find your perfect postgrad program
Search our Database of 30,000 Courses
Goldsmiths, University of London: Advanced Practices
Institution | Goldsmiths, University of London View institution profile |
---|---|
Department | Visual Cultures |
Web | https://www.gold.ac.uk/ |
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 8 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 8 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 8 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 8 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Master of Philosophy - MPhil
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
This graduate programme is geared towards advancing the grounds for different forms of practice, from artistic to infrastructural. While practice manifests differently, it always entails research and always contributes to knowledge.
The MPhil/PhD programme in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of practice driven research within knowledge production, public exhibiting, and cultural organising.
This program will provide you with an opportunity for your own work to engage with the widening horizons of new practices. It will also enable you to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies, and reimagine the contexts for work.
Building on theoretical grounding, the program offers an opportunity to bring together different sources of knowledge, methodologies, and models of making public.
Concepts animating our work on the program:
- Choreo politics
- Anthropology as Cultural Critique
- Cultural Metabolics
- Curatorial Knowledges
- The Exhibitionary Matrix
- The Intrusions of Nature
- Race and Digital Ecologies
- Practice Epistemology
- Spectral Infrastructures.
This is practice-driven and research-based programme which can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations, and platforms. It can also be an opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how/to whom work is communicated, and to put forms of transdisciplinarity into practice. Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers, and activists.
The Goldsmiths programme in Advanced Practices is linked to the European Forum for Advanced Practices (funded by the COST.eu action).
Recent guest lecturers (2019-2020):
Adam Bencke, Chief Curator, Museum of Medicine, Copenhagen
Christine Shaw, "The Work of Wind", Chief Curator,Toronto University Museum
Manuela Moscoso (Liverpool Biennial "The Stomach and The Port")
CAMP, Arts and Research Collective, Mumbai
Coco Fusco, Performance Artist, Filmmaker and writer, Florida.
Nora Sternfeld Curator and Educator, Hamburg and Vienna.
Elvira Dyangani Ose, The Showroom, London
This programme was formerly known as MPhil/PhD Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Research |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) a taught Masters in a relevant subject area. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. We welcome applicants from all disciplines, as well as those with a background in art and curatorial practices who want to engage with the expanded field. Such background can be a relevant degree or cumulative practice. The program enables exchanging knowledges and experiences between multiple fields contributing to the advancing of practices. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Master of Research - MRes
Summary
The MRes in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of research within contemporary cultural production.
Professionals and practitioners, be they artists, curators, choreographers, organisers, or others, engage in research and look for ways to circulate it widely. This 'research turn' has been a marked shift in recent years and is increasing in the wake of Covid-19 since audience numbers can no longer be a sole criterion for activity.
The programme in Advanced Practices provides graduate students with an opportunity to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies and reimagine the contexts in which our work is circulating.
Degrees are practice driven, research based, and can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations and platforms or be the opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how and to whom work can communicate itself.
Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers and activists.
There is a collaborative Practice Laboratory focused on an annual thematic that is investigated collaboratively – this is currently taught in weekly online meetings, seminars and guest lectures.
There is a separate MRes seminar for introducing key concepts while the rest of the teaching and Practice Lab are shared with the PhD programme.
This programme was formerly known as MRes Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Taught |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) an undergraduate degree of at least upper second class standard in a relevant subject. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant practice experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
The MRes in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of research within contemporary cultural production.
Professionals and practitioners, be they artists, curators, choreographers, organisers, or others, engage in research and look for ways to circulate it widely. This 'research turn' has been a marked shift in recent years and is increasing in the wake of Covid-19 since audience numbers can no longer be a sole criterion for activity.
The programme in Advanced Practices provides graduate students with an opportunity to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies and reimagine the contexts in which our work is circulating.
Degrees are practice driven, research based, and can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations and platforms or be the opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how and to whom work can communicate itself.
Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers and activists.
