive the scores. documents in one envelope if possible Architecture First Professional M.Arch. The Pratt Institute code for TOEFL and mail to: (Fall entrance only) Brooklyn Campus institutions attended after graduation applicants). Applications received after from secondary school. Make sure your that time will be considered only if there manuscript contains the school name Make sure you contact your is 2669. Check www.toefl.org for is room in a particular program. and your name before uploading it to references and request a information on testing sites. the application. recommendation letter from them. Application Forms Graduate applicants are required to apply online at www.pratt.edu/ apply. Please use your full name on all International students must have all transcripts officially translated into English. (Both the unofficial original and the English translated version must be uploaded online at our application site.) Students who have studied documents and do not use nicknames or outside the U.S. in an educational middle names. structure different from the U.S. (three-year degrees, for example) are Application Requirements asked to submit a World Education The online application, hosted Services (WES) (www.wes.org) by College.net, as well as various requirements, may be found at www. pratt.edu/apply. Please note: Pratt’s application enables applicants to request recommendation letters and upload transcript(s) online. Writing samples, for those departments that require them, will be uploaded on the application. Visual portfolios are submitted at https://pratt.slideroom.com. See www. pratt.edu/apply for instructions on submitting your application and supporting documents. Candidates for graduate admission must submit the following: evaluation to expedite their application Let them know the process is online. b.Additional writing sample (required Applicants from China In order to provide an in-person by City and Regional Planning, Urban interview opportunity for all Chinese Placemaking and Management, applicants interested in Pratt Institute Sustainable Environmental Systems, Historic Preservation, Media Studies, Theory, Criticism, and History of Art, Design, Architecture, and Writing only) may be uploaded at the application site. c.Résumé (required for Design and to process your application faster, we have partnered with Vericant. Vericant will conduct video interviews and short writing samples with our applicants in Mainland China. Vericant does not evaluate candidates but, instead, posts the interviews online for Management; optional for all other our admissions team to review. The include translations. The documents graduate programs) should be Vericant interview will form part of must be officially translated into uploaded at the application site. your application package if you opt to or any other reputable education evaluation service, e.g., your embassy. 3.Supporting Documents: The following documents should be submitted electronically on the online application site at www.pratt.edu/apply. Please include the following: a.Two letters of recommendation d.Statement of purpose giving your long-range goals and interest in the chosen discipline and reason for applying to the programs. The be interviewed. Although the Vericant interview is not mandatory, we highly recommend it as it will give you an excellent statement of purpose, which must opportunity to showcase your skills and be 250–500 words, should be professionalism to our admissions team. uploaded to the application site. To learn more about Vericant and to schedule an interview, please visit 4.TOEFL score or IELTS score for from employers, professors, or international applicants whose others able to judge your potential native language is not English. Unless Office of Graduate Admissions Pratt Institute processing. WES evaluations do not English before submitting to WES 253 Office of Graduate Admissions, 200 October 1 (September 1 for international General Credentials Graduate Admissions Vericant’s website at www.students. vericant.com. Vericant provides interviews in the following cities: 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 [email protected] Tel: 718.636.3669 or 800.331.0834 Fax: 718.399.4242 If you plan to messenger your documents, please do so before December 24 or after January 2. Pratt closes for winter break during that time. We strongly suggest making photocopies of all mailed forms for your own records. Please use your full name on the application and on all documents and not nicknames or middle names so that we are able to match TOEFL scores, transcripts, etc. with your application. Department Requirements Graduate programs have different professional requirements. See the following section for particular programs’ requirements. Applicants must have received a bachelor’s degree from an institution in the U.S. that is accredited by a recognized regional association or have been awarded the equivalent of the bachelor’s degree from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applicants must present a portfolio providing evidence of their interest in architecture or their visual sensibility through the media of their choice— photography, drawing, essays, videos, etc. Portfolios must be submitted online at pratt.slideroom.com. The GRE is required. The GRE code is R2669. TOEFL of 550 (79 internet) is required. Architecture M.S. Post-Professional (Summer entrance only) Brooklyn Campus This program is three semesters, beginning in summer and ending in spring. Applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Architecture (five-year B.Arch.) from an accredited school of architecture or the international equivalent. Applicants should submit all materials as early as possible in order to for graduate study in the specific otherwise indicated under each Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen as well as program. Recommendation letters department, the minimum required Chengdu, Chongqing, Dalian, Guangzhou, decisions and, in the case of international nonrefundable $50 application fee at are submitted online. See www. TOEFL score is 550 (paper)/213 Hangzhou, Nanjing, Qingdao, Wuhan, students, to get the I-20. Ideally, www.pratt.edu/apply. (International pratt.edu/apply. (If your references (computer)/79 (Internet) and the Xi’an, Zhengzhou. applicants (particularly international students must pay a $90 application prefer not to submit online, please required IELTS score is 6.5. Please ask them to seal the envelope, applicants) should submit all materials, fee.) Graduate students are required make sure that you register for a sign across the flap, and mail their including portfolio, by December 1. to apply online. TOEFL or IELTS test that will enable references to Pratt at Pratt Institute, you to submit your scores by the Applications will be accepted after 1. Online graduate application with ensure enough time to review and make Graduate Admissions 254 Graduate Admissions the deadline of January 5 only if there Applications will be accepted after paper or report done for work depending Urban Placemaking and Management M.S. Facilities Management M.S. (Fall and is room. A digital portfolio should be the deadline until the program is full. on the applicant’s background and is (Fall and spring entrance) spring entrance) Manhattan Campus submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. TOEFL of 575 (90 internet) is required not required to be related to planning. Brooklyn campus A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) for international students. Applicants Applicants may also submit additional is required. must submit, in addition to the general material that they feel contributes to application requirements: (1) a resume their application, such as work sample or Architecture and Urban Design M.S. and (2) an extended piece of writing to portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional; Post-Professional. (Summer entrance support their application for advance neither is required. All documents but only) Brooklyn Campus study. The writing sample may be a term a visual portfolio should be uploaded to paper or report done for work depending the application. Visual portfolio should on the applicant’s background and is be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. This program is three semesters, beginning in summer and ending in spring. Applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Architecture (five-year B.Arch.) from an accredited school of architecture or the international equivalent. Applicants should submit all materials as early as possible in order to ensure enough time to review and make decisions and in the case of international students to get the I-20. Ideally, applicants (particularly international applicants) should submit all materials including portfolio by December 1. Applications will be accepted after not required to be related to historic preservation. Applicants may also Sustainable Environmental Systems submit additional material that they feel M.S. (Fall and spring entrance) contributes to their application, such Brooklyn campus as work sample or portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. All documents but a visual portfolio should be uploaded to the application. Visual portfolio should be submitted at pratt. slideroom.com. City and Regional Planning M.S. (Fall and spring entrance) Brooklyn Campus Applicants are welcome from all fields degree in architecture, construction of study. Applicants should have management, engineering, business, received their bachelor’s degree from or interior design. Applicants in other an accredited institution in the U.S., fields are eligible but may be required or the equivalent from an international to take non-credit courses in building institution of acceptable standards. technology unless they have acquired Applications will be accepted after equivalent knowledge through non- the deadline until the program is full. academic experience. The GRE or TOEFL of 575 (90 internet) is required GMAT is optional; neither is required. for international students. Applicants Applications will be accepted after the must submit, in addition to the general deadline if there is room. application requirements: (1) a resume Applicants are welcome from all fields and (2) an extended piece of writing to School of Art of study. Applicants should have support their application for advance Fine Art M.F.A. (Fall entrance only) received their bachelor’s degree from study. The writing sample may be a term Brooklyn Campus an accredited institution in the U.S or paper or report done for work depending the equivalent from an international on the applicant’s background and is institution of acceptable standards. not required to be related to planning. Applications will be accepted after Applicants may also submit additional the deadline until the program is full. material that they feel contributes to A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is their application, such as work sample or the deadline of January 5 only if there Applicants should have received a required for international students. portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional; is room. A digital portfolio should be bachelor’s degree from an accredited Applicants must submit, in addition to neither is required. All documents but submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. institution in the U.S., or the equivalent the general application requirements: a visual portfolio should be uploaded to A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) from an international institution of (1) a resume and (2) either a writing the application. Visual portfolio should is required. acceptable standards. Applicants sample or visual portfolio, depending be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. are welcome from all fields of study. on their background. The writing Historic Preservation M.S. (Fall and spring Applications will be accepted after sample or portfolio should indicate an entrance) Brooklyn Campus the deadline until the program is full. interest in or awareness of issues to be TOEFL of 575 (90 internet) is required addressed in this program. The GRE or for international students. Applicants GMAT is optional; neither is required. must submit, in addition to the general Applications will be accepted after the application requirements: (1) a resume deadline if there is room. All documents and (2) an extended piece of writing to but a visual portfolio should be uploaded support their application for advance to the application. Visual portfolio should study. The writing sample may be a term be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. Applicants are welcome from all fields of study. Applicants should have received their bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the U.S. or the equivalent from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applicants should have a bachelor’s Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited U.S. college, university or art/design school or the equivalent degree from a recognized international institution. It is not required that applicants have majored in studio art as undergraduates, only that they demonstrate their readiness for the challenges of M.F.A. studies. The 60-credit MFA program in Fine Arts comprises four consecutive 15-week fall/ spring semesters and begins in the fall. We welcome visits to Pratt at any time, and interested applicants (or potential applicants) should contact Nat Meade, Assistant Chair of Fine Arts, to schedule an appointment and tour of facilities/ studios (tel. 718.636.3792, email: [email protected]). 255 In addition to Pratt’s general graduate admissions requirements, applicants to the Fine Arts M.F.A. program must upload the following materials to pratt.slideroom.com: 1) a portfolio of up to 20 well-selected images (including detail views) of works made in the last 2-3 years; and 2) information for each image including the work’s title, dimensions, materials used, and date of completion. The Graduate Admissions Committee is looking for work that shows the artist’s conceptual and aesthetic direction as well as the potential for successful growth over the two years of the program. Candidates whose applications are completed and submitted by the January 5 deadline will be given priority consideration for merit scholarships. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required for non-native English speakers. Master of Fine Arts in Digital Arts (Fall entrance only) Brooklyn Campus Applicants should have an undergraduate degree or considerable background in the digital arts and should submit a strong visual portfolio demonstrating a conceptual and aesthetic focus. No reviews are done in person, but applicants are encouraged to arrange a visit to the department by calling 718.636.3411. Applicants must submit 12–15 pieces of work in traditional or digital media (1) online at https://pratt. slideroom.com. The graduate admissions review committee is interested in work 256 Graduate Admissions that reflects creativity, technical facility, Developmental Psychology; and course Design Management M.P.S. (fall entrance and the conceptual skills to develop a work in anatomy/kinesiology. Students only) Manhattan campus sophisticated body of work. A TOEFL must also have extensive experience score of 550 (paper)/213 (computer)/or in at least two idioms of dance, one of 79 (Internet) is required for which must be modern dance. Students international students. must have experience in body/mind modalities, such as meditation, yoga, Art Therapy and Creativity Development and body therapy. A written synopsis M.P.S. (Fall entrance for academic year of dance training and experience must program and spring entrance for low be submitted with the application. A residency program), Brooklyn Campus personal interview will be required, part Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, preferably in studio art or psychology. Applicants must have 18 undergraduate credits in studio art, to include course work in drawing, painting, and 3-D media to include ceramic/ clay work, and 12 credits in psychology, to include course work in General, of which will include movement. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 Internet is required of all international students. No TOEFL waivers will be issued unless student’s first language is English. Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. (Fall entrance only) Manhattan campus Applicants must demonstrate experience and interest in applying design to shaping our shared world. The program provides the strategic leadership skills to enable participants to manage, market, innovate, resource and run creative enterprises Graduate Admissions 257 Art And Design Education (Professional) post-secondary school. Candidates would contribute to and benefit from M.S. A 34 credit hour program open to must also have completed the following a collaborative learning environment. A applicants who already have their Initial workshops: Child Abuse Identification TOEFL of 575 (paper)/233 (computer)/90 Certification as a Teacher of Visual Arts Workshop; School Violence Prevention (internet) is required. and have prior teaching experience. and Intervention Workshop; and Training in Harassment, Bullying, Cyberbullying, Interior Design M.F.A. (fall entrance only) Art and Design Education and Discrimination in Schools: Prevention Brooklyn campus Advanced Certificate and Intervention. These workshops must and shape sustainable strategic A 24-credit hour program open to advantage for their firms. The required individuals with an M.F.A. degree or those statement of purpose should reflect the currently enrolled in the MFA program applicant’s personal vision of how this at Pratt. program fits in with his/her personal All applicants must submit a portfolio and professional goals including how the of 15 images of work (submit online at applicant hopes to use the skills he/she pratt.slideroom.com). The required acquires in this program. The statement written statement of purpose is given should be no more than 500 words or significant consideration. Applicants are two pages. Ideally, applicants should contacted for a Skype interview when be taken with a provider approved by NYSED. Passing scores on the following tests and assessments, Educating all Students (EAS); Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST); Content Specialty Test (CST) and Education Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA), are also required. School of Design Industrial Design M.I.D. (Fall entrance only) Brooklyn campus Applicants with an undergraduate degree in interior design or architecture may be eligible for the 60-credit two-year graduate program and must submit a portfolio to pratt.slideroom.com that demonstrates experience, sensibility and skills from previous education and/ or professional experience. Please make sure to attribute your specific contributions in group projects and/or professional work. have an undergraduate degree in one of all credentials have been received. A Personality, Abnormal and Developmental Applicants must demonstrate experience the design disciplines with a minimum of TOEFL of 600 or 100 Internet is required Applicants should submit a portfolio of an additional 24 credits is required psychology. A portfolio of 12 to 15 and interest in applying the arts to three years of professional experience. for international students. All applicants online at https://pratt.slideroom. for applicants whose undergraduate slides or digital images (submit online shaping our shared world. The program We also consider social media managers, are encouraged to schedule a visit to com, including both text (descriptions, backgrounds are unrelated to interior at pratt.slideroom.com) is required of provides the strategic leadership skills to engineers, material scientists and others the department by calling 718.636.3637 problem statement, etc.) and images or architecture but whose applications all applicants. Applicants are contacted enable participants to manage, market, whose work converges with design. A or emailing [email protected], or by (from development sketches to finished indicate a strong aptitude for graduate for an interview when all credentials innovate, resource and run a creative resume is also required. A TOEFL score attending one of our Open Houses. work). The portfolio must contain study. These students complete 84 credits have been received. A TOEFL score of enterprise and to use the arts to connect of 600 or 100 Internet is required of examples of drawing as a communication in three years. Applicants to the Qualifying 600 or 100 Internet is required of all culture, community and commerce. The international students. Applications will programs are New York State Education tool, three-dimensional objects, and a Program are not required to submit international students. No TOEFL waivers required statement of purpose should be accepted throughout the semester. Department (NYSED) “approved teacher basic understanding of graphic design, a portfolio, but these applicants are will be issued unless student’s first reflect the applicant’s personal vision The GMAT is optional and not required. preparation programs” and meet the executed through presentation and encouraged to submit a portfolio language is English. of how this program fits in with his/her of work from relevant disciplines such as The Art and Design Education A two-semester Qualifying Program new requirements for New York State layout. Showing both the process personal and professional goals including Art and Design Education M.S. (Initial/ Initial Teacher Certification in Visual and execution of a project, along fine arts, fashion, industrial design, Dance/Movement Therapy M.S. (Fall how the applicant hopes to use the Professional) (fall only) Brooklyn campus Arts PreK-12. However, in order to be with problem-solving and research, or communications design. This portfolio entrance for academic year program skills he/she acquires in this program. recommended for New York State Initial/ is recommended. Please include any must also be submitted to pratt.slideroom. and spring entrance for low residency The statement should be no more than Professional Certification in Visual additional materials that tell the story of com. We do not schedule interviews in program), Brooklyn Campus 500 words or two pages. A TOEFL score Arts PreK-12, candidates must also who you are as a creative person. The person but applicants are encouraged have completed a three-credit course M.I.D. program is highly collaborative and to arrange a visit to the department by in child and adolescent psychology includes students from a wide variety of calling 718.636.3630. A TOEFL score of and a three-credit course in a foreign backgrounds; therefore, in your written 575 (paper) or 90 (Internet) is required of language. These courses may be taken statement, discuss aspects of your international students. at Pratt or transferred from another personal character and background that Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, preferably in dance or psychology. Prerequisites are 12 credits of 600 or 100 Internet is required of international students. The GMAT is optional and not required. A 38-credit program open to individuals with a bachelor’s degree or the equivalent with a minimum of 25 credit hours in art, design and/or the history of art from an accredited higher education institution or the equivalent of the in psychology to include General, bachelor’s degree from an international Abnormal, Theories of Personality, and institution of acceptable standards. 258 Graduate Admissions Communications Design M.F.A. (Fall Package Design M.S. (Fall entrance only) School of Information and entrance only) Manhattan campus Manhattan campus Library Science Library and Information Science M.S. Graduate Admissions 259 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences a personal statement explaining the professional), Art History, and the Media Studies M.A. (Fall entrance only) selection of Pratt and motivation for combined Art History/Library Science Brooklyn campus the degree, a writing sample (5–10 and combined Art History/Fine Art pages) that demonstrates analytic and programs. Pratt’s Institutional Code communication skills, and recently is R2669. Applicants must be highly motivated Applicants should hold an undergraduate individuals who hold an undergraduate degree in graphic design or related degree in graphic design or related design fields such as industrial or interior design fields such as industrial or interior design, architecture, fine arts, or media Applicants must have a superior on analytical writing on any subject. design, architecture, fine arts, or media arts, but we welcome applications from scholastic record or otherwise give The sample should be uploaded to the arts. Exceptional individuals from other individuals with degrees/backgrounds evidence of ability to perform work online application. A TOEFL score of 100 disciplines may be admitted provisionally from non-design fields such as business, on the graduate level. Applicants Internet is required. and required to take design foundation liberal arts, and the sciences who are expected to offer evidence of courses. All applicants must submit a demonstrate a strong aptitude for maturity and leadership potential Writing M.F.A. (Fall entrance only) portfolio of work to be reviewed by an graduate study. A qualifying program of for the profession. An in-person or Brooklyn campus Admissions Committee composed of an additional six credits of prerequisite telephone interview may be required; faculty. Work included in the portfolio classes may be required for these applicants will be contacted by the may be personal work, professional applicants. All applicants must submit School of Information and Library assignments, or course assignments a portfolio of work to be reviewed by Science (SILS) if an interview is deemed done in an undergraduate or graduate an admissions committee composed of necessary. Applicants may apply for program. Your portfolio should contain faculty. Work included in the portfolio non-matriculated status and take up to between 12 and 20 examples of your may be personal work, professional six credits. International students whose best work in traditional or digital assignments, or course assignments first language is not English must submit media. In addition to the portfolio, the done in an undergraduate or graduate a TOEFL score of at least 82 Internet. written statement of purpose is given program. Your portfolio should contain Students who are not international but significant consideration. The intent between 12 and 20 examples of your whose first language is not English must of this portfolio review is for you to best work in traditional or digital media. submit the TOEFL or GRE. Students may demonstrate creative potential and In addition to the portfolio, the written continue to apply after the January 5th provide enough information about statement of purpose is given significant deadline until the department is full. SILS you to determine whether or not this consideration. The intent of this portfolio accepts applications on a rolling basis. program is appropriate for you. Most review is for you to demonstrate important, the Admissions Committee creative potential and the potential Library and Information Science will determine if you demonstrate the to successfully complete the master’s Advanced Certificates (Fall, summer, and potential to successfully complete the degree program in Communications or spring entrance) Manhattan campus M.F.A. in Communications Design. Submit Package Design. Submit online at https:// online at https://pratt.slideroom.com. pratt.slideroom.com. For international For international applicants whose first applicants whose first language is not language is not English, a minimum TOEFL English, a minimum TOEFL score of 575 score of 575 (paper)/90 (internet) (paper)/233 (computer)/90 (Internet) is required. is required. (Fall, spring, and summer entrance) Manhattan campus Applicants must hold a master’s degree in library and information science. A TOEFL score of 600 (250 computer, 100 Internet) is required. Applicants must submit 10–20 pages of relevant writing sample(s), with emphasis Applicants must submit 10 to 20 pages of relevant writing samples of any genre with an emphasis on creative work. We also welcome cross-genre writing and writing that exists in relation to theory, activism, performance, and visual art. Upload your writing sample with your online application. All applicants must follow the standard admissions process for graduate programs at Pratt. A TOEFL score of 100 internet is required History of Art and Design M.S. (Fall entrance only) Brooklyn campus Applicants must demonstrate the skill of observation and description, analysis and criticism, and the potential to successfully complete the coursework and to design and present a graduate thesis of merit. Undergraduate study in art and/or design history is encouraged, and at least an introduction in those fields should be included in the completed undergraduate curriculum. The application package must contain earned scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE code R2669). Applicants for whom English is not their first language must submit the results of the TOEFL Examination and score at least 600 (250 computer or 100 Internet.) General Requirements Deficiencies in Undergraduate Preparation Accepted International Students All enrolling international students need to submit International Student forms to the Office of International Affairs. International Students include students who need an I-20 for the F1 student visa as well as international students in other immigration statuses. Students will not be permitted to register for classes Domestic applicants with deficiencies in until the forms are submitted. (U.S. their undergraduate preparation of not permanent residents are not considered more than six credits may be admitted, international students.) at the discretion of the department, on a nonmatriculating basis for not more than 18 graduate credits. These students may become matriculated upon completion of at least eight graduate credits with a grade of B or better. Applicants with deficiencies of more than six credits should apply as special students on the undergraduate level and may apply on the graduate level once these deficiencies are satisfactorily removed. Graduate Record Examination Requesting the I-20 To request the I-20, first submit your enrollment deposit to the Office of Admissions. Then you will receive your OneKey, which is a login and password. This can take up to seven days to receive. After you receive your OneKey, go to MyPratt at www.pratt.edu/mypratt. Log in with your OneKey. Under Pratt Resources, go to Web Services, then International Student Forms. Submit your I-20 Request online and print out the PDFs to send with Although Pratt Institute does not require the supplemental documents by express the Graduate Record Examination for mail directly to the Office of International most programs, students who already Affairs. For information, go to www.pratt. have taken this examination should edu/oia/I20. For questions, write to have the results forwarded to the [email protected]. Office of Graduate Admissions. The GRE is required for Architecture (first 260 Graduate Admissions Enrolling International Students for Health Requirements Admission to Pratt All new students need to submit In addition to providing the TOEFL documentation, in English, of or IELTS, for admission to Pratt, all all immunizations (including two international students who enroll whose measles, one mumps, and one rubella first language is not English are required immunization received after the first to take an English examination before birthday) to the health services office they register for classes. Students who prior to registration. All students should do not pass will be required to complete submit the completed Health Form, Intensive English at Pratt. Students who parts A and B. The form is available in are otherwise acceptable but have the Enrollment Guide and online at the low English scores on the TOEFL may Graduate Accepted Student page at be accepted provisionally and may be