

MA History of Art/Politics
About this course
History of art and politics might seem like an unexpected pairing, but the two disciplines are connected by a common concern with power, representation, and the ways in which human societies organise and understand themselves. History of art asks how and why paintings, sculptures, buildings, and works of design in a variety of media come to look the way they do, situating visual objects within the historical, social, and ideological conditions of their making and reception. Politics examines the structures of power, the formation of states, the dynamics of governance, and the competing values and interests that shape political life. Together, they offer a broad and richly textured education in human culture and institutions. At the University of Glasgow you will study this joint degree part-time, with a year abroad built into the programme to broaden your intellectual horizons and develop your ability to engage with visual and political culture from an international perspective. In history of art you will develop skills in visual analysis, connoisseurship, and art historical research, engaging with works across periods from antiquity to the contemporary. In politics you will study political theory, comparative government, international relations, and the empirical analysis of political behaviour. Both disciplines develop your capacity for sustained critical argument and independent research, skills that work together across the two subjects. The breadth of this combination is a genuine asset in the job market. Graduates pursue careers in the arts and heritage sector, including roles in museums, galleries, auction houses, arts policy, and cultural journalism. Political science skills open routes into the civil service, public affairs, non-governmental organisations, journalism, and law. The combination is particularly well suited to roles at the intersection of culture and governance, including arts funding bodies, heritage regulation, and international cultural organisations. Postgraduate study in either art history, politics, or related fields such as museum studies or international relations is a natural progression.
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.
What comes next? π
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 β