About
This interdisciplinary honors program allows students from any major to complete a senior capstone project in the arts and receive University Honors with their undergraduate degree.
Through a yearlong process, students develop a capstone project that goes beyond the traditional boundaries of their major.
- For students majoring in arts disciplines, this will involve incorporating multiple arts disciplines into their work.
- For students majoring in a non-arts discipline, capstone projects should incorporate themes, discourse, or learnings from a student's major along with arts practice or research.
Honors in the Arts can be completed in addition to honors work in a student's home department or alongside another capstone program (such as The Senior Reflection in Biology).
Program Components
To receive Honors in the Arts, students admitted into the program will complete the following:
- Workshop classes (ARTSINST 200A, 200B, and 200C) during their senior year.
- Capstone projects which are typically creative projects involving an arts practice element. Capstone projects may also be scholarly research projects involving a multidisciplinary approach. Students must receive at least an A- on the capstone project in order to receive honors. Students receiving a grade of less than an A- but greater than NP will receive credit for the workshops but will not receive honors.
- Mentors: Each student will work closely with two mentors, one Academic (from their home department) and one Creative, to develop and shape their capstone projects. Students are responsible for selecting their own mentors and setting up regular meetings throughout the academic year. Mentors do not need to be finalized/confirmed at the time of application. Learn more about developing a successful mentor relationship.
Preparation for Honors in the Arts
Students wishing to receive Honors in the Arts will be required to take at least three courses identified as preparing them to successfully execute an interdisciplinary capstone project. You should select courses that will provide you with a solid foundation in the artistic discipline(s) relevant to your proposed project. You should plan to complete at least two of these courses prior to entering the program. However, upon approval of the Program Director, students may take these courses while pursuing their Honors project.
The following courses provide an introduction to the study of the arts disciplines as well as incorporating the arts in an interdisciplinary context:
Students wishing to pursue an honors project involving a particular art practice area are recommended to have taken at least the relevant introductory course in that area from the list below or be able to demonstrate equivalent competency.
ARTSINST 11Q – Art in the Metropolis
MUSIC 2C – An Introduction to Opera
MUSIC 5G – Introduction to Gu-Zheng
MUSIC 11N – A View from the Podium: The Art of Conducting
MUSIC 15N – The Aesthetics of Data
MUSIC 19A/B – Introduction to Music Theory
MUSIC 21, 22, 23 – Elements of Music I, II, III
TAPS 1 – Introduction to Theater and Performance Studies
TAPS 20/124D – Acting for Non-Majors
TAPS 30 – How Theater is Designed
TAPS 31 – Introduction to Lighting and Production
TAPS 103 – Beginning Improvising
TAPS 120 A and B – Fundamentals of Acting
TAPS 120V – Vocal Production and Audition
TAPS 159 – Introduction to Game Studies
TAPS 175 – Writing for Performance: The Fundamentals
DANCE 37 – Beginning Lyric Contemporary
DANCE 39 – Intro/Beginning Contemporary Modern
DANCE 43 – Liquid Flow: Introduction to Contemporary Dance and Dance-making
DANCE 46 – Social Dance I
DANCE 48 – Beginning Ballet
DANCE 58 – Beginning Hip Hop
DANCE 65 – Construction Site
DANCE 118 – Developing Creativity in Dance
DANCE 160 – Performance and History: Rethinking the Ballerina
ARTHIST 1 – Introduction to the Visual Arts: History of Western Art from the Renaissance to the Present
ARTHIST 2 – Asian Arts and Cultures
ARTHIST 3 – Introduction to the History of Architecture
ARTHIST 157A – Histories of Photography
FILMSTUD 4 – Introduction to Film Study
FILMSTUD 102 – Theories of the Moving Image
FILMPROD 101 – Screenwriting
FILMPROD 114 – Introduction to Film and Video Production
ARTSTUDI 15AX – Introduction to Sculpture
ARTSTUDI 130N – Introduction to Art Practice
ARTSTUDI 140 – Drawing I
ARTSTUDI 145 – Painting 1
ARTSTUDI 148B – Introduction to Printmaking Techniques
ARTSTUDI 151 – Sculpture I
ARTSTUDI 160 – Design I: Fundamental Visual Language
ARTSTUDI 170 – Introduction to Photography
ARTSTUDI 177 – Video Art I
ARTSTUDI 179 – Digital Art I
ARTSTUDI 180 – Color
ME 101 – Visual Thinking
ME 103Q – Product Realization: Making is Thinking
ENGLISH 90 – Fiction Writing
ENGLISH 91 – Creative Nonfiction
ENGLISH 92 – Reading and Writing Poetry
Students interested in an interdisciplinary honors project might find inspiration in the following courses.
