Visual culture ba(hons)

Bachelor's degree

In Brighton and Hove

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Brighton and hove

  • Duration

    3 Years

  • Start date

    Different dates available

We live in an image-led and image-conscious society, where we are expected to decipher visual cues designed to sell, to celebrate and to represent.
Studying Visual Culture enables you to explore these forms of visual communication and their history, equipping you with a critical understanding of the society in which we live.
Addressing art, culture and media, the course considers the broad spectrum of visual creativity that permeates contemporary life. You will explore everything from the history and theory of painting and sculpture to print, photography, film, advertising and fashion, developing your skills in written, visual and verbal presentation and research.
Small group teaching encourages discussion in an environment where every student can be heard. Brighton is an ideal location to study the visual, offering a rich history of popular culture.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Brighton and Hove (East Sussex)
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Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

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Subjects

  • Media
  • Advertising
  • Image
  • Art
  • Art design
  • Design
  • Teaching

Course programme

Year 1

The first year of the Visual Culture degree familiarises you with good study practices and introduces you to the different kinds of assessment used on the course, including essays, seminar presentations, display projects and exams. Much of the teaching will take place in small groups of around 12 students with one tutor.

Modules
  • Art, Culture and Commerce

    In this module you will explore core concepts and historical phenomena, including colonialism, consumption, national identities and class constructions, which impacted on art, design and culture from the closing decades of the eighteenth century to the opening decades of the nineteenth. Through lectures and seminars, you will explore how enlightenment ideas and philosophies, as well as revolutionary upheavals and developing institutional practices, informed the conditions in which art and design was produced and consumed.

  • Art and Design History in Brighton: Places and Processes

    In this module you will explore aspects of Brighton and Hove that are significant to the history of art and design within the locality and in some cases more broadly, through the introduction of key sites, themes and resources, for example, the Royal Pavilion and Museums; the historical development of local identities in subcultures and sexualities and Brighton on film. The topics are complemented by a seminar series that will equip you with the skills and tools to the study of history of art and design at degree level.

  • Critical Approaches: Core concepts in History of Art and Design

    This module will introduce you to core concepts and key words in the humanities (including ideology, gender, class, nationality and ethnicity) and will provide opportunities for evaluating your utility as a means of understanding art and design through your application to practices, sites and artefacts.

  • Art, Design and Modern Life

    Through lectures and seminars, you will examine how ideas of ‘the modern’ and the contradictions of modernity are manifested in a wide range of visual and material culture including realist paintings, photography, advertising, dress, cities and international exhibitions during the long nineteenth century. The module relates practices of art, design, exhibition and dress to changing social structures and occupational patterns that informed many of the debates around art and design in the period.

  • Analysing Art and Design: Techniques and Tools

    This module will introduce you to the frameworks and tools by which a variety of visual and material objects, images and environments can be ‘read’ and understood. The emphasis of the module is on the acquisition and application of a range of different technical methods for image and object analysis across a range of media forms, including acquisition of the specialist vocabulary suitable to the analytical method deployed, and an understanding of the appropriateness of each technique.

  • Introducing Themes in History of Art and Design

    In this module you will undertake an intensive themed study related to your individual preferences and/or programme of study. The module will introduce you to the teaching and learning methods most relevant to the investigation of a particular area of inquiry within the History of Art and Design programme.

Our courses are reviewed and enhanced on an ongoing basis in order to make sure that what you learn with us is relevant and that your course enables you to develop appropriate skills. When you apply to study with us, we will inform you of any new developments in your chosen programme through our applicant portal.

*Most recently, themes explored on this module have included art, modernity and the city; screening meaning; art, architecture, design and decoration in the English country house.

Visual culture ba(hons)

Price on request