SAVANNAH COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN
(Redirected from Savannah college of art and design)
'The Savannah College of Art and Design' (often referred to as 'SCAD') — founded in 1978 by Paula S. Wallace, Richard Rowan, May Poetter and Paul Poetter — offers Fine Arts degrees. The college is closely engaged with the city and the preservation, at least architecturally, of its rich heritage.
SCAD enrolls more than 7,000 students from all 50 states and 100 countries. International student enrollment is 10-12 percent.
Degree programs include advertising design, animation, architectural history, architecture, art history, arts administration (M.A. only), broadcast design and motion graphics, cinema studies (M.A. only), contemporary writing, fashion, fibers, film and television, furniture design, graphic design, historic preservation, illustration, illustration design (M.A. only), industrial design, interactive design and game development, interior design, metals and jewelry, painting, performing arts, photography, production design, sculpture, sequential art, sound design, urban design (M.U.D. only), visual communication (B.A. only) and visual effects.
Minors are offered in 28 of the major programs as well as in accessory design, British-American studies, business management and entrepreneurship, ceramic arts, cultural landscape, dance, decorative arts, drawing, electronic design, exhibition design, interaction design, marine design, museum studies, music performance, new media art, printmaking, sculpture, storyboarding and technical direction.
The college also features a study-abroad campus in the scenic town of Lacoste, France. In 2005, SCAD opened a campus in Midtown, Atlanta, Georgia, called SCAD-Atlanta. In June 2006, the Atlanta College of Art merged with SCAD, resulting in more opportunities for students. SCAD-Atlanta is near the Woodruff Arts Center and the High Museum of Art on Peachtree Street in Atlanta.
Wallace was promoted to president of the college in 2000 after serving as Provost and Dean of Academics since the founding of the college in 1978. Wallace is described as the force behind the college's mission, curriculum, staffing and award-winning renovation projects. As President, Wallace is responsible for the direct the internal management of the institution. Under Wallace’s leadership, SCAD established an off-campus site in Lacoste, France, in 2002. In 2003, the college launched the SCAD e-Learning program, offering certificates and full master’s degrees online. In 2004, SCAD established a campus in Atlanta offering B.F.A., M.A. and M.F.A. degrees in 11 majors. Today the college encompasses more than 2.5 million square feet in Atlanta, Lacoste and Savannah. Wallace has also initiated several annual events, such as the Sidewalk Arts Festival, Savannah Film Festival, Fashion Show, SCAD Style, Art Educators’ Forum and Rising Star — all of which have a tremendous cultural and economic impact on the community. She earned an annual salary of $1,068,726 in 2004.
The college's first academic building was the Savannah Volunteer Guard Armory, which was purchased and renovated in 1979. Built in 1892, the Romanesque Revival red brick structure is included on the National Register of Historic Places. Originally named Preston Hall, the building was renamed Poetter Hall in honor of co-founders May and Paul Poetter. SCAD soon expanded rapidly, acquiring buildings in Savannah's downtown historic and Victorian districts, restoring old and often derelict buildings that had exhausted their original functions.
By restoring buildings for use as college facilities, the college has been recognized by the American Institute of Architects, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the Historic Savannah Foundation and the Victorian Society of America, among others. The college campus now consists of more than 60 buildings throughout the grid and park system of downtown Savannah. Many buildings are located on the famous 21 squares of the old town, which are laden with monuments, live oaks and an undeniable Southern-Gothic feel that is sought by the many movies filmed there.
Features located on or near the college buildings include the Riverfront Plaza and Factors' Walk — River Street's restored 19th-century cotton warehouses and passageways include shops, bars and restaurants — and City Market, Savannah's restored central market, features antiques, souvenirs and small eateries.
Located in Atlanta's burgeoning Midtown, SCAD–Atlanta facilities provide ample classroom and exhibition space, well-equipped computer labs, library, photography darkrooms, printmaking and sculpture studios, a dining hall, fitness center, swimming pool and residence hall.