www.pratt.edu/apply. All students are required to take only English classes required by Pratt Institute to carry health until they achieve the TOEFL score insurance providing acceptable coverage. required by their department, at which Some countries have health insurance time they may enroll in their degree plans that are valid in the United States. courses. These students will receive an Graduate Admissions 261 Nonmatriculated/Special Students Deferring Non-matriculated (non-degree) students Students may request a deferral to the may take courses for graduate credit, next available term by emailing Young Hah providing the department approves at [email protected]. Only one deferral the registration, but they may not be is permitted. The deposit must be The number of credits toward the admitted to candidacy for a degree submitted for a deferral to be approved. master’s degree that may be transferred without first gaining admission to a from another recognized graduate graduate degree program. No more institution varies within the schools than a total of 18 credits may be taken and programs, but generally it will not by a student with non-matriculated/ exceed 25 percent of the total credits special status (no more than six credits required. The First-Professional Master per semester). The non-degree form and of Architecture Program has a residency procedures can be found at www.pratt. requirement of 66 percent, which edu/apply. to enroll in the spring semester are was accepted for admission but never required to make a deposit of US $500 registered must reapply in writing to the by December 1 or two weeks following Office of Graduate Admissions. acceptance, whichever comes later. The full amount of this nonrefundable deposit is deducted from the student’s first-semester tuition. The US $500, if not paid online, must be in the form of an international money order or via credit card for international students and can be paid on the phone by calling graduate admissions. A space will not be held for students who do not send the deposit. Other Graduate Admissions Services Readmission Transfer Credits permits 33 percent of transfer credits. Students interested in receiving graduate Mailing Address Graduate students must apply for transfer credits should arrange for an Graduate Office of Admissions If a student cannot present evidence readmission if they were not in appointment with their department Pratt Institute I-20 for English only. Students who are of acceptable coverage, he or she will attendance for two consecutive chair. Credit will be allowed for graduate 200 Willoughby Avenue accepted with a possibility of needing be required to subscribe to a health semesters (excluding summer session). courses that are appropriate to the Brooklyn, NY 11205 English language study indicated on their insurance plan provided by the Institute. Master of Science students in the curriculum at Pratt and that have been I-20 and their acceptance letter will To request a waiver of health insurance Graduate School of Art and Design who passed with a grade of B or better. [email protected] be tested for English when they arrive or enroll for health insurance through attend four consecutive summer sessions Transfer credit is provisional until Tel: 718.636.3669 or 800.331.0834 at Pratt. Students who need to take Pratt, use the online waiver process do not have to apply for readmission the student has completed at least Fax: 718.399.4242 English will take it with their academic found online at www.pratt.edu/health. each summer. If they do not attend one 15 semester hours of credit at Pratt session of the four sessions offered, they Institute. Credit for courses taken, with must apply for readmission. Students permission, at another graduate school applying for readmission must pay a $50 while matriculated at Pratt is limited to a readmission application fee. A graduate maximum of six credits. program unless they do not meet the required score. In calculating their expenses, students should budget the tuition equivalent of two credits per semester for Intensive English courses. TOEFL requirements: Most departments require a TOEFL score of 550 (paper)/213 (computer)/ 79 (Internet), although some require 600 (paper)/250 (computer)/100 (Internet). Notification and Deposit Applicants for fall with complete applications by the deadline are generally notified of the decision of the admissions committee by April 1. Applicants for spring are notified by November 15. Accepted students who plan to enroll in the fall semester are required to make a deposit of US $500 by April 15 or two weeks following acceptance, whichever comes later. Deposits should be paid online at https://payments. pratt.edu. Accepted students who plan student who wishes to register after an absence of two or more consecutive semesters, excluding summer session, must apply to the Office of the Registrar for readmission. The form is available at www.pratt.edu/admissions/apply. Deadline dates for application are August 15 for the fall semester, December 15 for the spring semester, and May 1 for the summer session. A graduate student who Withdrawal After Deposit Applicants who decide not to enroll after submitting a deposit must notify the admissions office by email (yhah@pratt. edu) or mail as soon as possible. Deposits are not refundable. Title IX Statement It is the policy of Pratt Institute to comply with Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits discrimination (including sexual harassment and sexual violence) based on sex in the Institute’s educational programs and activities. Title IX also prohibits retaliation for asserting claims of sex discrimination. Pratt Institute has designated its Title IX Coordinator as Mai McDonald Graves to coordinate Pratt Institute’s compliance with and response to inquiries concerning Title IX. Contact Information: Pratt Institute Disability Resource Center 215 Willoughby Avenue (WH-1) Suite 117 Brooklyn, NY 11205 Tel: 718.802.3123 Fax: 718.399.4544 A person may also file a written complaint with the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights regarding an alleged violation of Title IX by visiting www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ ocr/complaintintro.html or calling 800.421.3481. 262 263 Financial Aid Pratt offers various kinds of assistance, Currently Enrolled Graduate Students ranging from academic merit-based Students who are interested in applying scholarships to assistantships and loans. for federal aid must submit the FAFSA to the Department of Education. The FAFSA Entering Graduate Students should be filed no later than March 1 if Graduate students who are interested in the student wishes to be advised of aid applying for federal aid must complete in a timely fashion. Documents such as and submit the Free Application for IRS tax transcripts may be requested. If Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) to the requested, they must be submitted by Department of Education electronically May 15. by March 1. File electronically using the FAFSA or The Office of Financial Aid, upon receipt of student grades, evaluates the renewal application at www.fafsa.ed.gov eligibility of each applicant and sends or Pratt’s website. Do not submit more email notifications of the awards to than one application! continuing students in early summer, if The FAFSA should be submitted no the student has applied by March 1. later than March 1 if the student wishes to receive timely notification of financial Grant and Scholarship Programs aid. Other documents, such as federal Graduate Scholarships tax transcripts, may be requested and must be submitted by May 15. If financial need has been established and adequate funding is available, students are considered for federal loan programs. Graduate students are not eligible for Federal Pell Grants and Federal Supplemental Pratt Restricted Awards and Scholarships What is the purpose of the program? To provide funds derived from Institute endowments and restricted gifts that are granted to students according to the wishes of the donor and on the recommendation of the appropriate dean or departmental chair. How much are the awards? The awards range from $1,000 and up for the academic year, for one year only. Who can receive this money? Full-time students who have applied for aid and have demonstrated financial need and are making satisfactory academic progress. Some awards are based on academic merit only, What is the purpose of the program? and all are based on departmental To provide funds to full-time students recommendations. based on merit. These are awarded by academic departments; all incoming How much do I have to pay back? students are considered. There is no No repayment is required. application form. They are renewable with a 3.0 cumulative GPA. Educational Opportunity Grants (FSEOGs), and Subsidized Stafford Loans. Manhattan Campus Brooklyn Campus HEOP 144 West 14th Street, 3rd Floor 200 Willoughby Avenue Assistant Director of Financial Aid New York, NY 10011 Myrtle Hall, Room 6 Savior Wright Brooklyn, NY 11206 [email protected] Senior Financial Aid Counselor 718.636.3563 Sonya Chestnut Financial Aid Counselor [email protected] Leonor Santillana 212.647.7788 [email protected]@pratt.edu 718.399.4491 Office of Financial Aid www.pratt.edu/financing www.pratt.edu/financial-aid 264 Financial Aid How do I apply? Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients There are no special application forms for restricted and endowed scholarships. Each department determines its own application process. Recipients are selected by deans or department chairs based on criteria established by donors. These awards are made for one year only and are based on the availability of funds in any given year. Pratt Assistantships/Fellowships What is the purpose of the program? To provide funds and professional experience to help meet a student’s costs from institutional sources. How much are the awards? The assistantship awards range from approximately $500 to $7,200 for the academic year and are paid directly to the student and are not deductible from the Bursar’s bill. Fellowships are credited to the Bursar’s bill. Who can receive this money? Graduate students with demonstrated proficiency in their area of study. How much do I have to repay? No monetary repayment is required; students must complete assigned tasks. How do I apply? Through your department chair. For assistantships or fellowships to be awarded in successive years, the student must make satisfactory progress toward a degree and show financial need. Students must not owe any refunds on Federal Pell Grants or any other awards paid, and not be in default of any student loan. Other Pratt Programs Pratt Student Employment Program Student employment is funded entirely by Pratt Institute and offers an opportunity for qualified students to work part time on campus. Applicants for student employment must complete and submit all required financial aid documents in order to qualify. These funds are paid directly to students for campus job assignments and are not deductible from the Bursar’s bill. Students are responsible for submitting signed time sheets electronically to the Office of Student Employment. Employment forms such as the W4, I-9, and Employment Authorization Form must be completed prior to working or getting paid. Federal Programs Federal College Work-Study (FCWS) What Is FCWS? Financial Aid 265 Application Procedures responsible for submitting signed time Origination/Insurance Fees year, the student is considered half All students must submit the FAFSA sheets electronically to the Office of Borrowers pay an origination fee of time for financial aid; and the third, the before a determination of eligibility will Student Employment. Employment forms 1.073 percent. Interest rate is fixed at student must be registered for at least be made. Eligible candidates will be such as the W4, I-9, and Employment 5.41 percent, but may change July 1. six credits in the major or electives to be notified by the Office of Financial Aid of Authorization Form must be submitted job assignments and the forms required prior to working. before initiating employment. Federal Unsubsidized Stafford Loans Selection of Recipients and Allocation of Awards The applicant must be enrolled full time (nine credits) at Pratt. Pratt makes employment reasonably available to all eligible students who demonstrate need as per federal guidelines. In the event that more students are eligible for FCWS than there are funds available, preference is given to students who have greater financial need and who must earn a part of their educational expenses. Schedule Pratt arranges jobs on campus, for up to 20 hours per week. Factors considered by the Office of Financial Aid in determining whether the applicant may work under this program are financial need, class schedule, academic progress, and specific skills. Level of salary must be at least the minimum wage; maximum wage is dependent on the nature of the job and the applicant’s qualifications. Students may work for only one department each semester. Federal College Work-Study is a federally These loans have the same terms and conditions as Stafford Loans, except that the borrower is responsible for interest that accrues during deferment periods (including in-school) and during the sixmonth grace period. Interest may be deferred while in school but interest will be capitalized if the student requests a deferment. Program is open to students who may not qualify for subsidized Federal Stafford Loans. (Combined total cannot exceed Stafford limits.) Loan Schedule Annual Loan Limit: $20,500—graduate and professional students (unsubsidized) The annual loan limits for students enrolled in a program of study for less than one academic year in length are prorated. Aggregate Loan Limits: $138,500— undergraduate and graduate combined. 1. All student loans will be disbursed in two installments, one each semester. 2.A percentage (approximately 1 percent) eligible for aid. Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients least a half-time student, the borrower Master Promissory Note (MPN) to apply must make formal arrangements for a Federal Direct Loan (subsidized and with the Department of Education unsubsidized). The MPN is an application to begin repayment. The following for the Stafford Loan Programs and is regulations apply: valid for 10 years from the time that you 1. The minimum monthly payment will originally submit. Please keep in mind that you will still have to submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) each year by March 1. The Office of Financial Aid will 10 years. 3.The maximum period of a loan from date of the original note may not exceed 15 years, excluding authorized deferments of payments. any changes are made to your financial aid, a new letter with the most current information will be emailed to your Pratt email address. You should keep all the letters you receive from the Office of Financial Aid in order to keep track of any award revisions. Along with your electronic award letter you will be able to gain access to an electronic master promissory note (MPN). Prior borrowers may have different interest and repayment terms based on when they borrowed their first loan. All borrowers must attend school at least half time to be eligible to borrow any type of loan. Students who offers qualified students a chance to Satisfactory academic progress must earn money to help pay for educational be maintained. Students must not owe expenses. These funds are paid directly any refunds on Federal Pell Grants or to students for job assignments and are any other awards paid, and not be in the student is considered full time for not deductible from the Institute’s bill. default on any student loan. Students are financial aid purposes only; the second origination fee. 2.The maximum repayment period is aid award letter of your loan eligibility. If Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients from each disbursement as an be $50 plus interest. notify you via your electronic financial assisted employment program that of the loan amount will be deducted Six months after ceasing to be at All borrowers are required to submit a are registered for Thesis in Progress (TIP) also have a minimum attendance requirement. The first year of TIP, 4.Repayment in whole or part may be made at any time without penalty. Disbursement and Refund of Credit Balances The Institute credits all loan disburse ments for graduate level students after the add/drop period of each semester. Your loan funds will be credited only if you file all your required applications in a timely fashion. If your loan funds do not credit to your account as expected, please contact your financial aid counselor or contact the Office of Financial Aid at 718.636.3599 for assistance. If your loan amounts exceed your balance, then you will be written a refund check 14 days after this credit has been created on your account. All refund checks are mailed to students at the address submitted to the Registrar’s Office. 266 Financial Aid If you have any questions regarding • Students receiving federal and Pratt program type shown on the chart your refund checks, please feel free financial aid who drop credits will requires that as you begin each to contact the Bursar’s Office at be subject to adjustments in their 718.636.3799. financial aid package. Sources of Outside Scholarships Review Policies In addition to the Financial Aid The Office of Financial Aid will Information Center notices of periodically review the GPA and number outside scholarships and scholarship of credits earned by each financial aid workshops held each month on campus, recipient using his or her academic the Financial Aid Office has lists of transcript. Credits earned include agencies to which you may also apply. only those for courses with A through (Contact Peggy West-Barton-Feagin at D grades. 718.399.4489 for more information.) A student not meeting these Financial Aid 267 Out-of-State Programs Virgin Islands Selection of Recipient and Other state or commonwealth Board of Education Allocation of Awards term shown: scholarship programs and where to PO Box 11900 To be eligible, the applicant must: • You must have earned at least the apply: St. Thomas, VI 00801 1. Be at least one-fourth American required number of credits listed; and • You must have achieved the minimum GPA. Both of these requirements must be met before loan certification can occur. Standards of Degree Progress Master’s Degree/Post-Master’s Certificate 340.774.4546 Maryland Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 2.Be an enrolled member of a tribe, Higher Education Commission Washington, D.C. band, or group recognized by the State Scholarship Administration Washington, D.C. Grant Program Bureau of Indian Affairs. Jeffrey Building Educational Assistance Office 16 Francis Street, 219 2100 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue enrollment at Pratt, pursuing at least a Annapolis, MD 21401-1700 Suite 401 four-year degree. 410-260-4500 Washington, D.C. 20020 202.698.2400 Rhode Island 3.Be enrolled in or accepted for 4.Demonstrate financial need. standards will be placed on financial Term GPA Credits Rhode Island State Scholarship The above state and district programs Veterans Administration Academic Progress and Pursuit aid warning for one semester. After the 1 na 0 560 Jefferson Boulevard are available only to residents of the Educational Benefits Financial Assistance Standards grades for the warning semester are 2 3.00 12 Warwick, RI 02886 appropriate state or district. Pratt knows Application forms are available at all calculated, the student’s transcript will 3 3.00 21 800.922.9855 of no other states that make awards to Veterans Administration (VA) offices, be reviewed. If the student fails to meet 4 3.00 30 students at a New York college. active duty stations, and American the standards, all of his or her financial 5 3.00 39 Vermont Standards of Academic Progress for Determining Eligibility for Pratt and Federal Financial Aid Pratt applies minimum academic progress standards to all students receiving Pratt aid, federal aid, and state aid (including loans). Criteria Measurable satisfactory academic progress for a full-time graduate student means: • The student must complete a minimum of nine credits each semester (TAP recipients must complete a minimum of 12 credits each semester). • The student’s cumulative grade point average (GPA) must not fall below 3.0. embassies. Completed forms are submitted to the nearest VA office. (See aid will be revoked beginning with the 6 3.00 48 Vermont Student Assistance Corporation United States Bureau of Indian Affairs semester following the warning semester. 7 3.00 57 PO Box 2000 Aid to Native Americans Higher Winooski, VT 05404 Education Assistance Program 800.645.3177 Application Procedures State Education Agencies Application forms may be obtained from Alaska the Bureau of Indian Affairs office. An Alaska Commission to study without Title IV aid if the application is necessary for each year on Post-Secondary Education department grants approval. In this of study. An official needs analysis from 707 A Street, Suite 206 instance, the student must apply and be Pratt’s Office of Financial Aid also is Anchorage, AK 99567 approved for an alternative loan prior to required each year. 907.269.7973 Once the student meets the minimum standards, he or she may reapply for financial aid. A student may choose to continue getting registration approval from the Bursar’s Office. Standards of Academic Progress for Determining Eligibility for Student Aid The following chart lists Pratt Institute’s standards of degree progress for determining eligibility. Note that each 8 3.00 66 9 3.00 75 Veterans Assistance under Registration.) Each first-time applicant must obtain tribal enrollment certification Arkansas from the bureau agency or tribe which Student Loan Guarantee Foundation records enrollment for the tribe. of Arkansas 10 Turtle Creek Lane Little Rock, AR 72202 800.622.3446 Financial Aid 269 Dream Big Endowed Scholarship Amy C. Koe Endowed Scholarship Frank O. Price Scholarship The Dream Big Endowed Scholarship The Amy C. Koe Endowed Scholarship This fund was established by friends for restricted and endowed scholarships. awards one annual partial scholarship is awarded to needy and deserving of Professor Frank O. Price, longtime 4 Barrell Court Recipients are selected by deans or to an undergraduate in the School students in the School of Architecture teacher in the School of Architecture, Concord, NH 03302 department chairs based on criteria of Architecture based on need and with demonstrated financial need. and is awarded to a worthy student. 603.255.6612 established by the donors. These merit, with financial need as the awards are generally made to continuing primary consideration. Charles Macchi Scholarship Edward Re Jr. Scholarship The Charles Macchi Scholarship provides This scholarship was established by 268 Financial Aid California New Hampshire Restricted Grants and Scholarships California Student Aid Commission New Hampshire Higher Education There are no special application forms 3300 Vinsandel Drive Assistance Foundation Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 888.224.7268 Connecticut State Scholarship Program Commission New Jersey students in the spring semester for for Higher Education New Jersey Higher Education one year only, and are based on the The G+B+M Architectural Scholarship one or more full or partial scholarships Professor Edward D. Re Jr. in order to PO Box 1329 Assistance Authority availability of funds in any given year. The G+B+M Architectural Scholarship to academically qualified students in the aid students studying in the School of Hartford, CT 06115 PO Box 545 Notification of scholarship and fellowship provides a need-based scholarship to an School of Architecture. Architecture and the Department of 860.713.6543 Trenton, NJ 08625 availability will be made by individual undergraduate architecture student. 800.792.8670 departments in the spring of each year. Delaware Post-Secondary New York School of Architecture Education Commission New York State Higher Education Carvel State Office Building Services Corporation 820 North French Street, 5th Floor 99 Washington Avenue Wilmington, DE 19801 Albany, NY 12255 800.292.7935 888.697.4372 Delaware Florida Pennsylvania Bureau of Student Financial Assistance Pennsylvania Higher Education 325 W. Gaines Street Assistance Agency Tallahassee, FL 32399.0400 State Grant and Special Programs Division 850.245.0414 1200 North 7th Street Harrisburg, PA 17102 Illinois 800.692.7392 Illinois Student Assistance Commission 500 West Monroe, 3rd Floor Texas Springfield, IL 62704 Texas Higher Education 800.899.4722 Coordinating Board Collaborative Endowment for Architecture/Peter Schreter Endowed Scholarship This scholarship endowment provides recognition and financial assistance to undergraduate students enrolled at Pratt Institute in the School of Architecture. Patrick F. Corvo ’88 Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established by the family and friends of Patrick Corvo, class of 1988, in his memory. An award is given to a student entering the final year of study in the School of Architecture who has demonstrated a serious commitment to the field of architecture. Construction Management. David Mandl Memorial Scholarship Goodstein Development Corporation A scholarship established in memory of Donna and Martin Rich ’63 Scholarship in Honor of Jack and David Mandl, the David Mandl Memorial Architecture Travel Fund Florence Goodstein Scholarship supports deserving and This fund provides financial assistance Established by Pratt alumnus academically qualified students in the to students who are accepted into the Steven H. Goodstein, class of 1966, in School of Architecture. “Pratt In Rome” travel program. benefits students majoring Patrons Program Scholarship Lee and Norman Rosenfeld Award in Construction Management. A scholarship established by Pratt The Lee and Norman Rosenfeld memory of his parents, this scholarship family member Edmund S. Twining III, Award provides monetary awards to Benjamon Goldberger Memorial the Patrons Program Scholarship professionally motivated, academically Scholarship provides support to outstanding qualified, and/or deserving The Benjamin Goldberger Memorial architecture students. undergraduate students in the School of Architecture who have completed Scholarship was established by Beatrice Goldberger, class of 1934, in honor of Planning Scholarship one year of study. Preference is given to her father, Benjamin Goldberger, class The Planning Scholarship fund was students who are honest and honorable, of 1909. established for students in the graduate as established by academic leadership program in City and Regional Planning. and character, and who will use the funds to perpetuate their educational, creative, William Randolph Hearst Scholarship The William Randolph Hearst Scholarship Pratt Planning Alumni Scholarship and professional goals. 1200 E. Anderson Lane is a fund established by the William A fund established by Pratt Planning Massachusetts Austin, TX 78752 Randolph Hearst Foundation for students Alumni for students in the Graduate Clyde Lincoln Rounseville Scholarship American Student Assistance Corporation 800.242.3062 in architecture. Financial need and Planning Program in the School The Clyde Lincoln Rounseville Scholarship 100 Cambridge Street academic merit being equal, preference of Architecture. is awarded to deserving students in the Boston, MA 02114 is given to minority students. 800.999.9080 School of Architecture. Financial Aid 271 Robert F. Calrow Memorial Scholarship Jacques and Natasha Gelman Elaine Gluckman Popowitz A scholarship fund established by Trudi Endowed Scholarship Memorial Scholarship of Sandra K. Benjamin-Hannibal, Calrow in memory of her husband, A scholarship established by Jacques The Elaine Gluckman Popowitz Memorial Lucinda Veikos, class of 1992, the Lucinda awarded to two first-year students Robert F. Calrow, a well-known and Natasha Gelman, awarded to Scholarship was established in memory Veikos Endowed Scholarship benefits who are in the process of completing painter and inspirational teacher. This undergraduate students in studio of Elaine Gluckman, class of 1981, a provides aid to students in the School a deserving student in the School their Foundation Year studies and are scholarship is awarded annually to a arts who demonstrate exceptional faculty member of the Graduate Art of Art, School of Design, or School of Architecture. candidates or finalists in the Foundation Fine Arts major on the basis of merit talent in drawing or painting. With the Therapy Department. The scholarship Art Competition. and need. level of creative merit being equal, is awarded annually to a second-year preference is given to those of Mexican student in the Graduate Creative Arts or Latino descent. Therapy Department who has exhibited 270 Financial Aid Charles and Marie Schade Lucinda Veikos Endowed Scholarship Sandra K. Benjamin-Hannibal Scholarship Endowed Scholarship A fund established by William and A scholarship established in honor A scholarship established by Charles Elizabeth Pedersen in memory of and Marie Schade, the Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship of Architecture who demonstrate good academic standing as well as Veikos Travel Scholarship for Architecture financial need. Study and Travel Raymond and Mabel Bolton Art Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen A scholarship established by Kohn and Design Scholarship Cella Memorial Scholarship Thomas F. and Tess L. Schutte Pederson Fox Associates in memory of A scholarship fund established in honor The Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Anthony Gennarelli Memorial Endowed Scholarship Lucinda Veikos, class of 1992, for travel of Raymond and Mabel Bolton for Cella Memorial Scholarship was Sculpture Award Named in commemoration of President abroad for a deserving student in the deserving students in the School of Art established by Robert and Warren Cella The Anthony Gennarelli Memorial Charles Pratt, Jr. Award for Excellence and Mrs. Schutte and in honor of the School of Architecture. and the School of Design. and aids students in the School of Art Sculpture Award is awarded to students in Photography and the School of Design who actively enrolled at Pratt Institute who are Established by Pratt Institute Trustee promote the arts in their community. studying sculpture. The award is based Mike C. Pratt in honor of his father, the on artistic and academic merit, as well as Charles Pratt, Jr. Award for Excellence in quality of student work. Photography is distributed annually to a President’s 20th anniversary at the outstanding scholarship, integrity, and concern for others. institution, the Thomas F. and Tess L. Winnemore Endowed Scholarship Alma H. Borgfeldt Scholarship Schutte Endowed Scholarship provides Established by Augustine E. Winnemore, A bequest by Alma H. Borgfeldt for scholarship support for undergraduate this scholarship is awarded to scholarships for worthy female students John A. Dreves Art and students in the schools of Art, Design outstanding students in the School to be selected by the dean of the School Design Scholarship and Architecture. of Architecture. of Art. The scholarships are awarded to A scholarship established from the Estate Haskell Travel Scholarship at Pratt Institute and is based on a applicants who have majored in the study of John A. Dreves, class of 1935, the John The Haskell Travel Scholarship was combination of academic merit and of art in a public high school located in A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship established for students in the School of financial need. Kings County (Brooklyn) and who reside provides support for students in the Art and the School of Design for travel in Kings County (Brooklyn). School of Art and the School of Design abroad within two years of graduation. Vincent A. Stabile Endowed Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Vincent A. Stabile, class of 1940, the Vincent A. Stabile Endowed Scholarship benefits students in the School of Architecture. Gihei and Sato Takeuchi Memorial Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by John M. Takeuchi in honor of his parents, the Gihei and Sato Takeuchi Memorial Endowed Scholarship is awarded to a full-time student in her or his second year studying in the School of Architecture, who shows promise through academic achievement. School of Art Art Students’ Association Scholarship A fund raised by the Art Students’ Association over a period of years, this scholarship is awarded by competition. Mary Pratt Barringer Scholarship A scholarship established by Mary Pratt Barringer, awarded annually to five incoming Delaware College of Art and Design students to Pratt, selected by a joint committee of representatives from both schools. The Reggie Behl Drawing Award The Reggie Behl Drawing Award provides a financial award annually to a student in the School of Art who exhibits excellence in drawing. student in the Photography Department Mary Buckley and Joseph Parriott Walter Rogalski Scholarship The Walter Rogalski scholarship is who demonstrate financial need. Steve Horn Art and Design Award awarded annually to a graduate Fine Arts Endowed Scholarship Faith Ellis Art Financial Aid Scholarship The Steve Horn Art and Design Award is student on the basis of merit and need. Established by Mary Buckley, a former A fund established by Faith Ellis, class a scholarship established by Steve Horn, The recipient is selected by a faculty professor at Pratt Institute who taught of 1939, in memory of her son Rolan awarded annually to one outstanding committee that reviews candidates in the Foundation Art Department, this R. Ellis, the Faith Ellis Art Financial Aid student studying Photography, Film, or who exemplify the creative ability that scholarship is awarded to Foundation Scholarship allows students to access other media arts. characterized the work of former Pratt students who exhibit excellence in color special training as determined by the Art work and is intended to encourage work Education Department. in that discipline. professor Walter Rogalski. Anna K. Rust Endowed Scholarship for Students in Art and Design A scholarship for students in the Schoolof Art and the School of Design established by Leo Lewis Rust in memory of his wife, Anna Klenke Rust, class of 1938. Financial Aid 272 Financial Aid Charles and Marie Schade James Seeman Endowed Scholarship Dorothy Toole Scholarship Endowed Scholarship Established by the family and friends Created through a bequest in the A scholarship established by Charles of interior design leader and muralist will of Mrs. Dorothy Rodgers Toole, and Marie Schade, the Charles and James Seeman, this scholarship provides class of 1931, the Dorothy Toole Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship resources for dedicated Painting Scholarship is for students who provides aid to students in the School students, with preference given to those demonstrate unusual interest and of Art, School of Design, or School who recently moved to the United States. talent in the field of fashion illustration. of Architecture who demonstrate good academic standing as well as Monica Shay Scholarship Max Weber Scholarship financial need. Established with gifts made in memory of A gift given by Mrs. Max Weber and Professor Monica Shay, this scholarship Miss Frances Weber in memory of the Dorothy G. Schmidt Scholarship is awarded to a deserving student who well-known artist who was a member A scholarship established in honor of meets the following criteria: a graduate of the class of 1900. It provides annual Dorothy G. Schmidt, used for elementary student in the Department of Design scholarship aid for students in the School and junior high school teachers seeking Management and Arts and Cultural of Art and the School of Design. courses at Pratt for professional Management with demonstrated financial enhancement in their work of teaching need or dedicated and exemplary service Willard Scholarship art and related subjects in the public and commitment to the Department The Willard Scholarship was established schools of Brooklyn. The scholarship is to of Design Management and Arts and to aid students in the School of Art and be awarded on the basis of need. Other Cultural Management. the School of Design who are graduates factors being equal, females shall be given preference. of Washington Irving High School. Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship The Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship is a fund Henry Wolf Scholarship Frederick J. Schuback Endowed established by the estate of Ruth P. An endowed scholarship fund, the Scholarship Taylor, class of 1921, for students in the income of which is used to award The Frederick J. Schuback Endowed School of Art and the School of Design. one or more scholarships to support Scholarship is awarded to one Fine economically disadvantaged students Arts undergraduate each year who is Virginia Pratt Thayer Scholarship pursuing B.F.A.s or M.F.A.s in in good academic standing and who in Fine Arts Photography or Communications Design. demonstrates financial need. The The Virginia Pratt Thayer Scholarship scholarship was established in memory of in Fine Arts is a fund created by Robert Irma Holland Wolstein Endowed Frederick J. Schuback, class of 1975. Thayer in memory of his mother, Virginia Scholarship Pratt Thayer, and provides scholarship aid The Irma Holland Wolstein Endowed Thomas F. and Tess L. Schutte to an outstanding student entering his or Scholarship is a scholarship fund Endowed Scholarship her junior year in the Fine Arts program. established by Dr. Benjamin Wolstein Named in commemoration of President and provides gifted students in the Arts and Mrs. Schutte and in honor of the Education program with financial aid. President’s 20th anniversary at the institution, the Thomas F. and Tess L. Schutte Endowed Scholarship provides scholarship support for undergraduate students in the schools of Art, Design and Architecture. School of Design Don Ariev Memorial Term Award A term award for Pratt graduate students enrolled in their second year in Graduate Communications Design, in memory of Pratt Professor Don Ariev, class of 1960. This award is based strictly on merit. Ralph Appelbaum Endowed Scholarship The Ralph Appelbaum Endowed Scholarship is a fund established by Ralph Appelbaum and is awarded to Industrial Design students on the basis of need and merit. Mary Pratt Barringer Scholarship A scholarship established by Mary Pratt Barringer, awarded annually to five incoming Delaware College of Art and Design students to Pratt, selected by a joint committee of representatives from both schools. Bernice Bienenstock Scholarship The Bernice Bienenstock Scholarship is awarded to students pursuing home furnishings-related studies. Ruth Campbell Bigelow and David E. Bigelow Scholarship The Ruth Campbell Bigelow and David E. Bigelow Scholarship is awarded to a student in Interior Design on the basis of need and academic promise. Raymond and Mabel Bolton Art and Design Scholarship A scholarship fund established in honor of Raymond and Mabel Bolton for deserving students in the School of Art and the School of Design. 273 Federico Castellon Endowed Scholarship Rick Goodwin Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established by Hilda This scholarship fund is established with Castellon in memory of her husband, gifts made in memory of Rick Goodwin, a Federico Castellon. This scholarship is former faculty member in the Department awarded on a yearly basis to a promising of Industrial Design, and supports an student in Graphic Arts. Industrial Design student based on financial need and academic merit. Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Cella Memorial Scholarship Charles L. Goslin Endowed Memorial The Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Scholarship Cella Memorial Scholarship was The Charles L. Goslin Endowed Memorial established by Robert and Warren Cella Scholarship provides recognition and and aids students in the School of Art financial assistance, based on need and the School of Design who actively and merit, to students enrolled in Pratt promote the arts in their community. Institute’s Communications Design program in the School of Design. Coyne Family Foundation Scholarship A fund established by the Richard and Richard and Anne L. Boetzel Jean Coyne Family Foundation for Gunn Scholarship students in Communications Design. The Richard and Anne L. Boetzel Gunn Scholarship is awarded annually to a Tomie dePaola Scholarship student majoring in Communications An endowed scholarship supporting Design on the basis of scholarly students majoring in Illustration, achievement, with preference given to established by alumnus Tomie dePaola, students majoring in Advertising Design class of 1956. or Illustration. The scholarship is named for and established by alumni from the John A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship class of 1937. A scholarship established from the Estate of John A. Dreves, class of 1935, the John Haskell Travel Scholarship A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship The Haskell Travel Scholarship was provides support for students in the established for students in the School of School of Art and the School of Design Art and the School of Design for travel who demonstrate financial need. abroad within two years of graduation. William Fogler Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established in memory of Professor William A. Fogler, class of 1955, for promising students in Industrial Design. 274 Financial Aid Financial Aid 275 John and Joan Herlitz Memorial Helen of Klucharka Endowed Scholarship William L. Longyear Scholarship Gino and Clarice Nahum Marc Rosen Scholarship Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship The Helen of Klucharka Endowed A fund established by students, alumni, Memorial Scholarship Funded by friends and associates of Endowed Scholarship This scholarship provides recognition Scholarship was established by Pearl and friends from the business world as a The Gino and Clarice Nahum Memorial Marc Rosen, class of 1970, in his honor, A scholarship established by Charles and and financial assistance, based on need K. Schwartz in honor of her mother tribute to William L. Longyear, associate Scholarship provides scholarships this award is made to an outstanding Marie Schade to aid students in either and merit, to undergraduate students and is awarded to students studying dean emeritus and former chair of the to professionally motivated and graduate Communications/Packaging the School of Art, School of Design, or enrolled in the Industrial Design Fashion Design. Department of Advertising Design. It is academically qualified students in Design student. The recipient is selected School of Architecture who demonstrate awarded annually to Communications undergraduate Communications Design, by the chair and members of the good academic standing as well as financial need. program in the School of Design. It was established in memory of John Herlitz, Leeds Scholarship in Interior Design Design students and to graduate who have already completed one year of faculty of the Department of Graduate class of 1964, and Joan Herlitz. A scholarship for Interior Design students, Packaging Design students on the basis study at Pratt. Preference will be given to Communications/Packaging Design. this scholarship was established through a of need and scholarship. The recipients undergraduate students who show great gift from the estate of Harold Leeds. of the scholarship are nominated by potential, and the scholarship will be Barbara Hauben Ross Interior Endowed Scholarship the department chairs and two faculty awarded based on merit. Design Award Named in commemoration of President The Barbara Hauben Ross Interior and Mrs. Schutte and in honor of the The Bill and Barbara Hilson Scholarship The Bill and Barbara Hilson Scholarship Thomas F. and Tess L. Schutte provides merit-based, renewable partial Naomi Leff Excellence in Interior members for approval by the deans of scholarships to incoming graduate Design Scholarship the School of Art and the School Point of Purchase Scholarship Design Award is a fund established to President’s 20th anniversary at the students in Communications Design. Established with a generous bequest of Design. The Point of Purchase Scholarship honor two outstanding Interior Design institution, the Thomas F. and Tess L. is funded by grants from numerous juniors annually. Schutte Endowed Scholarship provides from Naomi Leff, class of 1973, this The Hilson Family Fund full scholarship is awarded annually to The John S. Marquardt Award in companies with significant interest in The Hilson Family Fund was established one student who exhibits excellence in Communications Design the design of displays used at the Point Anna K. Rust Endowed Scholarship for students in the schools of Art, Design by the Hilson Family to enhance and Interior Design, who is in good academic An endowed scholarship fund established of Purchase (POP). An annual award Students in Art and Design and Architecture. strengthen the Graduate Communications standing, and who demonstrates by George Klauber, class of 1952, in is given to either undergraduate or A scholarship for students in the School of Design program. Part of the fund is used financial need. memory of John S. Marquardt, class graduate Industrial Design students who Art and the School of Design established Seeman-Burse Fund scholarship support for undergraduate of 1989. This scholarship is awarded have demonstrated design leadership by Leo Lewis Rust in memory of his wife, The Seeman-Burse Fund is a scholarship Herschel Levit Scholarship annually to outstanding undergraduates potential in the field of POP design. Anna Klenke Rust, class of 1938. for students in the School of Design, Founded in 1986 by a group of donors majoring in Illustration, Advertising/Art Industrial Design Scholarship to honor Professor Herschel Levit’s Direction, or Graphic Design, solely on Alan Pottasch Memorial Scholarship David Saylor Scholarship for Design The Industrial Design Scholarship 31 years of service to Pratt, this the basis of merit. A scholarship established by Lisa The David Saylor Scholarship for Design Selma Seigel Memorial Scholarship consists of a number of scholarships scholarship is given to talented Pratt Pottasch, honoring Alan Pottasch, was established to benefit undergraduate A fund created by Morton Flaum, class from a fund established by business students in their sophomore or junior Phyllis and Conrad Milster Endowed the Alan Pottasch Memorial and graduate students in the School of of 1971, in memory of Selma Seigel, that contributions and is awarded to students year, majoring in Advertising, Graphic Scholarship Scholarship supports undergraduate Design who are studying either Industrial provides scholarship aid to Interior in Industrial Design for experimental Design, or Illustration. Established by Conrad Milster, Pratt Communications Design students, with Design or Interior Design. Preference is Design students in the School of Design. Institute’s Chief Engineer, the Phyllis and a preference given to those who have given to students who combine the fields Ted and Betsy Lewin Endowed Scholarship Conrad Milster Endowed Scholarship declared a concentration in Advertising of industrial design and interior design Starr Foundation Scholarship Melvin K. Jung Memorial Scholarship This fund was established by Pratt provides one or more annual partial Art Direction and display financial need. in their studies, or who plan to do so in A scholarship fund established by the The Melvin K. Jung Memorial Scholarship, alumni Ted Lewin, class of 1956, and scholarships to undergraduate or their careers. Starr Foundation for students in the named in memory of an alumnus from Betsy Lewin, class of 1959, and provides graduate students in the Industrial Design Lillian Pratt Fashion Scholarship Department of Communications Design. the class of 1975, is awarded to a worthy support for Illustration students. Department. A scholarship benefiting outstanding Awards are made annually to three juniors and seniors in Fashion Design, students majoring in Illustration, Graphic established by Pratt family member Design, or Advertising. Academic merit Lillian Pratt. being equal, preference will be given to for scholarships for students in Graduate Communications Design. projects in the laboratory. graduate student in Industrial Design. specifically Fashion Design. Asian students. Financial Aid 276 Financial Aid Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship Henry Wolf Scholarship Library School Graduates’ George Simor Scholarship Michael M. Mahoney Writers’ Fund William Bingham II Scholarship The Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship is a fund An endowed scholarship fund, the Association Scholarship A scholarship fund established in memory Named in memory of former Pratt A trust for charitable purposes established established by the estate of Ruth P. income of which is used to award The Library School Graduates’ of George Simor, a former faculty student Michael Mahoney, this award is by the late William Bingham II for students Taylor, class of 1921, for students in the one or more scholarships to support Association Scholarship is a fund member in the School of Information and presented to undergraduate students from Bethel, Maine, other towns in Oxford School of Art and the School of Design. economically disadvantaged students established for graduate students in Library Science. majoring in writing, specifically those County, Maine, or elsewhere in the state pursuing B.F.A.s or M.F.A.s in Information and Library Science. interested in writing for publication and of Maine (in that order). Dorothy Toole Scholarship Photography or Communications Design. Created through a bequest in the will of 277 The Edmund S. Twining III and Diana performance media. Recipients are Library Science Fund Twining School of Information and Library chosen by the dean of the School of Black Alumni of Pratt Endowed Liberal Arts and Sciences. Scholarship Mrs. Dorothy Rodgers Toole, class School of Information and The Library Science Fund is a scholarship Science Fellowships in Florence of 1931, the Dorothy Toole Scholarship Library Science fund for graduate students in Information This fund provides two graduate and Library Science. fellowships each summer for H.W. Wilson Scholarship scholarships to students who have is for students who demonstrate unusual interest and talent in the field of fashion illustration. Max Weber Scholarship A gift given by Mrs. Max Weber and Miss Frances Weber in memory of the well-known artist who was a member of the class of 1900. It provides annual scholarship aid for students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Stephan Weiss Endowed Scholarship Funded by Donna Karan’s Karan-Weiss Foundation and awarded to Fine Arts students in good academic standing, this scholarship honors Stephan Weiss. Willard Scholarship The Willard Scholarship was established to aid students in the School of Art and the School of Design who are graduates of Washington Irving High School. Beta Phi Mu Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Beta Phi Mu, an honor society for elite graduates in the School of Information and Library Science. Mabel Bogardus Scholarship Established for graduate students in Information and Library Science, the Mabel Bogardus Scholarship is named for an alumna from the class of 1913. Dorothy M. Cooper Endowed Fellowship The Dorothy M. Cooper Endowed Fellowship, named for an alumna from the class of 1931, was established from the Dorothy M. Cooper Trust to provide support for students in the School of Information and Library Science. Morton D. Flaum Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established by Morton D. Flaum, class of 1971, through his estate, to benefit students in the School of Information and Library Science. A fund established to provide students studying in the School of A fund established by the H.W. Wilson completed a year at Pratt, are in good S.M. Matta Endowed Scholarship in Information and Library Science’s Foundation for graduate students in academic standing, and demonstrate a Information Technology Florence Summer Program. Information and Library Science or need for financial assistance. Academic Liberal Arts and Sciences. standing and financial need being equal, A scholarship established in honor of Seoud M. Matta, former dean H.W. Wilson Scholarship of the School of Information and A fund established by the H.W. Wilson Library Science. Foundation for graduate students in Information and Library Science or Sylvia G. Mechanic Merit Award in Liberal Arts and Sciences. Business Librarianship The Sylvia G. Mechanic Merit Award in Business Librarianship is a scholarship for graduate students in Information and Library Science. Pratt-Severn Student Research Award in Information Science This annual award, funded by a bequest from alumnus David Severn, class of 1968, is presented to a master’s degree student selected by the American Society for Information Science (ASIS). Marvin Scilken Endowed Scholarship A fund established in memory of Marvin Scilken, class of 1960, a former faculty member in the School of Information and Library Science. School of Liberal Arts and Sciences preference will be given to students of All Schools Alumni Scholarship The Alumni Scholarship is a fund established in 1957 by various alumni, the income from which is used for scholarship assistance for worthy students. Izchak Friedman Endowed Scholarship An endowed fund established by Pratt James W. Atkinson Memorial Scholarship alumna Estelle Friedman, class of 1969, A scholarship established from the trust and her children. It is named in memory of Yvonne Atkinson, in memory of her of her husband, Pratt alumnus, professor, husband James W. Atkinson, class of and dean of the School of Liberal Arts 1938, a generous and active alumnus and Sciences, Izchak Friedman, class and graphic designer who headed of 1962. The scholarship is awarded to Pratt’s alumni branch in Detroit. This students with an interest in combining fund provides resources for general science and the arts, based on merit and scholarship purposes. financial need. Dorothy P. Barrett Endowed Scholarship A fund established by the estate of Dorothy P. Barrett for general charitable and educational uses. African and Latino descent. Elsa K. Brooks Scholarship Created through a charitable gift annuity from Elsa K. Brooks, class of 1939, this scholarship is awarded to incoming freshman students. Helen R. Fecke Endowed Scholarship Awarded to students in good academic standing who demonstrate financial need, the Helen R. Fecke Endowed Scholarship is named for an alumna of the class of 1926. Esther Brigham Fisher Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Edward M. Fisher, in memory of his wife, to assist Pratt Institute students. Lewis H. Flynn Scholarship A fund established under the will of Lewis H. Flynn, class of 1916, for scholarship aid. Financial Aid 279 Richardson (Jerry) Pratt Endowed Utrecht Scholarships International Student Scholarships Scholarship The Utrecht Scholarships will provide The International Student Scholarship A scholarship established by Leo J. Funded by gifts from the Pratt family and four merit-based scholarships to for the academic year 2015–16 will be M. Junge Memorial Scholarship is Pantas, class of 1937, trustee emeritus, established in honor of Richardson Pratt support undergraduate students at available to those students who have awarded to talented and deserving with a matching grant from Eaton Jr., former president of Pratt, this Pratt Institute. encountered financial hardship. Students need. Financial need being equal, undergraduates who demonstrate Corporation. The scholarship is awarded scholarship is awarded to outstanding preference will be given to minorities, financial need. to a full-time student with financial need students with demonstrated financial need. 278 Financial Aid Ford-EEOC Scholarship Ferdinand M. Junge Memorial Scholarship Leo J. Pantas Residence Center The Ford-EEOC Scholarship is an A fund established from the estate of Scholarship endowment fund established by the Ford Ferdinand M. Junge, the Ferdinand Motor Company to provide scholarships for students with demonstrated financial living in Pantas Residence Hall. women, Ford employees, their spouses, must demonstrate unforeseen economic J. Sherwood Weber Memorial Scholarship need. A Financial Aid Committee will A fund established in memory of J. determine the eligibility of the applicant. Richardson and Mary O. Pratt Scholarship Sherwood Weber, former provost and The scholarship funds are very limited. for Disabled Students Pratt Art Supply Product Scholarship This scholarship, made possible by faculty member, to be awarded annually Since the award is based only on General Scholarship A fund established for disabled students A fund established by the Pratt Art Supply the gifts of various donors, honors to an outstanding student in any school. unforeseen economic need, there is no A fund established in 1956 through gifts in honor of former Pratt professor Shop to provide supply scholarships for the legacies of Richardson Pratt Jr., from industries made as matching Herman Y. Krinsky. qualifying students. Scholarships will be former president of Pratt, and his wife, The Jae Kwan Woo Scholarship if awarded, is to be used for tuition and awarded annually during a scholarship Mary O. Pratt. Established by former Pratt trustee and fees only. and their children. Herman Y. Krinsky Scholarship Fund scholarships or tuition grants, the income from the General Scholarship is used for Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence general scholarship purposes. Endowed Scholarship and fall trade show. application deadline. The scholarship, alumnus Young S. Woo, class of 1980, the Paige Rense Scholarship Jae Kwan Woo Scholarship will provide You Must Follow These Guidelines: 1. You must in be in good academic The Jacob and Gwendolyn Charles Pratt II Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established in honor of partial scholarships to Pratt Institute Kathleen L. Gerla Endowment Scholarship Lawrence Endowed Scholarship is This endowed scholarship was Paige Rense. undergraduate students based on merit standing and must submit the latest The Kathleen L. Gerla Endowment a fund established for general established by Edmund Twining III in and need. With the level of academic copy of your transcript. Scholarship is a fund established by the scholarship support. memory of his grandfather, Charles Raoul Settle Scholarship merit and financial need being equal, Pratt II, to support any full-time A fund established in memory of Raoul preference will be given to students from Settle, class of 1952. Korea or of Korean descent. Kathleen L. Gerla Charitable Trust. 2.You must have been enrolled at Pratt for at least one academic year. MacDonald Scholarship student at Pratt Institute who best Wilson Y. Hancock Endowed Scholarship This scholarship, named in honor of demonstrates the ideals of the founder A scholarship that provides general Helen Babbott MacDonald, provides of Pratt Institute. These are defined Irene C. Shea Endowed Scholarship any outstanding debts with the Bursar support for students in good academic financial resources to an undergraduate as leadership, community service, and A fund established by Irene C. Shea, will not be considered. standing, the Wilson Y. Hancock Endowed student at Pratt Institute. The award is self-motivation. Additionally, the award class of 1934, for students who Scholarship was established through a granted based on financial need and is made to a student who demonstrates demonstrate financial need and are in bequest from the Estate of Elizabeth academic merit. artistic achievement at the college level. good academic standing. Margaret A. Middleditch Fund George D. Pratt Scholarship Katherine Pratt Twitchell Fund The Margaret A. Middleditch Fund is a A scholarship fund established by Vera A fund established in memory of Coby Hoffman Scholarship fund established anonymously to finance H. A. Pratt in memory of her husband, Katherine Pratt Twitchell. The Coby Hoffman scholarship was scholarship or maintenance abroad, or George D. Pratt, for worthy students. established to support students in the the travel itself. Office of the Bursar. Those who have Marie Hancock in memory of her late husband, Wilson Y. Hancock, class of 1933. School of Art and the School of Design. 3.You must have clearance from the 4.You must submit copies of bank statements for the past six months; telephone, utility, and rent bills; and a budget for the academic year. 5.If you are sponsored, you must submit proof of your sponsor’s inability to continue with the financial commitment. 280 6.You must submit a statement outlining Financial Aid Financial Aid Instructions and Schedule 281 Tuition and Fees loan application. We can only notify Costs Books and Supplies students of their loan eligibility levels The following approximate costs are in in the electronic award letter, which is effect at the time of publication. They sent to your Pratt email address. are subject to change by action of the 3.Direct subsidized and your academic goals at Pratt, as well as All application materials are available unsubsidized loans what contributions you have made as at www.pratt.edu/financing. You must Continuing students who wish to an international student to the campus submit the following to be considered apply for a loan should file the FAFSA life and why you need the scholarship. for federal, state, and Pratt Institute by February 1. If you filed the Master aid (including bank loans) for the next Promissory Note (MPN) last year, you academic year: don’t have to submit another MPN 7.You must submit a letter of recommendation. 8.If you are receiving Pratt’s financial assistance, your travels will be restricted. The above-listed documents must be submitted as proof of unforeseen economic need to the Office of International Affairs, attention: Jane Bush. 1. Financial aid forms for 2015–16 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). You send the FAFSA to the federal processor. We strongly suggest it be completed and be submitted 4.Other information we request Board of Trustees. The Institute reserves A financial aid counselor may ask the right to change regulations at any ed.gov or at the financial aid section of for additional information and or time without prior notice. It also reserves Pratt’s website. documentation after your application the right to change tuition and fees as is reviewed. Respond quickly—we can’t necessary. Tuition and fees are payable finalize your aid until we receive the in full at the time of registration. electronically, online at www.fafsa. 