There is a collaborative Practice Laboratory focused on an annual thematic that is investigated collaboratively – this is currently taught in weekly online meetings, seminars and guest lectures.
There is a separate MRes seminar for introducing key concepts while the rest of the teaching and Practice Lab are shared with the PhD programme.
This programme was formerly known as MRes Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Taught |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) an undergraduate degree of at least upper second class standard in a relevant subject. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant practice experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. If English isn’t your first language, you will need an IELTS score (or equivalent English language qualification) of 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study this programme. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
The MRes in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of research within contemporary cultural production.
Professionals and practitioners, be they artists, curators, choreographers, organisers, or others, engage in research and look for ways to circulate it widely. This 'research turn' has been a marked shift in recent years and is increasing in the wake of Covid-19 since audience numbers can no longer be a sole criterion for activity.
The programme in Advanced Practices provides graduate students with an opportunity to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies and reimagine the contexts in which our work is circulating.
Degrees are practice driven, research based, and can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations and platforms or be the opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how and to whom work can communicate itself.
Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers and activists.
There is a collaborative Practice Laboratory focused on an annual thematic that is investigated collaboratively – this is currently taught in weekly online meetings, seminars and guest lectures.
There is a separate MRes seminar for introducing key concepts while the rest of the teaching and Practice Lab are shared with the PhD programme.
This programme was formerly known as MRes Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Taught |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) an undergraduate degree of at least upper second class standard in a relevant subject. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant practice experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |
Summary
The MRes in Advanced Practices responds to the growing importance of research within contemporary cultural production.
Professionals and practitioners, be they artists, curators, choreographers, organisers, or others, engage in research and look for ways to circulate it widely. This 'research turn' has been a marked shift in recent years and is increasing in the wake of Covid-19 since audience numbers can no longer be a sole criterion for activity.
The programme in Advanced Practices provides graduate students with an opportunity to invent methodologies, reframe urgencies and reimagine the contexts in which our work is circulating.
Degrees are practice driven, research based, and can incorporate projects in progress, collaborations with organisations and platforms or be the opportunity to rethink the circulation and meaning of how and to whom work can communicate itself.
Seminars are taught six times a year, encouraging those working in the field to be able to maintain their work. Participants are artists, curators, organisers, researchers and activists.
There is a collaborative Practice Laboratory focused on an annual thematic that is investigated collaboratively – this is currently taught in weekly online meetings, seminars and guest lectures.
There is a separate MRes seminar for introducing key concepts while the rest of the teaching and Practice Lab are shared with the PhD programme.
This programme was formerly known as MRes Curatorial/Knowledge.
Study type | Taught |
---|---|
Level | RQF Level 7 |
Entry requirements | You should normally have (or expect to be awarded) an undergraduate degree of at least upper second class standard in a relevant subject. You might also be considered if you aren’t a graduate or your degree is in an unrelated field, but have relevant practice experience and can show that you have the ability to work at postgraduate level. If English isn’t your first language, you’ll need to meet our English language requirements of IELTS 6.5 with a 6.5 in writing and no element lower than 6.0 to study with us. |
Location | Goldsmiths, University of London New Cross London SE14 6NW |

Goldsmiths, University of London
An incubator for ideas
Creativity has always been the hallmark of Goldsmiths. Academic excellence and imaginative course content combine to make a place where creative minds can thrive and ideas are allowed to grow.
Our courses and research activities span the creative arts, humanities, social sciences, cultural studies, computing, business and management across 18 academic departments.
A world leader in new knowledge
Our academics cooperate across disciplines to create exciting new courses and develop novel approaches to research issues. Our interdisciplinary approach has helped us to become a national leader in many subject areas. …
Not what you are looking for?
Browse other courses in Arts or Museum studies, or search our comprehensive database of postgrad programs.Scholarship Opportunity with Postgrad.com
Are you a PG student at this University or have you applied to study a postgraduate program at a university in Europe? Tell us your plans and qualify for a £500.00 PGS Scholarship.
Click here