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Arts
Curating Contemporary Design MA (in partnership with The Design Museum)
Curating Contemporary Design MA (in partnership with The Design Museum)

Curating Contemporary Design MA (in partnership with The Design Museum)

  • ID:KU440252
  • Level:Master's Degree
  • Duration:
  • Intake:

Fees (GBP)

Estimated Total/program:
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60
Accept letter
100
Visa
20
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1

Admission Requirements

Entry Requirement

English Requirement

 Academic IELTS of 6.5 overall with no element below 5.5

Other Requirements

Applicants should have a 2:2 or above honours degree or equivalent qualification in an academic subject or creative practice field.

We welcome applicants with relevant work experience, such as practitioners, museum staff and designers looking to extend their professional experience.

You should be able to demonstrate an ability to work creatively and within a team.

Course Information

This collaborative degree, between Kingston School of Art and The Design Museum, has grown into one of the world's foremost programmes for design curators.

Taught by leading curators and designers, the course engages critically and creatively with our fast-changing, complex world. You will have the opportunity to curate live projects and build your own professional profile, through The Design Museum and with institutions such as the Architectural Association, British Council, Gallery Fumi and the Royal Academy of Arts. Led by both research and practice, this course has taught aspiring curators for more than fifteen years.

The Kingston School of Art environment, which includes the Stanley Picker Gallery, Dorich House Museum and outstanding workshop facilities, encourages creativity and experimentation as responses to interrogations of contemporary conditions. To actively consider geopolitical, social and economic concerns, Curating Contemporary Design is taught within a transdisciplinary framework that allows students to develop responses to the complexity of the world today.

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What you will study

Through a rigorous framework and practical experience students will engage with contemporary discourse that responses to the complexities and urgencies of today's world. Acknowledging design and curatorial history, you will engage with those contemporary concerns through transdisciplinary collaborations in theory and practice, and will develop stimulating creative interventions and critical writing.

Throughout the year, students will work on a major live project with external partners, which will allow you to gain first hand curatorial experience. The final presentation will be shared with the general public at The Design Museum. Students are currently working on a collaboration with Parsons The New School, New York and HEAD Geneva, which started with a symposium on Design and Film at Dorich House Museum.

The course is structured into five modules. Typically students must complete 180 credits and will gain 30 credits with each of the four core modules plus 60 credits in the Major Project.

Modules

Optional placement year

You will be equipped with the creative, theoretical and practical skills necessary to curate design exhibitions and other curatorial formats including devising briefs, conducting primary and secondary research, selecting exhibits and curating public programmes.

A carefully composed curating visits programme runs alongside the taught modules and includes visits to exhibitions, studios and alternative sites of curatorial and design practice and critique.

The dissertation and/or creative project provides an opportunity to realise independently a body of work which demonstrates an original and creative approach in the field of design curation. With the ambition to develop professional practice and theory, the dissertation has the potential to be developed for research at higher degree level.

Core modules

  • Curatorial Skill Sets

  • Theories of the Contemporary Object

  • Curatorial Formats

  • Politics of Display

  • Major Project

Optional placement year

Many postgraduate courses at Kingston University allow students to do a 12-month work placement as part of their course. The responsibility for finding the work placement is with the student; we cannot guarantee the work placement, just the opportunity to undertake it. As the work placement is an assessed part of the course, it is covered by a student's Student Route visa.

Optional modules

  • Professional Placement

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Pre Courses


 

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Pathway Courses

 

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Career Opportunity

Career Opportunity

Our graduates have successful careers in prestigious roles in museums, galleries, universities and cultural organisations around the world.

Through our alumni, the course has developed an extensive international network of curators that include:

  • Keinton Butler: Senior Curator of Design and Architecture, Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences (MAAS), Sydney.

  • Nina Due: Director, the Röhsska Museum, Gothenburg.

  • Raphael Chikukwa: Chief Curator, National Gallery, Zimbabwe.

  • Catherine Ince: Chief Curator, V&A East, London.

  • Ning Li: Deputy Director of the Collection department, the China Art Museum, Shanghai.

  • Eunjoo Maing: Director/ Head of D-TEC Academy and International Affairs, the Korea Institute of Design Promotion and Regional Advisor, World Design Organisation.

  • Sarah Mann: Head of Programmes, Design Council, London.

  • Sumitra Upham: Public Programme Curator, The Design Museum, London.

Ability to settle

Overseas Student Health Cover

Insurance - Single: 300 (£) per year

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