If only they’d take care of my student loans

A friend of mine recently sent me an couple years-old advertisement for the Filmmaking Program at the San Francisco Art Institute, where we both attended. A typical ad one would find in an art journal or trade publication. He sent it to me because we’re both listed in a section entitled “MFA and BFA Degree Receipients (Selected 1970-2000):”

Detail of an advertisement for the Filmmaking Program, San Francisco Art Institute, circa 2001: click for image of entire ad (43K)

(Click on the above image for the complete advertisement).

But the fact that we made this short list of degree receipients (I wonder how many there have been over those 30 years) is only of passing interest. What’s interesting about the ad is that while my friend received his Masters of Fine Arts degree from the Art Institute, I didn’t even get a Bachelors at the place. In point of fact, I dropped out of the Institute about 12 units shy of graduating. So not only is my place on this list unwarranted, but they way they’ve organized it, one doesn’t really know if they “gave” me a BFA or an MFA.

Now, I’ve been known to stretch the truth of my college education on resumes and such, which is to say I usually list it like so:

Education
San Francisco Art Institute, Filmmaking
1988-1992

so that it sort of implies I graduated, but doesn’t explicitly state that I did. (In my defense, if the question came up, I told the truth, and have never tried to pass off a fake diploma.) But now I see that all these post-art school years, I’ve been underselling myself. Now if I could just get those pesky student loans I took out from that time to disappear in the same way that this degree has appeared, I’d be all set.

Why I dropped out of the Art Institute is a not-so-interesting story I really don’t want to go into at the moment. I don’t regret the time I spent there, I learned an incredible amount and not just about filmmaking, and met some very inspirational people, but in general I still have a lot of angst (for lack of a better word) about the place, though not about not finishing and getting my degree.

Actually, when I first enrolled, I never intended to stay long enough to get a degree, I just wanted to learn, and see amazing films, and be around people for whom film meant light and shadow captured on a strip of film that was run through a projector and sometimes produced meaning, something different from the packaged narratives I had been force-fed up till then. And so I went and studied and made films and eventually got close to finishing. But then, my interests changed, and the degree didn’t seem worth going through the motions for. And so I stopped going.

The image below is one I found online last week at the San Francisco Public Library’s Historical Photograph Collection, showing how the Art Institute looked in 1930 (when it was known as the California School of Fine Arts). Though there have been modern add-ons to the campus since then, it still looks almost exactly like this image, when looked at from this view. How many times did I enter the arched doorway at far left? (The school’s film and photography departments, when I was there, occupied this part of the campus).

artinstituteoldS.jpg

2 Replies to “If only they’d take care of my student loans”

  1. Interesting because I graduated with a degree in film, though since I studied a lot of other stuff as well (digital media, photography), I tend not to call attention to my cinema emphasis on resumes and such (unless I feel I’ll benefit from doing so).

    It’s funny because, while I was attending school I was quite passionate about being a filmmaker; by the time I graduated, and for a number of reasons, I lost interest in film as a profession and somehow wound up working mostly as a graphic designer.

    While I had fun, I do think my undergraduate years could have been better spent in another discipline, and alas, I am back in school again.

    Maybe you can guess what I’m studying. *^o^*

  2. hmmn, i would guess a discipline starting with the letter J 🙂

    since I did 3 years of general undergraduate study before even attending the Art Institute, I was lucky (or unlucky perhaps) to study primarily film. I think if I had to do it all over again I would have diversified a bit more, but at the time my thoughts were “I’m paying so much for this, that I can’t take a chance on some performance art class (or whatever) actually benefiting me.”

    about graphic design, I wonder how many art school attendees the world over have ended up doing this or something related after graduating. i would bet the number is huge.

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