2.IRS tax transcript for 2014, if requested. If you did not file a tax return, you must submit a notarized letter stating your source of income. requested information. Mail early. We award financial aid only Graduate when your file is complete! Call us with No flat rate. $1,591 per credit. Note: Mail to: questions at 718.636.3599 or email at The charge per credit for the School of Office of Financial Aid [email protected]. Information and Library Science is $1,278. Pratt Institute 200 Willoughby Avenue For the 2015–2016 academic year, please Brooklyn, N.Y. 11205 refer to the financial aid section of the 718.636.3739 fax Pratt website: www.pratt.edu/financing. Deadline: May 15, 2015, for requested tax transcript. Fees Approximately $2,500 per year, depending on program. Other Expenses For resident students (students living away from home in either on-campus or off-campus housing), an estimated $600 per month (for a nine-month period) should be allowed for food, housing, clothing, and other personal needs. For commuter students (students living at home), an estimated $250 per month should be allowed for personal expenses and transportation. Students provide their own textbooks and instructional and art supplies. These Fees vary according to program. For a books and supplies may be purchased complete listing of fees, see next page. either online or at local art supply stores. Please refer to the undergraduate bulletin Bookstore expenses are not chargeable to for undergraduate tuition and fees. the student’s Institute tuition account. For those students who have a third-party book voucher, they must purchase their books up front and provide the voucher with eligible copies of the receipt in order to be reimbursed. Tuition Payment Undergraduate and graduate students are charged tuition according to their enrollment status. An undergraduate student taking a graduate course applicable to his or her undergraduate degree is charged at the undergraduate rate. A graduate student taking an undergraduate course is charged tuition at the graduate rate. Terms of Payment Bills are payable by personal or certified check, money order, VISA, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, debit cards featuring the NYCE symbol, or wire transfer in advance of each term. Checks should be made payable to Pratt Institute. Payment is also accepted online. Payment for fall is due August 1 for all students. There is a 2.5% convenience fee charged with each credit card transaction. Library fines, lost ID cards, and fees not charged to your student account do not incur the fee. Pratt Card transactions also do not incur the fee. E-checks are free. Bursar Associate Bursar Manhattan Office Yvette Mack Madeline Vega-Mourad Tel: 718.636.3539 | Fax: 718.636.3740 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Associate Bursar Loretta Edwards [email protected] 282 Tuition and Fees Available Payment Plan through Tuition Pratt Institute Graduate Fees Management Systems Deferred Plan General Fees Option (Fall- and Spring-Based) This deferred payment plan may be implemented on a yearly basis or semester basis. This plan enables the student to pay both fall and spring* over eight, nine, or 10 months, beginning $50 Application fee $90 Application fee/ Academic Facilities Fees $350 full-time students $195 part-time students (This fee is $500 Acceptance deposit targeted to improve facilities, $300 Residence deposit equipment, and materials that continuing students. The start date of August 15 for the nine-month plan $106 or September 15 for the eight-month $84 Graduate activities fee each fall and spring term: part-time also a semester-based plan for $97 each semester. TMS will provide an easy- Technology Fees to-use worksheet to assist the student $325 or write: Tuition Management Systems Each fall and spring term: $195 $45 All 200–600-level courses in Printmaking $100 Shop Safety Certification Class $35 Fee for issuance of duplicate diploma Each summer term for and clay: $75 $100 Portfolio/work experience Architecture Fees Architecture shop fee. Each fall, spring, summer term: full-time deposit TBD Mandatory fee per semester. May be waived with proof of personal health insurance. $383 Fee–30 percent of per-credit $25 $25 Fee–30 percent of per-credit Each summer term for all Digital Arts Lab Fees students $45 per All 100/200/300- level course DDA courses 1.25 percent interest fee is assessed on all delinquent accounts one month or older Transcript Request Fee* (Per Copy) $7.50 By Internet, www.pratt.edu/registrar charge–SILS $477 Deposit for key replacement Returned Check Fees $10 By Internet, www.pratt.edu/ registrar (request leaves Pratt charge–graduate within one working day of receipt on campus) and part-time students Each fall and spring term: $65 per All 600-level DDA courses Thesis-in-Progress Fees $15 Each semester of In-Progress varies by $18.50 UPS Service academic department. All fees are charged 100 percent In-person requests when dropping classes during the add/ Late Payment Fees a.A late fee of $80 will be charged for drop period. Auditing Courses any unpaid balance after the initial Students and Community disbursement of financial aid has Pay 50 percent of the published “per been applied for each semester. credit” tuition rate for each course. b.A late registration fee of $55 will be charged after the first 15 days Pratt Alumni of each semester/session for Pay 40 percent of the published “per students who did not complete their credit” tuition rate for each course. registration during their designated registration period. Tel. 718.636.3539 [email protected] * The plan is not available for summer. Miscellaneous Fees Leave of absence fee www.afford.com/PRATT Brooklyn, NY 11205 Jewelry Deposit for the entire program and refunded by check. $20 course 200 Willoughby Avenue Deposits are paid to the Bursar’s Office courses, but requesting use of facilities 800.722.4867 Student Financial Services part-time students student.) $55 per All 400/500-level DDA courses Office of the Bursar/ All 200–600-level courses in Studio Deposit $50 Ceramics $45 M.F.A. Fine Arts Refundable Each fall and spring term: Readmission fee Warwick, RI 02886 Pratt Institute $94 $55 course are using TMS. full-time students All 200–600-level courses in Health Insurance Fees $45 Each fall and spring term: Students not enrolled in ceramics 171 Service Avenue, Second Floor Please notify the Bursar’s Office if you $185 available to the international part-time students $165 Fine Arts Studio Refundable Deposits all students full-time students $165 International student services Health Services Fees improve the quality of services students The fee is $105 for the year. There is available. For further information, call $45 283 All 200–600-level courses in Sculpture fee (This fee is targeted to Graduate activities fee each students Tuition Management Systems (TMS) firm. the year. A semester-based plan is also $75 fall and spring term: full-time plan is available for new students. in budgeting educational expenses for $50 directly enhance instruction.) Activities Fees an application) are available through the Fall and Spring Each fall and spring term: international students with July 15 for the 10-month plan for Brochures explaining this plan (including Each fall and spring term: Fine Arts Shop Fee (per course): Tuition and Fees * Subject to change. All persons auditing courses are charged 100 percent of all fees. 284 Tuition and Fees Zero-Credit Internships Pratt Institute Refund Policy Refunds on Student’s Credit Balance Billing Late Payment Fee and Interest Returned Checks Full Refund A credit balance on a student’s account Bills are mailed to one address. One copy A late payment fee is assessed each The Institute charges a processing fee Withdrawal prior to and including the after applying Title IV funds (Federal of each bill will be mailed to the address semester on all bills remaining unpaid, in of up to $25 when a check is returned opening day of term Student Aid Funds) will be automatically the student lists as his or her billing whole or in part, after the due date for the by the student’s bank for any reason. 85 Percent Tuition Refund refunded and a refund will be mailed or address on registration records. A billing semester. An interest fee of 1.25 percent Any check in payment of an Institute Withdrawal from the second through applied to the debit card within 14 days address may be established, changed, or per month is assessed on all delinquent charge that is returned by the bank may eighth day of the term of the later of any of the following dates: deleted at any time by writing or visiting accounts one month or older. result in a late-payment charge, as well 70 Percent Tuition Refund 1. the date the credit balance occurs. the Office of the Registrar. Due dates Withdrawal from the ninth through 15th 2.the first day of classes of a payment cannot be extended because bills have Notice of IRS Filing not been received. For any cash amount paid totaling Adjustments $10,000 or more made within a 12-month We strongly recommend that you view period, the IRS form 8300 will be your bill online periodically. In addition, completed and sent to the IRS. Please be we recommend giving parents or any www.pratt.edu/mypratt. sure to present photo ID. third-party payer access to the Parent Billing Schedule Payments bill online. A student who contests For those students who have registered, Payments must include the student’s a portion of the bill should pay the fall semester bills are mailed during the name and student ID number. Checks uncontested portion by the due date first week of July, and spring semester and money orders should be made and immediately contact the appropriate bills are mailed during the first week payable to Pratt Institute in U.S. dollars office to request an adjustment. of December. All other bills, including and drawn on a U.S. bank. Checks drawn Adjustments should be pursued and summer, are available online. Fall bills are on an international bank may delay credit resolved immediately to avoid a hold on available online after July 1, if registration to the student’s account and may be registration or grades. has already occurred. subject to a collection fee imposed by Zero-credit internships may have billing credits which are charged at 30 percent of the “per credit” rate. All zero credit internships are charged 100 percent of all fees. Course Withdrawal Refunds Procedures for official withdrawals are as follows: Students who want to withdraw must fill out the official withdrawal form (available in the student’s academic department), have the form signed by the Office of the Bursar, and submit it immediately to the Office of the Registrar. Refunds are determined by the date the add/drop or complete withdrawal form is signed by the Office of the Registrar. For all students, the following course withdrawal penalty schedules apply. day of the term 55 Percent Tuition Refund Withdrawal from the 16th through 22nd day of the term No Refund Withdrawal after the 22nd day of the term Individual fees are not refundable after the first day of the term. Once a student’s request is received, processing takes approximately 10 working days. Liability is computed from the date the form is signed by the registrar staff. Withdrawals may not be made by telephone. Check registration schedules and the Institute’s calendar for exact liability deadline dates each semester. Withdrawal from courses does not automatically cancel housing or meal plans. Penalties for housing and meal plans are calculated based on the date the student submits a completed Adjustment Form to the Office of Residential Life. Refunds for withdrawn courses are not automatic and must be requested from the Office of the Bursar. Tuition and Fees period of enrollment. 3.the date the student rescinds his or her authorization to apply Title IV funds to other charges or for the Institute to hold excess funds. Refund checks are valid for 90 days from the date of the check issued. In keeping with federal regulations, all Title IV (Federal Student Aid) checks not cashed within the time frame listed above will be considered unclaimed and will result in funds being returned to the federal government. Before such actions are taken, students will be notified by email. Banking Facilities Arrangements have been made with a bank on campus for students to open accounts, making it possible to cash personal checks with the Pratt ID (providing the student’s available bank account balance covers the amount of the check to be cashed) and a primary ID (state-issued or passport). An automated teller machine is also available on campus. If no billing address is specified, bills are mailed to the permanent address. You may also pay online at www. 285 as a returned-check charge. Module so they can view/pay your If you do not receive a bill, you may contact the Office of the Bursar prior Pratt’s bank. Students may pay in person and Direct Loans (Stafford, PLUS) Loan funds are sent to Pratt by the to the due date to ascertain the amount receive a receipt by presenting the federal government electronically (EFT). due. Please consult the costs section invoice and payment to the Bursar’s Funds will be disbursed in accordance and your housing license if you need Office, Myrtle Hall 6th Floor, between with federal regulations, and a signature an earlier estimate. Consult the annual 10 AM and 4 PM, Monday, Tuesday, may be required. Academic Calendar and Academic Guide Wednesday, and Friday. Evening hours for exact payment deadlines. are on Thursdays. Payment by mail avoids waiting in line. Please allow five working days for mail delivery and a minimum of three weeks for processing. A staff member is available for questions in the Manhattan Campus Wednesdays from 9 AM to 5 PM, located on the second floor in room 207. The office does not take any forms of payment, nor does it distribute refund checks. 286 Tuition and Fees Alternative Loan Checks Pratt Prepaid Discover Debit Card peerTransfer for International Students In order to attend any course at Pratt In some instances, lenders disburse The Pratt Prepaid Discover Debit card is a Pratt Institute is always looking for ways Institute, a student must: the Bursar. Students—and persons are not recognized as students and are faster way for you to receive your tuition to accommodate the busy lives of our 1. Be formally approved for admission. approved by that student via the not entitled to student services. To find Parent Module—can view the bill on out more about the PrattCard, log in at www.pratt.edu/mypratt. See the www.pratt.edu/mypratt (the PrattCard Tuition and Fees section of this Bulletin is on the left side of the dashboard). for more information. The PrattCard Office is located in the Alternative Loans in paper check form refunds. Partnering with www.acceluraid. students. With you in mind, Pratt Institute checks are made payable jointly to Pratt com, students have the flexibility of has recently partnered with peerTransfer Institute and the student. Payee must receiving their tuition refunds in a variety Corporation to offer an innovative way endorse the checks before they can be of ways. You can now manage and receive to streamline your international tuition your funds faster than ever, plus have payments. Developed by an international which may require a signature. Loan applied to the student’s account. the convenience of carrying a Discover student, peerTransfer offers a simple, for the loan portion of the balance on branded debit card. This card will serve as secure, and cost-effective method for his or her account whether or not he or your student refund card for the duration transferring and processing education The student will be held responsible she receives the loan. It is the student’s of your studies at Pratt Institute. All responsibility to contact the federal future student refunds will be disbursed payments in foreign currencies. By offering favorable conversion government when delays occur. A through it so you must be careful not to rates unmatched by larger financial student whose Institute bills are overdue misplace the card. institutions, peerTransfer enables Pratt’s will not be allowed to register in the The Accelluraid ATM located in the international students to pay from any Institute, receive grades, transcripts, or Design Center is the FREE ATM where country and any bank while saving a diploma, or have enrollment or degrees no charges are assessed for withdrawing significant amount of money. confirmed until financial obligations are funds. You may use the Sovereign paid in full. Bank ATM located by the guard booth; PLUS Loan checks are sent to the parent directly unless a parent gives written consent to have any PLUS loan excess returned to the student. however, fees will apply. You can also transfer the available funds to your personal checking/savings account or request a paper check be Furthermore, students will be able to: 1. Track the progress of their payment throughout the transfer. 2.Be alerted when their payment is received. 3.Track the progress of their tuition • Matriculated students will receive an acceptance letter/email that includes a OneKey (username) and ID number (initial password). It may also include additional requisites required for admission to a program. • All final and official college and high Tuition and Fees 287 4.Pay prescribed tuition and fees to produce a student identification card Students are fully responsible for tuition Activities and Resource Center (ARC), and fees after they complete steps 1 Lower Level, Room A109. through 3 above. If students do not complete Step 4 before the first day Pratt Email Accounts and school transcripts (indicating date of of class, their unpaid registrations may My.Pratt Access graduation) must be submitted to the be canceled according to the payment The portal www.pratt.edu/mypratt is Institute prior to enrollment. schedule. Responsibility for a correct Pratt’s interactive student gateway. It registration and a correct academic provides access to grades, schedules, provided this information once they record rests entirely with the student. bills, applications for graduation, and submit a non-matriculated student Students are responsible for knowing transcripts, as well as other academic application in the Registrar’s Office and regulations regarding withdrawals, information. No additional applications or pay the fee. They do not have to follow refund deadlines, program changes, and activations are necessary. steps 2 and 3. academic policies. • Non-matriculated students will be 2.Meet with an academic advisor and Instructors will not admit students All student user names are automatically assigned by the Information have a program of courses approved to classes in which they are not officially Technology Office. Pratt email and www. by that advisor on Academic Tools—the registered. Proof of official registration pratt.edu/mypratt accounts are assigned portion of www.pratt.edu/mypratt may be obtained in the Office of the to all students at the time of admission. that allows students to register for Registrar or through the Academic Tools. The Admissions Office mails a letter to all payments via an online dashboard and classes, add or drop sections, view be assured that their payments are Any student who attends a class without deposited students with their Pratt email their grades, and review their degree going to the correct account. valid registration (i.e., they are not on the address and ID number. audit. Your academic advisor and your official class roster) will not have credits the card. All questions regarding your You can find the link to the peerTransfer appointment dates for advisement and or a grade recorded for that course. card can be answered through the solution on the www.pratt.edu/bursar web- registration are listed on your degree Collection Accounts Acceluraid website, www.acceluraid. site or by visiting www.peerTransfer.com. audit. Students should contact their The student will be responsible for com/pratt or for more information all collection costs associated with regarding the debit card please see delinquent accounts forwarded to www.pratt.edu/debitcard. If you have online during the designated must present their PrattCard to receive an outside collection agency because not received a card and would like registration period. A student’s services and privileges, to gain entry of nonpayment. one, please contact the Bursar’s office registration date is displayed under the into campus buildings, and to identify student’s name when he or she logs themselves to Institute officers as in to www.pratt.edu/mypratt. Online necessary. People who cannot or will not mailed to you, at no cost. Registration (First Day of Class) Included with your card are We reserve the right to restrict instructions on how to activate and use eligibility for registration for students it. The Acceluraid Company administers with high balances. directly at [email protected]. advisor for assistance. 3.Register for the approved courses registration is done on Academic Tools. Identification Cards and Services As part of orientation, new students are issued identification cards. Students 288 289 Registration and Academic Policies In order to attend any course at Pratt classes, add or drop sections, view of class, their unpaid registrations may Institute, a student must: their grades, and review their degree be canceled according to the payment audit. Your academic advisor and your schedule. Responsibility for a correct appointment dates for advisement and registration and a correct academic registration are listed on your degree record rests entirely with the student. audit. Students should contact their Students are responsible for knowing advisor for assistance. regulations regarding withdrawals, 1. Be formally approved for admission. • Matriculated students will receive an acceptance letter/email that includes a OneKey (username) and ID number (initial password). It may also include additional requisites required for admission to a program. 3.Register for the approved courses online during the designated registration period. A student’s refund deadlines, program changes, and academic policies. Instructors will not admit students registration date is displayed under to classes in which they are not officially the student’s name when he or she registered. Proof of official registration school transcripts (indicating date of logs in to www.pratt.edu/mypratt. may be obtained in the Office of the graduation) must be submitted to the Online registration is done on Registrar or through the Academic Tools. Institute prior to enrollment. Academic Tools. Any student who attends a class without • All final and official college and high • Non-matriculated students will be 4.Pay prescribed tuition and fees to valid registration (i.e., they are not on the provided this information once they the Bursar. Students—and persons official class roster) will not have credits submit a non-matriculated student approved by that student via the or a grade recorded for that course. application in the Registrar’s Office and pay the fee. They do not have to follow steps 2 and 3. 2.Meet with an academic advisor and have a program of courses approved by that advisor on Academic Tools—the Parent Module—can view the bill on www.pratt.edu/mypratt. See the Tuition and Fees section of this Bulletin for more information. Students are fully responsible for tuition and fees after they complete steps 1 portion of www.pratt.edu/mypratt through 3 above. If students do not that allows students to register for complete Step 4 before the first day Registrar Tashana Curtis TAP Certification Officer/ Lisle Henderson [email protected] Veterans Advisor Charlotte Outlaw-Yorker [email protected] Matthew Townsend Assistant Registrars [email protected] [email protected] Marcia Approo Office [email protected] Tel: 718.636.3663 | Fax: 718.636.3548 [email protected] Registration and Academic Policies Registration and Academic Policies 290 291 in late fees. Late registrations will also Veterans Affairs As part of orientation, new students are for all official Institute communication severely jeopardize a student’s chances Pratt Institute participates in the following active military service must submit a issued identification cards. Students through the Internet as an individual’s of obtaining their preferred academic Veterans Administration Benefits: certified copy of their DD 214 (discharge must present their PrattCard to receive Pratt email address is the only way course schedule. The New York Regional Office is at to validate the authenticity of the should be certified by their commanding 245 W. Houston Street (at Varick Street) into campus buildings, and to identify requester. No official requests will be officer, and the signature of the Pratt New York, NY 10014 themselves to Institute officers as fulfilled from any email address that does • Chapter 33 Post 9/11 GI Bill • Chapter 30 Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB) • Chapter 1606 Montgomery GI Bill papers). Students in Active Reserve services and privileges, to gain entry necessary. People who cannot or will not not end with a pratt.edu suffix. Likewise, produce a student identification card all official Institute communications sent are not recognized as students and are electronically are emailed to this address. not entitled to student services. To find Some notices are only sent electronically. out more about the PrattCard, log in at Students are responsible for the www.pratt.edu/mypratt (the PrattCard information sent to their Pratt email. Identification Cards and Services Pratt online accounts must be used provides access to grades, schedules, bills, applications for graduation, and transcripts, as well as other academic information. No additional applications or activations are necessary. All student user names are automatically assigned by the Information Technology Office. Pratt email and www. pratt.edu/mypratt accounts are assigned to all students at the time of admission. The Admissions Office mails a letter to all deposited students with their Pratt email address and ID number. Rehabilitation and the Academic Calendar. Registration accept certification of enrollment or reinstatement after the published before the first class day of any session, add period requires a written appeal to students planning to enroll under any the Office of the Provost. Only after the of the VA programs should initiate the New students should receive information approval from the Provost will students be certification procedure by making an about registration in the mail once registered and allowed to attend classes. appointment to see the veterans’ advisor New Student Initial Registration Pratt’s interactive student gateway. It subject to a late fee. The amounts and • Chapter 31 Veterans Vocational Veterans Administration (VA) will not Activities and Resource Center (ARC), The portal www.pratt.edu/mypratt is designated registration periods are (MGIB-SR) Because the New York Regional Student Registration My.Pratt Access not complete registration during their Tuition and Fees section of this bulletin The PrattCard Office is located in the Pratt Email Accounts and New and continuing students who do timing of these fees are described in the is on the left side of the dashboard). Lower Level, Room A109. Late Registration they have paid their deposit. Each department’s advisement office provides detailed academic advisement and curriculum counseling for entering new students. Contact your department for further information. Continuing Student Registration in the Office of the Registrar after Admission to Class It is the responsibility of each student to obtain an official schedule (printout of registered course, section, credit, and time) on www.pratt.edu/mypratt after completion of the registration process. Students are strongly cautioned Continuing students are assigned a to review and confirm all data. If any registration date based on their degree course/section/credit correction is progress. Official registration dates can necessary, the student can make advisor- be found in the Academic Calendar or approved changes on www.pratt.edu/ in the Academic Guide for Students mypratt through the first two weeks of (emailed to all students each fall). To classes (drop/add period) only. Students avoid late fees, all registered students may also alter their schedule with the who plan to continue in subsequent assistance of their department or with semesters are required to register a Drop/Add form available in academic during the open registration period. This offices or the Office of the Registrar. registration period closes at the end of the previous semester. Failure to register during the open registration period and make payment in advance will both result registration is completed. Depending on the Chapter, students receive monthly checks from the VA or the VA will send the check directly to Pratt six to eight weeks after certification. Failure to request certification upon completion of registration may result in a four- to six-week delay in the receipt of the first benefit check. As of January 1976, those students receiving survivor’s benefits (children of deceased veterans) are no longer required to be certified by the school. Appropriate forms may be obtained at the student’s VA Regional Office. New transfer students who have already received educational benefits should bring their VA claim number to the veterans’ advisor. New students who have been in P.O. Box 4616 Buffalo, NY 14240 veterans’ advisor should be obtained from the Registrar’s Office. Students who support spouses, children, or parents should submit birth certificates or marriage certificates as appropriate. Students in the Reserve (Chapter 1606) seeking to obtain educational benefits should see their commanding officer for eligibility counseling and forms and, if eligible, should then see the Pratt veterans’ advisor for certification. All students receiving benefits under Veterans’ Vocational Rehabilitation (Chapter 31) should contact their counselors at the VA, who will forward an “authorization form” to Pratt’s veterans’ advisor. These veterans should then go to the Registrar’s Office after having been programmed by their respective departments in order to present a signed copy of the authorization to the Office of the Bursar. Only after receiving this signed authorization will the Office of the Bursar validate tuition payment. Veterans receiving an allocation for books should note that Pratt Institute does not maintain the campus bookstore. The VA should be notified accordingly. Final and official authorization cannot be forwarded to the VA until the student has completed registration. Pratt Institute serves only as a source of certification and information to the VA Regional Office. The student must carry out all financial transactions with the VA directly. All transactions are carried out with the Buffalo Office: Residency Requirement Graduate students are expected to complete a minimum of 75 percent of the program’s credits at Pratt, with the exception of the first-professional (M.Arch.) program in Architecture that requires 67 percent of the credits to be completed at Pratt. Transfer Credits Transfer Credit Prior to Matriculation Transfer credit is granted for courses that are appropriate to the program curriculum at Pratt from a school accredited by an accrediting agency or state approval agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education or the international equivalent. Credits may be awarded for courses in which (1) a grade of B or better is earned from domestic institutions (or 80 or better from international institutions as determined by an official international credit evaluation service) and (2) the courses correspond to the specific course requirements of the applicant’s program of study. Grades lower than B (including B-) or less than 80 are not transferable. Grades of transfer credits are not included in the GPA. The number of credits toward a master’s degree that may be transferred from another graduate institution may not exceed 25 percent of the total number of credits required for 292 Registration and Academic Policies graduation, with the exception of the Transfer Credit after Matriculation first-professional (M.Arch.) program in Architecture, which permits up to 33 percent of the program’s total credits to be transferred. Courses that have been applied toward an earned graduate degree will not be considered for transfer credit. Students seeking transfer credits for professional courses in art, design, or architecture are required to submit a portfolio reflective of their studio coursework completed in a prior institution as part of the admission application. International students may be required to submit additional class hour documentation to determine a U.S. semester hour equivalency or have their credentials of international credit hours evaluated by an official international credit evaluations service. Pratt accepts international credit evaluation performed by any member of the National Association of Credit Evaluation Services (NACES). Credit evaluations will be completed only after acceptance. Students petitioning for transfer credit(s) must submit to the Admissions Office an official transcript from each college attended prior to enrollment. Additional transcripts will not be accepted for transfer credit evaluation after the beginning of the student’s first semester at Pratt. Graduate students, once matriculated at Pratt, are expected to complete their degree requirements at Pratt. Students who are in good academic standing may request to take a course at another institution. These students must get permission in advance to take courses at other institutions for transfer to their Pratt record. Credit for courses taken, with permission, at another institution while matriculated at Pratt is limited to a maximum of six. To be accepted for transfer credit, the course must be recognized for graduate-level credit by the institution attended and must be passed with a grade of B or better. Grades lower than B (including B-) are not transferable. Grades of transfer credits are not included in the GPA. Portfolio/Work Experience Credit Based on previous work experience and/ or portfolio, credit may be granted only for work experience gained before initial To apply for portfolio/work experience Student Status credit, the following steps must be Full-Time Graduate followed. How to Petition • Petition in person at the office of the appropriate chair before initial enrollment for classes. You will be advised as to the feasibility of your request and given a statement of intent to be completed. You should keep a copy of the document and be sure another is in your permanent file. • Present a copy of the Statement of Intent to the Registrar’s Office with a $100 deposit. The Office of the Registrar will give you an application form, which should be returned to that office after completion. When the entire process is complete, the Registrar’s Office will apply the deposit one week for evaluation. admission the student should indicate his or her intention to seek credits for work experience. Students must submit the following documentation for credit consideration: • Résumé • Professional portfolio • Letters from employers detailing responsibilities and areas of expertise address of the company or person that is combination of credits and activities • Obtain a Good Student Discount to receive the verification letter. recognized as applicable). Graduate students enrolled in their thesis course or Thesis in Progress are considered full time. Students registered for Intensive English are considered registered in activities equivalent to two credits for each section. Part-Time Graduate Graduate students are classified as part time if they schedule or drop to fewer than nine credits of registered course work. Attendance Policy absences or cuts. Students are expected School of Architecture, School of Art, • Return the application with the proper authorization to the Office of the Registrar to complete the process. You will be billed accordingly. Payment is due upon billing. Credits earned through this procedure are not included in the GPA. They will not count toward the Institute’s minimum residence requirement. provide written permission to release student may also: credit evaluated. departmental chair. Please allow the direct recipient, that student must under “Verifications and Transcripts.” more semester credits (or an equivalent take attendance. There are no excused described above to the appropriate In all cases where the student is not left side of the page. Click on “log in” the information as well as the name and the regular per-credit tuition rate per available to all graduate students in the 2.Click on “Academic Tools” on the Through the Self-Service menu, a Faculty members are encouraged to • Submit documentation as 293 graduate students must enroll for nine or to a fee schedule of 30 percent of matriculation at the Institute. This is and School of Design. When applying for To establish full-time equivalence, Registration and Academic Policies to attend all classes. Any absences may affect the final grade. Three absences may result in course failure at the discretion of the instructor. Enrollment Verification Letters Students can generate a watermarked PDF record of their periods of enrollment and current status at Pratt Institute online through the National Student Clearinghouse. This service can be accessed at any time through www.pratt.edu/mypratt. 1. Log in with your OneKey at www.pratt.edu/mypratt; Certificate. • View the enrollment information on file with the National Student Clearinghouse. (Enrollment information is provided to the National Student Clearinghouse by many postsecondary institutions. Enrollment in those schools is included.) • View the student loan deferment Changes and Withdrawals Program/Major Changes Each student must follow the program and major for which she or he has been admitted to Pratt. The Institute will not recognize a change of major as official unless the change is processed with the appropriate approvals and recorded in the student information notifications that the Clearinghouse system. A student who wants to change has provided to your loan holders his or her major must first meet (lenders and guarantors). with the department chair and then • View the proof(s) of enrollment that notify Graduate Admissions. Course the Clearinghouse has provided to your requirements for the new major reflect health insurers and other providers of the current catalog year. Hence, a change student services or products. in major may result in more credits being • Order or track a transcript. • View specific information about your student loans. A student may request an enrollment verification letter on Pratt Institute letterhead several ways: • Through the Academic Tools student menu (under My Courses). • A written request including ID number and mailing/fax destination from a student’s Pratt email account. • In person at the Registrar’s Office with a Pratt ID. • A written request by fax with copy of student ID and signature. required to graduate. It may also have an effect on the number of transfer credits allowed. 294 Registration and Academic Policies Course/Section Changes from a registered course will receive a The Institute recognizes no change of course(s) or section(s) as official unless the change is processed online through Academic Tools or with a drop/add form submitted to the Registrar’s Office. Courses and course sections may be changed online during the first two weeks of each semester. Once this add period is over no courses may be added to the student’s schedule. Students paying by the credit who drop a course on or after the first day of the term will be charged a percentage of the course fee. (See refund period schedule below.) Last day to add a class or change sections Fall Spring Summer Sep. 4 Feb. 1 May 23 Withdrawal form is turned into the stop attending a course without having Registrar’s Office is the official date used officially dropped the course during for withdrawal. This date determines the published refund period will not be eligibility for WD grades and a student’s eligible for a retroactive refund. charges for the term of withdrawal. Only Students may withdraw from a Jan. 19 Last day to drop a class with 85% refund Aug. 31 Jan. 26 Last day to drop a class with 70% refund Sep. 7 Last day to drop a class with 55% refund Sep. 14 May 16 form will deactivate your status as a fall or spring semesters. A class that is currently enrolled student. Until that dropped from a student’s schedule after time, registration and billing stay in effect the second week of the semester will and grades of WF will be issued for class remain on the student’s academic record absences. with the noncredited designation of WD an official withdrawal or reduce financial accepted after the published deadline. liability for a semester: WD grades earned via the official • Notifying a faculty member, withdrawal procedure cannot be changed. Students who are leaving Pratt without Complete Withdrawal form in the Registrar’s Office. This form permits the Registrar to drop or withdraw a student Feb. 2 N/A from all registered classes (a student cannot do this online). The form also Feb. 9 May 23 It is the responsibility of the student to officially withdraw from any registered course or section. This decision must be completed online through Academic Tools or by filing a properly completed drop/add form with the Registrar’s Office. Failure to attend classes, to notify the instructor, or to make or complete tuition payment does not constitute an official withdrawal. A student who does not officially withdraw None of the following actions cause (withdrawal). No course withdrawal will be graduating are required to fill out a N/A the submission of a Complete Withdrawal course during the first 11 weeks of the Complete Withdrawal from the Institute Last day to drop Aug. 24 a class with 100% refund The date that the Complete WF for nonattendance. Students who serves to advise relevant offices that a student is no longer enrolled. Students who withdraw need to be advised about any financial obligations and any academic repercussions of their actions. They will also be required to complete an Exit Interview. department chair, or academic advisor. • Failure to pay the student account. • Failure to attend classes. The Complete Withdrawal form must be signed by the student, his or her department’s chair or academic advisor, a financial aid counselor, the Bursar, and the Director of Residential Life (if living in a residence hall). International students should also obtain the signature of the Office of International Affairs. Students Registration and Academic Policies 295 Leave of Absence Readmission Preferred Name A student in good academic and financial Students who do not attend Pratt for standing may request a leave of absence a semester or more without receiving an for not more than two consecutive official leave of absence must apply for semesters (excluding summer sessions). readmission. Applications for readmission Students must apply with a Leave of are available from the Registrar’s Office. Absence Request form in the Office of Those applying for readmission must the Registrar. submit a $55 application fee payable to • Students must apply for a leave of Pratt Institute. absence on or before the last day to withdraw from classes for any given semester. • Only students in good academic and financial standing will be approved. • A leave of absence will not be granted Degree requirements are updated to reflect the current catalog when a student is readmitted to a program (rather than the one used in the initial acceptance). The readmission application deadlines for each semester are below. once a student’s thesis is in progress. • International students must obtain authorization from the Office of International Affairs. • Students applying for a leave of absence must pay a $20 processing fee. • A student who wishes to register after an undocumented absence must apply for readmission. • Students requesting leave for medical reasons must obtain authorizations Application Deadline Fall Spring Summer Aug. 15 Dec. 15 May 1 to identify themselves. As long as the use of this preferred name is not for the purposes of misrepresentation, the Institute acknowledges that a “preferred name” can and should be used where possible in the course of Institute business and education. Therefore, beginning in the fall semester of 2015-16 any member of the Pratt Community may choose to identify a preferred name in addition to their legal name. The preferred name will be used in all Institute business, except where the use of the legal name is required. For example, some records, require use of a legal name; in such All personal data changes must be made circumstances, the Institute will not in written form only by the student. be able to use the preferred name. Students are responsible for reporting However, whenever reasonably possible, the following personal data changes to “preferred name” will be used. the Office of the Registrar: • Change of name (requires legal documentation) completed a Complete Withdrawal or Note: Consult the Office of the Leave of Absence form will be officially Registrar for procedural details on withdrawn from the Institute and will reporting these changes. need to apply for readmission. to use names other than their legal ones such as paychecks and transcripts, fall or the spring semester and have not who are not enrolled during either the members of the Pratt Community prefer Personal Data Changes • Change of address • Change of major from Health and Counseling Pratt Institute recognizes that many Inappropriate use of the preferred name, including but not limited to misrepresentation or attempting to avoid a legal obligation, may be cause for denying the request. 296 Registration and Academic Policies Parent Module Transcripts Students can authorize parents, Unofficial Transcripts are available for guardians, or sponsors to view current viewing and printing through the online schedules, grades, degree progress, Academic Tools at www.pratt.edu/ and/or access the tuition bill to see the mypratt. current balance and make payments. 1. Log in with your OneKey at Students manage (grant or rescind) these permissions through their Academic Tools. Parents and sponsors can then access the system and log in at parents. pratt.edu. To access the module: 1. Log in with your OneKey at www.pratt.edu/mypratt; 2.Click on “Academic Tools” on the left side of the page, and click “log in”; 3.After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4.Through “Grant Parent/Sponsor Rights” (listed under “My Personal Information”), students decide which information they allow each account to www.pratt.edu/mypratt; 2.Click on “Academic Tools” on left side of page, and click “log in”; 3.After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4.Click on the “Unofficial Transcripts” option under “My Grades and Transcripts.” Official Transcripts may be ordered online by students and alumni through www.getmytranscript.com. Official transcripts may also be ordered in person or by mail at the Office of the Registrar. Records containing financial Registration and Academic Policies Online Orders Official transcripts may be ordered To order an official transcript by mail, online through the National Student please send a written request and check Clearinghouse with a valid major credit or money order (no cash) to: card at www.getmytranscript.com. You will receive a confirmation sheet that must be signed and returned by one of the following methods: • Fax it to 1.703.742.4238 (remember to • Scan and email to transcripts@ studentclearinghouse.org (scanned attachment must be a GIF, JPEG, BMP, or TIFF). • Mail it to: National Student Clearinghouse 2300 Dulles Station Boulevard, Suite 300 Herndon, VA 20171. Payment is by credit card only. There is a $2.25 transaction fee per hold is cleared. More information can destination. Regular service (mailed first be found at www.pratt.edu/registrar. class from Pratt in three to five business Your request must have the following days) is $5 per copy. Rush service (mailed information to be processed: first class from Pratt in one business day) “My Personal Information”). If a person • Name while attending Pratt Institute. is $10 per copy. Express service with UPS is missing an email address or other • Nine-digit Social Security or Students can request to add people not listed on this screen by returning to the Students menu and clicking “Request New Parent/Sponsor” (under important information, a request to update their account can be made through the same process. seven-digit student ID number. • Date of birth. • Telephone number. • Dates of attendance and/or graduation. • Destination information where transcript is to be mailed. Pratt Institute Office of the Registrar Myrtle Hall, Sixth Floor 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 dial 1.703 first). holds will not be processed until the see or rescind previously given access. U.S. Mail Orders shipping (mailed via UPS from Pratt in one business day) is $18.50 per copy. Orders at the Registrar’s Office Official transcripts may be picked up in person or ordered for delivery during office hours. The office can only accept cash or checks made out to Pratt Institute. Requests for immediate processing and pickup are $15 per copy. Requests to send official transcripts by regular service (mailed first class from Pratt in three to five business days) are $10 per copy. Payment is by check or money order only. Only regular service (mailed first class from Pratt in three to five business days) is available using the mail service. The charge is $15 per copy. Records containing financial holds will not be processed until the hold is cleared. General Policies on Transcripts • Transcripts are not released above are generally for graduate paid in full. students only. A graduate course • Copies of transcripts from other schools that you may have attended must be requested directly from those schools. We cannot release or copy transcripts in our file. Organization of Course Offerings Courses Numbered 100 through 499 are primarily reserved for undergraduates. Graduate students will not receive credit toward graduation for taking these courses. Courses Numbered 500 through 599 may be open to both undergraduates with junior or senior class standing and graduate students. Courses in this range are considered either 1) Technical Elective; 2) Qualifying; or 3) Graduate the student’s written request or courses whose content complements authorization to issue a transcript. advanced undergraduate studies. Credit Parents cannot authorize the earned within the 500-numbered Registrar’s Office to mail a transcript. courses by undergraduate students seal and Registrar’s signature. • Partial transcripts are not issued. A transcript is a complete record of all credit work completed at Pratt. • Allow five business days from receipt may not be applied toward a graduate degree. Graduate students enrolled in 500-level courses are expected to perform with greater productivity and capacity for research and analysis than their undergraduate colleagues enrolled in the same courses. Significantly more is of the transcript request for the expected of graduate students in course transcript to be mailed. At certain projects, papers, and conferences. peak times, such as registration and commencement, the processing time may be longer. Courses Numbered 600 and until a student’s account has been • The Registrar’s Office must have • Official transcripts bear the Institute’s 297 embraces highly developed content that demands advanced qualitative and quantitative performance and specialization not normally appropriate to undergraduate courses. Courses Numbered 900 and above are elective internship courses. Semester Hour Credits In accordance with federal regulations, a credit/semester hour is the amount of work represented in intended learning outcomes and verified by evidence of student achievement. Pratt Institute operates on a semester calendar and awards credit on a semester basis. Each semester is a minimum of 15 weeks. One credit is awarded for at least three hours of student work per week, or the equivalent amount of work over a different amount of time. Student work may take the form of classroom time, other direct faculty instruction, or outof-class homework, assignments, or other student work. A minimum of one clock hour per week, or equivalent time in variable-length courses, represents classroom or direct instruction time. To determine the appropriate amount of classroom time required for each course, Pratt follows the standards established by its accrediting agencies. Typically, for each credit hour awarded to lecture or seminar courses, the students receive 15 clock hours of direct 298 Registration and Academic Policies instruction and are required to perform F failure The instructor has received approval to an additional 30 hours of out-of-class The student has failed to meet the award CR grades from the Office of the work. For each credit awarded to a minimum standards for the course. studio course, undergraduate students (Numerical Value: F= 0) typically receive 22.5 clock hours, and Registration and Academic Policies 299 NG (No Grade Reported) submitting a Change of Grade form the grade holds the authority to change Indicates that the student was properly directly to the Office of the Registrar. the grade unless appeal is granted by Provost. (This does not apply to liberal registered for the course but the Time limits have been allotted for Department Chair or Dean. If a grade is arts courses within the School of Liberal faculty member issued no grade. The resolving grade problems. Spring and to be changed, the student must be sure Arts and Sciences.) student should contact the professor. summer grades may not be changed after that the change is submitted within the Students cannot graduate with an NG the last day of the following fall semester. following semester. Petitions of change on their record. Fall grades cannot be changed after the of any grade will be accepted only up to last day of the following spring semester. the last day of the semester following the graduate students receive 15 hours of Note: The highest grade acceptable for direct instruction and are required to recording is A (4.0) and not A+; D (1.0), IP (In Progress) complete a minimum of 30 additional not D–, is the only grade preceding F Designation used only for graduate (0.0). The +/– grading system went into student thesis, thesis project for which NR (No Record) Once this time limit has passed, all INC one in which the grade was given. Other effect as of the fall 1989 semester and is satisfactory completion is pending, Grade given for no record of attendance and NR grades will convert to Fs. To view than resolution of an initially assigned Grading System not acceptable for recording purposes or Intensive English course for which in an enrolled course. (All NR grades online: incomplete grade or of a final grade Letter Grades That Affect for prior semesters. satisfactory competence level is pending. designations must be resolved by the 1. Log in with your OneKey at reported in error, no letter grade may be end of the following term or the grade www.pratt.edu/mypratt; hours of out-of-class work. the Academic Index A, A– excellent The student has consistently Grades That Do Not Affect INC (Incomplete) is changed to a letter grade of F with a the Academic Index Designation given by the instructor at numerical value of 0.) demonstrated outstanding ability in the AUD (Audit, no credit) comprehension and interpretation of the Students must register for courses they content of the course. (Numerical Value: plan to audit by contacting the Registrar’s A = 4.0; A– = 3.7) Office in person or by way of their Pratt email account. B+, B, B– average The student has acquired a CR (Credit) comprehensive knowledge of the content Grade indicates that the student’s of the course. (Numerical Value: B+ = 3.3; achievement was satisfactory to B = 3.0; B– = 2.7) assure proficiency in subsequent courses in the same or related areas. The CR C+, C acceptable The student has shown satisfactory grade does not affect the student’s academic index. The CR grade is to understanding of the content of the be assigned to all appropriately course. C is the lowest passing grade documented transfer credits. for undergraduate students. (Numerical Value: C+ = 2.3; C = 2.0 ) D+, D less than acceptable The student lacks satisfactory understanding of course content in some important respects. (Numerical Value: D+ = 1.3; D = 1) The CR grade is applied to credit earned at Pratt only if: • The student is enrolled in any course the written request of the student and 2.Click on “Academic Tools” on left side of page, and click “log in”; 3.After the system logs you in, click on Repeated Courses A repeated course must be the same course as the one for which the previous available only if the student has been WD (Withdrawal from a Registered Class) in regular attendance, to indicate the Indicates that the student was permitted student has satisfied all but the final to withdraw from a course in which he requirements of the course, and has or she was officially enrolled during the furnished satisfactory proof that the drop period for that semester. Final Grades, Grade Disputes, and illness or other circumstances beyond WF (Withdrawal Failing) All grades are final as assigned by the students must repeat all required his or her control. The student must Grade given to a student with a failing instructor. If a student feels that a grade courses in which F is the final grade. understand the terms necessary to fulfill grade due to lack of attendance. received is an error, or that he or she The initial grade will remain, but only was graded unfairly, it is the student’s the subsequent grade earned will be Grade Reports responsibility to make prompt inquiry averaged in the cumulative index from Grade reports are not mailed to of the instructor after the grade has the point of repeat onward. work was not completed because of the requirements of the course and the date by which work must be submitted. If the work is not submitted by the understood date of submission, the incomplete will be converted to a failure. If unresolved at the end of the following semester, the grade is changed to failure with a numerical grade value of 0. offered by a school other than the one NCR (No Credit) in which the student is matriculated, Indicates that the student has not and had requested from the professor demonstrated proficiency. (See CR for at the start of the term a CR/NCR conditions of use.) option as a final grade for that term. changed following graduation. students. Grades may be obtained via www.pratt.edu/mypratt (see instructions below). Professors submit final grades online and students are able to view their grades as soon as the instructor enters them. If there are any questions about the grade received, a student should contact the instructor immediately. Only the instructor can change a grade by properly completing, signing, and the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4.Choose from the options offered under “My Grades and Transcripts.” Grade Appeal Policies been issued. Should this procedure not prove to be an adequate resolution, the student should contact the chair of the department in which the course was taken to arrange a meeting and appeal the grade. If this appeal is unsuccessful, a further and final appeal can be made to the dean of the school in which the course was taken. It is important to note that the faculty member who issued final grade was awarded. No graduate student may choose to repeat a course that was passed with a grade of C or higher without specific authorization from the chair or dean. Graduate 300 Registration and Academic Policies Grade Point Average Total Grade Points ÷ Total Credits Institute. Students subject to academic Degree Audits A student’s grade point average is Attempted = Grade Points discipline are encouraged to take Degree audits are computerized Courses that usually do not count calculated by dividing the total Grade 30 ÷ 9 = 3.33 advantage of support services available checklists of graduation requirements. towards a program’s requirements Points received by the total Credits 30 (total grade points) divided by 9 (total to them, including academic advisement, These reports are similar to transcripts are listed in this bottom section. Earned. A Grade Point is computed credits) makes a GPA of 3.33. in an effort to help them meet Institute because they list all academic activity. Sometimes a course will not count academic standards. They are different from transcripts, toward graduation because it was however, because they organize the dropped, or carries a grade that by multiplying the Credits Attempted for each class by the Quality Points INC (incomplete) and NR (no record) earned for completing that class. Only carry no numerical value for one semester the end of each semester to determine coursework attempted into logical blocks credits evaluated with letter grades that after the grade is given. Thereafter, whether any student who has failed to that represent what is required. They earn quality points (see table below) are if unresolved, the INC and NR grades remain in good standing may continue in also clearly flag what has been taken and used in GPA calculations. Each semester convert to an F and carry a numerical the program. what has yet to be taken. has a minimum length of 15 weeks. In value of 0. Good Standing There Are Four Parts to an Audit: All graduate students must maintain 1. Student Information courses that are passed, a credit is The following grades do not earned for each period of lecture or carry numerical values and are never studio work, each week throughout one calculated in the GPA: term or the equivalent. Quality Points A = 4.00 C+ = .30 A– = 3.70 C = 2.00 B+ = 3.30 C– = 1.70 B = 3.00 D+ = 1.30 B– = 2.70 D = 1.00 F = 0.00 (If unresolved at the end of the following semester, INC = F = 0.00 and NR = F = 0.00) Grade = Quality Points × Credits Earned = Grade Points standing. A graduate student whose U Unsatisfactory GPA falls below a 3.0 at any time may the requirements are being checked WD Withdrawal be subject to academic dismissal. The against, and the student’s anticipated WF Withdrawal Failing AUD Audit NCR No Credit IP In Progress A= 4.00 × 3 = 12.00 B+= 3.30 × 3 = 9.90 B–= 2.70 × 3 = 8.10 =30.00 specific conditions under which this policy will be invoked are as set forth by the dean of each school. Written notification will be furnished to the student by the dean. or achieve academic honors. Each student is responsible at all times for knowing his or her own standing. These standings are based on the published academic policies, regulations, and standards of the graduation date (based on the date of admission). This section may also contain one or many text messages specific to the student, depending on his or her status at Pratt. 2.Credit and GPA Information Final grades for credit transferred from they are subject to academic discipline students choose to take an extra class for additional knowledge even Maximum Time for Graduate Study All work for the master’s degree should be completed within seven (7) calendar years from initial registration in graduate courses as a graduate student at Pratt Institute. The departments will not approve registration after seven years without the written approval of the provost. This area lists the total credits required for graduation, the number required to be taken at Pratt (residency), and the GPA required for graduation. 3.Required Course Information This section is usually the longest. It lists the entire range of requirements and electives specific to the academic Thesis must be completed within three years, the duration of which equals the initial semester of thesis registration plus five (5) consecutive semesters of Thesis in Progress. Graduate students must register without interruption and pay the Institute’s tuition and fees for each additional semester of continued thesis work following the initial semester of though it doesn’t fulfill any particular thesis registration. Any extension beyond degree requirement. the three-year duration is subject to an acceptable demonstration of extenuating How to Get a Copy of a Degree Audit 1. Log in with your OneKey at www.pratt. Credit students receive timely notification when such as an F or an INC. Also, some time using their Academic Tools. CR standing intend to ensure that all makes it ineligible for consideration, Students may view or print an audit at any being evaluated, the catalog year that Pratt Institute’s policies on academic Thesis Enrollment student’s name, the academic program Pass record are not computed in the GPA. 4.Other Courses The top of the first page lists the P other institutions to the student’s Pratt 301 a cumulative GPA of at least a 3.0 (equivalent of a B) to remain in good Academic Standing In the Following Example the GPA is 3.33: All students’ records are reviewed at Registration and Academic Policies edu/mypratt; 2.Click on “Academic Tools” on left side of page, and click “log in”; 3.After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4.Click on “Degree Audit” under “Course Planning”; 5.In order to review an audit for the current academic program (major), click “OK.” In order to see what the results would look like in a different program, use the drop-down list of majors next to Evaluate New Program to select a potential major to review. program being evaluated. Fulfilled Students may go online and receive requirements will be listed with the a degree audit at any time. If you do grade earned (or CR for transfer not have a computer or access to a credit). Missing requirements are also computer lab, come to the Office of the noted with credits needed. Registrar. Students who have questions about how to read the audit should visit their academic advisor’s office or stop by the Office of the Registrar during office hours for an explanation. circumstances from the candidate and a written approval from the department chair and the dean. First Registered Thesis Credit Semester Graduate students will register for their thesis course. If the student does not complete the thesis by the end of that first semester, completion of the thesis is pending and the student will receive an IP (In Progress) grade. The student must enroll in Thesis in Progress the following semester. 