The college's facilities in Lacoste, France, date back 500–600 years. Originally founded by Bernard Pfriem, an American artist, in the 1970s and called the Lacoste School of the Arts, the small town of about 300 permanent inhabitants is steeped in rustic charm. Lacoste is a medieval village in Provence, which is in Southern France. The beautiful countryside is an asset to the college as an inspiration for the courses taught there. Enrollment in Lacoste usually is for one quarter of the academic school year.
The university's Savannah campus is divided into seven schools:
★ Dean: Steve Bliss
★ Departments: Advertising Design, Graphic Design, Illustration, Photography, Sequential Art and Visual Communication
★ Dean: Crystal Weaver, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Architecture, Historic Preservation, Interior Design and Urban Design
★ Dean: Victor Ermoli
★ Departments: Fashion, Fibers, Furniture Design, Industrial Design and Metals and Jewelry
★ Dean: Maureen Garvin
★ Departments: Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture and Foundation Studies
★ Dean: Peter Weishar
★ Departments: Animation, Broadcast Design and Motion Graphics, Film and Television, Interactive Design and Game Development, Sound Design and Visual Effects
★ Dean: Désiré Houngues, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Architectural History, Art History, Arts Administration, Cinema Studies, Contemporary Writing and Liberal Arts
★ Dean: Danny Filson
★ Departments: Performing Arts and Production Design
The university's Atlanta campus is divided into three schools:
★ Academic Director for Communication Arts and Digital Media: Pat Quinn
★ Departments: Advertising Design, Animation, Broadcast Design and Motion Graphics, Graphic Design, Illustration, Interactive Design and Game Development, Photography, Sequential Art and Visual Effects
★ Academic Director for Design and Liberal Arts: Denise Smith, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Art History, Fashion, Interior Design and Liberal Arts
★ Academic Director for Fine Arts and Foundations: Brett Osborn
★ Departments: Foundation Studies, Painting, Printmaking and Sculpture
The most popular is the School of Film and Digital Media, which has seen much growth in recent years with the addition of new majors to support the demand for technology-based art classes. These areas of study focus on computer effects, animation and design for film, television, games and the Internet. To meet this demand, a former 64,000-square-foot carriage factory was refurbished as a high-end, 800-computer animation and effects teaching/production house complete with render farm, green-screen stages and even stop-motion labs. SCAD recently added an increasingly popular program in sound design, offering concentration in music production or audio for image.
Also very popular and widely recognized is the School of Communication Arts, which includes graphic design, advertising design, illustration, photography and sequential art. Most graphic design classes are held in Poetter Hall on Madison Square. Within its historic walls, Poetter Hall embraces the trend in electronic design, and features a large number of computers and several high-end Apple Computer workstations in its labs.
Most students live off-campus, which is to say outside the residence halls, as there are no formal campus grounds other than those contained by the building properties themselves. There are nine buildings that provide student housing and range from one- to three-person, single-room residence halls; to four-bedroom student apartments. The residence halls are Weston House, Dyson House, Oglethorpe House, Turner House, Turner Annex, Pulaski House (an all female residence hall), Forsyth House, Gaston House, Boundary Village, and Barnard Village (completed in 2007). SCAD has no fraternities or sororities.
The college has two newspapers: The Chronicle and the entirely student-run District. Student media also extends to SCAD Radio, an Internet-broadcast radio station; Beecon, the student television production group; The Hive, a student-run online community; and Agency Five, a student-run advertising agency. There are 23 student organizations related to academic programs and another 22 that are recognized but not affiliated with any particular programs.
Students are expected to focus on three areas of study: foundation studies (art fundamentals such as drawing, color theory and design), liberal arts (math, science, art history and English needed for accreditation) and their major area of discipline (a specific course of study such as graphic design, sequential art or animation).
