Emergent Digital Practices
The Emergent Digital Practices program (EDP) is a groundbreaking fusion of digital art, design, culture, and technology focused on building a better world.
In EDP, our visionary work combines creative making and critical thinking. Our faculty and students seek to better understand emerging technologies and their impacts on cultures and ecologies. We use those technologies in a hands-on, collaborative environment to contribute to more meaningful and equitable communities.
We thrive at the intersection of the liberal arts, humanities, and sciences. Our faculty and students bring together inclusive digital design, electronic and new media arts and technology, and creative coding to contribute to our investigations of culture and society, the arts and sciences, media philosophy, science fiction, trans-global politics, and social justice.
If you have a passion for digital arts and theory, and consider yourself a creative and critical thinker, you'll flourish in EDP, where we're dissolving the lines between artists, designers, scholars and inventors. The EDP program prepares you to work in innovative, undefined, and unfamiliar technological spaces. You will develop unique skill sets, vision and purpose, and a commitment to the public good that will prove valuable in a wide range of future opportunities.
EDP is for critical thinkers who want to expand the potential of technology in art, design and culture by:
creating interactive art and virtual worlds.
engaging 3D world fabrication to create a call to social action.
developing technological solutions for supporting creativity.
Undergraduate Programs
Undergraduate students explore new digital technologies to develop creative projects informed by critical thinking through the BA, BFA or minor in Emergent Digital Practices.
In the BA and minor, you'll learn about the ideas, cultures, and people that shape our current technological landscape alongside a second major or minor. You’ll work in a collaborative environment, creating complex and expressive works with digital tools such as data visualizations, virtual reality experiences and immersive installations. As a BFA student, you'll delve more deeply into these topics and extend your work into a fine arts-focused practice, developing works for public audiences in museums, galleries and other creative spaces.
Whatever paths you pursue after graduation—further academic study, professional careers, social activism or nonprofit service—our unique combination of applied critical thinking, creative technology and social engagement will help you thrive.
Explore Our Undergraduate Degrees
Graduate Programs
As a graduate student, you'll imagine new possibilities for digital technologies through an MA or MFA degree in Emergent Digital Practices.
The MA degree offers opportunities for you to develop your critical, technical and artistic skills by creating new technological applications that build on your undergraduate field of study and professional experience. In the MFA degree, you'll focus on creating an art and design practice that is critically and socially engaged, preparing for a career of professional practice in media arts and design.
Our graduate degrees challenge you to think and create with purpose—to become new leaders in the development and application of the emerging, the previously untried, and the otherwise unimagined new media that will shape our future.
These programs are not currently accepting applications.
Explore Our Graduate Degrees
Community Connections
We foster numerous community connections that allow us to draw from the ingenuity and perspectives of a wider community while making major contributions of our own.
Alumni
Our alumni go on to careers in a vast array of different fields, from game design to interactive media to teaching in art and design. Our alumni are artists and educators, including Morehshin Allahyari, MA '09. Allahyari creates art in multiple media, including sculpture, installation, 3D printing and sound. Allahyari's art and teaching explore technology "as a philosophical toolset to reflect on objects and as a poetic means to document our personal and collective lives and struggles."