BA History of Art (with a Year in Australasia or North America)
This four-year programme combines our innovative History of Art
degree with a year studying at a university in Australia, New
Zealand, Canada or the United States. This degree therefore offers
exceptional flexibility and breadth of art-historical training
since, during your year abroad, you may also take any of the
modules on offer to you at the host institution.
On this unique and innovative degree course you will be able to
study the history of European art and architecture (from classical
antiquity, medieval, Renaissance, Baroque and modern periods right
through to contemporary art), as well as the visual and material
art forms of Islamic, Indian, African, South American, Japanese and
Pa…
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This four-year programme combines our innovative History of Art
degree with a year studying at a university in Australia, New
Zealand, Canada or the United States. This degree therefore offers
exceptional flexibility and breadth of art-historical training
since, during your year abroad, you may also take any of the
modules on offer to you at the host institution.
On this unique and innovative degree course you will be able to
study the history of European art and architecture (from classical
antiquity, medieval, Renaissance, Baroque and modern periods right
through to contemporary art), as well as the visual and material
art forms of Islamic, Indian, African, South American, Japanese and
Pacific cultures.
Throughout this course, you will be encouraged to engage closely
with works of art and architecture of many kinds, and in many
historical and geographical contexts. You will be able to choose
modules from the wide variety offered within the School, tailoring
your degree to your own interests whether those relate to a
particular culture (e.g., Europe) or to a particular period (e.g.,
the twentieth century). Whichever module you take, you will be
taught to look closely at art and to think in creative yet rigorous
ways about art’s possible meanings. You will also be encouraged to
think about art as a transcultural and transhistorical phenomenon
which connects different periods and different places.
The course includes many opportunities to study works of art and
artefacts first-hand, whether in the Sainsbury Centre for Visual
Arts, in Norwich and East Anglia, or in trips to London, Cambridge,
and other cities in the UK and overseas (besides the year
abroad).
The degree combines teaching in small seminar groups with
lecture modules, giving great flexibility and allowing you to put
together a programme of study which reflects your own particular
interests. A spine of core modules running through the first and
second years is designed to develop your understanding of the
history of art as well as key terms and debates in its analysis,
whilst also introducing you to current thinking about art within
related disciplines such as archaeology and anthropology. A wide
range of seminar modules enables you to explore both new and
familiar areas of art history (including the Renaissance,
Impressionism and twentieth-century modernism), whilst also
introducing you to the arts of Asia, Africa, South America and the
Pacific.
During the first year, lecture modules examine artistic techniques,
materials and identities, as well as key themes and methods of
interpretation in the history of art, and are complemented by a
range of seminar modules which address art and architecture in
particular cultures and periods. You may also take a language
module.
The second-year lecture modules focus on art’s relationship to
performance and display, before exploring different methodological
approaches to art-historical analysis from the eighteenth century
through to the most up-to-date theories. Optional modules in the
second year allow you to develop your pre-existing interests, or to
engage with cultures and art forms which may be new to you.
The third year is spent at studying at one of our prestigious
partner universities in the United States, Canada, Australia and
New Zealand. There, you will put together a programme to suit your
own interests from the modules on offer. Imagine studying
Aboriginal art in Sydney or visiting Native American museums in
Vancouver, while being taught at university departments in these
cities!
Fourth-year teaching is entirely through small-group seminar
modules which involve the advanced and in-depth study of particular
cultures and art forms. As in all years, modules can be chosen
according to your own interests. The 9,000-word dissertation, on a
topic of your own choice and supervised by at least one member of
the faculty, represents an important part of the final year and
introduces you to the skills of academic enquiry, research and
writing needed for postgraduate study.
Key skills, issues and ideas are introduced in lectures given by
all members of faculty, including art historians, anthropologists
and archaeologists. More specialist study is undertaken in small
group seminars. These are chosen from a range offered within the
School and across the University. You will also spend time studying
and researching in the library or carrying out practical work or
projects. In most subject areas, you are assessed at the end of
each year on the basis of coursework and, in some cases, project
and examination results. In your final year, you will write a
dissertation on a topic of your choice and with the advice of
tutors. There is no final examination. Your final degree result is
determined by the marks you receive in years two and four.
Course Organiser:Prof Sandy Heslop
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We welcome applications from students from all academic backgrounds. We require evidence of proficiency in English (including writing, speaking, listening and reading). Recognised English Language qualifications include:
- IELTS: 6.5 overall (minimum 6.0 in Reading and Writing with no less than 5.5 in any component)
- TOEFL: Internet-based score of 88 overall (minimum 20 in Reading and Speaking components, 19 in Writing component and 17 in Listening components.
