Select Language

English (United States)简体中文(中国)EspañolFrench (Fr)Japanese (JP)Russian (CIS)GermanHinduArabicKorean

Sign up for our email newsletter today!

A+L Search

Latest Events

No events

VirtueMart Product Scroller

VirtueMart Shopping Cart

VirtueMart
Your Cart is currently empty.

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

As a mecca of young, creative minds, Art Center College of Design is a fulcrum of artistic innovation. Art and Living investigates the faces and the forces behind the Southern California institution

Situated on a tranquil, 175-acre campus in the wooded foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, Art Center College of Design might strike some as the ultimate ivory tower retreat of artists and academicians. But in fact, Art Center is a vibrant nexus of hands-on learning and real-world application.

Learning at Art Center occurs in almost every imaginable field of art and expressive communication—from car design to photography to environmen- tal design. Students are encouraged to interact and work together, a process that synergistically combines their talents.

Art Center’s curriculum features “transdisciplinary studios”, where students come together and work on special projects. Fine art students may help car

designers one week, while the reverse might be true the next week.The result is that the students learn a common language and see what real-life work is like. Some of the most ambitious student projects are called “blue sky proj- ects” because they challenge participants to envision the world ten or fifteen

years in the future. Stewart Reed, chair of the transportation design department, works on

a number of such projects alongside about 200 transportation design stu- dents. Reed himself is a 1969 graduate of Art Center and has had an accom- plished professional career in car design. He is the designer of the Meyers Manx SR and is currently the president of his own company, Stewart Reed Design. Previously, he worked for nine years at Chrysler’s advanced design department and was the chief designer at Toyota’s California-based advanced design studio for six years.

Reed explains that the founder of Art Center envisioned an institution where professors, as he puts it,“would keep a foot in the professional world,” because it enriches the learning experience.

Now, one of Reed’s overarching goals is to combine the passion of high-performance car design with the responsibility of environmental consciousness. In the fast-paced world of automo- tive design, the desire to build a flashy hot-rod must be tempered by considerations of safety, sustainability, and urban congestion, he explains. This summer, Reed and his students are

working on three main projects that bring those values to life.

The first project, in partnership with the University of Southern California School of Architecture, is an examination of urban transporta- tion in China, with the goal of designing urban cen- ters that are free of congestion and are environmen- tally friendly.The results of this two-term project will be exhibited at the Hong Kong Biennale of Urbanism

and Architecture in December. Another project looks at the future of the Indy

Racing League. Students recently traveled to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to observe and learn about the Indy experience. Now, they have put together a transdisciplinary studio and are brainstorming ideas to make open-wheel racing even more exciting and entertaining by 2011.

The transportation design students are also working to create a body for Peter Mullin’s Type 64 Bugatti chassis based on the never-completed designs of Jean Bugatti.This project, Reed admits, is “pure passion.”

One recent transportation design graduate, Brian Oh, echoed Reed’s sentiments. “The classes that are offered are not all based on super cars,” he reveals. Oh explains that about one-third of the curriculum is about research- ing and understanding car buyers, one-third is sketching designs, and one-third involves building models. “We come up with a [fictional] auto maker, then a buyer demographic, and we go into lifestyle, income, etc.,” says Oh.“Every class is similar to an internship at a professional studio.”

Reed himself notes that car design in the modern era is about much more than sketching. According to Reed, car design incorporates strategy, busi- ness, marketing, and other disciplines.“It is the intersection of art and science,” he says. “It is the ergonomics, sightlines, mechanics, and structure...blended together in the most artful way possible. Most people agree that the last real threshold to differentiate products is design.”

It is faculty like Reed who help make Art Center special—they bring real- world experience and understanding to an incubator of dreams and visions.

“I like the energy of this place—both Southern California and the Art Center...it’s keeping me young,” smiles Reed.

 Laurence Dreiband, chair of the fine ar t media depar tment, also feels that the opportunities provided by Art Center are unique. When asked to com- pare his program with others, he points out that Art Center requires far more units of studio credits than some other, less art-focused programs. Unlike stu- dents at large universities, every student at Art Center is committed to art and design, resulting in a concentration of talent, inspiration, and purpose.

“Here you are with other artists—they are not just taking it as an elec- tive,” Dreiband says.

viewed monolithically. “The car guys are like another species,” he jokes. Like others, Dreiband sees the school’s diversity as a strength. He talks about a new “skin” project, where students from various disciplines are com- ing together in a transdiscipinary studio to think about the skin of various art

forms—including cars, paintings, and buildings. “Maybe it will change what cars look like, maybe it will change what art looks like. We really don’t know,” he says. One thing is certain, though—the students of Art Center will be well

Still, according to Dreiband, the students at Art Center should not be prepared for whatever the future holds.

 

A & L Highlights

John Currin 27 November 2009, 16.00 Artists
John Currin
John Currin (b. 1962) is a virtuoso painter whose work draws from a startlingly diverse inventory of cultural reference—from Renaissance paintings to porn magazines. His edgy imaginings of women in pneumatic full bloom
Read More 447 Hits 0 Ratings
Jordan Schnitzer 28 July 2011, 16.57 Admin_Joomla Artists
Jordan Schnitzer
When noted art collector Jordan Schnitzer was a young boy his mother Arlene Schnitzer opened the Fountain Gallery in Portland, Oregon to spotlight artists in the Pacific Northwest. Her staunch belief in supporting artists
Read More 1499 Hits 0 Ratings
One Take Tony 23 April 2006, 16.00 Artists
One Take Tony
Legend Anthony Benedetto takes one canvas at a time Anthony Benedetto surreptitiously appears in the doorway of his Central Park South apartment in navy silk Brioni suit and tie. Carrying an intimate air of unaffected ch
Read More 428 Hits 0 Ratings
Los Angeles Asian & Tribal Arts Show, San Francisco Arts of Pacific Asia Show, New York Arts of Pacific Asia Show
Bill Caskey and Elizabeth Lees, Founders; Leslee Leong, Participating Dealer Across dynasties, continents, cultures, and generations, the art of Asia has found its way into prominent museums and the homes of collectors t
Read More 611 Hits 0 Ratings
Ann Philbin 27 November 2009, 16.00 Curators
Ann Philbin
Director, Hammer Museum, UCLA Career Highlights In January 1999, Ann Philbin became director of the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Under her leadership, the Hammer’s public profile has increased dramatically through the
Read More 2057 Hits 0 Ratings
Ruscha Revealed 17 September 2006, 16.00 Artists
Ruscha Revealed
When does text become art? When artist Ed Ruscha is behind it Probably no other artist captures the essence of Los Angeles as does Ed Ruscha. Since the early sixties, he has portrayed the myth and magic of the City of An
Read More 342 Hits 0 Ratings
Portrait of a New Life 23 April 2006, 16.00 Artists
Portrait of a New Life
Painting became the inspirational force that changed artist Margaret Rose Perenchio’s life In today’s unpredictable and challenging world, we cling to the safe and the familiar, to the routine and habitual, to our da
Read More 1061 Hits 0 Ratings
A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words 23 April 2006, 16.00 Curators
A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words
Los Angeles’ Norton Simon Museum is Telling Tales in an intriguingly intimate display Art can be a visual novel. Its words are illustrated through the elements of scenery, color, technique and media. When a masterful p
Read More 1791 Hits 0 Ratings
Website Designed and Maintained by: Ben Giroux Design
Get Started at: BenGirouxDesign.com