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Didactics

Graduate Thesis: 1993 to 2001

Graduate Thesis is an in-depth personal inquiry into visual communication design. This introductory overview is of Thesis samples from 1992 through 2001, wherein Tom Ockerse served as Primary Advisor.

With Graduate Studies assuming a leading role in the scholarly contributions to the discipline in graphic design the Graduate Thesis plays becomes an opportunity for an in-depth personal inquiry into visual communication design. However, the stress remains on theory in the thesis project. Why theory? Derived from the Greek word for contemplation and mental conception, theory reflects their synthesis, and not mere analysis. Through theory we develop a heightened sense of understanding and consequent action.  

The key to understanding focusses on paying attention, which is awareness (in contrast to self-indulgence, narcissism, and pretentious intellectual endeavor). Without theory we limit our capacity to act. Theory reflects a refined, deepened level of perception: to perceive the underlying abstract principles within the concrete (e.g., proportion in form, nutrition in food, harmony in music). Whenever we “exercise a principle” we exercise a theory. In that sense, theory and practice go hand in hand. Indeed, they are paradoxically one and the same representing merely two extremes of action.  

To “understand” implies linking and embracing both: the concrete and the abstract, the external and the internal, the practical and the poetical. This forms a dynamic synthesis, only possible through care in observation and mindful action. From this basis a graduate thesis reveals and not merely represents—and therefore becomes an act of substance. 

The Graduate Thesis is a RISD general requirement. Hence, as and MFA requirement in Graphic Design this reflects the thesis work from its beginning on, in 1979—when Tom Ockerse initiated and headed the program. Tom continued his leading role in that program until 2003, when he stepped down as Graduate Program Head. However, he continued to engage as Primary Thesis Advisor for many students until his retirement in 2018. While many students have attended the MFA program ever since 1979, this website only shares Graduate Thesis projects in which Tom Ockerse played the role as Primary Advisor. However, the Graduate Thesis always involves team of faculty as advisors, ranging from primary to general roles (including members from programs outside the major), and these teams are noted relative to the samples.