ANTHRO 178A: Culture, Narrative, and Medicine (HUMBIO 177C)
This course examines the ways in which medicine is practiced in diverse cultural contexts with narrative skills of recognizing, interpreting and being moved by the stories of illness. It is an examination of the human experience of illness and healing through narratives as presented in literature, film, and storytelling. We explore how cultural resources enable and empower healing and how narrative medicine can guide the practice of culturally competent medical care.
ARTHIST 145: Culture Wars: Art and Social Conflict in the USA, 1890-1950 (ARTHIST 345)
This course examines social conflicts and political controversies in American culture through the lens of visual art and photography. We consider how visual images both reflect and participate in the social and political life of the nation and how the terms of citizenship have been represented and, at times, contested by artists throughout the first half of the 20th century. The class explores the relation between American art and the body politic by focusing on issues of poverty, war, censorship, consumerism, class identity, and racial division.
ARTHIST 245: Art, Business & the Law
This course examines the intersection of art, business, and the law from a number of different angles, focusing on issues that impact our understanding of works of art and their circulation in the modern and contemporary periods. Topics range from individual case studies (e.g., Leonardo da Vinci; Richard Serra) to the consolidation of the art market, and include cultural heritage issues, problems of censorship, and conceptions of authorship and intellectual property.
ARTSTUDI 284: Art and Biology
The relationship between biology and art. Rather than how art has assisted the biological sciences as in medical illustration, focus is on how biology has influenced art making practice. New technologies and experimental directions, historical shifts in artists’ relationship to the living world, the effects of research methods on the development of theory, and changing conceptions of biology and life. Projects address these themes and others that emerge from class discussions and presentations. (upper level)
BIO 7N: Introduction to Conservation Photography
Introduction to the field of conservation photography and the strategic use of visual communication in addressing issues concerning the environment and conservation. Students will be introduced to basic digital photography, digital image processing, and the theory and application of photographic techniques. Case studies of conservation issues will be examined through photographs and multimedia platforms including images, video, and audio. Lectures, tutorials, demonstrations, and mandatory field trips will culminate in the production of individual and group projects.
BIO 196A/B/C: Biology Senior Reflection
Capstone course series for seniors. Creative, self-reflective and scientifically relevant projects conceived, produced and exhibited over the course of three quarters. Explore scientific content of personal interest through creative forms including but not limited to writing, music, fine arts, performing arts, photography, film or new media. A written essay on the creative process and scientific significance of the selected topic will accompany the creative work. Completed projects may be included in a creative portfolio. Required enrollment in 196A,B,C. Satisfies WIM in Biology.
DANCE 67: Being S(c)ene: Dance, Fashion and Art as Exhibition
In everyday life we are constantly moving from the subjects of the public, to its objects–from seeing to being seen. This performance- creation, interactive seminar explores everyday/pedestrian movement as articulated through the language of dance. Looking through the interpretive lenses of fashion, dance and visual representation, we critically consider how we observe others and ourselves in the world, and how we respond performatively or unconsciously. In addition to seminars and rehearsals, we will host guest lectures by curators, artists and professors: incorporate fieldwork research in museums as sites of display, and discuss scholarly texts and films. A performance installation with dance, fashion and visual display will ensue in the galleries at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford, in conjunction with the Fall 2013 exhibition, Carrie Mae Weems: Three Decades of Photography and Video.
