

BA Curating and Art History (with a year abroad)
About this course
Curating and art history together form a degree that takes both theory and practice seriously, recognising that the intellectual work of understanding and interpreting art must ultimately be put into service for real audiences through the design of exhibitions, collections and cultural programmes. Art history develops your ability to analyse visual works in their historical, social and aesthetic contexts, to engage with the major methodological debates in the discipline and to construct well-evidenced arguments about the meaning and significance of art across different periods and cultures. Curating adds a practical and professional dimension, teaching you how collections are managed, how exhibitions are conceived and installed, how institutions relate to their publics and how the ethical responsibilities of the curator are understood and navigated. At the University of York this four-year programme includes a sandwich year with work placements, giving you significant professional experience in galleries, museums or heritage organisations before you complete your degree. A year abroad is also built into the structure, providing the opportunity to engage with art and curatorial practice in a different national context. You will develop skills in curating for a range of spaces, from traditional gallery settings to public and heritage sites, and you will learn to create exhibitions and programmes that are both intellectually grounded and accessible to diverse visitors. The combination of art historical rigour and applied curatorial practice gives you a profile that is directly relevant to the cultural sector. Graduates work in galleries, museums, auction houses, heritage organisations, arts charities and cultural institutions at every level, from emerging contemporary art spaces to national collections. Roles in collection management, exhibition development, education and outreach, arts administration and cultural programming are common destinations. Some graduates move into commercial roles in the art market, including auction house work and art advisory. Many go on to postgraduate study in art history, museum and gallery studies or curating, and the placement experience gained during the degree is often a decisive advantage in a competitive sector.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 60 respondents (79% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →

