

High Drop-out Rate Alert
30% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
BA Fine Art
About this course
Fine art is the practice and study of art made primarily for aesthetic, conceptual, and expressive purposes, encompassing painting, drawing, sculpture, printmaking, installation, performance, video, and digital media. It is a discipline that asks you to develop and articulate your own creative vision while situating your practice within the history and theory of art and engaging critically with the ideas and work of other artists. Studying fine art at degree level means taking on the serious project of developing as an artist, learning to sustain a practice, receive and act on critical feedback, and engage with the contexts in which contemporary art is made and shown. At the University of the Highlands and Islands this part-time programme gives you the flexibility to develop your fine art practice alongside other commitments, building your skills, critical awareness, and portfolio over an extended period. You will work across a range of materials, processes, and conceptual approaches, developing both technical competence and the ability to think and talk about your work in ways that connect it to wider artistic conversations. UHI's distinctive distributed campus model, rooted in the communities of the Highlands and Islands, provides a particular setting for fine art practice, with access to landscapes, communities, and creative contexts that differ from those of urban arts schools. Fine art graduates pursue careers across a wide range of creative and cultural contexts. Many develop practices as artists, showing work in galleries, public spaces, and online, often alongside teaching, community arts work, or other creative roles. Others move into arts administration, curatorial practice, arts education, community arts, and cultural management. The visual thinking, creative problem-solving, and communication skills developed through a fine art degree are also valued outside the arts, in design, media, and any context that requires imaginative and lateral approaches to problems. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in fine art or art theory, deepening their practice or moving into research and teaching.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
Missing Satisfaction Data
The university has not shared complete student satisfaction records for this specific degree metrics block. You may want to formally explore these topics with the university staff at an open day before committing.
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