The Animation and Interactive Media curriculum incorporates courses from several departments including Graphic Design, Illustration and Photography.
The Animation and Interactive Media (A+IM) concentration at Montserrat College of Art reflects a philosophy that the basic ideas of linear, time-based and interactive media are equally at home in the fine arts and commercial realms, and that practitioners share tools, practices, basic storytelling and/or information design principles.
The A+IM curriculum incorporates courses from several departments including Graphic Design, Illustration and Photography. The program leaves it up to the individual student, under the guidance of faculty, to discover and pursue his or her own aesthetic direction.
A+IM graduates are prepared to work as individuals or as members of production teams in the development of animations, websites, video games or other interactive media projects.
Montserrat was born in the late sixties, a time when people were questioning the status quo and seeking new solutions.
A group of artists who were working and teaching in the Boston area had a bold idea: to create a new kind of art school in Massachusetts for professional education in the visual arts – a school that would not only focus on the arts, but would also focus on the individual needs of each student. A simple idea, but one that had seldom been attempted and rarely achieved.
Foregoing the security – but also the limitations – that traditional institutions offered, these artists labored to breathe life into their idea.
In the early years, Montserrat School of Visual Arts, as it was then called, offered a professional diploma in the same studio concentrations for which it is known today. By the 1980s, this still-young Massachusetts art school was accredited and granted the authority to award the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. With that milestone came a new name: Montserrat College of Art.
By 1990, Montserrat had outgrown its original facility and moved to historic downtown Beverly, Massachusetts, into the Hardie Building, a newly renovated, nineteenth century building with expanded teaching facilities. Steadily, the art college acquired residence halls and the Cabot Studio Building, establishing a vibrant and eclectic seaside Massachusetts campus.
Today, the dream of those artists back in the sixties is a reality. Just as they had hoped, creativity flows at Montserrat College of Art. Students are drawn by the intensive studio environment and one-on-one instruction from our faculty of accomplished artists, designers, and scholars.
At Montserrat art school you will find a place of inspiration, respect, and encouragement, where you can develop your talents and achieve your vision of the future.
The New York Film Academy’s 3D Animation Workshop is designed for individuals who want to learn the essentials of 3D animation with high-end 3D computer programs but do not have the time required to devote to full-time study as a year-round student.
Here students showing full competence in computer application and understanding learn the skills of frame by frame animation. Students create tablet generated frame by frame images composed in Flash. The images are animated with sound and output to DVD and online.
Here students showing full competence in computer application and understanding learn the skills of frame by frame animation. Students create tablet generated frame by frame images composed in Flash.
Whether you’re interested in learning creative software Adobe Animate, learning how to create digital animations, or an illustrator interested in diving into animation —this course will cover he fundamentals of digital animation as well as how to navigate Adobe Animate CC.
You have ideas for amazing animated stories, but how do you make them come to life? In this course, you learn the step by step process of creating your first animation, and explore the tools professional animators use on TV shows such as The Simpsons,
© 2024 coursetakers.com All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions of use | Privacy Policy