Classes

Explore all classes offered by the Department  — use the filters in the right column below to view classes by discipline groups or by semester.

The Department of Architecture is “Course 4.” The method of assigning numbers to classes is to write the course number in Arabic numerals followed by a period and three digits, which are used to differentiate courses. Most classes retain the same number from year to year. Architecture groups its numbers by discipline group.

Please select both Aga Khan and HTC to search for Aga Khan classes. 

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4.s24

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — X Machine

8/24/23: New class meeting time and room: R 10-12 in room 10-485. Units changed to 2-0-6.

Note: this is an H1 (half-term) subject.

In an AI-enhanced future, humans will become better at everything. The machine targets real-world artificial intelligence challenges designed to help address issues related to climate change, and urbanization in cities.

X Machine is an accelerator workshop designed to bring computer science and architecture together to create the most innovative and impactful technology solutions. The program's aim is to provide mentorship and technical support, with a focus on the problem statement and early-stage technology design ideation.

Norhan Bayomi
Svafa Grondfeldt
Fall
2023
2-0-6
G
Schedule
R 10-12
Location
10-485
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
Document Uploads
4.s24

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — Building an Impactful Creative Career: Entrepreneurial Tools and Strategies (H3 Half-Term)

Are you aspiring to thrive as an independent creative professional or to launch your creative practice?

This half-semester course offers students in art, cultural, and creative disciplines fundamental tools and strategies for building their careers as independent professionals.

Students will: A) Develop an understanding of the international framework of institutions, relations, and policies that serve as a foundation for professionals seeking to make an impact through their creative practice and how this knowledge can translate into offerings that stand out and create a competitive advantage.
B) Learn concepts and mechanisms commonly found in the economics of art and culture and understand how critical issues can be transformed into opportunities.
C) Explore the diverse values generated by cultural production and learn how to combine these into distinctive offerings. Students will also examine relevant business models within the creative industries and develop the skills to adapt and thrive in dynamic market landscapes.
D) Acquire practical skills in branding, legal business structures, and intellectual property, enabling students to protect and leverage their creative work while building a sustainable professional practice.

 

Giuliano Picchi
Spring
2025
2-0-4
G
Schedule
T 9-11
Location
E15-466
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
Document Uploads
4.s25

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — Self and Work 2.0: Haunting, Archives, and Diasporic Senses of Place

Cancelled

Place is location, but it’s also people, relationships, and memories, the site of things forgotten, suppressed or unrecorded, terrible and ordinary ways of being. The experience of people and peoples who have migrated, been displaced or exiled add further complexity to place: perhaps, an unshakeable orientation to elsewhere or a sense of in-betweenness; or, a simultaneous yet imperfect belonging to both here and there, to neither here nor there; an intermittent or constant feeling of being entirely out of place. What is a diasporic sense of place, how do we image or describe it, and how might it reimage space and place to define a territory for spatial practice?

This workshop is part of Self and Work, a series that began in 2018 as part of Experiments in Pedagogy at MIT Architecture. Self and Work centers the personal, the body, and lived experience as site of knowledge. In this workshop we will center the diasporic experience as a place from which we might draw upon to produce non-hegemonic understandings of space and place.
We will study work by authors and artists whose lives and works are profoundly influenced by their own relation to place.

Fall
2024
3-0-9
G
Schedule
TBA
Location
TBA
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 10
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s28

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — X-Machine

In an AI-enhanced future, humans will become better at everything. The machine targets real-world artificial intelligence challenges designed to help address issues related to climate change, and urbanization in cities. X Machine is an accelerator workshop designed to bring computer science and architecture together to create the most innovative and impactful technology solutions. The program's aim is to provide mentorship and technical support, with a focus on the problem statement and early-stage technology design ideation.

Undergraduates welcome.

Norhan Bayomi
Norbert Chang
Fall
2024
3-0-6
G
Schedule
T 9-10:30
Location
1-135
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 25
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
Document Uploads
4.s28

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — X-Machine: AI and Design Innovation

In an AI-enhanced future, humans will become better at everything. The machine targets real-world artificial intelligence challenges designed to help address issues related to climate change, and urbanization in cities. X Machine is a mini accelerator workshop course designed to unite computer science and design/architecture together to design and create innovative and impactful technological solutions to problems in the built and human environment. This half-semester course promotes the development of strategic thinking and technical exploration in the realm of AI, focusing on problem framing and early-stage ideation.

