To better familiarize yourself with the artists associated with new genres, you will do a deep dive on an artist of your choosing for an oral presentation. You will then also hear of artists each of your classmates selected to get a more well-rounded view of the field.
Brief
Prepare and deliver in class an eight-minute oral and visual presentation on a new-genre artist from this spreadsheet (select only from the Video, Animation, Performance, Video Performance, Sound, and Installation Art tabs). Your oral presentation should include visuals (and sound when appropriate). I recommend Google Slides for easy access during class. You will find the date your presentation will happen in the list at the bottom of the assignment brief.
Note: Not all artists on the list work exclusively within new genre, but the work you choose to highlight should focus only on video, animation, performance, video performance, sound and installation. Keep it BYU-appropriate in your topics and selection of works.
You will not be submitting anything for the assignment. Your grade is based solely on your oral and visual presentation.
Submission Checklist
Tips and Considerations
Select an artist that excites you, so you are invested in the project.
Use your entire eight minutes and no more. Pace yourself so you use your full time and stay within your allotted time.
Some biographical information is appropriate, but the main focus should be on their work and discussing its importance to the field. If you choose include biographical information, it should be no more than 20% of your presentation (1.5 minutes).
Find high-quality images, video, and sound (when appropriate), to add liberally to your presentation to illustrate your points and help other students connect to the work.
If using sound or video, edit them down to brief clips so that the work does not take up more that 1.5 minutes of your overall presentation. It is OK if you show a soundless video that you talk over. That would not count toward your 1.5 minutes.
Avoid subjective terms and focus on what the work is doing and how it is operating in the world. Think of this like our critiques. This is more about what the work is doing, and less about what the artist (or a curator, or an historian) says the work is doing. Express your own views on the work.
Assignments
Learning Outcomes Addressed
Non-Traditional Approaches
Students will expand their art practice by engaging in a variety of non-traditional approaches to art production, while incorporating a conceptual framework in their exploration.
New Genre Art Practices
Students will develop a basic understanding of New Genre art practices and their origins, including relevant themes and concerns.