Fine Art
| From | To | UK Fee * | International Fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| 01 Sep 2012 | 31 Aug 2013 | £4050 | £9400 |
* Exceptions may apply. Please see Fees and Finance for further information.
Introduction
The University of Sunderland's Faculty of Arts, Design and Media is part of the arts infrastructure of the North East region that includes Baltic, MIMA, Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art and Workplace Gallery.
The MA Fine Art programme is primarily studio based and builds on student's established Fine Art practice.
There are three main reasons why artists choose to undertake Masters level study in Fine Art at the University of Sunderland:
To develop their personal practice - individual student's concerns/projects are at the of centre the programme
To extend their professional experience and expertise through the range of live projects that the programme offers
To engage or re-engage in debate about contemporary art and design.
The MA programmes in Fine Art invites applications from artists, (usually, but not always, possessing a BA (Hons) in Fine Art), who want to develop their existing art practice in a creative, supportive and critically challenging environment.
Students demonstrate through a statement of intent at interview and through their portfolios, (portfolio and statement of intent for international students), their suitability for postgraduate level study.
Full-time, (45 weeks) and part-time (90 weeks) modes of study are available.
Increasing numbers of international students are attracted to the programme and enhance the diversity of the learning environment.
Many artists and others working within the creative industries are likely to consider part-time study as it enables them to maintain, develop and enhance their careers whilst studying at Masters level.
Each artist on the MA Fine Art programme negotiates a personal course of study.
Some participants use the first stage of the programme (the experimental stage) to include work in previously untried media so as to challenge and expand the way that they usually work.
Others develop ideas which demand the use of media and processes that are new to them.
Student learning is supported through an excellent provision of individual and group tutorials, reviews, critiques, lectures and seminars.
All Fine Art staff are practising artists, and each student is allocated a personal tutor whose research interests align with their own.
Employers value postgraduate qualifications as indicators of high-level skills, knowledge, academic maturity, intellectual ability and commitment.
On completion of the programme graduates have gone on to undertake commissions, exhibit their work regionally and nationally, and to take up a variety of opportunities in the cultural industries.
Course Content
Stage 1
Postgraduate Certificate (PgC) 60 credits
- Teaching is through Critical Studies, negotiated study and directed learning
The Critical Studies modules (20% of programme in total), focus on an analytical and critical re-examination of contemporary and emerging issues in art and design.
This element of the programme, which is designed to support individual student's practice, is undertaken alongside MA Glass and MA Ceramic students.
Stage 2
Postgraduate Diploma (PgD) 60 credits
- Stage 2 is an opportunity for continuing analysis, questioning and research, designed to test and deepen your personal practice
In Stage 2, in addition to the continued development and testing of student's own work, a unique feature of the MA Fine Art programme at the University of Sunderland is the focus on a range of issues relating to professional practice.
Professionals including curators, artists, gallery managers and arts entrepreneurs give talks and practical workshops on a range of topics from fundraising to self-presentation.
As part of their ongoing studio work students devise and complete an individual professional practice project that reflects their future career aspirations.
Stage 3
Masters (MA) 60 credits
- Teaching is through negotiated and directed learning
Stage 3 culminates in a public exhibition following an intense period of work during which you will find a form for your ideas that will communicate your intentions to the audience.
Students work as a group to realise the practical issues relating to the public exhibition. Curatorial/aesthetic issues are the responsibility of individual students.
You will write a short, critical report that will record the progress of your work and ideas throughout the programme and exhibit the results of the intense engagement with your work and ideas that the programme provides; an experience that will have been demanding, productive, enriching and some have said life-changing.
Entry Requirements
Admissions requirements to enter Stage 1 of the MA Fine Art programme will normally be: a first degree in Fine Art or another appropriate art and design first degree e.g. BA Arts and Design or Photography, Interior Design, Jewellery and so on.
Applicants with formal qualifications in other fields will be considered if their portfolio and articulated personal project is at a level commensurate with a postgraduate level of study in Fine Art.
