INCLUDED WITH FULL ENROLLMENT OF
FIRST YEAR OF MFA PROGRAM
A State of the art Canon EOS 5D Mark II
included in the class
that allows you to take
stills and HD Videos
Next Start Date: September 8, 2010
Applications Still Being Accepted
Tuition: $13,000 Per Semester
Additional equipment Fee: $2,000 per semester.
(January 2011 program tuition will be increased
to $15,000 Per Semester.)
The program is held at the
New York Film Academy at Universal Studios, California.
 

Two-Year MFA Photography Program

START DATES FOR UNIVERSAL STUDIOS:
January 5, 2011   •   September 7, 2011

OVERVIEW: Semester 1      Semester 2     Semester 3     Semester 4                     COURSES:  Semester 1     Semester 2     Semester 3     Semester 4

The New York Film Academy Master of Fine Arts in Photography is a four semester (16-weeks per semester) conservatory-based, full-time graduate program.

This exceptional course of study is designed to train a new generation of visual artists whose work is grounded in a thorough awareness of the history of the medium, who possess technical mastery of the latest tools, and who are equipped with the creative and business skills to succeed in a competitive marketplace, whether they choose to specialize in fine art, journalism, commercial, video or documentary traditions.

In this program, students are given unique opportunities to engage with an incredibly diverse international student body on our campus at Universal Studios, Hollywood, CA. Visits to world-class museums, galleries, studios, labs, agencies, publishers, and trade shows; guest lectures and critiques by working photojournalists, artists, and curators; internship opportunities; instruction by a core faculty comprised of working professionals – these are all key parts of the rich NYFA experience. Results of the successful completion of the MFA program include:
  • A comprehensive knowledge of digital and film cameras and optics from 35mm to large format
  • In-depth experience with a wide range of digital and photochemical image creation and printing techniques
  • A comprehensive awareness of and expertise with lighting, digital imaging and printing tools
  • Mastery of Adobe Photoshop Creative Suite
  • Knowledge of research techniques for documentary and news assignments
  • Knowledge of the history of photography practices, aesthetics and technology
  • Knowledge of aesthetic theories of photography and experience with their practical application
  • The ability to work independently in a high-pressure creative environment
  • A broad portfolio of fine art, commercial, documentary, news and personal images
The NYFA MFA photography program uniquely embraces today’s state-of-the-art cameras as tools that produce not only still images of unprecedented resolution, but also high-definition video of astonishing quality. The photography department embraces all lens-based media, offering a unique curriculum that includes not only still digital and film-based photography, but also video production.

Whether the intention of your work is to flicker as briefly and brightly as an advertisement, or to create an art icon that rewards generations of scrutiny, the value of your ideas, the quality of your execution and the impact of your style will ultimately determine its success. Content has never been more important, even as professional image-makers must constantly upgrade their technical skills and sharpen their conceptual faculties to produce work that is daring, provocative and influential. Technological change promises to continue to push the synthesis of mediums and distribution mechanisms. There has never been a more exciting time for visual artists.

SEMESTER ONE OVERVIEW

The main goal of the first semester is to develop core photography skills by shooting immediate and ongoing assignments with a state of the art digital SLR, the Canon 5D Mark II. As students shoot and edit, they are immersed in the theory and history of photography. Looking at master works and participating in critiques, students develop skills to conceptualize, pre-visualize, compose, expose and edit powerful images using light and perspective to underscore content.

Photographers are first and foremost light hunters. Students learn to recognize the power of dramatic light and the potential of shadows as they bend the sun, the moon, and every conceivable artificial light source from sparklers to fresnels, studio flash to LEDs to illuminate our subjects. Even as they learn traditional 3-point lighting, students are encouraged to think beyond convention to choose lighting techniques with emotional and dramatic impact.

As students examine a wide range of imaging disciplines, they also practice the essential business skills that enable any professional to run a successful practice, including research, assignments, bidding, self-promotion, marketing, stock imagery, studio organization, contracts, exhibition, licensing, publishing and artist grants.

