Associate Professors--Ellis, Holmes, Legrady, Suzuki
Assistant Professor--Johnson
M.A. in Creative Arts: Concentration in Interdisciplinary Arts
M.A. in Creative Arts: Concentration in Creativity and Arts Education
IAC also contributes course offerings in the Creative Arts area of the campuswide Liberal Studies program. Additional IAC involvement includes coordination of Special Majors stressing Creative Arts areas, offering of courses serving as intersections between Creative Arts disciplines, Creative Arts symposia on new directions in the arts, Inter-Artist of the Year Award, artist survival courses, GE Segments II and III offerings, internships in Bay Area arts organizations, and the high school Arts Bridge to College Program.
The Bachelor of Arts in Creative Arts has been suspended temporarily due to budget restrictions, and no new students are being admitted into it. Contact the department for further information.
The primary goal of the Master of Arts: Concentration in Interdisciplinary Arts is development of accomplished interdisciplinary artists. To enter the program, students must have reached a mature level of development necessary to pursue successfully advanced studies in interdisciplinary creative arts, and must have clearly integrated and meaningful goals. The overriding purposes of the program are to foster interdisciplinary creative ideas, processes, and expressions, as well as critical and theoretical understanding integral to these ideas, and to develop advanced creative capabilities in new processes and new arts technologies.
The purpose of the Master of Arts: Concentration in Creativity and Arts Education is to pursue advanced studies, research, creative projects, and methodologies to assist in facilitating experiences in the arts for individuals and groups in a variety of environments. Prospective sites for these applications include both traditional classrooms and nontraditional spaces. Primary areas of research concerning creative processes include: (1) theories and methods for stimulating creativity and aesthetic awareness in individuals and groups; (2) forms and processes of language unique to the arts, how these compare to and may enhance other language forms, and ways in which arts languages can substantively contribute to personal growth and interpersonal communication; (3) creative experiences contributing to understanding human diversity; (4) the impact of varied environments upon creative thought, processes, and expression; (5) relationships between creativity, society, and new arts technologies, and how these can constructively contribute to the human condition; (6) the centrality of the arts in personal and cultural health. Areas of research stressing community outreach and interdisciplinary learning processes include: (1) community applications of arts experiences in varied sites, schools, organizations, and cultural centers; (2) interdisciplinary learning and expression; (3) subject training for professional teachers in the arts and related areas; (4) new curriculum models and instructional resource development in the arts; (5) methods in which creative arts learning can increase, clarify, and deepen learning in other and related subject areas (creative thinking, critical thinking, problem solving, language skills, literature, history, social and cultural studies, mathematics, science).
Students may use electives in the M.A. in Creativity and Arts Education to pursue a focus in arts administration. Courses for this goal typically include courses in arts administration, arts economics, non-profit organizations, grantwriting, marketing, accounting, management, and on-site internships.
Students in this major must follow all program procedures specified in the B.A. Advisory Guide and Checklistavailable in the IAC office.
Program Sequence(minimum of four semesters to complete)
Units
Social/Cultural Studies 3
One course from:
IAC 315 Self and Others
IAC 380 New Directions in the Arts:
Expression and Social Change
Critical Thinking/Writing 3
One course from:
IAC 320 Contemporary Writing in the Arts
IAC 370 Arts and Artists of San Francisco
Creative Applications 3
One course from:
IAC 300 Creative Intersections: New
Forms and Processes
IAC 301 Introduction to Computers as
Arts Media
IAC 307 Collaborative Ideas and Processes
in the Arts
Culminating Project Prerequisites 0-6
Up to six additional units in applied and/or
theory courses may be required prior to
first time enrollment in the culminating
project if deficiencies in readiness are
determined based upon the proficiency
review required the term before enroll-
ment in IAC 400.
Culminating Creative/Scholarly Project 6
IAC 400 Synthesis: Culminating Inter-
disciplinary Arts Project (3)
[must be repeated in two
semester sequence]
Historical/Critical Studies in the Arts 6
Courses selected on advisement in historical
(three units) and critical/theoretical
(three units) areas in art, broadcast,
cinema, dance, design, inter-arts, music,
theatre arts. At least three units must
include twentieth century ideas in an art
form.
Studio/Lab/Applications in Single Arts
Discipline 6
Courses selected on advisement in a single
studio/lab/applied arts discipline
(painting, dance, piano, acting, etc.).
On-Advisement Culminating Project Support
Courses 13
Additional courses in creative arts and related
social, critical, ideational, historical, and
applied areas selected on advisement;
taken near to or during time of culmi-
nating project and directly contributing
to ideas and methodologies applicable to
the project.
Total 40-46
In addition to meeting university application requirements and deadlines, applicants must submit an application to the M.A. graduate program adviser in Interdisciplinary Arts, Inter-Arts Center, which includes:
Units
IAC 700 Arts as Experience: Practice and
Theory 3
IAC 707 Collaborative Processes in the Arts 3
IAC 710 Seminar in Interdisciplinary Arts
Theory and Criticism 3
One course selected from the following: 3
IAC 301 Introduction to Computers as
Arts Media
IAC 720 Alternative Documentary Forms
IAC 734 New Creative Applications in
Media Technology
Two courses selected from the following 6
IAC 730 Narrative and Interactive
Expression
IAC 731 Intersections: Sound, Media, Text,
Context
IAC 732 Intersections: Image, Media, Text,
Context
IAC 733 Intersections: Performance, Media,
Text, Context
IAC 740 Arts Law, Economics, Survival
One of the following: 3
IAC 894 Creative Work Project
IAC 898 Master's Thesis
Supporting upper division or graduate courses
in creative arts and/or campuswide areas
of study chosen in consultation with the
graduate program adviser 9
Minimum total 30An SP grade in IAC 894 or 898 requires enrollment through Extended Learning in three units of IAC 899 each subsequent semester until the SP grade is resolved.
In addition to meeting university application requirements and deadlines, applicants must submit an application to the M.A. program adviser in Creativity and Arts Education, Inter-Arts Center, which includes:
Units
IAC 707 Collaborative Processes in the Arts 3
IAC 800 Creativity: Individual and Cultural
Change 3
IAC 850 Creativity: Education, Community,
Culture (3 each) 6
IAC 850 requirement includes two courses
from the following topics:
New Directions in Arts Education
Stimulating Creativity/Aesthetic Aware-
ness
The Arts and Cultural Communications
Arts Education, Cultural Change, Media
Technology
One of the following: 3
IAC 894 Creative Work Project
IAC 898 Master's Thesis
Supporting upper division and/or graduate
courses selected on advisement in pro-
fessional education, creative arts, and/or
other disciplines that tangibly contribute
to student's professional goal 15
Minimum total 30An SP grade in IAC 894 or 898 requires enrollment through Extended Learning in three units of IAC 899 each subsequent semester until the SP grade is resolved.