The course will allow students to develop a foundational knowledge of AI within an interdisciplinary context. Students will learn how to design and create a prototype, learn how to maximize their engagement with their users/customers, and learn how to determine the value proposition that will make an AI-empowered startup successful. By the end of this class, students will be able to develop a conceptual business plan for an AI-based technology solution and apply to other programs at MIT such as DesignX, Sandbox, Delta V, The Engine, and more. 

Norhan Bayomi
Norbert Chang
Fall
2025
2-0-6
G
Schedule
T 9-11
Location
1-246
Prerequisites
Permission of Instructor
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s28

Special Subject: Architecture Studies — Eyes in the Sky: Drones in the Built Environment

Drones are providing us with new ways to map, monitor, and measure our changing landscape. Advances in digital image processing enable one to go from flying a drone to working with accurate maps and 3D models in a matter of hours. This course examines the applications of drones in which the aerial perspective can be integrated into architecture, engineering and construction practice. In this course, students will gain hands-on experience with drone vehicles, sensors, image processing software and applications. Students will learn how to use drones to help them better understand our changing environment. With the proliferation of drones there are increasing opportunities to use drones for scientific remote sensing data acquisition and applications. 

This course focuses on understanding the fundamentals behind acquiring imagery data with drone-based cameras (e.g. multi-spectral and thermal) and processing the data for various applications. Students will also get to know the fundamentals of open source and proprietary software packages as they relate to UAV technology, drone operations, flight planning and data collection and management as well as how to integrate resulting data into other software tools such as GIS, BEM and Python libraries. Recognizing the critical role that AI will play in defining the future international competition, many countries now regard AI as a national priority. The United States launched the American Artificial Intelligence Initiative in 2019 with the mission to promote its leadership in AI research, development, and application. One of the eight national strategies identified in this initiative is to “provide education and training opportunities to prepare the American workforce for the new era of AI”.  

In this course, students will go through aerial data processing, mainly data collected from drones, including working with Orthomosaic, Digital Terrain models (DTMs), Digital Surface Models (DSMs), Point Cloud, and 3D mesh modeling. This course will also provide technical and applied knowledge on using drones for building assessment through aerial thermography and the use of UAVs in various applications. The course will also cover the technical foundation of enhanced data processing using AI, including image segmentation and object identification, and feature extraction basics using computer vision techniques in Python. Upon completion of this course, students will have theoretical and applied and technical knowledge that will aid them to use UAVs in various applications. This course is the extended version of Eyes in The Sky Workshop that was offered during IAP 2022, which resulted in 2D mapping of Briggs field and 3D modelling of Simmons Hall at MIT campus. 

Norhan Bayomi
Fall
2022
3-3-6
G
Schedule
T 11-1
Location
5-232
Prerequisites
Interest in Drones application in mapping and data acquisition and Basic knowledge in Python
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
Document Uploads
4.s30
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Introduction to Interactive, Participatory and Generative Art Making

Undergraduate: 4.s30 | Graduate: 4.s32

Introduction to Interactive, Participatory and Generative Art Making introduces the basics of creating art projects that interact with participants and/or environment using a variety of code and hardware based solutions.

Divided into 3 sections:

1. Max/MSP/Jitter: is a graphical object based coding environment with virtual buttons, switches, timers, counters and many other modules, and the ability to communicate with other devices - one of the best way to 
create virtual and physical spaces with interactive A/V components without having to write code and as such is used extensively by musicians, interactive installation artists, VJs and more worldwide. Can be exported as an app for sharing and distribution

2. Physical computing using Ardiuno technology: using input sensors whose data can be interpreted and used to create interaction. Control or interact with anything from lights, speakers, motors to communicating with Max or Processing or P5.js and more.Processing and P5.js will be included as alternative code environments.

3. Web based interactivity using CSS and Javascript, for interactive animation and all the types of interactivity based on mouse and touch based input for screens and mobile devices. We will explore how AI can help generate, correct and validate code in this space and how it can be leveraged for interactive art purposes.

