Intermedia Art, Writing and Performance (PhD)
The Intermedia Art, Writing and Performance (IAWP) unit is an interdisciplinary digital arts and humanities research unit with a practice-based PhD. Faculty investigate past and present forms of digital art, writing, and performance, offering graduate students an environment in which to practice and research emerging forms of creativity.
The IAWP program is currently not accepting applications for the Fall 2024 cycle.
Graduate Program
The research conducted in the program reflects the rapidly transforming knowledge systems and digital media economies emerging from the substantial technological shifts currently taking place in our society. Digital creative work and critical media literacy play a defining role in our information society and are transforming all aspects of contemporary life, including the way many professional visual artists, multimedia performers, writers, publishers, digital humanists and archivists pursue their practice.
Traditional scholarly and creative work outputs such as the single-authored print book or conventional gallery exhibitions have already been challenged by the emergence of multi-authored, multi-modal and forms of transmission that are analog/digital hybrids. IAWP is unique in how its internationally renowned and affiliated faculty collaborate with graduate students probing the significance of a digitally expanded, process-based research environment located in a cluster of interdisciplinary research labs.
The program provides a rigorous yet flexible creative work environment—especially by way of the and the —that leads to the creation of new and hybridized forms of art, experimental writing, performance, scholarship, theory, design, curation, exhibition and publication appropriate for our current cultural moment. In short, the program concentrates its curriculum on the cultivation of cutting-edge investigations into the practice, theory, history and philosophy of media and its relationships to creativity, communication, technology and information.
IAWP News
IAWP & CMCI News
IAWP Research Labs
The Media Archaeology Lab (MAL) was founded in 2009 by Associate Professor . The MAL is a place for cross-disciplinary experimental research and teaching using the tools, software and platforms from the past. The MAL is propelled equally by the need to maintain access to early works of electronic literature and by the need to archive and maintain the computers these works were created on.
It is supported by CMCI and the .
Techne is a practice-based digital arts research initiative founded by Professor Mark Amerika, at the University of Colorado Boulder in November 2002. The Techne initiative develops innovative approaches to the invention of new forms of knowledge generally considered to be both artistic and scholarly.
Techne Lab is supported by CMCI and the .