The college operates 10 galleries, notably Red Gallery, the ACA Gallery of SCAD, the Pei Ling Chan Gallery, the Pinnacle Gallery, and La Galerie Bleue. In addition, the college holds numerous lectures, performances and film screenings at two historic theaters, the Trustees Theater and the Lucas Theatre for the Arts. These theaters also are used once a year for the popular Savannah Film Festival in late October/early November. With average attendance close to 35,000, the event includes a week of lectures, workshops and screenings of student and professional films. There also is a juried competition.
Each April, SCAD hosts the Sidewalk Arts Festival, which attracts huge crowds to Savannah's largest downtown park, Forsyth Park. The festival consists primarily of the chalk-drawing competition, which is divided into group and individual categories of students, alumni and prospective students. Similar in spirit is the Sand Arts Festival. This particular sand festival is held every spring on the beaches of nearby Tybee Island. Contestants can work alone or in groups of up to four people. The competition is divided into sand relief, sand sculpture, sand castle and wind sculpture divisions.
Individual departments host both yearly and quarterly shows to promote student work. Conferences such as the GDX conference and events such as SCAD Style foster dialogue among students, faculty and professionals, and offer opportunities for networking and career enhancement.
Students tend to frequent en masse non-SCAD-affiliated events if they are held in the historic district — for example, the Savannah Jazz Festival and the Savannah Shakespeare Festival (both in Forsyth Park) — not to mention the St. Patrick's Day celebration, which is one of the largest and oldest in the United States.
★ India.Arie, Grammy Award-winning R&B/soul singer and songwriter. IndiaArie.com
★ Michael Aziz, member of an architecture group designing a new university campus on the Bay of Bengal in India.
★ Mike Bear, comic book artist; currently employed by Devil's Due Publishing as the artist on .
★ Layne Brightwell, Hollywood costume and clothing designer.
★ Mark Brooks, comic book artist; currently employed by Marvel Comics.
★ Brock Butler, lead singer of Perpetual Groove.
★ Bennett Cain, creator of a short film, "Seed," which was chosen as one of the nine best films featured on mtvU's "Student Shorts."
★ Danny!, record producer/recording artist and winner of one of MTVu's four 2007 "Best Music On Campus" contests.
★ Gerard Caliste, contemporary painter, once belonged to world-renowned art group YAYA.
★ Kent Knowles, painter and author; book Lucius and the Storm published by Red Cygnet Press.
★ Monica Cook, painter; work featured in New American Paintings.
★ Walter S. Crane IV, artist/creator of comic book "Sheba"; animator at Olive Jar Studios during the mid-1990s.
★ Dave Guertin, lead character designer of the "Ratchet and Clank" series; currently employed by Insomniac Games.
★ Shaun Inman, award-winning developer of Mint (a program that helps Web Page authors identify where interest is generated and over what).
★ John Jacqua, director of engineering and design for the Bretford Inc. design team, which won a Silver 2006 IDEA award for a Laptop Mobility Cart designed for Apple Computer.
★ Tomas Kalnoky, lead singer of the third wave ska band Streetlight Manifesto, and the musical collective Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution. Tomas Kalnoky was also the first lead singer for the band Catch 22.
★ M. Alice LeGrow, creator of comic "Bizenghast."
★ Christy Lijewski, creator of the comics Next Exit and .
★ Keelan Parham, Cartoonist, author of the book Let's Toon Caricatures and the comic bookLunar Donut. Owner of Caricature Connection, one of the largest caricature concessions in the world for theme parks.
★ Dennis Oh, actor and model in South Korea.
★ Ty Romsa, painter and comic book artist for Marvel Comics, DC, and Aspen Comics.
★ Michael Scoggins, painter; artwork included in Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
★ Eric Limarenko, creative video editor; lead editor on children's DVD series Noodlebug
★ Geoffrey Taylor, research scholar, Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
★ René Pérez Joglar, aka ''"Residente"''triple grammy winner,MTV award, reggaeton artist and musician for Calle 13
★ Eduardo Marron, TV Producer for TELEHIT Music Video Channel in Mexico City (2000-2005) and EXA-TV (2005-present). http://www.exa.tv
★ Tom Feister (comics), comic book artist;inker on Eisner award winning Ex-Machina, Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Image Comics.