Photography today is intrinsically linked to Adobe Photoshop as the pre-eminent digital darkroom tool. Industry experts help students master non-destructive image editing, learn the staggering power of RAW processing, how to target and shift colors with incredible precision, professional selection and masking techniques, and even how to manipulate time in the editing process.

SEMESTER ONE OBJECTIVES

PROJECT GOALS
  • Test apertures ranges, shutter speeds, lenses, lighting tools, and filtration options on a wide variety of subjects.
  • Thoroughly test the limits of over and under exposure and RAW processing and the effect on the "look" of an image.
  • Research, conceptualize, shoot, edit and output a photographic documentary essay, including a written artist’s statement.
  • Conceptualize, shoot, edit and output a fine-art exhibition on a single cohesive theme, including a written artist’s statement.
  • Develop and participate in a community of creative peers capable of providing invaluable critical feedback.
LEARNING GOALS
  • Understand the components of exposure.
  • Acquire a working mastery over the Canon 5D Mark II digital SLR camera and standard lenses for still imaging.
  • Develop working digital darkroom skills using Adobe Photoshop.
  • Understand basic color management and be able to output accurate prints to modern inkjet printers.
  • Recognize the characteristics and make creative use of basic lighting tools and camera position to create drama and emotional impact under typical lighting conditions.
  • Examine the history of photography and photo technology up to the arrival of handheld 35mm cameras.
  • Understand and apply theories of aesthetics, semiotics, design, composition and color.

SEMESTER ONE CLASSES

Studio Practice I
Studio Practice is the core of the curriculum, encompassing lecture, demonstration, shooting assignments on location or in the studio, and critique. Students learn the mechanics of cameras and lenses and the components of exposure. Students are taught to be aware of the unique characteristics that light can take: direct, diffused, reflected, tempered by atmosphere. They begin to master the modern digital SLR, and analyze digital capture’s pleasures (instant gratification!) and pitfalls (generic, competent images). Every technique is practiced through individual assignments, which are critiqued by faculty and peers.
Digital Imaging I
Adobe Photoshop may be the greatest tool of visual illusion and manipulation ever invented. Going beyond the flashy effects that wow at trade shows, students use professional digital darkroom techniques that give unprecedented color and tonal control over their images. Students build their digital darkroom from RAW processing through non-destructive editing, and output from print to web page to iPod. This course includes lecture, demonstration and lab time for students to edit their own images with the assistance of expert faculty.

History & Theory I
Intensive study, analysis, and critique of the work of master photographers, their techniques, aesthetics and approaches helps to equip students to choose the most effective means of realizing their own projects. The history of photography is studied from its beginning through the proliferation of the handheld 35mm camera. Students are guided to analyze the cultural and societal impact of photography, and the evolution of the medium from the original assumed veracity of photographs to the exploitation of the viewer’s acceptance of the photograph as "truth," given the use of modern photographic manipulation with tools such as Photoshop. Additionally, students become intimately familiar with a particular photographer’s body of work through written research projects.

Discussions include composition, traditional and non-conventional framing, color theory, design, semiotics (signs and symbols), the effect of technological changes on photography, the use and limitations of photography as a documentary and personal record, and the surprisingly long history of using viewer assumptions to distort the truth.

Documentary & Fine Art Photography
In this class, students take a close look at the evolution of documentary and fine art photography through the work of established and emerging masters such as Bernice Abbott, Diane Arbus, Eugene Atget, Jonas Bendiksen, Bill Brandt, Matthew Brady, Keith Carter, Henri Cartier-Bresson, William Eggelston, Alfred Eisenstadt, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Lee Friedlander, Nan Goldin, Michael Kenna, Dorothea Lange, Philip Lorca-diCorcia, Sally Mann, Mary Ellen Mark, Steve McCurry, Tina Modotti, Sebastiao Salgado, Sandy Skoglund, Cindy Sherman, Eugene Smith, Edward Weston and others. Guest presentations play a major part of this course, as well as written analyses. Students build on their in-depth exposure to the work of these masters to research, plan and execute their own documentary and fine art projects for in-class critique.

Visiting artists address the business practices of successful documentary and fine art photographers, including private and public funding, assignment work, self-promotion, exhibition, approaching galleries and museums, book publishing, stock and commercial licensing.

