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Module

FIN3011 : Studio Practice II with Study Abroad

  • Offered for Year: 2024/25
  • Module Leader(s): Professor Uta Kogelsberger
  • Other Staff: Professor Louise Wilson, Ms Catherine Bertola, Professor Catrin Huber, Professor Jane Wilson, Professor Wolfgang Weileder, Ms Judith King, Miss Jennifer Douglas, Ms Tracey Tofield, Miss Michele Allen, Ms Eva Masterman, Professor Christopher Jones
  • Owning School: Arts & Cultures
  • Teaching Location: Newcastle City Campus
Semesters

Your programme is made up of credits, the total differs on programme to programme.

Semester 1 Credit Value: 40
Semester 2 Credit Value: 40
ECTS Credits: 40.0
European Credit Transfer System

Aims

1. To enable the student to carry out sustained individual enquiry.
2. To encourage the student to further develop and apply appropriate strategies for researching and progressing visual ideas and material.
3. To develop the student’s understanding of professional practice and capacity to work independently.
4. To develop the student’s ability to rigorously assess their work and to place it into context.
5. To encourage the student’s participation in debate around issues pertinent to Fine Art practice.
6. To develop the student’s knowledge and understanding of professional practice in relation to an international cultural context.

Outline Of Syllabus

In this module students concentrate on developing a rigorous, well-managed, informed and independent creative practice. Students develop a body of work directed by choices of medium, studio discipline and subject or theme. Emphasis is placed both on consolidating knowledge, understanding and skills developed in Stage 2 of the Programme and on further exploring formal, conceptual and technical aspects of practice. Methods employed in the documentation and public presentation of artwork are explored.

The module includes a period of study of one semester’s length in a partner art institution abroad. This introduces students to issues relevant to the internationalisation of systems of Fine Art production and ideas of ideological and cultural diversity.

The module proceeds by means of a schedule of tutorials with the student’s studio tutor, group critiques, lectures from the Visiting Speakers’ programme and a programme of practice related seminars. In addition students may receive tutorials from visiting artists, are encouraged to make use of the surgery tutorial system to request tutorials with specific members of staff, and to participate in discipline-specific forums. Also included is the regular upkeep of a studio notebook/sketchbook, in digital or physical form, that records and reflects upon research, progress and outputs. In addition, students are required to write a reflective report on their experience on exchange and its significance for the development of their practice.

Teaching Methods

Teaching Activities
Category Activity Number Length Student Hours Comment
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesLecture51:307:30Visiting Speaker Programme: in-person lectures, PIP/SYNC
Guided Independent StudyAssessment preparation and completion24:008:00Preparing presentation of artwork and portfolio for assessment
Structured Guided LearningLecture materials41:306:00Visiting Speaker Programme: online lectures, SYNC
Placement/Study AbroadStudy Abroad1399:45399:45N/A
Guided Independent StudyDirected research and reading106:0060:00Research in relation to practice.
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesSmall group teaching13:003:00Cross year crit sessions PIP/SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesSmall group teaching11:001:00Visiting Speaker Programme: seminars, PIP/SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesSmall group teaching10:300:30Small group Q & A with Module leader PIP/SYNC
Guided Independent StudySkills practice106:0060:00Skills practice in relation to workshops and demonstrations.
Guided Independent StudyProject work1017:30175:00Creative Practice
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesWorkshops22:004:00Professional development workshops – Web design, documenting work etc. PIP/SYNC/NON SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesWorkshops26:0012:00Elective Practical skills workshops/forums PIP/SYNC/NON SYNC
Guided Independent StudyReflective learning activity173:0051:00Portfolio, studio notebook, exchange report preparation
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesDrop-in/surgery21:002:00Surgery tutorial PIP/SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesDissertation/project related supervision30:452:15Individual tutorials PIP/SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesDissertation/project related supervision23:006:00Small group tutorial/crit PIP/SYNC
Scheduled Learning And Teaching ActivitiesModule talk21:002:00Module introduction and Assess and feedback Briefing. PIP/SYNC
Total800:00
Teaching Rationale And Relationship

Most Guided Independent Study, including project work and skills practice is focused on the individual development and production of experimental and fully realised artworks, including research and preparation such as sketch books, test pieces and technical trials. The regular upkeep of a studio notebook/sketchbook, in digital or physical form, records and reflects upon research, progress and outputs.

Scheduled leaching and learning activities such as workshops, demonstrations, individual tutorials and small group teaching will also be conducted present in person in the Fine Art studios and workshops (or synchronous online if necessary).

Tutorials facilitate the development of the student’s understanding and skills in all aspects of their practice: organisational, developmental, formal, conceptual, technical, contextual and professional. They also nurture the student’s ability to evaluate and reflect, to articulate their ideas and debate issues relevant to their practice. Group critiques foster the student’s ability to reflect critically on their own work and that of others and to formulate reasoned responses to the views of others.

Skills-based workshops allow students to broaden their range of technical skills, exploring new means of making or developing an existing methodology. Students are also encouraged to choose from a range of discipline-specific Forums, which provide the space for conversations within a particular area of art practice, such as Painting, Performance or Film. These groups enable discussion around both technical skills and ideas/artists pertinent to the discipline, helping students situate their work within the context of contemporary practice. Professional practice workshops help prepare students for the assessment submission process, whilst developing skills essential for life as a creative practitioner after graduation.

Study Abroad will include equivalent modes of teaching and learning offered by the host institution as a natural and enriching part of international exchange.

The Visiting Speakers’ Programme extends the student’s awareness of the spectrum of Fine Art practice and the different ways in which theory might relate to and sustain practice. It also provides a wide range of examples of approaches to developing a practice and presenting and documenting artwork.

Nb. Scheduled teaching and learning activities will typically be conducted present in person in the Fine Art studios and workshops. Teaching methods may be liable to adjustment in response to changes to Government and University Covid-19 advice and restrictions. PiP teaching would be substituted by equivalent synchronous and asynchronous online delivery. Where scheduled teaching and learning activities are delivered via non-synchronous online sessions they will be followed by a synchronous on-line drop-in Q&A session.

Assessment Methods

The format of resits will be determined by the Board of Examiners

Other Assessment
Description Semester When Set Percentage Comment
Portfolio2A50Portfolio of a body of artwork and related supporting material.
Portfolio1A50Portfolio of a body of artwork and related supporting material.
Assessment Rationale And Relationship

The portfolio will focus on the physical and/or documentary evidence of the student’s creative practice supported by other contextual, research and reflective material. This enables assessment of the full range of a student’s engagement with the module in relation to: sound research and developmental methods: technical processes and materials; identification of subject matter; formal and conceptual considerations; contextual understanding; independent planning, management and direction of their practice; critical self-reflection and professional practice. It will show the basis and development of a viable and effective creative practice and its capacity to develop a body of art work towards resolution.

Where a student is studying at an exchange institution that conducts assessments and awards a mark, we will convert this mark using our mark conversion table. This mark will be used as the studio mark for the semester in question. Where a student is studying at an institution that doesn't have assessments or awards a Pass/Fail, we ask for a digital portfolio to be submitted according to specific guidelines. This portfolio will be marked against the Newcastle assessment criteria by studio staff in Newcastle.

Students should select to take only comparable studio modules at their host institution. Where this isn't possible and an additional Art History or Theory module is selected in order to make up the required number of credits, all module marks will be converted to arrive at a comparable overall mark for FIN3011 with the credit weightings of the modules taken in the exchange institution reflected in that overall module mark.

Reading Lists

Timetable