302 Registration and Academic Policies Subsequent Semesters of Thesis must be submitted to the Library. The Examples of violations include but are in Progress form is available at the Library Reference not limited to the following: desk. The department chair’s signature is 1. The supplying or receiving of Registration for Thesis in Progress must be made for each consecutive semester following enrollment in Thesis. A student is expected to complete his or her thesis within the next five consecutive semesters. If at the end of five semesters the thesis is still pending completion, the student will be withdrawn from the original Thesis course. Re-enrollment in the Thesis course will only take place with the written permission of the department chair. Certification of Enrollment for Registered Thesis Work For certification purposes, Pratt considers students taking Thesis or Thesis in Progress to be full time. Thesis Submission and Final Grade required to allow a late thesis submission. Thesis and Thesis in Progress are graded IP. Thesis will remain IP until the Thesis Advisor assigns a final grade upon completed papers, outlines, or research for submission by any person other than the author. 2.The submission of the same, or completion of the thesis project. A failing essentially the same, paper or report grade may be assigned if the student for credit on two different occasions. fails to remain in proper progress or 3.The supplying or receiving of or the opinions of someone else. It is dishonest, since the plagiarist offers, as his or her own, for credit, the language or information or thought for which he or she deserves no credit. Plagiarism occurs when one uses the Graduation Procedures Degrees are conferred by the Institute upon the recommendation of the dean and faculty of the various schools. This is done three times a year: October 1 (summer term), February 1 (fall term), and June 1 (spring term). Commencement Ceremony exact language of someone else without One commencement ceremony is satisfactory thesis. putting the quoted material in quotation held each year at the end of the spring form or content of an examination marks and giving its source. (Exceptions semester. Students who successfully are very well-known quotations, complete their studies in October or from the Bible or Shakespeare, for February are invited to attend the example.) In formal papers, the source is ceremony that is held following their acknowledged in a footnote; in informal graduation. Students who anticipate prior to its first being given, specifically Academic Integrity Code including unauthorized possession of When a student submits any work for exam material prior to the exam. academic credit, he/she makes an 4.The supplying or receiving of partial implicit claim that the work is wholly his/ or complete answers, or suggestions her own, done without the assistance papers, it may be put in parentheses, a Summer/October completion for answers, of assistance in of any person or source not explicitly interpretation of questions on any or made a part of the text: “Robert date should attend the ceremony noted, and that the work has not examination from any source not Sherwood says...” that is held the May following their previously been submitted for academic explicitly authorized. (This includes credit in any area. Students are free to copying or reading of another student’s Students should refer to the latest assignments unless specifically asked sources during examinations.) version of the Graduate Theses Library not to by the instructor. In addition, Guidelines, available at the Pratt Library. students, especially international Questions concerning organization students, are encouraged to seek the and formatting of materials should editorial assistance they may need for be discussed with the Information/ writing assignments, term papers, and Reference department of the Pratt theses. Our Writing and Tutorial Center Library before final typing. staff is always available to clarify issues Graduation File on or before: of academic standards and to provide Summer Term/October September 15 writing and tutorial help for all Pratt Fall Term/February January 15 students. In the case of examinations Spring Term/May May 15 (tests, quizzes, etc.), the student also implicitly claims that he/she has obtained Students must submit their own no prior unauthorized information about thesis in person, unless it is submitted the examination, and neither gives by a representative from the nor obtains any assistance during the academic department. examination. Moreover, a student shall a Late Thesis Submittal Permission form own, the words, the work, information, Graduation and Degrees unauthorized information about the work or consultation of notes or other thesis submittal after the deadline date, Plagiarism means presenting, as one’s 303 communication, or fails to complete a study and work together on homework For the Pratt Libraries to accept a Plagiarism* Registration and Academic Policies 5.Plagiarism. (See statement following which defines plagiarism.) 6.Copying or allowing copying of assigned work or falsification of information. 7.Unauthorized removal or unnecessary This first type of plagiarism, using graduation. Students who will graduate without acknowledging the language in Summer/October and cannot attend of someone, is easy to understand and commencement the following spring to avoid. When a writer uses the exact may apply for Permission to Walk in words of another writer, or speaker, he May Commencement in the Registrar’s or she must put those words in quotation Office. Their names will not appear in the marks and give their source. commencement program, nor will they A second type of plagiarism is more complex. It occurs when the writer at commencement does not guarantee presents, as his or her own, the sequence graduation from the Institute. “hoarding” of study or research of ideas, the arrangement of material, or materials or equipment intended for the pattern of thought of someone else, common use in assigned work, including even though he or she expresses it in his the sequestering of library materials. or her own words. The language may be 8.Alteration of any materials or his or hers, but he or she is presenting as apparatus that would interfere with his or her work, and taking credit for, the another student’s work. work of another. He or she is, therefore, 9.Forging a signature to certify guilty of plagiarism if he or she fails to completion of a course assignment or give credit to the original author of the a recommendation and the like. pattern of ideas. not prevent others from completing their work. receive their diplomas early. Attendance * Reprinted with permission of Macmillan Publishing Company from Understanding and Using English by Newman P. Birk, 1972. Graduation with Honors To be graduated with distinction, a graduate student must have earned a final cumulative GPA no lower than 3.85 in all work. To be considered for distinction, a To be eligible for a degree, the student must satisfy all Institute, school, and department requirements as stated in announcements. Where applicable, students must also meet specific academic requirements concerning prerequisites, course sequences, or program options as posted by academic departments. Application for Graduation Students wishing to be considered for graduation must file a Graduation Application. The application is available on the student’s online Academic Tools available through www.pratt.edu/ mypratt. Applications must be filed on or before the following deadlines: Graduation File on or before Summer Term/October March 25 Fall Term/February August 25 Spring Term/May December 15 Using the application, candidates indicate: 1. Their anticipated graduation term. 2.The exact spelling and punctuation of their name as it is to appear on the diploma. 3.Their hometown and state/country as it is to appear in the commencement program. 4.The Diploma Mailing Address to be used to mail diplomas. student must have completed a minimum Information can be updated before the of 50 percent of degree credits at Pratt. application deadline by simply filling These credits must be in semesters out and submitting the graduation evaluated with a GPA. application again. If the candidate is not 304 Registration and Academic Policies 305 Student Affairs cleared for the announced graduation, a new application must be filed for each subsequently requested graduation. Only after the application has been submitted to the Office of the Registrar will the candidate’s name be placed on a Graduation Requirements Final graduation requirements include the following: office for consideration. A course requirement in a student’s major may be substituted by the department chair/advisor of the department 1. Grade Requirements Graduate students must be in good standing, with a cumulative GPA of at tentative graduation list. At that time, the least 3.0. In courses constituting the graduation review is scheduled. student’s major as formally specified in which the student is enrolled; however, another course in the same subject area must be taken. 3.Residence Requirements Life at Pratt can be intense. Often Student Involvement The Department of Student Involvement coordinates and assists students to students need assistance to cope with in advance by his or her departmental Thesis work must be registered at Graduation Clearance chair, the student must have received the Institute. The minimum residence Within the schedules mentioned earlier, a grade of B or better in each or have requirement at Pratt for the master’s a cumulative index in these courses degree is 24 credits. In most cases of at least 3.0. Any outstanding transferred credit does not exceed INC, NG, or NR grades from any 25 percent of the total credits previous semester(s) that are pending required. The Professional Master of make meeting these challenges a positive resolution must be resolved by the Architecture program permits up to 33 experience. In addition, the Office of Assistant Director responsible for managing their own following deadlines: percent of the total credits required. Student Affairs performs many ombud- Alex Ullman group activities, thus gaining experience the candidate must check for clearance at the following offices: Office of The Bursar: Outstanding Balance on Tuition Account 4.Master’s Thesis/e-Portfolio Library: Graduation File on or before: Outstanding Materials or Account Summer Term/October September 15 A thesis or e-portfolio is required in Fall Term/February January 15 many of the master’s degree programs. Spring Term/May May 2 Each student is held responsible for All financial indebtedness to the Institute must be cleared prior to graduation. Students who have completed their academic requirements but who have outstanding financial obligations to the Institute will be graduated; however, the diploma will be held and no transcript will be released until their financial account is cleared in full. meeting the precise requirements of challenges encountered at Pratt and in Director plan social, cultural, educational, the city of New York. The staff members Emma Legge and recreational programs. Student activities at Pratt are planned to of the Office of Student Affairs are able and willing to help each student in as Associate Director contribute to each student’s total many ways as necessary and possible to Meredith Crain education, as well as to meet social and recreational needs. Students are in community and social affairs and sperson services. The Office of Student Affairs is located on the ground floor of Main Office Manager playing a role in shaping Institute policy. Karen Smith Students are represented on Institute decision-making bodies such as the Building and can be found on the Web at www.pratt.edu/student-life/ Office Board of Trustees, trustee committees, student-affairs/. Student Affairs also Tel: 718.636.3422 and the Student Judiciary. Failure to do so will result in removal his or her school. Thesis candidates from the graduation list. When final should obtain the latest edition of has an office in Room 207A on the Pratt [email protected] grades are reported for the last term Regulations Concerning the Deposit Manhattan campus. Specific hours and www.pratt.edu/involvement of active registration, any reported of Master’s Thesis in the Pratt Institute services provided are posted there and INC or NR grade for a graduation Library and sample pages from their on the Student Affairs website. candidate will automatically remove respective departments. • Allocation and administration of funds collected through the student activity fee. the candidate from the graduation list. Students who have been removed Changes to This Bulletin from consideration must complete While every effort has been made to a new application for graduation in make the material presented in this order to be considered for another Bulletin timely and accurate, the Institute graduation date. reserves the right to periodically update 2.Curriculum Requirements Each student must fulfill all requirements for graduation. No credits required for graduation will be waived. All requests for an exception to The main functions of the Department of Student Involvement are: • Overseeing the Student Union complex. • Programming of student activities. • Promoting leadership and professional development. and otherwise change any material, including faculty listings, course offerings, policies, and procedures, without reprinting or amending this Bulletin. this rule must be referred to the dean’s Vice President Administrative Assistant Office Helen Matusow-Ayres Nadine Shuler Tel: 718.636.3639 | Fax: 718.399.4239 [email protected] Assistant To The Vice President Grace Kendall www.pratt.edu/student-affairs 306 Student Affairs New Student Orientation Parent and Family Programs Active Organizations Cultural Student Affairs 307 Professional and Academic Greek Letter Organizations Residential Life and Housing •American Institute of Architecture •Inter-Greek Council (Fraternity/Sorority New student orientation is an exciting The mission of Parent and Family time at Pratt. In order to acclimate to Programs at Pratt is to provide parents •Bako Tribe campus, graduate students have a one- with the resources to support and •Chinese Student Scholars Association •Art and Design Educators •Kappa Sigma Fraternity day orientation during the week before encourage the success of their Pratt classes begin. Brooklyn campus students student. Pratt Institute recognizes that •Korean Student Association •Association for Information Science •Pi Sigma Chi Fraternity Associate Director attend orientation on that campus, while parents are valuable members of the •Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority Katherine Hale students attending Pratt Manhattan will Pratt community and have much to attend orientation at 14th Street. Grad- contribute to Pratt. We encourage parent uate student socials will be held at both involvement in the Pratt community. We campuses that week. offer programs for parents including •Latin American Student Association Students and Technology •Pratt International Students Association •ComD Agency •Queer Pratt •Communications Committee Governing Body) Associate Director For Housing •Diversity Initiatives Group Religious and Spiritual Special Interest •Fashion Society •Art/Faith Collective Parent Orientation, our Annual Family •Anime Club •Graduate ComD •Gospel Christian Fellowship Weekend, and parent blog. For further •History of Art and Design Student pening that week, including the Broadway information, please contact our office at •Ceramics •Jewish Student Union show and baseball game. However, there 718.636.3422 or email at family@pratt. is no requirement to attend those events. edu. The orientation program is staffed by an exemplary group of student leaders who assist new students in any and many ways. •Dance Club •Drawing Club Detailed information will be sent to new students beginning in June. •Comic Club Student Organizations •Games Club Student Government Association (SGA) •Envirolutions The Student Government’s primary •Founders Entrepreneurship Club responsibility is to represent the student •Music Club body’s interests and to encourage •Pratt Feminists students’ involvement in •Pratt Film Cult the life of the Institute. •Reef Club The Student Government has an Executive Committee in which undergraduate or graduate students are encouraged to become involved. •Strive Student Mentors Student Media Association •Industrial Design Club Christopher Kasik •Theta Phi Alpha Sorority attend any and all other programs hap- Graduate students are invited to Director Administration Tuan Vu Assistant Director North Campus Christopher Ruggieri •Newman Club •Remnant Christian Fellowship •Jewelry Club Assistant Director South Campus Benjamin Fabian •Keyframe Animation Club Community Engagement Board •Leadership in Environmental Also known as C-Board, these students Assistant Director Housing are dedicated to giving back to their Jason LeConey Advocacy and Policy •Painting Club community, both local and global. Administrative Assistant •Photo League •Pratt Artists League Program Board •Pratt Historical Preservation The Program Board is a group of Organization •Pratt Institute Planning Student students who plan many on- and offcampus events. Association •Pressure Printmaking Campus Ministry •School of Information and Library The chapel, one of the central spaces The SGA can be reached by calling •The Prattler Student Newspaper 718.399.4468 or by emailing •Prattonia Yearbook [email protected]. •Static Fish Comic Book •Sculpture Club •Ubiquitous Arts and Literary Magazine •Special Archivists’ Association •WPIR Pratt Radio •Special Libraries Association Sciences Student Association •Type Directors Club •User Experience/Information Architecture on campus, is the setting for meditation and for interdenominational and denominational rites to celebrate important events of the campus community. Currently, Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant (in English and Korean) services are offered on a regular basis. Any group wishing to use the chapel may contact the director of Student Involvement, whose only requirement is respect for the space and its purpose. Lillian Jennas Receptionist Steven Spavento Office Tel: 718.399.4550 [email protected] www.pratt.edu/reslife The mission of the Office of Residential Life and Housing is to efficiently and effectively administer a housing program in a learning-centered environment that challenges and supports students to: • Enhance self-understanding • Value community responsibility • Learn from their experiences Student Affairs 308 The Office of Residential Life and Housing holds the belief that student development and learning goes on all can enjoy the time spent in the residence halls at Pratt Institute. The Office of Residential Life and outside the classroom, as well as inside Housing at Pratt Institute is based on a the classroom. The policies, procedures, specific set of values. These values guide and programs that are established and the expectations the department has encouraged by the Office of Residential for itself and the students who reside on Life and Housing are those that enhance campus and extend to the residence halls student learning and involvement outside in many direct ways. They are: the classroom. • Personal rights and responsibilities • Integrity • Respect • Fairness and justice • Open communication • Involvement The department takes very seriously its role as guarantor of a residence hall atmosphere conducive to work and study. We also strive to provide an atmosphere in which students are encouraged to make informed decisions on their own, take responsibility for their actions, and learn from their experiences. Leadership development The educational mission of Pratt opportunities are offered to students in Institute is actively pursued in the the residence halls through participation residence halls. An expected outcome in Residence Hall Councils, the of the on-campus experience is to have Residence Hall Advisory Committee students learn to cope and deal with (a student advisory committee to the problems that arise. Though this is not Office of Residential Life and Housing), always an easy task, if a student is able to EcoReps, Dining Services Reps, and learn from an adverse situation, the goal the Connections Leadership class. has been achieved. Along with this is the Participation in these activities exposes ability for students to take responsibility students to other departments at the for their choices and behaviors. If Institute while helping them to gain students make inappropriate choices, leadership skills. they should expect to be held The Residential Life staff wants accountable, the hope being a different to provide a memorable, enjoyable, choice will be made the next time, and successful academic year, but more in keeping with the community reminds students that the success expectations set forth. of this experience lies with all of us. Through participation, cooperation, understanding, and communication, The Residence Halls Pratt Institute maintains two residence halls accommodating approximately 100 graduate students. The focus of our residential life program is on providing a comfortable yet challenging environment for students to become integral members of the campus community. This is fostered by educational approaches and programming. Pratt residence halls offer a variety of housing options, including rooms with and rooms without kitchens, doubles, and singles. Pratt also offers campus meal plans for students who like the convenience of eating on campus. Grand Avenue Residence Grand Avenue Residence Hall is a joint venture between Pratt Institute and a local developer resulting in a true apartment-style graduate facility. The building can accommodate 50 students in efficiency apartments (double and single) and private single rooms within two- and three-bedroom apartments. Apartments are single-sex, but floors are co-ed. It is important that students understand the layout of the apartments when making their preferences known. Our cost-saving double efficiency apartment involves two students sharing a one-room efficiency apartment. Our single efficiency is a smaller efficiency apartment that one student occupies. Both of these options include a bathroom and kitchen, within the confines of the apartment. The single with shared bath involves each student Student Affairs 309 having a private bedroom with shared with a bookcase. All students assigned Room Assignment kitchen and bath. The building is located to double, triple, and single spaces will one block from campus. Each living share kitchen and bathroom facilities room is furnished with a sofa, club chair, with other residents of the suite. The coffee table, kitchen table, and chairs. converted apartments consist of at Utilities are included, with the exception least one double or triple that occupies of telephone. Internet connections the former living room space of the and CATV service are provided. The apartment and at least one private single building offers a garden courtyard, room that occupies the former bedroom laundry facilities, and lounge areas. This space of the apartment. The number of residence is for 12-month occupancy and students residing in a given suite ranges students will be assigned for one year. from two to six students (depending upon Different from other assignments, this the size of the converted apartment— assignment cannot be cancelled unless a one bedroom, two bedroom, or three student leaves Pratt Institute. The ability bedroom). Willoughby Residence Hall to sublet to other Pratt Institute students remains open all year. However, residents with approval from Residential Life on certain floors might have to relocate and Housing does exist in the summer to different floors during the summer months; details will be available during months for the purpose of maintenance the spring semester. and upkeep. To accommodate additional graduate students, select double Upon acceptance to the Institute, students are sent an Accepted Student Guide, which includes an application and brochure describing each housing option. Students are assigned rooms in the order their application was received. Space is limited, and students are advised to return their completed application as soon as possible. Assignment notifications are made in June. Students who have not applied by April 15 can anticipate being assigned only if and when space becomes available. All correspondence should be addressed to: Residential Life and Housing 215 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 [email protected] Willoughby Hall rooms are converted to a semi-private Willoughby Residence Hall is a former single space. The semi-private space 17-story apartment coop and is the occupies the former living room space Room rates vary according to the type largest residence hall. It accommodates of the apartment, is occupied by only of accommodation. Typical costs for over 800 undergraduate and graduate one student, and shares kitchen and each residence hall for a calendar year* students. The building houses offices bathroom facilities with other private are as follows: (Residential Life and Housing, Health single rooms in the apartment. The semi- and Counseling, and the Disability private option is only available to graduate Grand Avenue Services Center) as well as a student students and on an as-needed basis. $14,936 (double studio) Room Rates—Graduate Options work room, TV lounge, convenience $20,496 (single w/shared bath) store, laundry facilities, and other $23,528 (studio single) common student lounge areas. Suites are single sex, but floors are co-ed. Rooms Willoughby Hall vary in size from 9’ x 12’ to 15’ x 18’. In $13,101 (semi-private single) addition to the standard furniture, all $13,701 (single w/shared bath) suites have a kitchen table, stove, and $14,314 (single w/private bath) refrigerator. Each resident is provided *Graduate students, in most cases, have a 12-month contract. 310 Student Affairs Meal Plan Athletics and Recreation In an effort to ensure that students receive options for proper daily nutritional requirements, Pratt Institute offers its students a number of meal plans. The meal plans are designed on a debit card system; the student’s meal plan points decrease as he or she purchases items in the main dining room, convenience store, or pizza shop. A meal plan point equals $1. Graduate students may opt for a meal plan. Plans range from $250–2,033 per semester. Students not living in mandatory meal plan areas, upper-class students, and commuters may opt for a mandatory plan or an optional plan. Three optional plans exist to accommodate a variety of student needs. These plans are per semester only. The optional meal plan rates for 2015–16 are $250, $695, and $1,025. Purchasing a meal plan can save the student almost 10 percent over paying cash. With all meal plans, students have the option to add points online at any time during the semester in amounts greater than $25. Additional details pertaining to the meal plans are provided in the Enrollment Guide and are available from the Office of Residential Life and Housing. Student Affairs encircles the athletic court areas. Career and Professional Development There are full locker room facilities with 311 industry mentoring, professional your own business. Guest speakers development resources, workshops, and and recruiters come to campus every Director saunas for men and women. The second Director entrepreneurial education. We combine semester to speak on careers in Dave B. Adebanjo floor houses a fully equipped and newly Rhonda Schaller an excellent academic creative creative industries, review portfolios, experience with a lifetime job and career and hold interview sessions. renovated weight and fitness room, a Associate Director For Intercollegiate Athletics Ryan McCarthy dance studio, and administrative offices. Recreational and intramural activities are scheduled throughout Associate Directors Hera Marashian Brynna Tucker transition support system. CCPD staff members stay abreast of changing trends and employer needs, and guide Pratt students into an the year in conjunction with PrattFit Associate Director for programming and range from individual Assistant Director easy transition from college into the work Wellness And Recreation to team sports and special events. Men’s Deborah Yanagisawa environment. We maintain relationships Shena Faith intercollegiate athletics teams include with employers and internship providers basketball, cross-country, indoor and Assistant Director For Experiential nationally and internationally, and offer Assistant Director for Athletics outdoor track and field, tennis and Education many ways Facilities and Event Management volleyball. Women’s teams include Laura Burrell for employers to reach and recruit from Keisha Lynch basketball, cross-country, indoor and the talented Pratt community. outdoor track and field, tennis and Communications Manager Administrative Secretary volleyball. Pratt Institute is a member Robert Carabay Linda Rouse of the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Office Tel: 718.636.3773 | Fax: 718.636.3772 Professional staff work with students on professional learning goals for internship placements and career goals Athletic Conference and fields a total of Career Development and Customer for their job search and small business 12 teams. Relations Coordinator planning. Extended support is offered Alex Fisher in the areas of exhibition submissions, grants, fellowships, and residencies. We www.pratt.edu/athletics Office encourage peer learning through our The Activities Resource Center (ARC) Tel: 718.636.3506 Pratt Success program to expand the houses a 325 x 130-foot athletic area, [email protected] leadership opportunities on campus. the largest enclosed clear-span area www.pratt.edu/ccps The CCPD provides resources designed to foster meaningful in Brooklyn aside from the newly constructed Barclays Center. The The Center for Career and Professional connections between emerging complex includes five regulation-size Development (CCPD) inspires, supports, artists and professionals through tennis courts, two volleyball courts, and and educates students and alumni the following services: an NCAA basketball court. This same about emerging trends, the job market, area provides 650 bleacher seats for and what it takes to be a professional • Professional Development intercollegiate basketball, volleyball, creative in the workplace. We believe the Colgate Women’s Games, and other that preparing for a fulfilling, meaningful, spectator sports events. This enclosed and productive career is one of the area has a seating capacity for up to 1,000 most important co-curricular activities people for special events. The four-lane, for Pratt students. The CCPD augments 200-meter indoor track completely the state-of-the art curriculum with career and internship counseling, Programming We welcome classroom visits to the Center every semester and offer presentations on résumé building, networking, interviewing skills, developing an online presence, portfolio presentation, selfpromotion, freelancing, and starting • Individual and Group Career Advising Individual career advising is available to Pratt students and alumni for life. All CCPD staff have backgrounds as working creatives in major-related industries. Group sessions and major-specific career workshops are scheduled throughout the year. • Entrepreneurship Training The CCPD has developed resources to help students and alumni build skills and strategies to become successful entrepreneurs. The Meditation Incubator project offers the Creative Mind, Business Mind course, which teaches