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Cool Class: Foundations in Sculpture

Connecting with their inner spirit animals, first-year students take a creative, hands-on approach to learning the foundations of a time-honored art form.

October 21, 2015

A student wearing a cardboard hummingbird hat that she made in her Foundations in Sculpture course.
Scott Cook

During the Renaissance, an artist’s three-dimensional creation (think Michelangelo’s David) was judged largely on technical qualities such as proportion, beauty, and life-like resemblance.

Today, sculpture is often a more abstract vehicle, an exploration into the very ideas and concepts that fuel individual expression.

Through a series of studio assignments, first-year students in this Rollins College Conference (RCC) course are encouraged to develop their own sculptural vocabulary and a repertoire of practical techniques. Using their new skills to parade around as “spirit animals” is a fun bonus.

Course Title

Foundations in Sculpture: Constructing Meaning

Josh Almond
Associate Professor of Art Josh Almond | Scott Cook

Instructor

Joshua Almond, associate professor of studio art

A student wearing a bear hat.
Scott Cook

The Scoop

Students learn the fundamentals of sculpture with a hands-on approach that emphasizes spatial awareness, problem solving, and conceptual development. Allegory, metaphor, and symbolism are just as important as tools, materials, and techniques.

By focusing on conceptual development, students begin to think about the content of their work in a more sophisticated manner,” Almond says. “In addition, they realize they’re going to be pushed way outside their comfort zone and use materials—like wood and metal—that are intimidating and/or unfamiliar.”

A student wearing a fish hat.
Scott Cook

Snapshot

When we dropped in on the class September 28, students were modeling and showcasing their spirit animals. Made using cardboard, the wearable sculptures enabled them to explore identity and a three-dimensional form in space using a medium that doesn’t require a tremendous amount of skill to manipulate.

“The sculpture itself was going to transform their physical being in a new and interesting way,” Almond says. “We talked about how the assignment connects to various traditions and societies around the world where costumes are worn for spiritual or ritualistic purposes, and we used the idea of a spirit animal as a departure point.”

A student wearing an owl mask.
Scott Cook

Student Perspective

Meredith Ewen ’19, who plans to major in art history, says the class has challenged her to explore new materials and concepts.

A student wearing a giraffe hat.
Scott Cook

“These materials, while simple at first glance, have exposed me to the challenge of how to understand the ways the material or process is limited and how to then find ways to manipulate them to fit my design,” she says. “Overall, this class has taught me lessons of understanding and flexibility that transcend out of the studio space and into other realms of my college experience as I study and engage in the community.”

Students pose outside with their sculptures.
Scott Cook

Fun Fact

Native American totem poles are a natural example of how sculpture intersects with “spirit animal” iconography. According to New World Encyclopedia, designs featuring bears, birds, frogs, lizards, and people—often endowed with arms, legs, and wings—were carved to illustrate stories, commemorate historic persons, represent shamanic powers, and provide objects of public ridicule.

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