
My home in Alabama
Mary Rachel Fanning | Portfolio
My home in Alabama
Last week I was invited to sit on a panel about critiques in the classroom at the Center for Teaching Excellence. Three other faculty and myself did presentations on our student critique philosophy and then had a health discussion with the attendees. I went over what I did in the classroom but also wanted to share a little bit of research on an area of interest to me.
A couple years ago I went to visit my brother Ben and sister-in-law Angela in NYC. They introduced me to Project Runway. Like so many it became a border-line obsession for me. Imagine a reality competition show where contestants are actually judged on talent! Anyway, what struck me was how Tim Gunn critiqued contestants. How suave he was in guiding designers through their creative process.
Then a freshman student in my Foundations of Photography class started to make full use of the “Make it Work” tagline in his feedback to other students. Over, and over, and over. Is there something to this in our teaching? Or even more so do students enter college with the expectation they will be critiqued in Tim Gunn or Simon Cowell fashion?
I found a lovely paper titled “From Simon Cowell to Tim Gunn: What Reality Television Can Teach Us About How to Critique Our Students’ Work Effectively.” It was written by Michael J. Higdon, a lawyer professor at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Read it!
Jamal Penjweny’s “Iraq is flying.” Take a look. Enough said.
Informal information here.
Formal information here.
If you can be there in person I guarantee it will be nothing like anything you’ve ever experienced. You can track the hilarious antics of the Bad at Sports crew today and tonight by following the hashtag #basapex on Twitter.
Don’t Piss On Me And Tell Me It’s Raining
Organized by Bad at Sports
April 7 – May 22, 2010
Opening reception: April 7, 6-8 pm
291 church.treet
new york, ny 10013
For the last five years Bad at Sports, a collective based in Chicago, New York, and San Francisco, has attempted to document their art world from the inside. The artists in the collective have logged close
to 300 hours of audio interviews and (what might best be described as) reportage, and produced thousands of blog posts and tweets for their site, badatsports.com. For their exhibition at apexart, they have assembled a curio cabinet/archive of projects from members of the Bad at Sports galaxy and will give visitors the opportunity to have their questions about the art world answered by the Bad at Sports team. [Read more…] about Exhibition opening at Apex Art NYC tonight