★ Victor Ruano (CMPA & FILM) http://www.santasombra.com - http://tdb.berlinale-talentcampus.de/campus/talent/victor-ruano4/profile
★ Brenda Brathwaite, professor of interactive design and game development; writer of "Sex and Video Games"; named one of the game industry's 100 Most Influential Women by Next Generation, an online magazine, and her peers.
★ Larry Dixon, professor of photography; photographer; photographer of many album covers while working in Nashville, Tenn.
★ Winrich Kolbe, professor of film and television; directed episodes for many popular television shows, including '', ''24'', and ''The Rockford Files''.
★ Tom Lyle, professor of sequential art; penciler for over 40 Spider-Man comics, as well as numerous other titles.
★ E.G. Daves Rossell, professor of architectural history; noted scholar on vernacular architecture; works on Virtual Historic Savannah Project, which documents the evolution of urban form by combining architectural and social history research with 3-D computer and database technology.
★ David Spencer, Atlanta College of Art alumnus and SCAD-Atlanta professor of interactive design; rock musician with the band Tone Star.
★ Craig Stevens, professor of photography; photographer.
★ David Jeffreys, professor of art; formerly a guitarist for British band Prolapse.
★ Savannah College of Art and Design Web site.
★ SCAD-Lacoste in Lacoste, France.
★ SCAD-Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia.
★ SCAD e-Learning.
★ SCAD Athletics.
★ SCAD Exhibitions.
★ The Chronicle.
★ District (student newspaper).
★ Beecon (student television).
★ The Hive (student online community).
★ SCAD Radio.
★ Sand Arts Festival.
★ Sidewalk Arts Festival.
★ Savannah Film Festival.
★ Jen Library.
'The Savannah College of Art and Design' (often referred to as 'SCAD') — founded in 1978 by Paula S. Wallace, Richard Rowan, May Poetter and Paul Poetter — offers Fine Arts degrees. The college is closely engaged with the city and the preservation, at least architecturally, of its rich heritage.
SCAD enrolls more than 7,000 students from all 50 states and 100 countries. International student enrollment is 10-12 percent.
Degree programs include advertising design, animation, architectural history, architecture, art history, arts administration (M.A. only), broadcast design and motion graphics, cinema studies (M.A. only), contemporary writing, fashion, fibers, film and television, furniture design, graphic design, historic preservation, illustration, illustration design (M.A. only), industrial design, interactive design and game development, interior design, metals and jewelry, painting, performing arts, photography, production design, sculpture, sequential art, sound design, urban design (M.U.D. only), visual communication (B.A. only) and visual effects.
Minors are offered in 28 of the major programs as well as in accessory design, British-American studies, business management and entrepreneurship, ceramic arts, cultural landscape, dance, decorative arts, drawing, electronic design, exhibition design, interaction design, marine design, museum studies, music performance, new media art, printmaking, sculpture, storyboarding and technical direction.
The college also features a study-abroad campus in the scenic town of Lacoste, France. In 2005, SCAD opened a campus in Midtown, Atlanta, Georgia, called SCAD-Atlanta. In June 2006, the Atlanta College of Art merged with SCAD, resulting in more opportunities for students. SCAD-Atlanta is near the Woodruff Arts Center and the High Museum of Art on Peachtree Street in Atlanta.
Administration
Paula S. Wallace (2000-present)
Wallace was promoted to president of the college in 2000 after serving as Provost and Dean of Academics since the founding of the college in 1978. Wallace is described as the force behind the college's mission, curriculum, staffing and award-winning renovation projects. As President, Wallace is responsible for the direct the internal management of the institution. Under Wallace’s leadership, SCAD established an off-campus site in Lacoste, France, in 2002. In 2003, the college launched the SCAD e-Learning program, offering certificates and full master’s degrees online. In 2004, SCAD established a campus in Atlanta offering B.F.A., M.A. and M.F.A. degrees in 11 majors. Today the college encompasses more than 2.5 million square feet in Atlanta, Lacoste and Savannah. Wallace has also initiated several annual events, such as the Sidewalk Arts Festival, Savannah Film Festival, Fashion Show, SCAD Style, Art Educators’ Forum and Rising Star — all of which have a tremendous cultural and economic impact on the community. She earned an annual salary of $1,068,726 in 2004.
