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    Fine Art
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    University of Plymouth

    Fine Art

    University of Plymouth

    University of Plymouth

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    United Kingdom, Plymouth

    University RankQS Ranking
    564

    Key Facts

    Program Level

    Bachelor

    Study Type

    Full Time

    Delivery

    On Campus

    Course Code

    W100

    Campuses

    Plymouth

    Program Language

    English

    Start & Deadlines

    Next Intake Deadlines18-Sep-2023
    Apply to this program

    Go to the official application for the university

    Duration 3 year(s)
    Tuition Fee
    GBP 17,100  / year
    Next Intake 18-Sep-2023

    Fine Art

    About

    • Studio culture. Our main teaching and learning space is the studio and we place emphasis on creating a friendly, supportive, vibrant, creative, critical and reflective studio environment. You will work in dedicated studio spaces and specialist workshops through a mix of practical exercises, one-to-one and group tutorials, seminars and interactive lectures, artist talks, and fieldwork and field trip opportunities.
    • Thinking through doing. This is a practice-based programme, which means that critical enquiry is at the heart of making work. We encourage you to be exploratory and experimental, to think through making and to embrace uncertainty and not knowing. 
    • Facilities. You will have inductions in and access to a wide range of specialist workshop facilities to advance your artistic enquiry, including letterpress and printmaking, ceramics, woodworking, metal, video, audio, XR and 3D printing.
    • Interdisciplinary. Studio practice modules and the common challenges and dissertation modules offer you opportunities to work in interdisciplinary research areas across the arts, humanities and sciences.
    • Degree show. Showcase your final project in a faculty-wide exhibition alongside students from our 12 art and design degrees. The Degree Show is your chance to introduce friends and family, your new creative network and art community, prospective employers and the general public to your work.
    • Collaboration. You will collaborate with partners through placements in organisations like KARST, The Box, Arts Institute, Marine Institute and you will exhibit work both on- and off-site throughout your degree.

    Realise your potential in one of Britain's most vibrant cities for artist-led culture. Be guided by practising artists, curators, producers and writers to explore different concepts, contexts, techniques, and technologies. Your degree and our supportive studio culture will equip you to understand, and participate in the expanded forms of making, thinking and writing that reflect contemporary, interdisciplinary art practice.

    100% overall student satisfaction in the 2022 National Student Survey.*

    • Year 1

    • Your first year is about exploration of materials, processes and ideas. You'll examine the diverse traditions of fine art up to the present day. There's ample studio time to try out different techniques and technologies from painting to digital media. Building critical analysis skills through interaction with other students and teaching staff will boost your confidence and you will be introduced to interdisciplinary art practices, working in response to the global challenges that we face today.

      Core modules

      • Contemporary Fine Art 1: Skills, Themes and Contexts (ART413)

        This is a diagnostic module introduces students to the diverse nature of fine art practice and the role of the studio within it. Critical contexts are also introduced. The studio-based projects include seminars and workshops to relate examples of contemporary fine art practice to explorations of relevant concepts, material processes and techniques.

      • Interdisciplinary Art Practice 1 (ART414)

        An introductory module to fine art interdisciplinary practice in which students will be introduced to relevant approaches to generating art practice through tutorials and seminars.

      • Interdisciplinary Art Practice 2 (ART415)

        Students are required to respond individually or collaboratively to a given theme through the appropriate exploration of aspects of interdisciplinary art practices, in the context of the studio. Supported by seminars and workshops, practice will be informed by a developing awareness of ideas and approaches established in recent work within the field of contemporary art practice.

      • Critical studies 1: Critical Review of Contemporary Practices (ART416)

        This module provides an introduction to key ideas, methods, and approaches in fine art to inform students' practice. This is achieved through seminars and lectures on contemporary Fine Art, which includes introduction to cultural theory and visual culture tutorials, use of online materials, and other research processes.

      • Critical studies 2: Critical Reflection of Contemporary Practice (ART417)

        This module provides a further introduction to key ideas, methods, and approaches within contemporary art practices and related areas to inform students' practice. This is achieved through seminars, lectures, tutorials, use of online materials and the students' own research leading to a body of critically reflective writing.

    • Year 2

    • Drawing on your work from the first year, you'll now have confidence to follow your instincts, choose your own media, use your inspirations and intentions to outline project aims and research strategies. You'll further develop your critical skills by reflecting on your own work and that of others. In groups, you will curate a selection of work for a public exhibition and engage in a professional placement or interdisciplinary residency. You'll also make work in response to common challenges – environment, health and equality. There is also an opportunity to take part in an international exchange programme.

      Core modules

      Fine Art Practice 2: Studio Experimentation and DIY Culture (ART522)

      This module provides an opportunity for students to develop a negotiated art practice through sustained studio experimentation and a DIY/DIWO (Do It Yourself / Do It With Others) culture, including strategies for navigating collaborative practices. The studio-based module will develop an awareness of contextual frameworks in relation to art practice and enable students to research and experiment with materials, processes, concepts and environments in preparation for a public show of art practice.

      Interdisciplinary Art Practice 3: audiences and public interaction (ART523)

      This module provides an opportunity for students to develop an understanding of professional practice or links within a discipline of associated research through placement participation. Develop outputs that can be disseminated to a public audience that are appropriate to the student's area of professional interaction, introduced through a series of seminars and/or workshops This module also is aimed at developing the student's professional portfolio.