DANCE 197: Dance in Prison: The Arts, Juvenile Justice, and Rehabilitation in America
Participatory seminar. The nexus of art, community, and social action, using dance to study how the performing arts affect self-construction, perception and experiences of embodiment, and social control for incarcerated teenagers in Santa Clara Juvenile Hall. Service Learning Course (certified by Haas Center).
HISTORY 168: American History in Film: Since World War ll
U.S. society, culture, and politics since WW II through feature films. Topics include: McCarthyism and the Cold War; ethnicity and racial identify; changing sex and gender relationships; the civil rights and anti-war movements; and mass media. Films include The Best Years of Our Lives, Salt of the Earth, On the Waterfront, Raisin in the Sun, Medium Cool, and Broadcast News.
HUMBIO 167: The Art of Vision
This course concerns eyes and art. It asks how eyes are built, how they process visual information, and how they are affected by diseases that are major problems in our society. These topics are illustrated through fine art and famous artists, and we explore the implications of both normal and abnormal vision for art. There are short diversions into animal eyes and the role of vision in music, literature, and sports. This course will be taught in Florence in Autumn, 2012.
HUMBIO 175: Health Care as Seen Through Medical History, Literature, and the Arts
The differences between disease as pathology and as the patient’s experience. Topics include: patient-doctor relationships; medical technology; the changing focus on illness; gender issues; love, sex, and illness; mental illness; sick children; and death and dying. Limited enrollment.
ME 377: Design Thinking Studio: Experiences in Innovation and Design
Design Thinking Studio is an immersive introduction to design thinking. You will engage in the real world, with your eyes, with your mind, with your hands, and with classmates to learn, practice, and use the tools and attitudes of design. The fundamental goal of the class is to cultivate the creative, synthetic, and divergent thinking of students. This is a project-based class, asking students to take on new behaviors of work: collaboration, experimentation, empathizing, visualization, craft and inference. Field work and collaboration with teammates are required and critical for student success.
OSPPARIS 30: The Avant Garde in France through Literature, Art, and Theater
Multiple artistic trends and esthetic theories from Baudelaire to the Nouveau Roman, from the Surrealists to Oulipo, from the theater of cruelty to the theater of the absurd, from the Impressionists to Yves Klein. Interdisciplinary approach to reflect on the meaning of avant garde and modernity in general, and on the question of why revolutionary artists in France remained in search of institutional recognition, nonetheless.
PWR 2JP: Writing & Rhetoric 2: The Rhetoric of Art and Commerce
Prerequisite: PWR 1. Further work in developing skills in argument and research-based writing, with emphasis on both written and oral/multimedia presentation of research. Examination of unspoken rules regarding the separation of creativity and commerce and arguments about how consumer culture influences the work of the artist.
TAPS 13N: Law and Drama
Preference to Freshmen.Beyond the obvious traits that make a good (court room) drama, theater and jurisprudence have much more in common. Just as drama is engaged not only in entertainment but also in examination of social conventions and mechanisms, so law is not only concerned with dispensing justice but with shaping and maintaining a viable human community. In this class we will read and discuss a series of plays in which court proceedings are at the center of dramatic action and concluding with an investigation of the new genre of documentary drama.
TAPS 130: ReDesigning Theater (ME 288)
In this class students will learn and apply the design thinking processes to reinvent the theater experience. Students will learn and then identify, define, needfind, ideate and prototype the elements necessary to create a new artistic genre of live performance that will utilize technology in new ways and embody what is unique to the Silicon Valley / San Francisco Bay Area. This multidisciplinary class will leverage different technical and creative disciplines to create an accessible and radical collaborative performance atmosphere.
Applications for the 2016-2017 cohort are due by 11:59pm on April 4, 2016
Please contact Sabrina Wilensky with any questions.
How to Apply
Admission to the program is competitive.
Eligibility requirements include:
- Stanford senior during the 2016-17 academic year.