4.s30/4.s32 Syllabus (MIT Certificate Protected)

Gearóid Dolan
Fall
2023
0-3-3
U/G
0-3-6
U/G
Schedule
F 2-5
Location
E15-054
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 8
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s30
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Documentary Production: from classic to hybrid & interactive

UG: 4.s30 | G: 4.s32

Students will learn the basics of capturing documentary footage and sounds in real world scenarios. Learn to navigate the ethics and complexities of capturing “reality” and depicting real people and representing “truth”.

Students will learn how to edit for the desired final product, be it a film or alternative medium such as interactive, web, installation, location intervention and more.

From Robert Flaherty (Silent Era) to John Grierson (British Model) to Morin & Rouch (Cinema Verite) to George Stoney (Community Engagement) to Errol Morris (Epistomological Interview) to Adam Curtis (Journalistic Essay), learn the history and context of documentary and the various ways people have attempted to represent the real world, including newer hybrid forms that mix fiction and non-fiction and non-linear interactive works.

Students will produce a documentary short on the subject and in the medium of their choice.

Gearóid Dolan
Spring
2024
0-3-6
U/G
Schedule
R 2-5
Location
E15-054
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 12
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s30
4.s35

Special Subject: Art, Culture and Technology — Digital Art from Nano-Scale to Human Scale: Intro to Making Art Using a Variety of 3D Scanning Techniques at all Scales

UG: 4.s30  G: 4.s35

An introduction to the tools and concepts of capturing and transitioning forms between the human scale and nanoscale. The generation of simulation-based art projects reflects these explorations and the ways they can be used in the context of art, culture, and technology. What dialogs can engage with society when operating on sub-visible scales or taking forms from the nano into the human macro scale, creating artistic simulations, motion from form, or form from motion?

Students will collaborate with MIT Nano on final projects intended for public exhibition in a gallery setting.

Spring
2025
3-3-6
U/G
Schedule
TR 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-054
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt.
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s30
4.s35

Special Subject: Art, Culture and Technology — From Art at the Nanoscale to Large Generative Models and Simulations

UG: 4.s30  G: 4.s35

An introduction to the tools and concepts of capturing and transitioning forms between the human scale and nanoscale. The generation of simulation-based art projects reflects these explorations and the ways they can be used in the context of art, culture, and technology. What dialogs can engage with society when operating on sub-visible scales or taking forms from the nano into the human macro scale, creating artistic simulations, motion from form, or form from motion?

Students will collaborate with MIT Nano on final projects intended for public exhibition in a gallery setting.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Gearóid Dolan
Matej Vakula
Fall
2024
3-3-6
U
3-3-3
G
Schedule
TR 2-5
Location
E15-054
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Artist, Tinkerer, Architect, Engineer

Seminar connecting the arts and sciences by exploring methodological similarities and differences across disciplines: arts/architecture, humanities/social sciences, engineering, natural and material sciences et al. Aimed at fostering student collaborations across research interests: students develop their ideas for projects through targeted analysis of their disciplinary and interdisciplinary  interests. Each student will either enter with a project in mind, or develop their project ideas within the class. Students can choose to work individually or in groups.

This seminar’s goal to provide blueprints for developing interdisciplinary projects: final is a paper/ plan with goals/outcomes forming the basis for collaborative interdisciplinary projects.  Examples of such projects: artwork that makes use of cross-species communication, (Tomás Saraceno); project engaging the natural sciences, composed of material that endlessly transform, simultaneously functioning as an artwork, (Neri Oxman).

First half semester is targeted reading (articles) across disciplines – based in student interests – alongside discussion of case studies of successful collaborations in these disciplines. Analyzing case studies plus reading will enable an understanding of methodological specificities in different disciplines in relation to aesthetics and fabrication issues, and directly in context of the particular disciplines under consideration. Together this fosters reciprocal knowledge of the strengths and differences across disciplines. Case studies drawn from MIT’s history: CAST and CAVS, and from across the global ‘artworld’. Second half semester will be geared toward aiding students in better connecting across disciplines at MIT (and possibly beyond). This is trial and error, of course. However, final project, as a working plan for interdisciplinary collaboration, will provide the knowledge base and research skills applicable to future projects.