SEMESTER TWO OVERVIEW

The second semester builds on students’ basic skill set and challenges them to refine their technical, aesthetic and business skills. Focusing on commercial image-making, students look at established masters as they work intensively with studio lighting, the 5D D-SLR and medium format camera systems on fashion, product, beauty, and architectural assignments. Art direction and design elements are employed to create distinctive visual styles. In-post production, students move beyond basic color and tone correction into sophisticated compositing techniques, dynamic range extension, and advanced retouching and masking techniques.

Students also explore the creative potential of unconventional cameras, and get familiar with the incredible high-definition video capabilities of the Canon 5D Mark II as they are immersed in a unique curriculum of visual storytelling techniques, including concept, direction, editing, lighting, and sound design, culminating in a short video commercial project.

Students expand their repertoire of techniques with light and shadow as they work with professional lighting and grip hardware, as well as inexpensive and unconventional practical sources of light and shadow.

SEMESTER TWO OBJECTIVES

PROJECT GOALS
  • Apply professional business practices to each project, including releases, casting, contracts.
  • Thoroughly test a wide variety of lenses and alternative image capture devices.
  • Conceptualize, shoot, edit and screen a short high-definition video project.
  • Conceptualize, shoot, edit and exhibit a commercial photo project, working with models, an art director, sets, and professional lighting equipment.
  • Research, shoot, edit and exhibit a news story.
LEARNING GOALS
  • Refine lighting skills that can be applied under controlled and any real-world conditions using a comprehensive array of tools.
  • Acquire working expertise with video features of the Canon 5D Mark II D-SLR camera.
  • Learn motion picture storytelling techniques, including writing, directing, producing, lighting and editing.
  • Become familiar with commercial and journalistic business practices, ethics, legal issues and practices.
  • Become familiar with medium-format systems.
  • Develop expert digital imaging skills using Adobe Photoshop.
  • Examine the history of photography and photo technology from the arrival of handheld 35mm cameras through today.
  • Expand and refine aesthetic sensibilities in composition, color, design and lighting.

SEMESTER TWO CLASSES

Studio Practice II
The semester begins with an intensive immersion in digital filmmaking. Each student works as director, cinematographer, gaffer, camera assistant and sound recordist, as well as edits his or her own projects. The astounding high-definition video capabilities of the Canon 5D camera are employed as students learn the grammar of cinema, plan shots that serve the story and support editorial continuity, and practice set protocol. Finally, narratives are deconstructed and rebuilt using the power of non-linear editing.

Medium format systems, using both film and digital backs and alternative cameras - scanners, cell phones, pocket cameras, video cameras, even copiers - are investigated. Students are encouraged to analyze how the choice of format affects the subjects, point of view and shooting approach.

Students learn to find and create dramatic light under any conditions, using conventional tools like the latest hot and cool continuous sources, flash in all forms, and professional grip hardware, as well as unconventional sources from flashlights to headlights. Discussion includes 3-point lighting, soft and hard light, color temperature, gels, diffusion and control systems.

Digital Imaging II
Transformations, layer masks, tone, texture and color matching are used in this class to composite entirely new visual worlds, full of startling and utterly believable juxtapositions. Also taught are in-depth RAW processing, advanced color correction and tone control techniques including the use of multiple color models. This class demystifies color management in order to get accurate results through the workflow, including device profiles, RGB and CMYK color spaces, conversions and workflow configuration. Finally, students explore output options in depth, including ink and carbon based output, 4-color press, Lambda, Kodak Approvals and others.

History and Theory II
Study and analysis of the work of master photographers continues from the proliferation of the handheld 35mm camera to the present day. The impact of the digital revolution in relation to the proliferation of image distribution devices (the cell phone, iPod, the web, etc.) and its relationship to popular culture, photojournalism, the blurring of art and commerce is explored. Students examine the radical degree to which commercial retouching practices have distorted viewer expectations, had a profound effect on society, and utterly transformed the very nature of what a photograph is. Students also analyze the aesthetic and technical techniques of particular photographers through written research projects.