participants meditation, visualization, and self-reflection techniques to deepen their creative process and use as business planning tools. The Student Start-Up Center provides resources that help students and alumni pursue entrepreneurship, intrapreneurship, and business development goals. • Industry Outreach and Pratt Pro Job Board CCPD manages the Pratt Pro job board—thousands of new positions are posted each year. We perform outreach to employers around the world to develop a pipeline to help move Pratt students and alumni into their job openings. We visit studios and organize firm trips for students 312 to learn about the latest industry trends. Pratt Institute hosts numerous portfolio reviews and thesis exhibitions of current and graduating student work, including multiple end-of-year events highlighting the best work of the graduating class. Each year, CCPD hosts opportunity fairs, roundtable discussions, and creative career conferences with visiting partners, recruiters, and industry leaders. All of our programs are developed to educate students and alumni as well as provide networking opportunities with the creative professional community. • Developing an Online Portfolio Student Affairs Pratt Institute Internship Program Each Pratt graduate student has the opportunity to gain hands-on professional experience in New York City and beyond through an academic internship program supervised in collaboration with department faculty. The CCPD supports students in gaining hands-on professional experience interning at companies such as Condé Nast, Unified Field, Knoll, and many, many more. Graduate internships play a crucial students every semester, including online presence. Pratt Institute and the summer semester. For more information CCPD have partnered with Behance about internships such as eligibility, the to launch Pratt Institute Portfolios at registration process, and deadlines, portfolios.pratt.edu. This is an exciting log on to www.pratt.edu/career and opportunity for students to promote click on “Students & Alumni,” then their work under the Pratt brand. With “Internship Program.” In most cases, the Behance platform, Pratt Institute graduate students must complete one Portfolios reaches a wide audience of full semester to be eligible for academic industry professionals on the lookout credit for an internship. for the best creative talent. you, contact [email protected] or call 718.636.3506. • The experience is a full semester. • The experience can be paid or unpaid. • Internships are available to all What is an internship? Internships are learning experiences in the workplace that relate to a student’s major or professional pursuits. Interns are able to take the skills and theories learned in the classroom and apply them to real-life work experience. Internships are an opportunity to try a specific field, organization, or company and participate as a trainee within that site. Internships also allow students to develop a Director Mai McDonald Graves [email protected] Learning Specialist/Counselor Anna Riquier, L.M.H.C. [email protected] domestic, international, and transfer students during their time at Pratt. • Internship credits vary from 0 to 3 credits based on student need, departmental policy. available to full-time matriculated or to find out how the CCPD can help Some key components of a Pratt Internship are: professional perspectives. An internship students develop their portfolio and questions. To make an appointment them well as emerging professionals. number of hours worked, and individual at Pratt is an academic opportunity Disability Resource Center relationships in the field, which will serve role in developing skills and offering The CCPD professional staff can help The staff of CCPD welcomes your professional network of contacts and build • To obtain academic credit for an internship, students must be enrolled in an internship course at the same time they are participating in the internship. Students are required to attend one of the internship information sessions offered throughout the year in the CCPD to learn more about the internship program, how to begin an internship search, and how to find departmental eligibility information. To make an appointment or to learn the dates of the next internship information session, contact career@ pratt.edu or call 718.636.3506. Student Affairs 313 Services to Students • Consults with campus department The DRC provides the following services directly to students: • Offers a full-service Center where students can meet with professional support staff and use computer, study, and exam-taking areas. • Maintains confidential records of documentation of disability. Learning Specialist Maegan D’Amato, L.M.S.W. [email protected] Assistant to the Director Marie A. McLaughlin [email protected] Office Tel: 718.802.3123 | Fax: 718.399.4544 • Determines program eligibility for services based upon documentation of disability and staff assessment, and determines appropriate, individualized classroom accommodations and support services. • Responds to inquiries from prospective students and parents. • Coordinates support services [email protected] for students such as note taking, www.pratt.edu/disability tutoring, time management coaching, and counseling. The mission of the Disability Resource Center (DRC) is to ensure students with disabilities can freely and actively participate in all facets of Pratt life. To this end, the office provides and coordinates services and programs that support student development, enable students to maximize their educational and creative potential, and assist students in developing their independence to the fullest extent possible. The DRC aims to increase the level of awareness among all members of the Pratt community so that students with disabilities are able to perform at a level limited only by their abilities, not their disabilities. • For deaf and hard-of-hearing students, available services include FM units, sign language interpreters, and remote and in-class Computer Assisted Realtime Translation (CART) services. • Arranges auxiliary aids for students, such as assistive learning software, FM units, and books in alternative formats. • Consults with faculty regarding the instructional needs of students. administrators regarding specific needs of students, such as special housing and dietary accommodations, and access to campus facilities. • Collaborates with Health and Counseling services in meeting the needs of students with medical or psychological conditions. • Consults with community, local, and regional services, such as rehabilitation agencies on behalf of students. • Serves as an advocate for students with faculty and staff. • Provides DRC program information to the campus community. • Assists students in monitoring the effectiveness of services and accommodations. • Develops and administers appropriate assessment tools to determine efficacy of accommodations and services. Students with disabilities may utilize the DRC to receive various support services, including attending time-management and self-advocacy workshops and scheduling weekly oneon-one sessions with staff. Students may work on writing and reading assignments on computers containing assistive learning technologies, and may also arrange to take quizzes and exams in our distraction-free study and exam room. Student Affairs 314 To receive classroom Health and Counseling Services accommodations and/or support services through the DRC we encourage Director students to schedule an appointment Martha Cedarholm, A.R.N.P.-B.C., F.N.P. to meet with DRC staff to discuss their [email protected] Student Affairs 315 Case Manager and Staff Counselor Health and Counseling Services operates Hali Brindel, L.C.S.W. both by appointment and as a walk-in clinic. psychologists, clinical social workers, and in a health and accident insurance [email protected] All care provided is strictly confidential and a consulting psychiatrist who are available plan. They may waive this insurance fee, remains separate from a student’s academic by appointment to meet with students. which will be deducted from their bill, The counseling staff includes clinical Students are automatically enrolled Student Health Insurance Specialist and social conduct record. The office is Students may receive counseling on a by providing insurance information in needs. Students may also be referred Josefina Soto open on weekdays 9 PM to 5 pm, with the short-term basis for personal, emotional, the online student insurance system, for formal evaluation that is conducted Associate Director For Counseling [email protected] last appointments made at 4 PM. Check the family, interpersonal, and situational Aetna Student Health, prior to the by appropriate professionals to receive Vincent Kiefner, Ph.D. website for updated hours and services. problems. Consultation is available waiver deadline, which is always the last documentation of recommended [email protected] on campus, and referrals for specialty day to drop or add courses for the fall services are made. semester. All students who were born academic support. For more information about Nurse Practitioner/Associate Director the Disability Resource Center visit for Health our website at www.pratt.edu/ Debbie Scott, A.R.N.P.-B.C., F.N.P. disabilityresourcecenter. You may also [email protected] Nurses The medical staff includes the director, Christine Susca, RN who is a family nurse practitioner, two nurse [email protected] practitioners, a physician attending the clinic Since the Health and Counseling after January 1, 1957, must provide proof once a week during the academic year, and Services Center is not designed to of immunity against measles, mumps, Sheriezah Shiwprashad, LPN two registered nurses. Services provided meet the total health care needs of and rubella. New York State law requires [email protected] include treatment of illnesses; first aid for students, referrals are sometimes made written documentation of two measles- injuries; physicals, including sports and to outside clinics and agencies. The staff mumps-rubella vaccines or written contact the DRC at 718.802.3123 to schedule an appointment to discuss Nurse Practitioner Administrative Aides women’s health examinations; health educa- is committed to helping students find documentation of immunity to these classroom accommodations and services Alison Altschuler, A.R.N.P.-B.C., F.N.P. Giovanni Glaize tion; and medical testing. the best source of health care at the diseases proved by a blood test. Written you may need. [email protected] [email protected] lowest cost. Hospital and medical care documentation is absolutely required in the office for free; however, other tests beyond that provided by the Health order to attend classes. Pregnancy testing is performed in Consulting Physician Sandra Davis are sent to a laboratory service, which and Counseling Services is the financial Kristen Harvey, M.D. [email protected] will bill the student or the student’s responsibility of the student and his meningitis is strongly recommended for insurance provider. Some commonly or her family. For this purpose, Pratt students planning to live in on-campus housing.† A complete medical history and a comprehensive physical examination Staff Counselors Consulting Psychiatrist used medications (over-the-counter Institute requires all students to carry Sarika Seth Ph.D. Jane Zirin, M.D. and prescription) are dispensed free health and accident insurance. [email protected] or for a nominal fee. Students must Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner purchase all other medication at a Victoria Chun Kwon Ph.D. Lori Neushotz, DNP pharmacy. Referrals are made to local [email protected] [email protected] medical resources for care not provided Assistant Director for Counseling and Office Staff Counselor Tel: 718.399.4542 | Fax: 718.399.4544 Lonette Belizaire, Ph.D. [email protected] [email protected] www.pratt.edu/counseling on campus.* Clinical AOD Services Coordinator Jernee Montoya, L.C.S.W. [email protected] *Numerous and varied resources are available at the Health and Counseling page of the Pratt website at www.pratt.edu/health. †New York State does not require this vaccine but does require a signed acknowledgment of receipt and review of vaccine information. Immunization against meningococcal are also required for all new students. 316 Student Affairs 317 Libraries International Affairs The Office of International Affairs (OIA) welcomes about 500 new international Director students each year. There are about L. Jane Bush 1,329 international students from 77 countries. In addition to providing Associate Director services to international students, the Saundra Hampton OIA takes care of J1 Exchange Visitors including inbound exchange students, Assistant Director professors, and scholars. The OIA is Mia Schleifer the office in charge of keeping Pratt in compliance with the Department of Sevis Coordinator Homeland Security and the Department Silvana Grima of State. The well-traveled and experienced Receptionist staff members are here to help students Zoila Dennigan make a successful transition to the Pratt community and help address some of Office the challenges students might encounter Tel: 718.636.3674 during their academic program. They [email protected] create a friendly environment, providing www.pratt.edu/oia direct support with immigration issues, employment authorization, financial issues, personal issues, and crosscultural events. The OIA advises the Pratt International Student Association (PISA), which is open for all to join. The Libraries are dedicated to an active titles are accessible. The Brooklyn Management, AOS/AAS Program, Design partnership in the academic process. The Campus Library houses microfilm, Management, and Continuing and Libraries’ primary mission is to support multimedia, rare books, and the Professional Studies. the Institute’s academic programs by college archives. Visual and Multimedia providing materials and information Resources has a collection of DVDs, VHS instructional programs to help patrons services to students, faculty, staff, tapes, and 16mm films. The department use information resources more alumni, and visiting scholars. A state- also circulates cameras, projectors, light effectively. Other services offered of-the-art integrated library system kits, audio recorders, and a half dozen throughout the year include orientation; interfaces with an up-to-date website laptops. The Visual Resources Center individualized instruction; information providing broad access to electronic holds a collection of 35mm slides and literacy instruction; and research materials as well as information about provides access to over 1.3 million images assistance and referrals to other libraries the Libraries. Connect to the Libraries’ through ARTstor. Comfortable reading in the metropolitan area. website and catalog at library.pratt.edu. and study spaces are available in this The collection at the Brooklyn Campus Library provides broad-based coverage of the history, theory, criticism, Librarians at both facilities offer All of the Library units are dedicated New York City landmark building on the not only to providing access to Brooklyn campus. information, but to assisting information The Pratt Manhattan Library seekers in developing successful and practice of architecture, fine arts, holds more than 17,024 monographs, strategies to locate, evaluate, and employ and design, while also supporting the subscribes to over 170 current information to meet a full range of needs. liberal arts and sciences. The collection periodicals and maintains a small encompasses over 176,674 monographs fiction collection. The book and and bound periodicals and also maintains periodical collection provides support 776 current periodical descriptions. The for the following programs: Graduate Libraries also provide students access Communications Design, Information and to 38 online resources and electronic Library Science, Creative Arts Therapy, periodical indexes. Through these Facilities/Construction Management, resources over 11,474 full-text periodical Historic Preservation, Arts and Cultural Director Library Services Coordinator, Visual Resources Curator Russell S. Abell Manhattan Campus Johanna Bauman Jean Hines Library Audiovisual Coordinator Head of Public Services TBA Evening and Weekend Library Manager Kate McDermott Head of Technical Services John A. Maier Visual and Multimedia Resources Director Chris Arabadjis Mike Nemire 318 319 Library Faculty Steven J. Cohen Maggie Portis Associate Professor/Cataloger and Librarian B.A., Cornell University; M.S.L.S., Columbia University; professional organization memberships include: American Library Association, Art Libraries Society of North America, Association of College and Research Libraries, Association for Library Collections and Technical Services New York Library Club. Assistant Professor/Art and Architecture Librarian B.A., The University of Texas at Austin; M.S. LIS, The Palmer School, Long Island University; professional organization memberships include ARLIS/NA and ARLIS/VRA. Cheryl M. Costello Assistant Professor/Art and Architecture Librarian B.A., M.S., Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; curator of exhibit, La Gazette du Bon Ton: Art Deco Fashion Plates from 1913-1922 at the Pratt Library; published in ARLIS/NA Reviews; peer reviewer for Art Documentation; professional organization memberships include: American Association of Museums, Art Libraries Society of New York, Art Libraries Society of North America; awarded the Celine Palatsky Travel Award for the Art Libraries Society of North America Annual Conference 2008. Bill McMillin Assistant Professor/Emerging Technologies Librarian B.F.A., Photography, Maryland Institute College of Art and Design; M.L.S. with Digital Libraries Specialization, Indiana University at Bloomington; publications include “One Size Does Not Fit All: a multi-layered assessment approach to identifying skill and competency levels” and “Library Technology and Applications for the Classroom”; professional organization memberships include ALA, ACRL, and ASIS&T. Paul Schlotthauer Associate Professor/Librarian and Archivist B.S., Gettysburg College; M.M., Indiana University; M.L.S., St. John’s University; publications include “Pratt Institute: A Historical Snapshot of Campus and Area” in Digitization in the Real World: Lessons Learned from Small and Medium-Sized Digitization Projects; professional organization memberships include: Association of American Archivists, MidAtlantic Regional Archives Conference, Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York, New York Library Club (board member), American Library Association, Association of College and Research Libraries, American Association of Museums. Holly Wilson Associate Professor/Research and Instruction Librarian B.A., Baldwin-Wallace; M.L.I.S., University of Pittsburgh; publications include “Touch, see, find: serving multiple literacies in the art and design library” in The Handbook of Art and Design Librarianship; professional organization memberships include: American Library Association, Association of College and Research Libraries; Reference and User Services Association, Art Libraries Society of North America. 320 321 Board of Trustees Bruce J. Gitlin Gary S. Hattem Adam D. Tihany Chair of the Board President and CEO, Milgo Industrial Inc. President, Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation and Managing Director, Deutsche Bank Community Development Finance Group Principal, Tihany Design Mike Pratt Vice Chair of the Board President and Executive Director, The Scherman Foundation Robert H. Siegel Vice Chair of the Board Founding Partner, Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects, LLC Thomas F. Schutte June Kelly June Kelly Gallery Roelfien Kuijpers Global Head of AWM Relationship Management, Institutional Head of WM Relationship Management, Americas, Deautsche Bank David S. Mack Senior Partner, The Mack Company President, Pratt Institute Dr. Joshua L. Smith Secretary Professor Emeritus, New York University Howard S. Stein Treasurer Retired, Managing Director, Operational Risk Global Corporate and Investment Bank, Citigroup Kurt Andersen Trustee, The Halycon Foundation, Trustee Emerita, The American Museum in Britain, Member of the Board, The American Associates of the National Theatre in London Katharine L. McKenna Kelsey Miller Recent Graduate Trustee Diane Hang Nguyen Chief Marketing Officer, Lutron Electronics, and Chief Creative Officer, Ivalo Lighting Incorporated Faculty Trustee Michael S. Zetlin Attorney, Zetlin & De Chiara LLP Trustees Emeriti: Richard W. Eiger Young Ho Kim Not-for-Profit Consultant Ralph Pucci Malcolm MacKay President, Ralph Pucci International Leon Moed Stan Richards Bruce M. Newman Principal, The Richards Group Kate Selden Graduate Student Trustee Arts Activisit Susan Hakkarainen Susan Young David O. Pratt Undergraduate Student Trustee Anne N. Edwards Ellery Washington Charles J. Hamm Attorney David Cutler Founding Partner, Two Trees Management Co., LLC Recent Graduate Trustee Founder and Principal, Art Agency, Partners Kathryn C. Chenault David C. Walentas Artist, Designer, and Owner, KLM Studios Artist, Interior Designer, and Owner, Buck House Amy Cappellazzo Former Director, Architecture, Planning and Design Program and Capital Projects, NYSCA and Adjunct Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University Faculty Trustee Carolyn Bransford MacDonald Writer Deborah J. Buck Anne H. Van Ingen Mark D. Stumer Principal, Mojo-Stumer Associates, P.C. Juliana C. Terian Chairman of the Rallye Group Heidi Nitze Marc A. Rosen 322 323 Administration Dr. Thomas F. Schutte Russell Abell Anthony Gelber President Director of Libraries Director of Administrative Sustainability Kirk E. Pillow Sylvia Acuesta Glenn Gordon Provost Comptroller Executive Director of Planning, Design, Construction, and Physical Plant Marianthi Zikopoulos TBA Associate Provost Director of Athletics and Recreation Judith Aaron Sinclaire Alkire Vice President for Enrollment Director of Enrollment Marketing and Research Helen Matusow-Ayres Nedzad Goga Vice President for Student Affairs Director of Financial Aid Joseph M. Hemway Christopher Arabadjis Vice President for Information Technology and CIO Director of Multi-Media Services Mai McDonald-Graves Director of Disability Services Thomas Greene Director of Human Resources Imani Griszell Director of Events Nancy Walker Director of Graduate Admissions Nicholas Battis Director of Exhibitions Interim Vice President for Institutional Advancement Vladimir Briller Cathleen Kenny Executive Director of Strategic Planning and Institutional Research Vice President for Finance and Administration L. Jane Bush Thomas Hanrahan Dean, School of Architecture Gerald Snyder Dean, School of Art Anita Cooney Director of International Affairs Dustin Liebenow Director of Marketing Communications and Enrollment Management Debera Johnson Academic Director of Sustainability Martha Cedarholm Director of Health and Counseling Services Berti Jones Director of Enterprise Systems Randy Donowitz Director of the Writing and Tutorial Center Christopher Kasik Director of Residential Life and Housing Grace Kendall Andrew Barnes Director of Special Projects/Assistant to the Vice President for Student Affairs Dean, School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean, School of Information and Library Science Lisle Henderson Registrar Dean, School of Design Tula Giannini Young Hah Adam Friedman Director of Pratt Center for Community Development Emma Legge Director of Student Involvement and Parent and Family Programs 324 Administration 325 Academic Calendar Ludovic Leroy Rhonda Schaller Director of Corporate Relations Director of the Center for Career and Professional Development Yvette Mack Bursar William J. Schmitz Director of Safety and Security John Maier Last day for 100% tuition refund First day of classes Director of Alumni Relations and Annual Giving Last day to add or drop without a Emily Mack Marshall Nancy Seidler Last day to withdraw (WD) from a Director of Intensive English course Lorraine Smith Curator, Visual Resource Center Director of Academic Computing Patti McCall Head of Public Services Mara McGinnis Executive Director of Communications Emily Moqtaderi Executive Director, Campaign and Major Gifts Director of Processing and Technology Director of Research January 19 May 16 August 24 January 19 May 16 September 7 February 1 May 23 November 13 April 8 June 27 Dates that classes do September 7 (Labor Day) January 18 May 30 not meet October 12–13 (Midterm Break) (Martin Luther King Day) (Memorial Day) November 25–29 (Thanksgiving) March 14–20 July 4 (Independence (Spring Break) Day) Director of Budget William Swan Studio Days December 8–11 May 3–6 Director of Undergraduate Admissions Final exams December 12–18 May 7–13 Vicki Weiner Last day of classes December 18 May 13 Warren White Director of HEOP Dmitriy Paskhaver August 24 WD grade Richard Soto Director of Planning Christopher Paisley Summer 2016 (See schedule of classes) Michael Sclafani Ellery Matthews Spring 2016 upon withdrawal (WD) Head of Technical Services Director of Foundation Relations Fall 2015 Bryan Wizemann Director of the Web Group July 22 (See schedule of classes) Grades due online December 22 May 17 July 26 Please note: This calendar must be considered as informational and not binding on the Institute. The dates listed here are provided as a guideline for use by students and offices participating in academic and registration related activities. This calendar is not to be used for nonacademic business purposes. Pratt Institute reserves the right to make changes to the information printed in this Bulletin without prior notice. Important Telephone Numbers Academic Advisors Admissions (toll-free): 800.331.0834 International Affairs Office: 718.636.3674 Architecture: 718.399.4333 Admissions: 718.636.3514 Library (Circulation Desk): 718.636.3420 Art and Design: 718.636.3611 Bursar: 718.636.3539 Registrar: 718.636.3663 Information and Library Science: Career Services: 718.636.3506 Residential Life: 718.399.4550 212.647.7682 Financial Aid: 718.636.3599 Security: 718.636.3540 Intensive English Program: 718.636.3450 Health and Counseling Services: Student Activities and Orientation: Writing Programs: 718.399.4497 718.399.4542 718.636.3422 326 Academic Calendar Academic Calendar 327 Late Payment Fees Fall 2015 Registration New Student Orientation Academic Tuesday, December 22 Refund Schedule Monday, February 2 Tuesday, August 18–Sunday, August 23 Monday, August 17 Last day to change grades from previous Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule Fall 2015 New student orientation held; loan Arts and Cultural Management Office. entrance interviews. classes begin. Tuesday, December 22 Prior to and including August 24 Wednesday, August 19 All final grades due online by 3 PM. August 25–August 31 85% refund Monday, February 2 charged for any unpaid balance after Full refund Brooklyn SU/FA schedule due to Payment/Financial Design Management classes begin. Thursday, December 24– September 1–September 7 70% refund Registrar’s Office. Wednesday, July 1 Monday, August 24 Sunday, January 3 September 8–September 14 55% refund Monday, March 2 Student loan application deadline. Classes begin. Winter vacation. No classes. After September 14 Fall schedule goes live on the Web. Saturday, August 1 Monday, September 7. Monday, March 9 Continuing students’ tuition payment Labor Day. No classes. Academic advisement begins. deadline. Monday, April 6 Saturday, August 1 Last day to add a class. Online registration begins for continuing New students’ tuition payment deadline. Last day to drop a class without a WD students. Sunday, August 2 grade recorded. Friday, May 15 Late payment fee of $80 in effect for all Monday, October 12–Tuesday, Last day of preregistration for continuing students. October 13 students. Monday, August 24 Midterm Break. No classes. Monday, June 15–Friday, June 19 Last day for 100 percent tuition refund Friday, November 13 Tentative date for new student online upon withdrawal. Last day for course withdrawal. registration. Monday, September 7 Housing Monday, September 7 Wednesday, November 25– Sunday, November 29 Last day to add a class. Tuesday, August 18 Thanksgiving. No classes. Last day to drop a class without a WD Entering freshman, transfer, and graduate Offices open on 11/25 only. grade recorded. students check in to residence halls, No new registrations accepted after 9 AM to 5 PM. this date. Friday, August 21–Saturday, August 22 Friday, November 13 Continuing students check in to Last day for course withdrawal. residence halls, 9 AM to 5 PM. Saturday, December 19 Noon checkout deadline for graduating students and those who cancelled spring residence hall license. Note: Students residing on campus spring 2016 do not check out of their fall rooms. Tuesday, December 8– Friday December 11 Studio Days Saturday, December 12– Friday, December 18 Final exams week. Fall semester ends. Tuesday, December 15 Last day for students to submit graduation applications to the Registrar’s Office for May graduation. Review for graduation begins January 4. Institute offices closed. International Students Friday, August 14; Monday, August 17; Tuesday, August 18 Mandatory compliance and check-in workshops with OIA (choose one day on MyPratt). Thursday, August 13; Friday, August 14; Saturday August 15 Mandatory English Proficiency exams given for international students (choose one day on MyPratt). Saturday, August 15 New international students check in to residence halls, 9 AM to 5 PM. Sunday, August 16 Welcome dinner for all new international students and their families Tuesday, August 18–Sunday August 23 New student orientation. • A late payment fee of $80 will be PMC SU/FA schedule due to Registrar’s spring/summer semesters. No refund the initial disbursement of financial aid has been applied for each semester. • A late fee of $55 will be charged after the first 15 days of each semester/ session for students who did not The refunds above are calculated using complete their registration during their the date you dropped your course online designated registration period. or submitted your completed drop/ add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall 6th Floor). No penalty is assessed for undergraduate withdrawals when a full-time credit load (12–18 credits) is carried before and after the drop/add date. Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Fall 2015 Please refer to the housing license to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the cancellation penalty schedule on the back of your meal plan contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. 328 Academic Calendar Academic Calendar 329 Spring 2016 Registration Payment/Financial Housing Academic Tuesday, May 17 Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Wednesday, August 19 Sunday, November 1 Thursday, January 14 Saturday, January 9 Last day to change grades from previous Spring 2016 PMC spring schedule due to Registrar’s Recommended date to file spring New international students’ residence Graduate Design Management and Arts fall semesters. Office. financial aid and student loan hall check-in, 9 AM to 5 PM. and Cultural Management classes begin. Tuesday, May 17 to determine the cancellation Tuesday, September 8 applications for students who did not file Thursday, January 14 Thursday, January 14 All final grades due online by 3 PM. penalty/refund. Brooklyn spring schedule due to for fall term. Entering freshman, transfer, and graduate English proficiency exam for international TBA Registrar’s Office. Friday, December 18 students’ check in to residence hall, 9 AM students. Graduation Awards Convocation. Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Monday, September 21 Continuing students’ tuition payment to 5 PM. Monday, January 18 TBA Please refer to the cancellation penalty Spring schedule goes live on Web deadline for spring. Saturday, May 14 Martin Luther King Day. Commencement. schedule on the back of your meal plan Monday, October 19 Monday, January 4 Noon check out deadline for non- No classes. Academic advisement begins. All continuing students should begin to graduating students and those students Tuesday, January 19 Refund Schedule Weekday classes begin. Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule Please refer to the housing license contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. file financial aid forms for financial aid without a Summer Session residence award packages. hall license. Friday, January 15 Day after Commencement, TBA Last day to add a class or drop without New students’ tuition payment deadline. Noon checkout deadline for graduating Prior to and including January 19 a WD grade recorded. 85% refund charged for any unpaid balance after Last day to add a class. students the day after commencement. January 20–January 26 Tuesday, January 19 Monday, February 15 January 27–February 2 70% refund the initial disbursement of financial aid Last day to drop a class without a WD Last day for 100 percent tuition refund Presidents’ Day. Classes meet. February 3–February 9 55% refund has been applied for each semester. grade recorded. upon withdrawal. Offices closed. After February 9 No new registrations accepted after Monday, February 1 this date. Recommended filing deadline for Friday, April 8 financial aid applications for the next Last day for course withdrawal. academic year. Monday, November 2 Continuing students’ online registration for spring begins. Monday, February 1 Note: Students residing on campus Summer 2016 session do not check out of their spring room until notified by their SU that summer room is ready. Monday, February 1 Monday, March 14–Sunday, March 20 Spring break. Friday, March 25 Last day to submit a graduation Tuesday, April 5 application for summer and fall New Student Orientation Recommended filing deadline for 2016/17 graduation. Thursday, January 14–Friday January 15 student loan applications. Late Payment Fees Spring 2016 Full refund No refund The refunds above are calculated using the date you completed your transaction online or submitted your completed drop/add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall, sixth floor). No penalty is assessed for undergraduate Saturday, March 26–Sunday, March 27 withdrawals when a full-time credit load New international student orientation held. Spring Holiday. No classes. (12–18 credits) is carried before and after Friday, January 15 Institute closed. the drop/add date. New student orientation held. Friday, April 8 Last day for course withdrawal. Tuesday, May 3–Friday May 6 Studio Days Saturday, May 7–Friday, May 13 Final exams week. Classes end. • A late payment fee of $80 will be • A late fee of $55 will be charged after the first 15 days of each semester/ session for students who did not complete their registration during their designated registration period. 330 Academic Calendar Academic Calendar Summer 2016 Registration* Housing Academic Refund Schedule Monday, April 4 Students check in to their residence Saturday, May 7 Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule Registration for summer classes begins. hall room the Sunday prior to the start Graduate Design Management and Arts Summer 2016 of their classes, 9 AM to 5 PM. (Consult and Cultural Management classes begin. course schedule to determine the weeks Prior to and including May 16 Full refund Monday, May 16 desired for on-campus housing.) May 17 through May 23 55% refund Summer classes begin. After May 23 No refund Monday, May 23 Last day to add a class. Monday, May 23 Last day to drop summer classes without a WD grade recorded. No new Summer Session registrations accepted after this date. Students check out of their residence hall room on the Saturday following the conclusion of their classes by noon. (Consult course schedule to determine Monday, June 27 the weeks desired for on-campus Last day for withdrawal from a housing.) summer class. *The last day to add a class, drop a class, or withdraw from a class with a grade of WD is dependent on the start date and length of the class Payment/Financial Friday, April 8 Summer Session tuition payment deadline for continuing students; Note: Students residing on campus for Monday, May 23 Last day to add a class. Last day to drop without a WD grade recorded. No new Summer Session registrations accepted after this date. Monday, May 30 Memorial Day. No classes. the last week of the Summer Session Monday, June 27 and residing on campus for the fall 2016 Last day for course withdrawal from semester do not check out of their Summer Session. summer room until they are notified their Monday, July 4 fall room is ready. Independence Day. No classes. Friday, July 22 Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the housing license to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the cancellation penalty schedule on the back of your meal plan contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. Summer classes end. thereafter, an $80 late payment fee Tuesday, July 26 charged to continuing students for Summer grades due online by 3 PM. Summer Session. The above refunds are calculated using the date you dropped classes online or submitted your completed drop/add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall, sixth floor). Late Payment Fees • A late payment fee of $80 will be charged for any unpaid balance after the initial disbursement of financial aid has been applied for each semester. • A late fee of $55 will be charged after the first 15 days of each semester/ session for students who did not complete their registration during their designated registration period. 331 332 333 B54 B54 How to Get to Pratt Brooklyn Campus By Car From Newark-Liberty Airport 200 Willoughby Avenue From BQE, Heading West/South Brooklyn, NY 11205 Exit 31, Wythe Avenue/Kent Avenue. Stay straight to go onto Williamsburg Street W., which becomes Williamsburg Place, then Park Avenue. Turn left onto Hall Street. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. After the exit, continue toward US-1/US-9/ Newark-Elizabeth (US-22.) Continue on US-1 and 9 North toward Port Newark. US-1 and 9 North become 12th Street. Continue on Boyle Plaza, which becomes the Holland Tunnel. Take the tunnel toward Brooklyn/Downtown and continue on Beach Street to Walker Street. Continue on Canal Street to the Manhattan Bridge. Cross the bridge to Flatbush Avenue Extension. Turn left onto Myrtle Avenue. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby. Campus is on right. B54 B54 B54 By Subway From Grand Central Station Take the downtown 4 or 5 train to the Fulton Street station. Take the Brooklyn-bound A or C train to the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station. Cross platform and take the G train (front car) to the Clinton-Washington station. Use Washington Avenue exit. On Washington, walk one block north to DeKalb Avenue. Turn right onto DeKalb and proceed one block to Hall Street/Saint James Place to the corner gate of the Pratt campus. From Penn Station and Port Authority Bus Terminals Take the Brooklyn-bound A or C train to the Hoyt-Schermerhorn station. Cross platform and take G train (front car) to the Clinton-Washington station. Use Washington Avenue exit and follow directions above to campus. From BQE, Heading East/North Exit 30, Flushing Avenue. Bear left onto Classon Avenue, then turn left onto Flushing Avenue. Turn left onto Washington Avenue. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. Myrtle Hall is across the street from the main gate (first left parking lot). From West Side of Manhattan Via Manhattan Bridge Travel east on Canal Street to Manhattan Bridge. Exit bridge to Flatbush Avenue. Turn left onto Myrtle Avenue. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby. Campus is on right. From East Side of Manhattan By Bus From Downtown Manhattan Take the B51 bus from City Hall to Fulton and Smith streets in downtown Brooklyn. Change to B38 bus and take it up Lafayette Avenue to the corner of Saint James Place, which turns into Hall Street. Entrance to the campus is one block north on Hall Street. B 1. ISC Building 2. Library 3. DeKalb Hall 4. Higgins Hall 5. North Hall 6. Memorial Hall 7. Student Union 8. Main Building 9. East Building 10. South Hall 11. Jones Hall 12. Thrift Hall 13. Pantas Hall 14. Willoughby Hall 15A. Willoughby Security Booth 15B. Pantas Security Booth 15C. Hall Security Booth 16. Chemistry Building 17. Machinery Building 18. Engineering Building 19A. Pratt Studios 19B. Juliana Curran Terian Design Center 19C. Steuben Hall 20. Film/Video Building 21. Pratt Townhouses 22. ARC building 23. Stabile Hall 24. Cannoneer Court 25. Myrtle Hall 26. 100 Grand 27. 248 Flushing 28. Newman Mall and Clock Via Brooklyn Bridge Travel south on the FDR Drive (also called East River Drive) to Brooklyn Bridge exit. Exit bridge to Tillary Street. Turn left on Tillary to Flatbush Avenue. Turn left onto Myrtle Avenue. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby. Campus is on right. From LaGuardia Airport Follow signs toward Airport Exit/Rental Cars. Take ramp (right) onto Grand Central Parkway toward Parkway West/Manhattan. At exit 4, take ramp (right) onto BQE/ I-278 W. toward the Verrazano Narrows Bridge. Take BQE to exit 31, Wythe Avenue/Kent Avenue. Stay straight to go onto Williamsburg Street W., which becomes Williamsburg Place, then Park Avenue. Turn left onto Hall Street. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. From Kennedy Airport Take the Airport Exit on I-678 South and continue towards Terminals 8 and 9. Go toward Terminal 9 Departures. Bear right towards the Van Wyck Expressway/Airport Exit. Continue on the Van Wyck/I-678 North. Take the 1B-2/Belt Parkway exit towards the Verrazano Bridge. Take exit 1B to North Conduit Avenue, which becomes North Conduit Boulevard. Take Belt Parkway West towards the Verrazano Bridge. Take the North Conduit Avenue exit 17W. Continue on Nassau Expressway/North Conduit Avenue. Bear left on Atlantic Avenue. Proceed five miles. Turn right onto Washington Avenue and go seven blocks. Turn right onto Willoughby Avenue. Campus is on right. Myrtle Hall is across the street from the main gate (first left into parking lot). 334 335 Index Manhattan Campus By Subway Going from Pratt Brooklyn 144 West 14th Street Take the A, C, or E train to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue, the F or M train to 14th Street/Sixth Avenue, the 1, 2, or 3 train to 14th Street/Seventh Avenue, or the 4, 5, 6, N, R, or Q train to 14th Street/Union Square. Take crosstown buses or the L train to travel east or west on 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. to Pratt Manhattan New York, NY 10011 By Car From Queens Via 59th Street Bridge Go south on the FDR Drive. Take 23rd Street exit. Make a right turn onto 23rd Street. Make a left turn on Second Avenue. Take Second Avenue to 14th Street. Make a right turn. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From Brooklyn Via Brooklyn Bridge, north on FDR Drive Drive to Houston Street exit. Take left on Houston to Third Avenue. Make a right. Take Third Avenue to 14th Street, and make a left turn. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From New Jersey Take the Holland Tunnel to Manhattan. Take Exit 3 toward Brooklyn, merge onto Beach St./W. Broadway and continue to follow W. Broadway. Make a slight left onto Sixth Avenue/Avenue of the Americas. Turn left onto 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From Westchester Take the West Side Highway South. Make a left turn onto 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. Parking in Manhattan Limited street parking is available on weekdays and weekends. Parking is available for a fee in nearby garages. By Bus If uptown, take the M20 to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue. Or take the M6 to 14th Street/Avenue of the Americas. If downtown, take the M20 to 14th Street/Seventh Avenue. Or take the M6 to 14th Street/Union Square. Take crosstown buses or the L train to travel east or west on 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. By PATH Train From New Jersey Take the PATH train to 14th Street in Manhattan. Exit at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. By Subway Take the G train from the Clinton-Washington station. Go two stops to Hoyt-Schermerhorn. Change for the A or C train, and take it to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue. Walk east, or take the crosstown buses or L train for eastbound travel. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. By Bus and Subway Take the M38 bus to Flatbush Avenue. Exit at DeKalb Avenue station. Take the N, R, Q or W train to 14th Street/Union Square. Walk west, or take crosstown buses, or the L train for westbound travel. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. A Academic calendar, 325–331 Academic integrity code, 302–303 Academic policies. see Registration and academic policies Academic standing, 300 Academic Year format, Creative Arts Therapy program, 80, 81 Accreditation. see also Teacher certification Accreditation Statement, 21 School of Architecture, 21, 29 School of Art, 72, 80 School of Design, 21 School of Information and Library Science, 21, 136 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 21 Activities Resource Center (ARC), 13, 310 Administration, 323–324 Admission requirements, 251–261 applications, 251–253, 259–260 obtaining information about, 4 Office of Graduate Admissions, 251 readmission, 260–261 School of Architecture, 29, 47, 63, 253–255 School of Art, 72, 77, 81, 84, 88, 97, 255–257 School of Design, 111, 115, 128, 257–258 School of Information and Library Science, 142, 145, 147, 148, 258 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 159, 162, 166, 259 transfer credits, 261, 291–292 transfer students, 261 Advanced Certificates Archives, 147 Art and Design Education, 72, 97 Library and Information Studies, 148 Library Media Specialist Program, 142, 147–148 Museum Libraries, 147 Museum Studies, 154 American Art Therapy Association, Inc., 21, 80 American Dance Therapy Association, 21, 80 American Library Association, 21, 136 Applications credentials needed for, 252–253, 259 deadlines for, 251–252 international applicants, 252, 259, 260 international applicants, from China, 253 notification and deposit, 260 Architecture, School of, 27–65 accreditation of, 21, 29 admission requirements, 29, 47, 63, 253–255 Architecture (department), 33–40 City and Regional Planning, 51–53 curriculum descriptions, 174–176 degrees offered, 27, 29, 31, 33, 34, 49, 55, 173 Facilities Management, 62–65 faculty, 190–200 general information, 27–29 Graduate Architecture and Urban Design (GAUD), 31–32 Historic Preservation, 58–61 professional standards, 29 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development, 46–49 scholarships, 268–270, 277–279 Study Abroad programs, 16–17 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 54–57 Urban Design, 41–45 Art, School of, 66–103 accreditation, 21, 72, 80 admission requirements, 72, 77, 81, 84, 88, 97, 255–257 Art and Design Education, 70–73 Arts and Cultural Management (ACM), 74–77 Creative Arts Therapy, 78–81 curriculum descriptions, 176–181 Dance/Movement Therapy, 79-81 degrees offered, 68, 71, 72, 76, 79, 80, 81, 84, 87, 95, 96, 97, 173 Design Management (DM), 82–85 Digital Arts, 86–93 faculty, 200–226 Fine Arts, 94–103 general information, 67 refundable deposits (Fine Arts Studio), 283 (see also Tuition and fees) scholarships, 270–272, 277–279 Study Abroad programs, 16-19 Art and Design Education Advanced Certificate, 72, 97 faculty, 200–201 general information, 70–73 Arts and Cultural Management (ACM), 74–77, 202 Art Therapy and Creativity Development, 79, 80 Art Therapy with Special Needs Children, 80 Assistantships, 264 Auditing courses, 283 B Banking facilities, 284 Billing, 285 Board of Trustees, 321 Brooklyn campus cultural partnerships, 16 description, 1–5 directions to, 333 libraries, 317, 319 map, 332 Schools and departments (list), 22–23 tours, 4, 251 Brooklyn Law School, 49, 144 Bulletin, changes to, 304 C Calendar, academic, 325–331 Campuses. see Brooklyn campus; Manhattan campus Campus Ministry, 307 Career support, 8 Center for Career and Professional Development (CCPD), 311–312 Center for Sustainable Design Studies (CSDS), 7, 21 Certificate programs Advanced Certificate in Archives, 147 Advanced Certificate in Library and Information Studies, 148 Advanced Certificate in Library Media Specialist Program, 142, 147–148 Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries, 147 Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies, 154 Certificate in Art and Design Education (M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate), 96 Intensive English Program (IEP), 151, 170, 171 Certification. see Teacher certification Children and Young Adult Librarianship, 142 China, applicants from, 253 City and Regional Planning, 51–53, 196–197 College.net, 252 Combined degrees and certificates Certificate in Art and Design Education (M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate), 96 City and Regional Planning (M.S./J.D.), 49 Digital Arts and Information (M.S.L.I.S./M.F.A.), 145 Fine Arts/History of Art (M.S./M.F.A.), 96 History of Art, Design, and Architecture (M.S.L.I.S./M.S.), 145 History of Art and Design (M.S./M.F.A.), 154 History of Art/Art and Design Education (M.S./M.F.A.), 95, 96 Library and Information Science and Law (M.S.L.I.S./J.D.), 144, 145 overview of all degrees, 173 Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools, 21 Communications Design, 108–117, 217–219 336 Computer facilities, 171 Copenhagen, Study Abroad programs, 17 Council for Interior Design Accreditation, 21 Course offerings, organization of, 297 Creative Arts Therapy, 78–81, 202–204 Credits portfolio/work experience credit, 292 semester hour credits, 297–298 transfer credits, 261 Curricula School of Architecture, 174–176 School of Art, 176–181 School of Design, 182–183 School of Information and Library Science, 184–187 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 187–189 D Dance/Movement Therapy, 79-81 Dance Therapy Association, 80 Deadlines, for applications, 251–252 Deferral, 261 Degrees. see also Advanced Certificates; Certificate programs; Combined degrees and certificates; Curricula; Teacher certification; individual names of Master degrees admission requirements, by degree, 253–259 degree audits, 301 graduation and degrees, 303–304 overview, 173 Denmark, Study Abroad programs, 17 Department of Student Involvement, 305 Deposit, for enrollment, 260 Design, School of, 105–133 accreditation, 21 admission requirements, 111, 115, 128, 257–258 Communications Design, 108–117 curriculum descriptions, 182–183 degrees offered, 109–115, 119, 122, 127, 128, 173 general information, 105–106 Industrial Design, 118–125 Interior Design, 126–133 scholarships, 273–276, 277–279 Study Abroad program, 122 Study Abroad programs, 16-17 Design Management (DM) (School of Art), 82–85, 204–205 Digital Animation and Motion Arts (School of Art), 88 Digital Arts (School of Art), 86–93, 205–207 Digital Humanities (School of Information and Library Science), 142 Digital Imaging (School of Art), 88 Directions Brooklyn campus, 333 Manhattan campus, 334 map (Brooklyn campus), 332 Disability Resource Center, 261, 313–314 Discrimination, 261 337 E Email accounts, 290 Employment program, for students, 264 England, Study Abroad programs, 16, 149 English language proficiency Intensive English Program (IEP), 151, 170, 171 international applicants, 252–253, 260 Enrollment verification letters, 293 Exhibitions, 8 F Facilities Management, 62–65, 199 Faculty Architecture, 190–194 Art and Design Education, 200–201 Arts and Cultural Management, 202 City and Regional Planning, 196–197 Communications Design, 217–219 Creative Arts Therapy, 202–204 Design Management, 204–205 Digital Arts, 205–207 Facilities Management, 199 Fine Arts, 208–216 general information, 7 Historic Preservation, 200 History of Art and Design, 229–233 Industrial Design, 219–221 Interior Design, 222–226 Liberal Arts, 236–250 libraries, 319 Library and Information Science, 227–229 Media Studies, 233 Performance and Performance Studies, 234 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 198 Urban Design, 194–196 Writing and Tutorial Center, 250 Writing (School of Liberal Arts and Sciences department), 235–236 Federal College Work-Study (FCWS), 264 Fees. see Tuition and fees Fellowships, 264 Financial aid, 263–280 academic progress and pursuit, 266 assistantships/fellowships, 264 FAFSA, 263, 264, 265, 280 federal programs, 264–266 general information, 263 grant and scholarship programs, 263–264 instructions and schedule, 280 loan funds, 285, 286 out-of-state programs (scholarships), 267 restricted grants and scholarships, 268 scholarships, all Schools, 277–279 scholarships, by individual Schools, 268–277 scholarships, international students, 279–280 state education agencies, 267–268 student employment program, 264 United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Aid to Native Americans Higher Education Assistance Program, 267 Veterans Administration (VA) educational benefits, 267 Global Innovation Design (GID), 122 Grade point average (GPA), 300 Grading system, 298–299 Graduate Architecture and Urban Design (GAUD), 31 Graduate Assistantships Digital Arts, 88 Facilities Management, 63 Graduate Record Examination (GRE), 259 Grant programs, 263–264, 268. see also Financial aid peerTransfer for international students, 286 scholarships for, 279–280 TOEFL and IELTS scores, 252–253, 260 Internships Arts and Cultural Management, 76 City and Regional Planning, 51 Communication Design, 109, 112 Creative Arts Therapy, 80, 81 Digital Arts, 87 Industrial Design, 119, 122 overview, 8 Pratt Institute internship program, 312 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development, 48 School of Information and Library Science, 136, 149 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 56 zero-credit internships, 284 Italy, Study Abroad programs, 16–19, 149, 154 H J Fine Arts, 94–103, 208–216, 283 Florence, Study Abroad programs, 16, 149 France, Study Abroad programs, 17 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), 263, 264, 265, 280 G Health and Counseling Services Center, 314–315 Health Information (School of Information and Library Science), 145 Health requirements, for enrollment, 260 Historic Preservation, 58–61, 200 History of Art and Design (School of Liberal Arts and Sciences), 152–155, 170, 229–233 History of Art/Art and Design Education (M.S./M.F.A.), 95, 96 Housing, 81, 307–310 I Identification cards and services, 287, 290 IELTS, 252–253, 260 I-20 forms, 259 Industrial Design, 118–125, 219–221 Information and Library Science, School of (SILS), 134–149 accreditation, 21, 136 admission requirements, 142, 145, 147, 148, 258 certificate programs, 147–148 curriculum descriptions, 184–187 degrees offered, overview, 173 dual-degree programs, 145–147 faculty, 227–229 history of, 136 M.S.L.I.S. with Library Media Specialty (LMS) program, 142, 147–148 program focus areas, 142–145 scholarships, 276–279 Study Abroad programs, 149 Information Policy and Society (IPS), 141 Intensive English Program (IEP), 151, 170, 171 Interactive Arts (School of Art), 88 Interior Design, 126–133, 222–226 Internal Revenue Service (IRS), 285 International students from China, 253 forms required for enrollment by, 259 Intensive English Program (IEP), 151, 170, 171 Office of International Affairs, 316 Japan, Study Abroad programs, 17, 122 Juris Doctor (J.D.) combined degrees Library and Information Science and Law (M.S.L.I.S./J.D.), 144, 145 Master of Science in City and Regional Planning and Law (M.S./J.D.), 49 K Knowledge Organization and Cultural Heritage, 144 L Laboratories, 171 Late payment, 285, 286 Law Librarianship, 144 Leave of absence, 295 Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of, 151–171 accreditation, 21 admission requirements, 159, 162, 166, 259 curriculum descriptions, 187–189 degrees offered, 154, 157–159, 161, 165–166, 169–170, 173 faculty, 229–250 general information, 151 History of Art and Design, 152–155 Media Studies, 156–159 Performance and Performance Studies, 160–163 resources, 170–171 scholarships, 277–279 Study Abroad programs, 154 Writing, 164–167 Libraries, 8, 317, 319 Literacy, Education, and Outreach (LEO), 141 Loans. see also Financial aid receiving loan funds, 285, 286 Stafford loans, 265 London, Study Abroad programs, 16, 149 Low Residency format, Creative Arts Therapy program, 80, 81 M Manhattan campus cultural partnerships, 16 description and tours of, 4 directions to, 334 libraries, 317, 319 Schools and departments (list), 22–23 Map (Brooklyn campus), 332 Master in Industrial Design (M.I.D.), 119, 122 Master of Architecture (M. Arch.), 29, 33 Master of Arts in Media Studies, 157–159, 169 Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) Certificate in Art and Design Education (M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate), 96 Communications Design, 109–112 Digital Arts, 87-93 Digital Arts and Information (M.S.L.I.S./ M.F.A.), 145 Fine Arts, 95, 96 Fine Arts/History of Art (M.S./M.F.A.), 96 History of Art and Design (M.S./M.F.A.), 154, 170 History of Art/Art and Design Education (M.S./M.F.A.), 95, 96 Interior Design, 127, 128 Performance and Performance Studies, 161-162, 170 Writing, 165–166, 169 Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) Arts and Cultural Management, 75-78 Art Therapy and Creativity Development, 79, 80 Art Therapy with Special Needs Children, 80 Design Management, 83-85 Master of Science in Library and Information Science (M.S.L.I.S.) Digital Arts and Information (M.S.L.I.S./ M.F.A.), 145 History of Art, Design, and Architecture (M.S.L.I.S./M.S.), 145 Library and Information Science and Law (M.S.L.I.S./J.D.), 144, 145 M.S.L.I.S. program, 140–141 M.S.L.I.S. with Library Media Specialty (LMS) program, 142, 147–148 Master of Science (M.S.) Architecture (First-Professional), 27, 29, 33, 37 Architecture (Post-Professional), 27, 29, 34 Art and Design Education, 71, 72 City and Regional Planning (combined M.S./J.D.), 49 Dance/Movement Therapy, 79, 81 Facilities Management, 63 Fine Arts/History of Art (M.S./M.F.A.), 96 History of Art, Design, and Architecture (M.S.L.I.S./M.S.), 145 History of Art, Design (M.S./M.F.A.), 154, 170 History of Art/Art and Design Education (M.S./M.F.A.), 95, 96 Package Design, 109, 112 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development, 47 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 55 Meal plan, 310 Media Studies, 156–159, 169, 233 Merit-based scholarships, 251 My.Pratt access, 287, 290, 296 N National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB), 21, 29 National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD), 21 Network for Emerging Architectural Research (NEAR), 31 New Hampshire, Creative Arts Therapy program in, 81 New York City. see also Brooklyn campus; Manhattan campus cultural partnerships, 16 New York City Environmental Justice Alliance (NYC-EJA), 49 New York State. see also Teacher certification Department of Education accreditation, 21 New York State Education Department certification, Library Media Specialty (LMS) program, 142, 147–148 Nonmatriculated students, 261 O Office of Graduate Admissions, 251 Office of International Affairs, 316 Office of Residential Life and Housing, 13, 306–308, 307–310 Office of Student Affairs, 305. see also Student affairs Orientation, for new students, 306 P Package Design, 109, 112–117 Parent module (My.Pratt), 296 Paris, Study Abroad programs, 17 Payments, 285 PeerTransfer, 286 Performance and Performance Studies, 160–163, 170, 234 Personal data, changes to, 295 Plagiarism, 303 Portfolio/work experience credit, 292 Pratt Center for Community Development, 7, 28, 48, 51 Pratt Institute. see also individual names of centers; individual names of departments; individual names of offices; individual names of Schools academic calendar, 325–331 alumni of, 15 Bulletin, 304 email accounts, 287, 290 history of, 1, 4, 11 internship program, 312 libraries, 317, 319 My.Pratt access, 287, 290, 296 rankings of, 3 Schools and departments (list), 22–23 students of, 13 338 Pratt Prepaid Discover Debit card, 286 Pratt Student Employment Program, 264 Preservation/Conservation (School of Information and Library Science), 144 Professional certification, in Art and Design Education (M.S.), 72 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development (PSPD), 17, 46–50, 55, 59, 64 Project for Public Spaces (PPS), 49 R RATE, 21 Readmission, 260–261, 295 Refund policies, 283, 284 Registration and academic policies, 289–304 academic calendar, 325–331 academic initiatives, 7 academic integrity code, 302–303 academic standing, 300 changes and withdrawals, 293–295 degree audits, 301 email accounts, 290 enrollment verification letters, 293 general information, 289 grade point average, 300 grading system, 298–299 graduation and degrees, 303–304 identification cards and services, 290 My.Pratt access, 290 organization of course offerings, 297 parent module, 296 personal data changes, 295 portfolio/work experience credit, 292 preferred name of students, 295 repeated courses, 299 residency requirement, 291 semester hour credits, 297–298 student registration, 290 student status, 293 thesis enrollment, 301–302, 304 transcripts, 296–297 transfer credits, 261, 291–292 tuition and fee payment, 286 Veterans Administration, 291 Repeated courses, 299 Research and Assessment, 144 Residency requirement, 291 Returned checks, 285 Rome, Study Abroad programs, 16–17 S Scholarships. see also Financial aid for all Schools, 277–279 general information, 263–264 for individual Schools, 148, 268–277 for international students, 279–280 merit-based, 251 out-of-state programs, 267 School of Architecture. see Architecture, School of School of Art. see Art, School of School of Design. see Design, School of School of Information and Library Science (SILS). see Information and Library Science, School of (SILS) School of Liberal Arts and Sciences. see Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Semester hour credits, 297–298 Spatial Analysis and Visualization Initative (SAVI), 49 Special students, 261 Stafford loans, 265, 285 Student affairs, 305–316 athletics and recreation, 310 Campus Ministry, 307 career and professional development, 311–312 Department of Student Involvement, 305 Disability Resource Center, 261, 313–314 Health and Counseling Services Center, 314–315 new student orientation, 306 Office of International Affairs, 316 Office of Student Affairs, 305 parent and family programs, 306 Pratt Institute internship program, 312 Residential Life and Housing, 307–310 student organizations, 306–307 Study Abroad programs, 16–19, 149, 154 Summer (SCP), Intensive English Program (IEP), 151, 170, 171 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 54–57, 198 T Teacher certification Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education, 72, 97 Library Media Specialty (LMS) program, 142, 147–148 M.F.A. in Communications Design, 112 Technology, 8 Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 252–253, 260 Thesis enrollment, 301–302, 304 Title IX statement, 261 Tokyo, Study Abroad programs, 17, 122 Transcripts, 296–297 Transfer students residency requirement, 291 transfer credits, 261, 291–292 Trustees, board of, 321 Tuition and fees, 281–287 adjustments, 285 application notification and deposit, 260 auditing courses, 283 banking facilities, 284 billing and payment, 285, 286 course withdrawal fees, 284 general information, 281–282 graduate fees, 282–283 identification cards and services, 287 IRS filing, 285 loan funds, 285, 286 meal plan, 310 peerTransfer for international students, 286 Pratt email accounts and My.Pratt access, 287 Pratt Prepaid Discover Debit card, 286 refundable deposits (Fine Arts Studio), 283 refund policies, 283, 284 registration, 286, 287 returned checks, 285 room rates, 309 zero-credit internships, 284 Turkey, Study Abroad programs, 16, 17 U Undergraduate preparation, deficiencies in, 259 United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Aid to Native Americans Higher Education Assistance Program, 267 Urban Design, 41–45, 194–196 User Experience (UX), 144 V Venice, Study Abroad programs, 19, 154 Vericant, 253 Veterans Administration (VA) educational benefits, 267 registration and academic policies, 291 W Withdrawals, 261, 293–295 Work experience credit, 292 Writing Writing and Tutorial Center, 151, 171, 250 Writing (School of Liberal Arts and Sciences department), 164–167, 169, 235–236 Z Zero-credit internships, 284