Spring
2022
2-3-4
G
Schedule
W 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Artist, Tinkerer, Architect, Engineer

Seminar connecting the arts and sciences by exploring methodological similarities and differences across disciplines: arts/architecture, humanities/social sciences, engineering, natural and material sciences et al. Aimed at fostering student collaborations across research interests: students develop their ideas for projects through targeted analysis of their disciplinary and interdisciplinary  interests. Each student will either enter with a project in mind, or develop their project ideas within the class. Students can choose to work individually or in groups.

This seminar’s goal to provide blueprints for developing interdisciplinary projects: final is a paper/ plan with goals/outcomes forming the basis for collaborative interdisciplinary projects.  Examples of such projects: artwork that makes use of cross-species communication, (Tomás Saraceno); project engaging the natural sciences, composed of material that endlessly transform, simultaneously functioning as an artwork, (Neri Oxman).

First half semester is targeted reading (articles) across disciplines – based in student interests – alongside discussion of case studies of successful collaborations in these disciplines. Analyzing case studies plus reading will enable an understanding of methodological specificities in different disciplines in relation to aesthetics and fabrication issues, and directly in context of the particular disciplines under consideration. Together this fosters reciprocal knowledge of the strengths and differences across disciplines. Case studies drawn from MIT’s history: CAST and CAVS, and from across the global ‘artworld’. Second half semester will be geared toward aiding students in better connecting across disciplines at MIT (and possibly beyond). This is trial and error, of course. However, final project, as a working plan for interdisciplinary collaboration, will provide the knowledge base and research skills applicable to future projects.
 

Fall
2022
3-3-3
G
3-3-6
G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Future Heritage Workshop: Toxic Textiles / Fashion Fables

2/8/23 note: Room changed to E15-207

Textile manufacturing is among the most lucrative and largest polluting industries today: more than 80 billion square meters of leftover garments end up in landfills or get destroyed by burning. When the expected demand is not met, supply chains channel stock to the parallel economy of stock destruction ensuring price control. Critiquing this widespread phenomenon of fast fashion, this course takes the notion of “toxic textiles” both as a medium and as a framework to explore the cultural, social, political, economic, and environmental footprint of clothing through the textile medium as a artistic and critical response to the world’s pressing concerns. The course introduces hands-on experimentation with textile art and fashion design informed by case studies in contemporary art, decolonizing fashion, performative and wearable technologies, experimental preservation, and fabric upcycling. 

Research assignments and material experimentation in the first part of the semester build on Donna Haraway’s method of “Implosion” geared toward concept development and skill building. The course will introduce working with a variety of materials and techniques, with an emphasis on reverse applique technique and fabric manipulation. Lectures, readings, screenings, and crits supplement studio practice. At the end of the semester, students will be expected to exhibit one studio-based final project informed by thematic readings and class discussions. 

Students from all disciplines are encouraged and welcome to enroll. The enrollment is limited to 20 students. Sewing skills are beneficial but not pre-required for the class; sewing tutorials, machines, and basic sewing equipment and textiles will be provided.

4.s32 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Spring
2023
3-0-6
G
3-0-9
G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Transversal Design for Social Impact

While design is frequently deployed as a problem-solving instrument, it can unintentionally result in ethical dilemmas and unanticipated outcomes. This course uniquely combines the critical lens of art with the innovation framework of DesignX, promoting introspection and thoughtful deliberation before diving into design interventions. This transdisciplinary class initiates a collaboration between ACT and the Morningside Academy of Design through DesignX. Students design and present visual representations on the social impact area they choose to innovate and explore on. Undergraduates are welcome.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Fall
2024
3-0-3
G
Schedule
F 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s32
4.s38

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Monuments Matter

Undergraduate: 4.s38 | Graduate: 4.s32

This course explores the evolving role of monuments and public memory through the lens of racial justice, decolonization, and the politics of space. Students will critically engage with historical and contemporary monuments, as well as concepts of “ReMemory” (Toni Morrison) that are not yet materialized outside the bodies that hold these traces of the past. Subject focuses on interventions that challenge dominant narratives and foster inclusive, participatory spaces of memory. Deliverables include a semester-long project showcased in an exhibition and/or collaborative publication, aligning with the course’s focus on research, scholarship and creative practice, and public engagement.