Exceptionally applicants with no formal academic qualifications will be considered if they have an appropriate professional background such as personal practice as an artist and/or an appropriate professional background in the creative industries and if their portfolio and articulated personal project is at a level commensurate with a postgraduate level of study.
All applicants are required to demonstrate, through a portfolio of work, and through verbal articulation at interview or by a statement of intent, (international applicants unable to attend interview), that they have a personal project of a calibre commensurate with a postgraduate level of study.
Note:
Portfolio in this instance is a coherent collection of Fine Art based work which is delivered at application as actual works or presented documented through 35mm slides, photographs, or in digital form.
All successful applicants are expected to demonstrate through the requirements of the application process motivation, commitment to and engagement with the practice of Fine Art commensurate with both postgraduate study and future professional practice as artists or arts professionals.
Students may enter the programme at Stages 2 and 3 having completed comparable postgraduate certificates or diplomas.
The standard university procedure for accredited prior learning (APA, APL, APEL) will then apply.
Fees and Finance
The fees for this course are as specified in the table at the top of the page.
Please note that different fees apply to students studying for "Equivalent or Lower Qualifications" (ELQs). For more information about ELQs, please see the page Information for applicants who already have an HE Qualification.
For information about University scholarships and bursaries please see the page Fees and Finance.
Teaching and Assessment
The MA Fine Art programme is based on students' individual projects, supported by seminars, individual and group tutorials, critiques, lectures, group work and a Visiting Speaker programme.
Studio work is assessed in Stages 1 and 2 through a studio presentation of artworks. Critical Studies modules are assessed in the form of presentations that are then expanded into short essays.
Critical Studies modules are taken in the company of MA Glass and MA Ceramics students, this provides a broader platform for discussion of issues relating to contemporary Art and Design.
The Public Exhibition (80%) and a written report (20%) form the basis of the Stage 3 assessment.
Students who wish to transfer to one of the other MA programmes in visual arts may do so at the end of Stage 1 or Stage 2.
Career Opportunities
Graduates from this programme have gone on to practice as artists, to undertake commissions, to direct and manage community arts initiatives and projects, and to a wide range of self-employed and employed opportunities within the cultural industries.
Supplemental Information
External Links
Employers value postgraduate qualifications as indicators of high-level skills, knowledge, academic maturity, intellectual ability and commitment.
On completion of the programme graduates have gone on to undertake commissions, exhibit their work regionally and nationally, and to take up a variety of opportunities in the cultural industries.
Each year, visits are organised to major art events in the UK and there is an annual international visit, and these have been made to New York, Barcelona and Berlin.
Facilities
*World Class Web/Design Tools*
The University of Sunderland has made a significant investment in providing students with access to the latest releases of Adobe products.
Selected PCs within the St Peter's and Murray Libraries have been pre-loaded with the Creative Suite 4 (CS4) Adobe Design Premium Suite for your exclusive use.
CS4 Creative includes key products such as Indesign, Illustrator, Dreamweaver as well as Photoshop and a range of many others.
Further information is available from:
http://www.adobe.com/uk/products/creativesuite/design/
For information regarding locations of PC or Macs within your own faculty that have access to Adobe products please contact your Faculty IT Support.
If you are interested in purchasing Adobe products for your own PC/Mac Adobe offer significant savings for student purchases via any of its approved re-sellers.
Please visit:
http://www.student-software.co.uk/
The Fine Art department has excellent workshop facilities for printmaking, sculpture and digital media (video etc).
Related Courses
Faculty Contact Details:
Faculty of Arts, Design and Media
Ashburne House
Backhouse Park
Ryhope Road
Sunderland
SR2 7EF
Tel: +44 (0) 191 515 3593
Fax: +44 (0) 191 515 2132
Email: admenquiry@sunderland.ac.uk
Course Contact Details
Programme Leader:
Virgina Bodman
Tel: 0191 515 3423
Email: Virgina Bodman
To visit the Fine Art page at the Faculty of Arts, Design and Media please click here.