Commercial Photography
In this class, students produce tabletop, fashion and beauty, advertising and product work. Casting, working with models, lighting challenges for specialized products, and high-end commercial retouching are also addressed. Students conceptualize and design shoots from top to bottom, including set design, location scouting, art direction, costumes, makeup, hair and props.

The work of successful commercial photographers such as Richard Avedon, Chris Buck, Patrick Demarchelier, Annie Leibovitz, Helmut Newton, Herb Ritts, Ellen von Unwerth, and Albert Watson is examined. Business practices including bidding, studio organization, releases, working with assistants, art directors and clients, licensing, pricing, publishing, assignments, self-promotion, and contracts are studied.

Photojournalism
Students research, shoot and edit news stories, address single-image and longer form photo essays, consider the relationship between text and image, and discuss ethics and standards. Lectures and guest presentations from photojournalists play a major role. Key work from past and present professionals such as Robert Capa and James Nachtwey, and the lesser known heroes of the news world are examined.

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What makes our PHOTOGRAPHY Program unique?

Photography students at New York Film Academy will be introduced to the tools and develop the skills necessary for researching, composing, and capturing Digital Photographic Projects. Students are encouraged to be creative but are also taught to think of each project as a concise statement of artistic, documentary, and/or journalistic intent.

BRIAN DILG, PROGRAM CHAIR Brian Dilg is an internationally published and collected photographer and award-winning filmmaker with over 20 years of professional teaching experience around the world. His images have been published in the New York Times, Time Out, and the Village Voice, and on book covers by Simon and Schuster, Random House and Hyperion. He has provided image retouching services to clients including Victoria's Secret, Polo Ralph Lauren, Revlon, Nike, NBC and Allure. He is an Adobe Certified Expert in Photoshop, an Adobe Certified Instructor, and a frequently consulted authority on retouching and color management hardware and software.

"Auf Wiedersehen," premiered at the 2010 Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival. He recently shot "The Greims" starring Wes Bentley (American Beauty), featured at the 2009 Vancouver International Film Festival. He previously served as the Technical Director of the film program and as the Director of the digital imaging program at the Maine Media Workshops. He did his graduate work in film production at New York University, where he was a full scholarship student. He has worked as director, cinematographer, and editor on over 70 other narrative, documentary, music video and commercial films.


SEMESTER THREE OVERVIEW

The second year expands into traditional and alternative film-based processes, while helping students choose a focus that will become their final thesis project within a fine art, documentary, journalistic or commercial convention. The thesis project really begins in the summer between the first and second year, when students are expected to explore the themes, ideas and techniques that will lead to their final project.

A broad exposure to state-of-the-art and antique processes and technology empowers students to develop a personal visual identity by combining old and new techniques to create unique results. Students simultaneously build expert digital darkroom skills, including the ability to extend reality through dynamic range and digital montage.

Portraiture, including street photography, commercial studio technique, and the snapshot aesthetic are surveyed through the work of established masters and visiting professionals. Students also explore the power of limitations, learn to prepare for serendipitous accidents, and explore multi-image sequencing and image juxtaposition.

SEMESTER THREE OBJECTIVES

PROJECT GOALS
  • Develop a portfolio of carefully edited portrait photos
  • Produce a portfolio of images shot on film
  • Produce a portfolio of multi-image and sequenced works
  • Digitally edit images shot on film and scanned
LEARNING GOALS
  • Learn the Zone System for film and apply it to digital workflow
  • Test the results of mixing digital and photochemical processes
  • Develop advanced Photoshop skills
  • Advance our skill at capturing the personalities of people we are photographing
  • Develop working expertise with flatbed and film scanning techniques and devices
  • Develop a facility with multi-image juxtaposition and sequencing
  • Learn to create beautiful, compelling light using unconventional sources in any conditions
  • Get familiar with alternative optics and output materials

SEMESTER THREE CLASSES

Thesis Prep
At the beginning of Semester Three, master students must form a thesis committee. Students meet regularly (at least once per week) with thesis committee members to ensure compliance with New York Film Academy standards. This course focuses on the thesis goals of each individual, with an emphasis on perfecting craft and exposing him or her to the realities of the photographic industry and the business of professional photography. It is designed to prepare MFA students for their thesis projects as well as for a life in the industry after graduation.
Studio Practice III
Film and the darkroom: are they dead or at least doomed? Can they ever be replaced? Are ultra-sharp, contrasty modern lenses actually better than antique glass with blurred corners, imperfections and even fungus – or just different? Modern digital technology has hidden dangers: the machine-made consistency of automatic modern equipment unwittingly conspires to produce predictable, competently exposed, and potentially generic images. How can we take advantage of technology to create a unique voice?

