All classes are college level, live sessions with built in independent work time, so be prepared to give the maximum time and effort both in and out of class. You must complete all curriculum units to receive college credit. Faculty and MICA Undergraduate staff will support you and provide regular and ongoing feedback throughout the program.
Below you'll find the course offerings for each session, alongside course descriptions and a sample schedule.
- Session One: 2-Week Sunday June 30 - Saturday July 13
Course Options:
Painting the Figure in Acrylic, Drawing the Figure, Graphic Design, Ceramics: The Figurative Form, Hand Drawn Animation, Painterly Print, Illustration - Session Two: 2-Week Sunday July 14 - Saturday July 27
Course Options:
2D Digital Animation, Alternative Processes in Photography, Illustration, Painting the Figure in Oil, Digital Fabrication: Objects and Places, Ceramics: Throw, Fire, Glaze, Graphic Design, Film and Video, Fiber: Dye, Felt, Weave, Interdisciplinary Art
See below for sample courses from Summer 2024
Offered: July 1 - July 12
Ceramics: The Figurative Form
This course explores the use of ceramics within a mixed media context to explore the full potential of the figurative form. From working with the live model to more contemporary approaches exploring figurative sculpture, students will learn a variety of ceramic techniques as well as exploring clay within a mixed media context. Students will learn about a number of firing and finishing options, building skills and taking new risks. Students will have access to MICA’s state of the art ceramics studio and a wide range of ceramics materials including different types of clay, slips and glazes.
Offered: July 1 - July 12
Drawing the Figure
In this course, students work from live nude models to investigate the technical challenges and expressive potential of a range of drawing media and approaches. In addition to investigating the human form, students work through a progression of drawings that investigate how different approaches to the figure can address mood, spirit, intensity, viewpoints, and emotion. Students will produce a portfolio of figure drawings that range in style from traditional to more contemporary and conceptual approaches that embody a student's personal artistic vision.
Offered: July 1 - July 12
Printmaking: Painterly Print
Monotype Printmaking is an exciting journey of creativity and self-discovery; every print is a masterpiece waiting to be revealed. This course invites artists to explore, experiment, and uncover multiple forms of expression. This course is for you if you're drawn to vivid colors and designs. Through technical demonstrations and a study of printmaking's history and contemporary artists, students will uncover the myriad possibilities of printmaking. They will receive guidance through individual and group critiques, helping them develop a unique thematic body of work for their portfolio. This course is designed to accommodate both novice and experienced artists and is accessible to students who may not have taken a printmaking class before.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Fiber: Dye, Felt, Weave
Students will learn techniques such as fabric dyeing, wet felting and weaving in order to create expressive and meaningful sculptural artforms. Working in MICA's well equipped Fiber Arts center students will have the opportunity to learn professional processes, use state of the art equipment and combine their unique artistic vision with fibers' special expressive quality.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Interdisciplinary Art
Interdisciplinary art uses a combination of art forms and explores a multifaceted approach to making. What is the piece doing? Does it tell a story? Evoke a feeling? Focusing on several concepts, students who take this course are encouraged to investigate the relationship between form, material, process and personal expression .Students may work in a variety of forms such as sculpture, performance art, collage, fiber, fashion, installation, video and photography as they learn to develop personally significant directions for making work and building a cohesive themed portfolio.
Offered in 2-week and 4-week sessions
Illustration
Illustration tells a visual story, provides visual interpretation, or creates a visual explanation of a narrative, concept, or process. Illustrators create images for posters, flyers, magazines, books, animations, and video games. Students in Illustration apply approaches to contemporary illustration as a means for creating or supporting a narrative/story. Students consider issues of character development, sequential imagery, storytelling genres, and the relationship between text and image. Final portfolios include a range of work exploring different illustration markets and genres.
Offered: July 1 - July 12
Hand Drawn Animation
Animation students explore image, motion, character, and narrative storytelling through traditional hand drawn techniques. Students in this course will be challenged to create work from their personal experiences and will work both independently and collaboratively. Portfolios will include concept drawings, storyboards, and completed short animations.
Offered in 2-week and 4-week sessions
Graphic Design
Type, image, composition, color, and concept, are among the essential tools used by graphic designers to solve visual challenges. Graphic Designers create posters, websites, logos/branding, product packaging, and signage. Students in this course will utilize the Adobe Creative Cloud software to take on real-world design industry challenges. Students will find their own voice as they develop designs with commercial, social, public, and political impact. Assignments will emphasize the use of symbols, sequential design, the integration of imagery, typography, and conceptual thinking. Final projects contain fully realized and executed designs that combine innovative solutions through their personal voice as a designer.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Ceramics: Throw, Fire, Glaze
This course explores the use of wheel throwing in ceramics as a process of innovation and exploration. Students will explore how the potter’s wheel can be used as a tool and as a jumping-off point for questions about form, function, design and the potential of ceramics in sculptural applications. Students will learn about a number of firing and finishing options, including Raku firing. They will build skills and refine existing ones, creating more inventive, larger and more complicated forms. Students will have access to MICA’s state of the art ceramics studio and a wide range of ceramics materials including different types of clay, slips and glazes.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Alternative Processes in Photography
Students will explore unique alternative photography printing processes such as cyanotype, salt prints, photograms and pinhole images. They will also have the opportunity to be introduced to the magic of analogue photography through demonstrations involving the large format camera and tintype process. Working in MICA's well equipped and state of the art analog and digital facilities, students will get a chance to experience all that alternative processes have to offer and create unique portfolio pieces.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Digital Fabrication & Prototyping
People interact with objects and places on a daily basis. From museums, to parking meters and subways- objects and places can be interacted with in many different ways. In this course students will evaluate what artists and designers do to improve and challenge public spaces. Students will think critically about the purpose of objects and places and how they can be context to develop new designed objects and places. Working in various scales from handheld to life size, students will learn product design methods, 3D printing, laser cutting and receive hands-on experience in prototyping methods, and computer-aided drawing (CAD) in MICA's digital fabrication studio.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
Painting the Figure in Oil
This course focuses on building proficiency for painting the human figure. Working from a live nude model, students will learn proportion and anatomy and how to use oil paint to explore formal and expressive elements of form, texture, movement, color, and composition. Students will produce a portfolio that includes ambitious artwork that confronts the demands of large-scale format painting, portraiture, narrative painting, and the intensity with which paint expresses ideas.
Offered: July 15 - July 26
2D Digital Animation
Animation students will explore image, motion, character, and narrative storytelling through 2D digital techniques with an introduction to stop motion. Students will be challenged to create work from their personal experiences and will work both independently and collaboratively. Portfolios will include concept drawings, storyboards, and completed short animations.
Offered: July 1 - July 12
Painting the Figure in Acrylic
This course focuses on building proficiency for painting the human figure. Working from a live nude model, students learn proportion and anatomy as well as paints formal/expressive elements such as paint form, texture, movement, color, composition and their application to the execution of student's personal artistic vision. Students produce a portfolio that includes ambitious artwork that confronts the demands of large-scale format painting, portraiture, narrative painting, and the intensity with which paint expresses ideas. Students will work primarily with acrylic paints in this 2-week course.