All two-dimensional objects have the two basic confines of space: length and width. But what makes an object that is three-dimensional, well, three dimensional? What makes a painting a painting and a sculpture a sculpture? The answer: DEPTH Whether students in this course work with paper mache, plaster, paper, clay, wire, or some sort of found objects, all projects in this course have the three-dimensional element of depth. Students explore sculptural fields such as the fundamentals of paper sculpting, casting forms, and assemblage, as well as investigating sculptural artists and art movements throughout history -- i.e. Installation art, the Dada movement, Mark Jenkins, Christo, and George Segal. Check out a couple of those links below!