Exercises in shooting, testing, scanning and printing both black and white and color stocks help students to understand the expressive potential of film and traditional printing processes. Students also learn to use Ansel Adams’ Zone System to compress and extend the dynamic range of film stock to optimize any lighting situation. Combinations of physical and digital processes are investigated, and students test the limits of each to create uniquely beautiful images using both organic and digital technology.

Students test the power of juxtaposition and sequencing in multi-image works to change the meaning of the single image, using both narrative and non-narrative techniques. They learn to transform their subjects with magical light under a variety of conditions – even complete darkness - exploring non-traditional and real world lighting. Mixed light sources, neon, practicals, infrared, headlights, moonlight, fireworks, sparklers, flashlights, LEDs - you name it, if it makes light, we’ll find out what makes it special, and find it in the real world.

Additionally, students test the transformative and distorting powers of specialty optics, including macro, tilt and shift, extreme telephoto, and antique lenses, and filters, gels, and translucent materials. On the output side, a wide variety of paper stocks, transparencies, video projection and non-paper surfaces are explored, as well as mounting, framing and exhibition methodologies, always addressing archival concerns.

Digital Imaging III
Even as they re-discover irreplaceable antique processes, students delve into the most advanced Photoshop techniques, including blending modes, compositing, advanced masking, channel mixing, transformations, advanced retouching techniques, texture maps and simulated grain structures. Students examine traditional chemically generated images under the microscope of the digital darkroom, and debunk the dangerous lure of "correct" or technically "perfect" images. Students also get familiar with film and flatbed scanners and scanning techniques as they digitize images shot and printed by traditional methods.

History and Theory III
This course provides a close academic study of the history of aesthetics (from Plato, through Kant, Romanticism, Modernism, to current postmodern theories) as applied to the visual arts and photography. Special attention is paid to the evolution of the still visual image through history, and how artists have both paralleled and rebelled against the predominant artistic and aesthetic movements of their respective times.

The history of conceptual art as a means of leading us to multi-faceted meaning from a simple idea is also examined. Students are asked to work in new ways that deliberately take away control over critical aspects in order to discover the power of serendipitous "accidents," and tap into the vast processing and synthesizing abilities of their own subconscious.

Portrait Photography
However diverse the paths artists take, the closest thing to a certainty is that nearly everyone who picks up a camera will photograph a human being at some point in their lives. For most commercial photographers, being able to create compelling portraits is a bread and butter skill. Yet no two photographers will make the same picture of the same subject. So does a portrait only represent the sitter? Or is it also - inevitably - a portrait of the photographer? Does it matter?

Students examine the relationship between the photographer and the photographed, find some who hide behind the camera, those who use it as a bridge to other people, and those for whom looking at other people is remarkably more inward than outward.

The work of commercial, documentary and fine art masters such as Richard Avedon, Diane Arbus, Nan Goldin, Yousuf Karsh, Annie Leibovitz, Mary Ellen Mark and Arnold Newman is analyzed and discussed to inspire our own portraiture and illuminate the hand of the photographer behind the images. This class requires students to photograph strangers on the street, friends and family in the studio and at home, actors playing themselves, the image-conscious and the image-oblivious. Students test the power of locations to affect the subjects and the images, take both staged and stolen looks at other people as well as themselves, and discuss the endless fascination of human beings, frozen in time.

SEMESTER FOUR OVERVIEW

The primary focus of the fourth semester is the final student thesis project, including planning, research, shooting, editing, processing, publishing, promotion and exhibition. Self-promotion techniques and successful business practices are examined using both electronic and print mediums, including basic Adobe Flash programming and web-based portfolios.

