Final Project


Select from the following options for a final project:

Example Projects:

Sam Bourgault's Megafauna
Jungah Son's Emotive recoloring tool (PDF presentation)

Example Student Projects:

Sonia Hashim's Floral Dutch Painting Series:  VideoProject Description
Stejara Dinelescu's GAN exploration

Ari Gilmore's Waveform library

Write a short proposal for your final project based on one of the options, due  November 21st

You may propose one idea, or several different possibilities. Projects may be collaborative. If you plan to work with other members of the class, describe how you plan to organize the work across the members of the team members.

Upload your project description to Github before under a new directory entitled "FinalProject". See Sihwa Park's proposal from last year's class as an example: https://github.com/CSVAD/sihwa/tree/master/finalProject

Proposals will be presented in class on November 21st (see schedule detail). Proposals should be edited based on peer and instructor feedback.

Final project critiques will take place on December 7th

All final project materials are due on December 12th.

Materials include:  

Critique Requirements


Each student or project group should prepare a 10 minute presentation on their final project for the day of the critique. Following the 10 minute presentation, there will be 10-15 minutes for questions and feedback from the class and reviewer(s). 

The presentation should include the following elements:

Additional Notes

The format of your presentation is up to you. You can choose to create slides, a video, or an html or markdown document with images and text. The only requirement is that you upload your presentation to Github in some form.


Keep in mind that presentation of your project and results is a component of the final project assignment.

Make sure to plan in advance for preparing the presentation and ensuring it fits into the allotted time.


Plan time for documentation, both during the project creation, and at the end of project completion.

See Hannah Perner Wilson's website for examples of masterful process documentation. 

Note: Hannah primarily focuses on physical products but the overall concept is the same


The goal of the critique session is for the class to give and receive constructive feedback. The clarity of your presentation will directly impact the quality of feedback you receive in the final critique. Similarly, being present for your classmates presentations and offering constructive and thoughtful feedback is an important contribution.