Facilities
The college's first academic building was the Savannah Volunteer Guard Armory, which was purchased and renovated in 1979. Built in 1892, the Romanesque Revival red brick structure is included on the National Register of Historic Places. Originally named Preston Hall, the building was renamed Poetter Hall in honor of co-founders May and Paul Poetter. SCAD soon expanded rapidly, acquiring buildings in Savannah's downtown historic and Victorian districts, restoring old and often derelict buildings that had exhausted their original functions.
By restoring buildings for use as college facilities, the college has been recognized by the American Institute of Architects, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the Historic Savannah Foundation and the Victorian Society of America, among others. The college campus now consists of more than 60 buildings throughout the grid and park system of downtown Savannah. Many buildings are located on the famous 21 squares of the old town, which are laden with monuments, live oaks and an undeniable Southern-Gothic feel that is sought by the many movies filmed there.
Features located on or near the college buildings include the Riverfront Plaza and Factors' Walk — River Street's restored 19th-century cotton warehouses and passageways include shops, bars and restaurants — and City Market, Savannah's restored central market, features antiques, souvenirs and small eateries.
Located in Atlanta's burgeoning Midtown, SCAD–Atlanta facilities provide ample classroom and exhibition space, well-equipped computer labs, library, photography darkrooms, printmaking and sculpture studios, a dining hall, fitness center, swimming pool and residence hall.
The college's facilities in Lacoste, France, date back 500–600 years. Originally founded by Bernard Pfriem, an American artist, in the 1970s and called the Lacoste School of the Arts, the small town of about 300 permanent inhabitants is steeped in rustic charm. Lacoste is a medieval village in Provence, which is in Southern France. The beautiful countryside is an asset to the college as an inspiration for the courses taught there. Enrollment in Lacoste usually is for one quarter of the academic school year.
Departments
The university's Savannah campus is divided into seven schools:
School of Communication Arts
★ Dean: Steve Bliss
★ Departments: Advertising Design, Graphic Design, Illustration, Photography, Sequential Art and Visual Communication
School of Building Arts
★ Dean: Crystal Weaver, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Architecture, Historic Preservation, Interior Design and Urban Design
School of Design
★ Dean: Victor Ermoli
★ Departments: Fashion, Fibers, Furniture Design, Industrial Design and Metals and Jewelry
School of Fine Arts
★ Dean: Maureen Garvin
★ Departments: Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture and Foundation Studies
School of Film and Digital Media
★ Dean: Peter Weishar
★ Departments: Animation, Broadcast Design and Motion Graphics, Film and Television, Interactive Design and Game Development, Sound Design and Visual Effects
School of Liberal Arts
★ Dean: Désiré Houngues, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Architectural History, Art History, Arts Administration, Cinema Studies, Contemporary Writing and Liberal Arts
School of Performing Arts
★ Dean: Danny Filson
★ Departments: Performing Arts and Production Design
The university's Atlanta campus is divided into three schools:
Communication Arts and Digital Media
★ Academic Director for Communication Arts and Digital Media: Pat Quinn
★ Departments: Advertising Design, Animation, Broadcast Design and Motion Graphics, Graphic Design, Illustration, Interactive Design and Game Development, Photography, Sequential Art and Visual Effects
Design and Liberal Arts
★ Academic Director for Design and Liberal Arts: Denise Smith, Ph.D.