      Common Challenge: Interdisciplinary Art Practice 4 (ART524)

      This module provides an opportunity for students to develop and realise collaborative professional practice through interdisciplinary research grounded in placement and/or residency participation. There will be a specific focus on strategies for collaboration, community-based practice and social practice art. This will be introduced through a series of seminars and/or workshops. Students will work in groups with interdisciplinary partners to develop collaborative outputs that can be disseminated to a public audience.

      Optional modules

      ADA International Exchange

      Critical studies 3: Close reading of influential text (ART520)

      This programme of seminars, tutorials and independent study will examine key theories and ideas which relate to contemporary fine art practice through close reading of selected texts. The influential texts will be used to explore areas of artistic inquiry as well as strategies for researching, writing and engaging in practical research within a group and individual framework.

      Critical studies 4: writing as cultural practice (ART521)

      This programme of seminars, presentations, tutorials and independent study continues to explore key theories and ideas which relate to contemporary art practices. Selected works and texts, and modes of writing, will be used to explore areas of inquiry as methods of engaging in practical research within a group and individual framework.

    • Final year

    • In your final year, you will produce a comprehensive body of work, exploring its social and cultural context and the relationship between artist and audience. Deepen your knowledge of a specific area of artistic practice and its concepts through the common dissertation module, where you can develop critical and creative skills in an interdisciplinary setting. Continue to prepare for a career in art by developing a research portfolio and art publication for use when you graduate. Develop professional and transferable skills in collaborative arts administration and management through curation, design, marketing and installing your degree show.

      Core modules

      Fine Art Practice 3: Research and Development for Public Exhibition (ART625)

      The students will develop a negotiated conceptual framework for individual and/or collaborative creative methods, with reference to contemporary practices, approaches and theories. The module will enable the development of student learning towards an increasingly independent enquiry into source material and appropriate practices, linked to critical research and professional practice.

      Fine Art Practice 4: Public Exhibition (ART626)

      The students will realise a negotiated conceptual framework for individual and/or collaborative creative methods, with reference to contemporary practices, approaches and theories. The module will enable the development of student learning towards the realisation of an independent, practice-based enquiry into source material and appropriate professional practices, linked to critical research. This will be developed into a body of work for final presentation that is suitable for public exhibition.

      Common Dissertation (ADA600)

      The module engages students in situating practice through research, contextualisation and critical reflection, in relation to their final stage study and post University aspirations. Programmes can offer: a traditional dissertation; preparation for an extended dissertation; situating existing practice; or the construction of a new body of work as practice-based research.

      Interdisciplinary Art Publication (ART627)

      In this module students are encouraged to embrace a more open and flexible approach toward the interdisciplinary art publication. This module enables students to expand the possibilities of art publication through individual or the merging of art disciplines and in association with their studio practice.

    Every undergraduate taught course has a detailed programme specification document describing the course aims, the course structure, the teaching and learning methods, the learning outcomes and the rules of assessment.

    The following programme specification represents the latest course structure and may be subject to change:

    BA (Hons) Fine Art programme specification_0506

    The modules shown for this course are those currently being studied by our students, or are proposed new modules. Please note that programme structures and individual modules are subject to amendment from time to time as part of the University's curriculum enrichment programme and in line with changes in the University's policies and requirements.

    In light of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the changeable nature of the situation and any updates to government guidance, we may need to make further, last minute adjustments to how we deliver our teaching and learning on some or all of our programmes, at any time during the academic year. We want to reassure you that even if we do have to adjust the way in which we teach our programmes, we will be working to maintain the quality of the student learning experience and learning outcomes at all times.

    Disciplines

    School of Art

    Design and Architecture

    Requirements

    Entry Requirements

    We require applicants to have completed the شهادة الدراسة الثانوية العامة Secondary School Certificate (Tawjihi) and a foundation year programme or equivalent. Our partner college on campus, University of Plymouth International College (UPIC), offers a wide variety of foundation courses.

    Career

    BA (Hons) Fine Art will equip you with a diverse range of transferable skills, including independent study, goal setting, workload and deadline management, critical and professional writing, problem-solving, spatial planning, resource management, complex project management and collaboration – skills that are key to contemporary, globalised, flexible working in many different sectors. You'll also graduate with a body of self-directed art practice that demonstrates critical, theoretical and contextual understandings of contemporary fine art.

    Our mix of seminars and tutorials, placements and residencies, workshops and studio practice and your development of independent, collaborative and social practices will ready you to launch your professional practice, find employment in the cultural sector or act as a catalyst for further post-graduate study.

    What can you do with a fine art degree?

    Fee Information

    Tuition Fee

    GBP 17,100  / year

    How to Apply

    Applying for an undergraduate course?

    Make your application to University of Plymouth online through the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) by visiting their website and selecting 'Apply'.
    We'll be in touch with our decision on your application and to provide information on the next stages of the process. Check the status of your application at any time via UCAS Hub.
    Important: You must enter your name as it appears in your current passport when applying for any course.
    You may also choose to apply via one of our representatives in your country. Find out more on our individual country pages or email us with your questions at [email protected].
    University of Plymouth

    Fine Art

    University of Plymouth

    [object Object]

    United Kingdom,

    Plymouth

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