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Map of the California College of the Art's Montgomery Campus building at 1111 Eighth St., San Francisco, 2017
Map of the California College of the Art's Montgomery Campus at 1111 Eighth St., San Francisco, showing classrooms and other areas of the first and second floors of the building, March 23, 201
CCA Undergraduate Commencement 2017
California College of the Arts Commencement, May 13 2017
American Art Students Respond to John Ruskin and Marcus Waithe
Appeared in the magazine of The Guild of St George
Daniel Ransom's presentation at New Student Orientation, 2017
Daniel Ransom, Instructional Services Librarian, presenting at the New Student Orientation in the Meyer Library, August 30, 2017
CCA Libraries Staff in the Meyer Library, 2017
Left to right: Nancy Chan, Amber Bales, Pearl Shen, and Glenn Grace near the Artist's Books case in the Rare Book area of the CCA Meyer Library, 2017
CONSTITUTION DAY exhibition documentation
By definition, a constitution is “a body of fundamental principles ... according to which a state or other organization is acknowledged to be governed. Synonyms: charter, social code, law; bill of rights; rules,
regulations, fundamental principles, e.g., “the constitution guarantees our rights’”*
Drafting it was a creative and visionary act, during the revolutionary war, “times,” Thomas Paine observed, “that try men’s souls,” words also suited to today’s political climate. But though it was written over
200 years ago, the Constitution is a living document, reviewed, argued over, occasionally amended, continuously.
Why is it important, especially in this current moment? Do you feel protected by it?
The recent white nationalist protest and counter-protest in Charlottesville, among other things, challenged the definition of “free speech,” protected under the first amendment to the Constitution. Should hate speech be protected under the first amendment?
On September 5, the White House announced it would repeal DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals aka The Dream Act), putting 800,000 young people, many in school or college, whose parents emigrated to the U.S. illegally, in jeopardy. What are your feelings about DACA and its repeal?
Trump and his allies on the right have often cried “Fake news!” about the mainstream media’s reporting; federal investigators have uncovered fake news stories about the 2016 election promulgated by Russian agencies. How does the specter of fake news influence your reading? How important is Freedom of the Press?
During the week of Constitution Day, students were invited to draw &/or write their thoughts on current events as related to their Constitutional rights
Charlie Milgrim interview
Artist and educator Charlie Milgrim talks about her building experiences in the Emeryville mudflats: building sculptures with high-school students during her first teaching experience in 1975 and collaboratively creating large scale activist pieces protesting the U.S. involvement in the Civil War in El Salvador in the late 1980s
Intuition in Design: Reflections on the Iterative Aesthetics of Form
Curious to reflect on the factors contributing to the internal decision-making processes of intuitive design, a reflective study was established to systematically examine and document the practice of intuition while performing an iterative aesthetic task. Autoethnographic techniques were used to document the reflective practices that occurred over numerous iterations spanning several weeks of activity. Our analysis concludes with a summary of reflections on how intuition informs judgment in design cognition. We examine four dimensions of intuition in design—efficiency, inspiration, curiosity, and insight—and the reflective and sensory inputs that drive intuitive speculation and impulse