- PTE: 62 overall (minimum 55 in Reading and Writing components with no less than 51 in any component).
If you do not meet the University's entry requirements, our INTO
Language Learning Centre offers a range of university preparation
courses to help you develop the high level of academic and English
skills necessary for successful undergraduate study.
The majority of candidates will not be called for an interview.
However, for some students an interview will be requested. These
are normally quite informal and generally cover topics such as your
current studies, reasons for choosing the course and your personal
interests and extra-curricular activities.
Students will have the opportunity to meet with an academic
individually on a Visit Day in order to gain a deeper insight into
the course(s) you have applied for.
We welcome applications from students who have already taken or
intend to take a gap year.
We also welcome applications for deferred entry, believing that a
year between school and university can be of substantial benefit.
You are advised to indicate your reason for wishing to defer entry
and may wish to contact the appropriate Admissions Office directly
to discuss this further.
The School's annual intake is in September of each year.
Alternative QualificationsIf you have alternative qualifications that have not been mentioned above, then please contact university directly for further information.
GCSE OfferStudents are required to have GCSE Mathematics and GCSE English Language at Grade C or above.
AssessmentFor the majority of candidates the most important factors in
assessing the application will be past and future achievement in
examinations, academic interest in the subject being applied for,
personal interest and extra-curricular activities and the
confidential reference.
We consider applicants as individuals and accept students from a
very wide range of educational backgrounds and spend time
considering your application in order to reach an informed decision
relating to your application. Typical offers are indicated above.
Please note, there may be additional subject entry requirements
specific to individual degree courses.
Our teaching received a 96% satisfaction rate in both the 2012 National Student Survey and the 2013 Guardian University Guide league table.
Our students are able to study a wider range of artistic cultures, periods and forms than in any other art history department in the UK. The School is particularly renowned for its broad approach to art, encompassing ancient, medieval, Renaissance, baroque, modern and contemporary European art, American art, African art, Asian art and Pacific art. Staff, students and researchers in the School are interested in the history of art, as well as archaeology, anthropology, cultural heritage, and museum studies.We engage with all forms of visual and material creativity from oil painting, sculpture and drawing through to architecture, photography, video and installation art. We teach small groups of students in a friendly, supportive and open environment, supported by great facilities. This is why the Guardian University Guide consistently ranks us among the top departments in the UK for student satisfaction with teaching and feedback, for staff-student ratio and for the quality of student resources.
The School has a long-standing international reputation for excellence; ranked 1st in the UK for world-leading research in the latest Research Assessment Exercise, we are one of the most important and highly-rated History of Art departments in the UK. Our graduates go on to high profile posts in such prestigious institutions as the British Museum, V&A, Tate and Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, as well as leading History of Art departments, publishers and the commercial art world.
The School of Art History and World Art Studies is based in Norman Foster’s world-famous Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, an icon of modern design, which contains an astounding art collection with major internationally-renowned works by artists such as Francis Bacon, Edgar Degas, Jacob Epstein, Henry Moore and Pablo Picasso. Students work in close proximity to this collection, “perhaps the greatest resource of its type on any British campus” according to the Times Good University Guide.
- 95% of our History of Art graduates (and 88% of the School’s BA graduates overall) go on to work and/or postgraduate study within 6 months of graduating. We are therefore the highest-rated department in England (and joint first in the UK) for History of Art graduate prospects
- 100% of our History of Art graduates (and 97% of the School’s BA graduates overall) said they thought staff had made the subject interesting. This figure was matched by just one other History of Art department in England
- Almost 90% of the School’s BA graduates said that they had received the advice and support they needed to do well in their studies, a figure exceeded by just two other History of Art departments in the UK. This is probably because – as the survey reveals – our students get more lectures, seminars, tutorials and general contact time with academic staff than students at many other leading History of Art departments in the UK
- 96% of our History of Art graduates said they had been provided with the IT resources they needed for their studies, a figure matched by just one other History of Art department in the UK
- Finally, 94% of the School’s BA graduates overall said they were highly satisfied with the quality of their degree course, continuing our tradition of providing a first-class university education in History of Art as well as Archaeology, Anthropology, and Museum and Gallery Studies.
Further information on fees and funding for 2012 can be found here
University Fees and Financial Support: International StudentsThe University will be charging International students £11,700.00 for all full time School of World Art Studies and Museology undergraduate programmes which start in 2012.
Please click to access further information about fees and funding for International students
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