Zeitgeist is the spirit of a particular period of time reflected in its ideas and beliefs including but not limited to arts and culture. This summer students embarked on a journey through Germany via SAIC’s Study Abroad program “Zeitgeist: Germany.” Throughout the trip, students were given an academic and culturally rich opportunity to grow in their creative practices.
Alongside professors Oliver Sann and Beate Geissler, students spent two weeks experiencing the zeitgeist of Germany visiting Münich, Loheland, Kronach, Weimar, and Berlin. Students received credit for the trip by planning and showing their own exhibition in gallery space provided by Institut für Alles Mögliche. Students presented multimedia work created over the course of the trip and titled the show “and other objects.”
Sann shared his thoughts on the trip with F Newsmagazine: “ ‘The Flying Classroom’ is about what happened to a group of students at a boarding school. The narrative is magical, thrilling – I always had distinct ideas about the classroom that could fly. Learning about people, architecture, countries, landscapes and histories by witnessing them became a tenet of my ideas and imaginations about what experiential pedagogy can be. With the SAIC study trip we traveled this year not only in space but also time – [The] epitome of our trip was the [student] artist-curated exhibition entitled ‘and other objects.’ It was exciting to see what different routes people took and how vastly different impulse and feedback was, which was processed by the artists in this show.”
Many students left Europe with new friends and a wider perspective on arts, culture, and education. Some students continued their momentum and continued to travel independently or with other members of the group.
New found friends Rin Caswell (BFA Print and Fibers 2025) and River Hill (BFA New Media 2026) shared their experience of meeting and collaborating on their “and other objects” installation.
Caswell: “I’m happy with what I made. I’m happy that I had the chance to collaborate with someone who I didn’t know at the beginning of the trip—It just feels really amazing to cultivate something from nothing. And then by the end of the trip, have something that feels so cohesive and so collaborative, which is something I’ve never felt before with my art—it’s amazing to take my art past me.”
Hill: “It [the trip] forced me to think outside of my own practice, as well as being in an incredibly new area. I had to approach it [the piece] from an outside angle. My good friend Rin and I ended up collaborating in a way, in a sense, both collaborating together and also keeping the pieces separate. I felt like it was important to memorialize this [trip] in a physical manifestation. That was a documentation of every location, every place that we’ve been. This trip, I was able to create that in a very successful way that is true to my work.”
Adrienne Weiss (MFA Fibers 2025), who spent her time reflecting on heritage, health, and history through her weaving, also expressed, “I feel like the history of this country got me to connect with my roots, with my ancestors, and with healing.”
This is one of many summer study trips offered by SAIC. This summer SAIC brought students to Germany, Italy, and Arizona in the United States. There are multitudes of experiences to be shared with the SAIC Study Abroad program as new destinations and programs come to the course every year. Where can a look at global zeitgeist take you?