Syllabus

Digital Photography 1 || Spring 2017 || COMD 2330, Section D366 || Monday 12:00-3:20, Room V-111 || Professor Matthew C. Lange || mlange@citytech.cuny.edu || Office hours: Monday 3:30-4:30 or by appointment

Course Description This course will serve as an introduction to the fundamentals of photography for students in Communication Design. Our curriculum will be based on operating digital SLRs and compact digital cameras, with an emphasis on composition and technical knowledge. In conjunction with digital capture we will examine file management, fundamental digital darkroom technique, and archival printing.

The course will involve studio and location shooting during classroom laboratory sessions. Studio projects will include still-life and portrait exercises. On location shoots will be designed to put fundamental camera techniques into practice.

Course Objectives To successful complete this course, you will be expected to develop your technical and aesthetic understanding of photographic media according to the following criteria:

Successful completion of this course will require: Evaluation criteria:
Use of professional vocabulary to discuss technical and aesthetic issues in photography. Competency demonstrated in written assignments and in-class discussions.
Ability to frame photographs using basic principles of design and composition. Competency demonstrated by taking photographs both in-class and as homework.
Ability to use available and artificial light to photograph still life, portrait and landscape subjects. Ability to correctly expose photographs in a wide range of lighting conditions.
Analysis of aesthetic value and the technical competency of one’s own work, the work of one’s peers, and the work of professional photographers. Competency displayed through in-class discussions and writing exercises.
Developing skills necessary for collaborative teamwork. Competency displayed through in-class team projects.

Teaching/Learning Methods Class sessions will be designed to facilitate course objectives through group discussions, hands-on photo shoots, editing & printing photos, photo gallery visits, readings and peer-to-peerreview. Weekly assignments will supplement classroom discussions and activities, and will serve as a journal of your personal growth.

Grading

Learning Journal/Weekly Assignments: 40%

In-class productivity: 20%

Mid-term Project 20%

Final Term Project and Presentation 20%

Weekly shooting assignments, submitted via Flickr, are essential to your success in this course. Expect to shoot & upload at least 40-50 images, and share your best 4-5, every week.

In-class Productivity includes initiative on shoots, participation in classroom discussions, and quizzes.

Web Resources: Flickr & OpenLab Flickr will serve as the primary web resource for this class. You will find all weekly homework assignments, and will be responsible for posting work in our Flickr group, which can be found at the following URL: https://www.flickr.com/groups/comd2330spring2017monday/

We will also be using the OpenLab internet application to provide access to course materials and stay current with course developments. Our OpenLab site can be found at the following URL:  https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/mondaydigitalphotospring2017/

Required Equipment You will need a camera to complete your assignments for this course. To get the most out of this class, you should use a camera that allows full manual control.

You may sign out cameras from City Tech’s equipment room. If you do not have full manual settings on your camera, you will be required to use City Tech cameras for at least one-third of your assignments.

If you need to buy a camera, refer to www.dpreview.com, keh.com or B&H photo.

Additional Required Materials

– Memory Card

– Portable External Hard Drive

– Inkjet Paper (Do not rush out to buy this – additional details to follow.)

Recommended Texts

A Short Course in Digital Photography, 3rd Edition. Barbara London and Jim Stone. 2014. Pearson, NY

Read This if You Want To Take Great Photographs. Henry Carroll. 2014. Laurence King Publishing, London.

Attendance College and Departmental policies regarding attendance and lateness will be strictly upheld. Only two absences will be allowed. Students arriving after roll is taken will be marked late. 2 lates = 1 absence. After being absent two times or equivalent, a student may be asked to withdraw from the class (code W before the College drop deadline) or may be withdrawn from the class (code WU).

Please email me in advance if you will be unable to attend a class session. It is your responsibility to obtain notes for missed sessions from your peers. You will still be expected to submit assignments before any missed sessions. Absence from class does not excuse you from submitting homework assignments on time.

Field Trips There are 3 scheduled field trips throughout the semester. Any student who is not yet 18 years old must have a signed permission form from their parent or guardian for each trip beforehand.

 

Academic Integrity Standards Students and all others who work with information, ideas, texts, images, music, inventions, and other intellectual property owe their audience and sources accuracy and honesty in using, crediting, and citing sources. As a community of intellectual and professional workers, the College recognizes its responsibility for providing instruction in information literacy and academic integrity, offering models of good practice, and responding vigilantly and appropriately to infractions of academic integrity. Accordingly, academic dishonesty is prohibited in The City University of New York and at New York City College of Technology and is punishable by penalties, including failing grades, suspension, and expulsion.

