Green Studio
Revised Last Updated: 05/08/2008
Fall, Winter and Spring quarters
Faculty: Bob Leverich visual arts, architecture, Peter Impara geography, landscape studies
Faculty Signature Required: Yes for sophomores and above. There is no signature requirement for freshmen students. Prospective students (sophomore-senior) must provide a statement of interest (one page, max.; include name, address, phone and e-mail) and a transcript of recent academic work or copies of student evaluations from 2008-09. Complete applications received at or before the Academic Fair, May 14, 2008 will be given priority. Qualified students will be accepted until the program fills. For more information contact Bob Leverich, leverich@evergreen.edu, or Peter Impara, imparap@evergreen.edu.
Major areas of study include environmental design, art, sculpture, architecture, furniture design and drawing.
Class Standing: This all-level program accepts up to 25% freshmen as well as supporting and encouraging those ready for advanced work.
Prerequisites: Students need to be willing to work with their hands to design and make things, to tackle open-ended problems, to respond with insight to real-world needs and obstacles, and to produce carefully finished work.
This program is for people who are drawn to the challenges and the satisfactions of creating and building - designers and artists - who want to do so with sustainable means. Can you make objects and environments that are expressive and compelling, purposeful and beautiful, using ways that respect both natural cycles and living communities? How do you justify your choices and measure your success? How do these things and places you make fit into sustaining and sustainable ways of living, for you and others? Sustainable design is emerging as a holistic problem solving methodology, inclusive rather than exclusive, that requires visual, verbal, and quantitative skills, creativity, flexibility, and a commitment to finding and implementing more integral and meaningful ways of inhabiting our world.
Green Studio will combine intensive 2D and 3D studio work with supporting reading, research, and writing on philosophies of sustainability, materials and construction science, landscape studies. environmental art and design history, and community dynamics - plus field trips, seminars and critiques. We will engage our work as art, science, expression and service, challenging such distinctions and looking for commonalities of approach and meaning. Fall quarter work will address drawing and design skills, thinking in three dimensions, wood and metal shop skills, site survey and mapping skills, ecologies of landscapes and materials, historical and philosophical contexts for the work, and the question of a sustainable life. Projects will include joinery prototypes with mixed materials, a site survey project and an indoor-scaled lighting, furnishing or sculpture project. Winter quarter we will expand our skills and knowledge base, and address larger scaled works - indoor or outdoor furnishings, construction system prototypes, site specific sculpture, or small-scale shelter. We will also begin identifying and preparing for Spring quarter work - small-group or individual projects that are grounded in real-world site and community contexts, carefully researched and realized. Project possibilities include improving particular social spaces on campus, water front park and streetscape planning in Olympia, master planning for the campus Organic Farm or proposed Sculpture Walk, assistance on low-cost housing, progress on "zero-runoff" for campus storm water, or restoration of brown field sites in Thurston County. These projects will involve students in real-world processes, constraints, and trade-offs - essential experience for those who wish to make a difference.
Serious students will leave Green Studio with new design and building skills, a deeper understanding of sites and materials, and a fuller sense of the cultural, environmental and personal dimensions of "sustainability" in shaping our world. We'll aim to have "serious fun" in the studio, and to make works that are expressive arguments for positive awareness and change.
Total: 16 per quarter
Enrollment: 44
Internship Possibilities: Spring only with faculty approval.
Special Expenses: $175 per quarter for drawing and studio equipment and materials and $75 per quarter for studio fee.
Program is preparatory for careers and future studies in environmental design, sculpture, architecture, fine arts and applied arts.
Planning Units: Programs for Freshmen, Environmental Studies, Expressive Arts
Program Revisions
| Date | Revision |
|---|---|
| May 5th, 2008 | Peter Impara has joined the faculty team for this program. The narrative, enrollment and faculty signature requirements have been changed. |