★ Departments: Art History, Fashion, Interior Design and Liberal Arts
Fine Arts and Foundations
★ Academic Director for Fine Arts and Foundations: Brett Osborn
★ Departments: Foundation Studies, Painting, Printmaking and Sculpture
The most popular is the School of Film and Digital Media, which has seen much growth in recent years with the addition of new majors to support the demand for technology-based art classes. These areas of study focus on computer effects, animation and design for film, television, games and the Internet. To meet this demand, a former 64,000-square-foot carriage factory was refurbished as a high-end, 800-computer animation and effects teaching/production house complete with render farm, green-screen stages and even stop-motion labs. SCAD recently added an increasingly popular program in sound design, offering concentration in music production or audio for image.
Also very popular and widely recognized is the School of Communication Arts, which includes graphic design, advertising design, illustration, photography and sequential art. Most graphic design classes are held in Poetter Hall on Madison Square. Within its historic walls, Poetter Hall embraces the trend in electronic design, and features a large number of computers and several high-end Apple Computer workstations in its labs.
Students
Most students live off-campus, which is to say outside the residence halls, as there are no formal campus grounds other than those contained by the building properties themselves. There are nine buildings that provide student housing and range from one- to three-person, single-room residence halls; to four-bedroom student apartments. The residence halls are Weston House, Dyson House, Oglethorpe House, Turner House, Turner Annex, Pulaski House (an all female residence hall), Forsyth House, Gaston House, Boundary Village, and Barnard Village (completed in 2007). SCAD has no fraternities or sororities.
The college has two newspapers: The Chronicle and the entirely student-run District. Student media also extends to SCAD Radio, an Internet-broadcast radio station; Beecon, the student television production group; The Hive, a student-run online community; and Agency Five, a student-run advertising agency. There are 23 student organizations related to academic programs and another 22 that are recognized but not affiliated with any particular programs.
Students are expected to focus on three areas of study: foundation studies (art fundamentals such as drawing, color theory and design), liberal arts (math, science, art history and English needed for accreditation) and their major area of discipline (a specific course of study such as graphic design, sequential art or animation).
Events
The college operates 10 galleries, notably Red Gallery, the ACA Gallery of SCAD, the Pei Ling Chan Gallery, the Pinnacle Gallery, and La Galerie Bleue. In addition, the college holds numerous lectures, performances and film screenings at two historic theaters, the Trustees Theater and the Lucas Theatre for the Arts. These theaters also are used once a year for the popular Savannah Film Festival in late October/early November. With average attendance close to 35,000, the event includes a week of lectures, workshops and screenings of student and professional films. There also is a juried competition.
Each April, SCAD hosts the Sidewalk Arts Festival, which attracts huge crowds to Savannah's largest downtown park, Forsyth Park. The festival consists primarily of the chalk-drawing competition, which is divided into group and individual categories of students, alumni and prospective students. Similar in spirit is the Sand Arts Festival. This particular sand festival is held every spring on the beaches of nearby Tybee Island. Contestants can work alone or in groups of up to four people. The competition is divided into sand relief, sand sculpture, sand castle and wind sculpture divisions.
Individual departments host both yearly and quarterly shows to promote student work. Conferences such as the GDX conference and events such as SCAD Style foster dialogue among students, faculty and professionals, and offer opportunities for networking and career enhancement.
Students tend to frequent en masse non-SCAD-affiliated events if they are held in the historic district — for example, the Savannah Jazz Festival and the Savannah Shakespeare Festival (both in Forsyth Park) — not to mention the St. Patrick's Day celebration, which is one of the largest and oldest in the United States.
Noted alumni and faculty
Alumni
★ India.Arie, Grammy Award-winning R&B/soul singer and songwriter. IndiaArie.com
★ Michael Aziz, member of an architecture group designing a new university campus on the Bay of Bengal in India.
★ Mike Bear, comic book artist; currently employed by Devil's Due Publishing as the artist on .
★ Layne Brightwell, Hollywood costume and clothing designer.
★ Mark Brooks, comic book artist; currently employed by Marvel Comics.
★ Brock Butler, lead singer of Perpetual Groove.
