Program Overview
The Collaborative Arts BFA is a course of study designed for a diverse group of versatile, curious, and enterprising undergraduates. We value creative cooperation, theoretical rigor, hands-on experimentation and radical revision. We prioritize process as a method of self-discovery and often encourage our students to try before they completely understand how or why.
Students in the Collaborative Arts BFA are required to practice and learn a variety of art disciplines and are expected to emerge as multidisciplinary artists and performers. They are seeking a curriculum that emphasizes breadth, integrates theory with practice and rewards the artist who is able to dream up projects and work with others to realize them. The Collaborative Arts BFA appeals to students who are passionate about working in the arts across disciplines.
Authoritative curriculum information can be found exclusively in the University Bulletin. All other content, including this web-page, is for informational purposes only. You can find the curriculum for this program on this page of the Bulletin.
First Year Core Curriculum (24 Credits)
Our first year core curriculum introduces students to the fundamentals of performance, movement and acting, visual art and filmmaking, emerging media and technology, music production, fabrication, playwriting, screenwriting, and art theory. All of the courses below are required:
Expanded Core Curriculum (8 Credits)
Throughout the years, Jam House brings together the entire BFA for weekend-long intensive art jams and productions.
After beginning an array of artistic practice electives in sophomore year, students begin junior year with an expanded interdisciplinary workshop, Body Library, to engage with exciting guest artists and further prepare for their final thesis project in senior year.
Various Instructors / 2 Credits
Art Palace is a series of weekly talks/events presented by working artists with noteworthy careers in the greater New York area. Students will be introduced to a disparate variety of multi- and inter-disciplinary practitioners, allowing students to listen to, learn from and - in many cases - collaborate with visiting artists. Art Palace is required of all incoming students in their first semester, however each evening’s event is open to all Collaborative Arts majors who would like to participate.
Various Instructors
Conducted every semester, Jam House is a 2-day intensive offered for credit to all Collaborative Arts Majors. Students assemble to brainstorm unique experiential and collaborative works culminating in final presentations, projects and performances. Designed to function as a platform for experimentation and play, the workshop allows students to test ideas in an open, supportive yet critical environment with an emphasis on interdisciplinary art and a focused attention to the creative process. Every workshop begins with a visiting guest artist presenting their work, followed by Q&A and discussions. Students then form groups and create a collaborative work in any medium (or many) inspired or loosely informed by the ideas or themes presented by the artist.
4 Credits
A collaborative process in Body Library is not a premeditated passage, but an invitation for a responsive sequence of experiments that are issued by intention and vision. Consisting of the entire third-year cohort, the objective of the course is the development, research, production, and presentation of a new collaborative interdisciplinary live performance. The cohort is broken into groups and each student is responsible for bringing their interests, skill set, ambition, and aspirations to contribute to the creation of a unique process that is tailored to each group's chosen subject matter, themes, and formats.
Body Library is an occasion for experimentation and a call to step outside of our comfort zone. In this rigorous process, we welcome risks and challenges into our collaborations to explore the opportunities and possibilities they present, and to learn how to meet them with creativity and innovation. While working on methodology and building the group's focus and visions based on the individuals in the group and the collective’s goals, we will also encourage flexibility and curiosity in the process to allow for discovery, chance, and surprise. The nuance of a project’s meanings are often hidden deeper in its process; Body Library wants you to transform the joy and playfulness of art making and community into a sincere art practice and to create a work you did not know you had in you.
Body Library is an interdisciplinary lab and will make use of the entire facilities of the departments. We will integrate sculpting, drawing, sound, video, light, movement, technology, and text into the assignment for the class to become part of the process and the final performance to be presented to the Collaborative Art community at the end of the semester. The Individual group projects will be developed in parallel with several sharing of their work in progress with the rest of the class. Through the transparency and vulnerability of this sharing, we will be able to provide feedback and learn from observations across the collaboration teams.
The course will include a series of visiting guests from different fields; a dancer, a dramaturg, a light designer, and a sculptor to provide their skills and perspectives on their approaches to interdisciplinary collaborative performance art practices.
Various Instructors / 4 Credits
CA Capstone is an opportunity for graduating students to produce original interdisciplinary works of art that allow them to reflect and expand on their practice, skills, knowledge and insights they have gathered during their time at Collaborative Arts. While the works can take any form, we encourage collaborative projects and expect a collaborative process. Students as a group will be responsible for curating a final group show that brings all their work together into a cohesive narrative and engaging community experience. Throughout the semester students will compose and give feedback to each other’s individual artist statements and project “maps”, produce a curatorial statement, press-release, and invitation for the show. Works in the show should reflect the artist's playfulness, experimentation, curiosity, openness, originality and mastery of the tools employed. Agility in reason, intellectual rigor, attention to detail, contextualization, references and documentation - as well as final presentation - will all be important aspects of how the work will be assessed and evaluated. The class will be a combination of in-class workshops, review of weekly assignments, critique of work in progress, guest lectures, 1-on-1 sessions, and art outings.
"I came into Collaborative Arts with an idea of what art I was best in and ended the year with an entirely new opinion on who I was. Be open to learning new things and thriving in those new things."- Birdie Le'au
Artistic Practice Electives (36 Credits)
After the first year core curriculum, students move onto higher-level interdisciplinary coursework and become immersed in our expansive program electives across our core areas: image, performance, writing, music/sound, emerging media/technology, and research/studies.
Liberal Arts Requirements (32 Credits)
Every NYU student is required to complete a liberal arts core curriculum alongside of their primary major. For Collaborative Arts, the liberal arts requirements are as follows:
Minors
Students majoring in Collaborative Arts can also choose to complete a minor as part of their degree. Minors can be in the humanities, social sciences, languages, or other arts (subject to policies governing minors in those respective departments). To learn more about minors that are offered through Tisch, please visit Tisch Minors. Examples of minors offered outside of Tisch include: Psychology; The Business of Entertainment, Media, and Technology; Art History; Journalism; and many more.
Study Abroad
At Tisch we believe that global and cultural awareness is critical to education and personal development. The Collaborative Arts B.F.A. encourages students to study abroad while completing their degree. The curriculum is designed to allow students to spend a semester (or an entire year) abroad while earning core, general education or elective credits. Visit NYU Study Abroad or Tisch Special Programs to learn more about study abroad opportunities at NYU.