- A minimum overall GPA of 3.67 (A-) will normally be required for admission into the program. However, applicants can submit a GPA petition.
- Completion of at least three creative/artistic courses that prepare the student to successfully execute an interdisciplinary capstone project.
Application materials include:
- Project proposal
- Unofficial transcript
- Name a faculty member who can provide a reference upon request.
- At least one (but no more than three) pieces of media relating to your proposed project. Accepted file formats include: images, video, audio, PDFs, 3D models, and linked external media (such as YouTube, Vimeo, and SoundCloud)
Honors in the Arts Alumni
FAQs
What is the format of the program?
Admitted students will participate in small, yearlong workshops during senior year to develop their capstone project. Workshops will be led by faculty and academic staff, and will be offered for two units of credit and will be taken for a letter grade. Students will be paired with a primary faculty advisor for their project and, where further expertise is necessary, will also be assigned a mentor or mentors who can advise and guide on other aspects as appropriate. Capstone projects will be graded by the project advisor, with input from a secondary reader. Students must receive at least an A- on the capstone project in order to receive honors.
What is a capstone project?
Capstone projects can be either scholarly/research projects involving a historical/theoretical approach or creative projects involving an arts practice element. In the latter case, students will be required to produce, in addition to the creative project, a brief explanatory statement outlining the intellectual and artistic goals of the project and reflecting on its impact. The capstone project should be informed by a student’s major and scholarly experience.
I am a Computer Science/Biology/Engineering/Economics/Other major. I would like to compose music/write a play/make a piece of visual art. Does my capstone project have to be about Computer Science/Biology/Engineering/Economics/Other?
Your research or creative capstone does not have to be about your major, but it should connect to your major through themes, methodology, discourse, or subject matter. As with any Honors project, the Honors in the Arts capstone should build on your previous studies, integrating them with art practice.
Who is eligible to apply?
Students in any major will be able to apply during the winter of their junior year.
I'm interested in pursuing an Honors in the Arts capstone as part of a team project. Is this possible?
Yes. If you are applying as a team you will be asked for additional information in your application regarding the roles and responsibilities each team member will take on during the project lifecycle. Each team member will need to submit their individual transcript, preparation courses, and academic reference. However, team members can submit the same project abstract, project proposal, and mentor possibilities. Please contact Sabrina Wilensky (swilensk@stanford.edu) if you have questions regarding applying as a team.
I’m interested in this program, but I’m not a junior yet. What should I do to prepare?
Students wishing to receive Honors in the Arts will be required to take at least three courses identified as preparing them to successfully execute an interdisciplinary capstone project. You should plan to complete at least two of these courses prior to entering the program. However, upon approval of the program director, students may take these courses while pursuing their honors project. Courses will normally be at least two units and will have been taken for a letter grade.
What do I need to apply?
To apply you will need to submit a project proposal of 500-750 words, a portfolio of relevant work, and an unofficial transcript. Be prepared to list your three introductory/preparatory courses, to provide a brief abstract of your project, and to provide the name of an academic reference. If your GPA is below 3.67, you will also need to submit a GPA petition.
My GPA is below 3.67. Am I ineligible to apply?
A minimum overall GPA of 3.67 (A-) will normally be required for admission into the program. However, we understand that GPA is one indicator of assessing overall merit, but we also recognize that innovative thinking does not necessarily get reflected in GPA. We want applicants who are interested in excellent, searching work. Applicants will be able to provide additional information demonstrating how their qualifications can be judged outside of their GPA.
Can I do this Honors and another Honors program?
Yes. However, you should plan to complete two separate projects.
Can I have my project count towards both Honors programs?
If you are interested in submitting one substantial thesis to fulfill honors requirements in more than one program, you must submit a request to the Exceptions Committee of the Committee on Undergraduate Standards and Policy (C-USP). This committee clarifies policy and determines whether or not it would be permissible for a student to submit one thesis for this purpose.
Can I do the honors program and go abroad?
Unfortunately, no. One of the core requirements of the Honors program is participation in the yearlong workshops.