Module overview
Resolution. The module is designed to enable you to bring together your practical learning in a single, self-directed, fully-resolved exhibition outcome which is well presented and articulate.
Aims and Objectives
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge and Understanding
Having successfully completed this module, you will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of:
- how to articulate and resolve your thinking in an artwork.
- how to make clear and informed curatorial and technical decisions within a context of continuing experimentation;
Transferable and Generic Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- manage and deliver a public-facing event to a professional standard;
- propose and plan a major project;
- demonstrate that you can articulate and communicate in a professional manner appropriate to the chosen topic.
Subject Specific Intellectual and Research Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- accommodate the unanticipated.
- conceptualise and plan intended outcomes;
- think clearly and laterally in the resolution of technical and theoretical problems;
Subject Specific Practical Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- make work with a view to exhibition;
- edit, place and present work to a professional standard.
Syllabus
This module is focussed on encompassing the full range of knowledge and skills associated with contemporary art practice in an exhibited outcome, an installation, a single exhibit, or a presentation of multiple exhibits. Issues of presentation and audience are crucial considerations. Experimentation remains a vital part of the work of the module. The continued development of your ideas, through tests and reflection, leads to a project proposal, further discussion and reflection, and eventual realisation of the project. A number of visiting artists deliver lectures on their practice.
Learning and Teaching
Teaching and learning methods
Teaching methods include:
- lectures;
- module briefing;
- tutorials;
- group critiques.
Learning activities include:
- module briefing;
- lectures;
- library research;
- tutorials;
- group critiques;
- peer-group learning;
- self-evaluation.
Interim outcomes and work in progress are discussed individually with tutors, and in group critiques. Library research is again essential.
Relationship between the teaching, learning and assessment methods and the planned learning outcomes
Outcomes and work in progress are discussed individually with tutors, and in group critiques. The module requires highly focused and effective ongoing research for relevant antecedents and theoretical underpinnings for the work in hand, for which use of the library is essential. The advice you receive and what you learn should all be documented in your sketchbooks and research folders and will be manifest in the work you produce, in particular in the exhibition of your final project. Taken together, these items are your ‘portfolio’, which will be assessed at the end of the semester against the learning outcomes for the module.
Type | Hours |
---|---|
Tutorial | 2 |
Wider reading or practice | 100 |
Supervised time in studio/workshop | 180 |
Seminar | 18 |
Lecture | 20 |
Completion of assessment task | 130 |
Total study time | 450 |
Resources & Reading list
Internet Resources
Academic Skills (including AI).
Textbooks
Nairne, S. et al (1996). Thinking About Exhibitions. London: Routledge.
Delillo, D. (1993). Underworld. London: Picador.
Gay, P. (2008). Modernism: The Lure of Heresy. New York: : W. W. Norton & Company.
Rancière, J. (2007). The Future of the Image. London: Verso L3S2.
Williams, R. (2014). Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society. London: Fourth Estate.
Storr, A. (1972). The Dynamics of Creation. London: Penguin.
Assessment
Formative
This is how we’ll give you feedback as you are learning. It is not a formal test or exam.
Portfolio
- Assessment Type: Formative
- Feedback: •You will have a feedback tutorial on your portfolio development in the early part of the module, to discuss the advice arising from assessment of your work on the previous Studio Practice module and any plans for practice you choose to outline in the meeting. •At least once during the module, you will have the opportunity to present work, either completed or in progress, for discussion in a group crit, which will include formative feedback from the tutor leading the meeting. You are expected to take part in group crits on a weekly basis. •Interim tutorials in the studio will provide you with spoken feedback on work in progress. You can email tutors to arrange this, and there will be sign-up sheets for tutorials with visiting lecturers.
- Final Assessment: No
- Group Work: No
Summative
This is how we’ll formally assess what you have learned in this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Portfolio | 100% |
Referral
This is how we’ll assess you if you don’t meet the criteria to pass this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Portfolio | 100% |
Repeat
An internal repeat is where you take all of your modules again, including any you passed. An external repeat is where you only re-take the modules you failed.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Portfolio | 100% |