Spring
2025
2-0-9
U/G
Schedule
W 10:00-12:00
R 2:30-3:30
Location
Wed: E15-207
Thurs: E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s33

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Attention Economies

2/8/23 note: Room changed to E15-283A

Investigates the political economy of attention from a contemporary media studies perspective. Offers instructions in theories of mass media and commodification, the history of capitalism, and key theoretical debates pertaining to the mediation of attention as a cultural form. Emphasis on critical practices of reading, viewing, and listening that resist dominant configurations of attention in the capitalist sensorium. Seminar format with time for student presentation, guest lecture, visiting artist presentation, and class field trips. Readings will be drawn from a range of fields including political philosophy, film and media theory, art history, technology studies, and communication theory. The course is open to both graduate and undergraduate students. Students may elect to fulfill final assignment as either creative project or research-based seminar paper. Additional work required of students taking graduate version.

4.s33 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Cassandra Guan
Spring
2023
3-0-6
G
3-0-9
G
Schedule
R 2-5
Location
E15-283A
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s33
4.s37

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Beginner’s Guide to Visualizing Data and Life-Like Processes in Digital Art

12/4/24 Update: class will now meet MW 10-1, room 13-1143

4.s37 UG | 4.s33 G

Introduction to basics of biomimicry and natural algorithms in computational design and artificial life. You don’t have any prior programming or modeling software experience is needed. Advanced folks will be accommodated on an individual project-based track.

Students learn about the cultural and visual implications of automation and biotechnological advancements driven by computational technology, exploring their aesthetic significance through data and algorithms.

This is a beginner’s guide to ethical solutions to design problems in computational design and data concerning nature through visualization and art. It considers the broader impact of design decisions on communities, society, and culture.

This is a low-level, beginner-friendly introduction to the basics of data visualization in processing and Python, biomimicry, agent-based systems in Grasshopper visual coding and C#, and animation in Maya.

Spring
2025
3-3-6 (4.s37)
U
3-3-3 (4.s33)
G
Schedule
MW 10-1
Location
13-1143
Prerequisites
Permission of Instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt.
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s33
4.s37

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Intro to Screen Printing: Manifesting the Multiple

Undergraduate: 4.s37 | Graduate: 4.s33

This hands-on studio class will expose students to the technical skills needed for successful screen printing. Students will produce single and multicolor prints on paper and fabric using a variety of methods.

Graham Yeager
Spring
2024
0-3-6
U/G
Schedule
W 2-5
Location
E14-251
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 16
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture and Technology — Art and Agriculture

Annexation, greenwashing, and destructive notions of progress have all but wiped out the memory of an indigenous mythology once deeply rooted in an embodied, balanced stewardship of nature. How can the merging of artistic methodologies with agricultural practices address this loss of cultural capital?

Common Ground is a transdisciplinary experiment in learning from the land, seeking to develop a new field of inquiry at the intersection of art, science and agriculture. The history of art is also a history of agriculture, marking humanity’s complex relationship with the environment. This course will examine historic typologies of indigenous architectural and agrarian technologies, bringing them into conversation with contemporary techno-scientific and artistic discourses. Through this synthesis, our class will explore artistic methods to decolonize the social, political, economic and narrative structures that govern our relationship to nature. Following the semester, project documentation and research developed over the semester will contribute to a publication.

Applicants from across artistic and scientific disciplines are highly encouraged. Interested students should attend the first class.

Undergraduates are welcome to enroll.

4.s34 Syllabus (MIT Certificate protected)

Spring
2024
0-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 2-5
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Publication as Worldmaking: Performative Approaches to Fiction and Publishing

This course investigates the interdisciplinary and generative possibilities of publication, emphasizing its role as a practice of expanding public engagement and imagination. Throughout the semester, students will explore worldmaking strategies, speculative fiction and an array of publication methods ranging from traditional techniques—leveraging ACT and MIT’s extensive resources such as riso printing, book binding and maker labs—to experimental approaches in digital media, performance, political systems, architecture, contemporary art, design and AI.Specific expectations and/or deliverable product resulting from course.

