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BA Culture, Criticism and Curation
About this course
Culture, Criticism and Curation is a degree for those who want to engage seriously with how meaning is made, communicated, and organised in contemporary society. At the University of the Arts London, this three-year full-time programme sits at the intersection of cultural theory, critical writing, and curatorial practice, developing your ability to think and write about art, culture, and ideas with rigour and originality. UAL is one of the world's leading arts universities, and studying here places you within a creative environment of unusual depth and diversity. The discipline draws on the traditions of art history, cultural studies, literary criticism, and philosophy, while also engaging with the practical and institutional questions that curators face: how exhibitions are conceived and organised, how cultural institutions address their audiences, and how the framing and presentation of objects and artworks shapes what they mean. Critical writing is central to the programme, and you will develop your voice as a writer who can engage with visual and material culture, contemporary art, performance, film, and digital media in ways that go beyond simple description or review. You will learn to situate cultural production within broader historical, social, and political contexts, and to think carefully about questions of value, taste, and the institutions that make culture visible. Graduates of this programme move into careers across the cultural and creative sectors. Curatorial roles in galleries, museums, and arts organisations are among the most direct pathways, as are positions in arts writing and criticism, editorial work, cultural journalism, arts administration, and public programming. The skills in critical analysis and clear, sophisticated writing that the programme develops are also valued in publishing, communications, the media, and policy roles connected to culture and the arts. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in art history, curatorial practice, cultural policy, or related disciplines. The combination of intellectual rigour and practical awareness of how cultural institutions work gives graduates of this programme an unusually strong foundation for a career in the arts.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 30 respondents (76% response rate)
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