★ Bennett Cain, creator of a short film, "Seed," which was chosen as one of the nine best films featured on mtvU's "Student Shorts."
★ Danny!, record producer/recording artist and winner of one of MTVu's four 2007 "Best Music On Campus" contests.
★ Gerard Caliste, contemporary painter, once belonged to world-renowned art group YAYA.
★ Kent Knowles, painter and author; book Lucius and the Storm published by Red Cygnet Press.
★ Monica Cook, painter; work featured in New American Paintings.
★ Walter S. Crane IV, artist/creator of comic book "Sheba"; animator at Olive Jar Studios during the mid-1990s.
★ Dave Guertin, lead character designer of the "Ratchet and Clank" series; currently employed by Insomniac Games.
★ Shaun Inman, award-winning developer of Mint (a program that helps Web Page authors identify where interest is generated and over what).
★ John Jacqua, director of engineering and design for the Bretford Inc. design team, which won a Silver 2006 IDEA award for a Laptop Mobility Cart designed for Apple Computer.
★ Tomas Kalnoky, lead singer of the third wave ska band Streetlight Manifesto, and the musical collective Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution. Tomas Kalnoky was also the first lead singer for the band Catch 22.
★ M. Alice LeGrow, creator of comic "Bizenghast."
★ Christy Lijewski, creator of the comics Next Exit and .
★ Keelan Parham, Cartoonist, author of the book Let's Toon Caricatures and the comic bookLunar Donut. Owner of Caricature Connection, one of the largest caricature concessions in the world for theme parks.
★ Dennis Oh, actor and model in South Korea.
★ Ty Romsa, painter and comic book artist for Marvel Comics, DC, and Aspen Comics.
★ Michael Scoggins, painter; artwork included in Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
★ Eric Limarenko, creative video editor; lead editor on children's DVD series Noodlebug
★ Geoffrey Taylor, research scholar, Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
★ René Pérez Joglar, aka ''"Residente"''triple grammy winner,MTV award, reggaeton artist and musician for Calle 13
★ Eduardo Marron, TV Producer for TELEHIT Music Video Channel in Mexico City (2000-2005) and EXA-TV (2005-present). http://www.exa.tv
★ Tom Feister (comics), comic book artist;inker on Eisner award winning Ex-Machina, Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Image Comics.
★ Victor Ruano (CMPA & FILM) http://www.santasombra.com - http://tdb.berlinale-talentcampus.de/campus/talent/victor-ruano4/profile
Faculty
★ Brenda Brathwaite, professor of interactive design and game development; writer of "Sex and Video Games"; named one of the game industry's 100 Most Influential Women by Next Generation, an online magazine, and her peers.
★ Larry Dixon, professor of photography; photographer; photographer of many album covers while working in Nashville, Tenn.
★ Winrich Kolbe, professor of film and television; directed episodes for many popular television shows, including '', ''24'', and ''The Rockford Files''.
★ Tom Lyle, professor of sequential art; penciler for over 40 Spider-Man comics, as well as numerous other titles.
★ E.G. Daves Rossell, professor of architectural history; noted scholar on vernacular architecture; works on Virtual Historic Savannah Project, which documents the evolution of urban form by combining architectural and social history research with 3-D computer and database technology.
★ David Spencer, Atlanta College of Art alumnus and SCAD-Atlanta professor of interactive design; rock musician with the band Tone Star.
★ Craig Stevens, professor of photography; photographer.
★ David Jeffreys, professor of art; formerly a guitarist for British band Prolapse.
External links
★ Savannah College of Art and Design Web site.
★ SCAD-Lacoste in Lacoste, France.
★ SCAD-Atlanta in Atlanta, Georgia.
★ SCAD e-Learning.
★ SCAD Athletics.
★ SCAD Exhibitions.
★ The Chronicle.
★ District (student newspaper).
★ Beecon (student television).
★ The Hive (student online community).
★ SCAD Radio.
★ Sand Arts Festival.
★ Sidewalk Arts Festival.
★ Savannah Film Festival.
★ Jen Library.
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