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About

RICHARD BEENEN: Teaching Bio

Richard Beenen is an artist, photographer, film producer, and educator with extensive teaching experience at introductory, intermediate, and advanced levels in photography, video production, digital arts, design, drawing/painting, and new media at numerous institutions, including the Museum of Modern Art, Parsons School of Design, Pratt Institute, and the School of Visual Arts. Currently he is a teaching artist for Tribeca Film Institute. His students have come from a wide range of backgrounds with varied artistic interests, skills, and career ambitions. Richard holds Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Visual Art from California State University, Fullerton and a Commercial Art (CTE) credential issued by the New York City Board of Education.While living in California, Richard taught visual art and photography at California State University (CSUF), Orange Coast College, Santa Ana College, Brooks College, Laguna College of Art & Design and also taught in an advanced college placement program for exceptional art students at Villa Park High School. After moving to New York City, he was hired by Walden School to develop and implement a progressive photography department into their curriculum. During a two-year period at Walden, Richard taught the history of photography, camera courses, and advanced darkroom techniques to high-school students. Recently Richard taught video production in the new media department at The High School of Art & Design. He has worked closely with students helping them achieve prestigious fellowships, internships, and awards. As a visual artist, Richard is motivated by ideas based in science. Much of his personal work is inspired and informed by minimalism and how the mind interprets space and time. His fine art work has been exhibited at numerous galleries and museums including the Brooklyn Museum of Art, White Columns/NYC, the Los Angeles County Museum, and Museo D'Arte Contemporanea Roma. Richard has received artist fellowships from the National Endowment of the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Pollack Krasner Foundation, and the Adolph & Esther Gottlieb Foundation. Recent projects include creating video pieces that have screened internationally at film festivals and museums, including Viper Basel: International Festival for Film & Video, Switzerland and Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY.While teaching, Richard has also worked as a commercial photographer, film producer and graphic designer. Color theory plays an integral part in Richard’s professional work and has been the topic of much of his teaching, as he helps students better understand color and its importance in art production.With Richard’s combined experience in teaching, commercial work, and fine art Richard can offer students varied levels of technical instruction as well as aid students in developing expressive content, aesthetic judgments and an overall understanding and appreciation for diverse art forms.

RICHARD BEENEN: Teaching Philosophy

I moved to New York City from Southern California for the sole purpose of living in a multi-cultural environment and advancing my career in education and visual arts. This has proven to be an invaluable and enriching experience for me as an artist and educator. My first teaching position in New York was at the Parsons School of Design where I have had the opportunity to work with students from a wide range of ethnic backgrounds from around the world. This diversity enriches the classroom experience, as students provide a variety of cultural viewpoints and references within our discussions and critiques of artwork. In my teaching I am also committed to exposing students to work made by artists from diverse backgrounds and with different artistic sensibilities in the hope that contact with a range of work--and, when possible, with artists themselves--will provoke and inspire the students. I strongly believe that diversity is the catalyst for enriching our lives and fostering an appreciation of our civilization and culture. Significant works of art are often characterized by their creators’ skillful handling and control of tools and materials; however, art education should do more than merely provide technique: it must encourage and aid students in developing expressive content and aesthetic judgments and provide the tools to think critically about contemporary art forms. It is my role as a teacher to help students discover and clarify their aesthetic inclinations. As an art educator with extensive teaching experience in color theory, I apply the principles of color theory that are fundamental in fine arts training to all my courses, thus adding an important and distinctive component in students’ development as artists.As an artist, I am constantly exploring the boundaries of various media, both conceptually and technically. With advancements in digital imaging and the proliferation of new media platforms, imagery can now be interactive, immersive and interpreted from almost limitless points of entry by the viewer. Exposing students to current digital technologies as well as traditional techniques allows them the freedom to make up their own minds about what’s best for a given visual expression. These advancements in technology will determine how we define ourselves as artists and designers in contemporary culture.I bring a sense of challenge, passion and discovery into the classroom where I become inspired by the creativity, originality, and expressive confidence I see developing in my students.