MIT Certificate Protected Syllabus

Raafat Majzoub
Fall
2024
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 2-5
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Art and Agriculture

Annexation, greenwashing, and destructive notions of progress have all but wiped out the memory of an indigenous mythology once deeply rooted in an embodied, balanced stewardship of nature. How can the merging of artistic methodologies with agricultural practices address this loss of cultural capital?

Common Ground is a transdisciplinary experiment in learning from the land, seeking to develop a new field of inquiry at the intersection of art, science and agriculture. The history of art is also a history of agriculture, marking humanity’s complex relationship with the environment. This course will examine historic typologies of indigenous architectural and agrarian technologies, bringing them into conversation with contemporary techno-scientific and artistic discourses. Through this synthesis, our class will explore artistic methods to decolonize the social, political, economic and narrative structures that govern our relationship to nature. Following the semester, project documentation and research developed over the semester will contribute to a publication.

Applicants from across artistic and scientific disciplines are highly encouraged. Interested students should attend the first class. Undergraduates are welcome to enroll.

Spring
2022
2-3-4
G
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-001
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Art and Agriculture

Undergraduates are welcome to enroll.

This class is a pre-approved ACT elective for Spring 2023.

Annexation, greenwashing, and destructive notions of progress have all but wiped out the memory of an indigenous mythology once deeply rooted in an embodied, balanced stewardship of nature. How can the merging of artistic methodologies with agricultural practices address this loss of cultural capital?

Common Ground is a transdisciplinary experiment in learning from the land, seeking to develop a new field of inquiry at the intersection of art, science and agriculture. The history of art is also a history of agriculture, marking humanity’s complex relationship with the environment. This course will examine historic typologies of indigenous architectural and agrarian technologies, bringing them into conversation with contemporary techno-scientific and artistic discourses. Through this synthesis, our class will explore artistic methods to decolonize the social, political, economic and narrative structures that govern our relationship to nature. Following the semester, project documentation and research developed over the semester will contribute to a publication.

Applicants from across artistic and scientific disciplines are highly encouraged. Interested students should attend the first class.

Spring
2023
3-3-3
G
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 9:30-12:30
Location
E15-283A
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Publication as Worldmaking: Performative Approaches to Fiction and Publishing

This course investigates the interdisciplinary and generative possibilities of publication, emphasizing its role as a practice of expanding public engagement and imagination. Throughout the semester, students will explore worldmaking strategies, speculative fiction and an array of publication methods ranging from traditional techniques—leveraging ACT and MIT’s extensive resources such as riso printing, book binding and maker labs—to experimental approaches in digital media, performance, political systems, architecture, contemporary art, design, and AI.

Rooted in the definition of publication as the act of ‘making public,’ this course offers an opportunity to experiment with the collective meaning-making strategies of editorial work through and beyond printed matter. Participants are encouraged to bring in their personal research and projects to develop them with the lens of artistic publication. The semester culminates in a collective exhibition or public representation of the work produced.
 

Spring
2025
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 2-5
Location
E15-054
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Making Across Media

Cancelled

Canceled for Fall 2022.
 

Fall
2022
3-3-3
G
3-3-6
G
Prerequisites
permission of instructor
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
4.s34

Special Subject: Art, Culture, and Technology — Publication as Worldmaking: Performative Approaches to Fiction and Publishing

This course investigates the interdisciplinary and generative possibilities of publication, emphasizing its role as a practice of expanding public engagement and imagination. Throughout the semester, students will explore worldmaking strategies, speculative fiction and an array of publication methods ranging from traditional techniques—leveraging ACT and MIT’s extensive resources such as riso printing, book binding and maker labs—to experimental approaches in digital media, performance, political systems, architecture, contemporary art, design and AI.Specific expectations and/or deliverable product resulting from course.

Fall
2025
3-3-6
G
Schedule
TR 2-5
Location
E15-207
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor
Enrollment
Limited to 20
Lab Fee
Per-term $75 fee after Add Date; SMACT students are exempt
Can Be Repeated for Credit
Yes