The unique and extraordinary characteristics of the large-format film camera are thoroughly explored in conventional and unconventional applications, including portraiture, landscape and architectural applications. The limitless possibilities of combining large-format film capture with high-resolution scanning and digital editing are investigated.

MFA students must write a thesis proposal of ten to twenty pages and receive approval from the thesis committee made up of their faculty. The proposal must include a clear statement of the artistic vision, purpose, and technique(s) the candidate hopes to employ. It should include historical and aesthetic references and may include sample sketches or photographs from the student’s previous work. The final work must include a minimum of twenty gallery quality prints, with accompanying text, and summary statement of the artist. Students may chose a fine art or documentary approach, and will be evaluated by the standards established for those genres in coordination with the thesis committee.

This culminates in a final public exhibition of 20 printed images. This is the crowning event of the MFA program, where students celebrate their achievements with the viewing public and network with curators, publishers, image buyers, publishers, photo editors, agents, and fellow image-makers.

SEMESTER FOUR OBJECTIVES

PROJECT GOALS
  • Produce a final thesis exhibition
  • Produce a portfolio of large-format images
  • Create an online retrospective exhibition of edited work from all four semesters
LEARNING GOALS
  • Get comfortable handling a large-format camera
  • Acquire a working mastery of advanced digital imaging techniques by applying them to thesis work
  • Become intimately familiar with the current professional art and commercial marketplace

SEMESTER FOUR CLASSES

Studio Practice IV
The primary focus of this class is on the development of the thesis project, including research, tests, location scouting, casting, design, shooting, editing, processing, printing and mounting.

In preparation for entry into the professional world, additional focus is placed on exhibition and self-promotion techniques, including online and printed portfolio and exhibition practices.

Large Format Camera
Students delve into the extraordinary and deliberate world of the large format camera, including contact printing, portraiture, landscape and architectural applications, and its unique potential for unconventional uses. This class examines the impact of outrageous detail and extraordinary separation through miniscule depth of field as well as the way the very physical nature of the camera affects the photographer’s process, the subject and results. The result of traditional silver printing as well as scanning large format film for digital processing is also explored.

History and Theory IV
Critical theory as it applies to photography and students' own work is examined. The course explores the question of how meaning is constructed by the photographer and interpreted by the viewer. Prominent critics and thinkers including Roland Barthes, Susan Sontag, and Jacques Derrida will be central to the discussion as students see images as texts and artifacts which reveal and describe humankind. The course identifies the "filters" of gender, ethnicity, culture, and politics and uses them to analyze the work of major photographers as students apply these concepts to their thesis projects.

Exit Strategies
As students prepare to compete as imaging professionals, they examine what is selling in today’s marketplace, the state of the fine art market, the role of retouching, licensing possibilities, the blurring of art and commerce, and the effects of instant worldwide electronic distribution on the perceived value of the image. This class looks at the diverse practices and portfolios of successful contemporary professionals and artists such as Nick Brandt, Michael Grecco, Andreas Gursky, Todd Hido, Sean Kernan, David LaChapelle, Loretta Lux, Cindy Sherman, Alex Soth, Mario Testino and others.

Portfolios are carefully edited to target specific markets and assignments, and the latest print and electronic presentation techniques are surveyed, including use of electronic portfolio devices such as the iPad, animated Flash slide shows, and traditional printed marketing campaigns.

Frequent interviews and guest critiques with professional photographers, photographers’ representatives, photo editors, buyers, curators and other industry figures present business strategies and help students refine and focus their portfolios to ensure that they are prepared to enter the professional world with a full complement of creative, strategic and business skills.

QUICK FACTS:
Start Dates:
For Universal Studios:
Sep 8, 2010 , Jan 5, 2011 , Sep 7, 2011

Program Requirements: Bachelor's Degree
tuition: $13,000**(USD)/Semester
             €10,294 (EURO)/Semester
You Graduate With: Diploma, Portfolio

**Additional equipment Fee: $2,000 (€1,584) per semester. Students will also incur additional expenses on their own productions.


Please note:
The Canon 5-D camera becomes the sole property of the student once he or she has completed the first semester and at least one-half of second semester of the program.