COURSE SCHEDULE ***The following schedule is subject to change. Weekly Assignments on Flickr will serve as updates.

Week 1 – January 30: Introduction and Course Overview || A Very Brief History of Photography

For Next Week: Composition 1: Light & Shadow

Week 2 – February 6: Physics, Optics, Capture || Camera & Exposure Settings: Aperture, Shutter Speed, ISO, File Formats || Paul Strand, Walker Evans, Margaret Bourke-White, James Welling….

For Next Week: Composition 2: The Frame

Week 3 – WEDNESDAY, February 15: Field Trip: Brooklyn War Memorial Park (shoot near City Tech) Shutter Speed and Aperture; Intro to Lightroom, Histograms

Eadweard Muybridge, Jacques Lartigue, Francesca Woodman, Stan Douglas….

For Next Week: Characteristics 1: Time and Movement

***NO CLASSES – February 20***

Week 4 – February 27: Studio Lighting, Portraiture, Composition || Photographic Composition: Rule of Thirds, Perspective, Foreground/Background || RAW Conversions, Histograms

Bill Brandt, Irving Penn, Susan Meiselas, Fazal Sheikh….

For Next Week: Characteristics 2: Depth & Flatness

Week 5 – March 6: Studio Lighting, Direction & Quality of Light || Digital Workflow: Color Management, Adjustment Layers, Curves || Seydou Keita, Dawoud Bey, Alec Soth, Deana Lawson….

For Next Week: Environmental Portrait 1 for Midterm Project

Week 6 – March 13: Studio Shoot for Midterm Project

For Next Week: Environmental Portrait 2 for Midterm Project

Week 7 – March 20: Edit and Print Midterm || Digital Workflow: Color Correction for print

For Next Week: Edit captions, upload Midterm Finals

Week 8 – March 27: 1st Quiz, Midterm Presentations & Critique

Week 9 – April 3: Studio Lighting: Still Life || Controlling Intensity, Angle & Quality of Light

Man Ray, Edward Weston, Fischli & Weiss, Laura Letinsky…

For Next Week: Studio 2: Still Life

***NO CLASSES – April 10, April 17***

Week 10 – THURSDAY – April 20: Field Trip: Brooklyn Bridge Park || Quality and Meaning of Color

William Eggleston, Nan Goldin, Sarah Charlesworth, Barbara Kasten….

For Next Week: Color

Week 11 – April 24: Digital Workflow: Manipulating & Altering Images || Introduce Final Project: Series Aaron Siskind, Cindy Sherman, Laurie Simmons, Carrie Mae Weems…

For Next Week: Ideas for Final Project

Week 12 – May 1: Gallery Field Trip TBD

For Next Week: Final Project, Write 3-4 Paragraph Statement for Final Project

Week 13 – May 8: Digital Workflow: Output and Color || Understanding devices and media

Work Session: Edit & Color Correct Final Project

For Next Week: Final Project

Week 14 – May 15: Contemporary Uses of Photography || Quiz 2 || Work Session: Print Final

Broomberg & Channering, Trevor Paglen, Walid Raad…

For Next Week: Finish Printing Final Project, Post Final Images

Week 15 – May 22: Final Presentations

Presentations & Critique of Final Project

Recommended Readings (optional):

Week 1: SCDP pp. 3-16, pp. 58-59, pp. 147-151 || RTGP pp. 6-13

Week 2: SCDP pp. 22-25, 40-49, 152-153 || RTGP pp. 14-29

Week 3: SCDP pp. 74-75, 82, 122-126 || RTGP pp. 30-41

Week 4: SCDP pp. 16-25, 154-155 || RTGP pp. 42-49

Week 5: SCDP pp.158-169 || RTGP pp. 50-53, 114-117

Week 6: SCDP pp. 76-87 || RTGP pp. 60-73, 100-103

Week 7: RTGP pp. 82-93

Week 8: SCDP pp. 134-139 || RTGP pp. 94-99, 118-119

Week 9: SCDP pp. 140-145 || RTGP pp. 104-109

Week 10: SCDP pp. 173-192, pp. 193-203 || RTGP pp. 74-81

Week 11: SCDP pp. 109-112 || RTGP pp. 54-59, 110-113

Week 12: RTGP pp. 120-123

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