Fine Art
Fine Art at Brighton fosters a dynamic research culture with three key aims:
- To nurture individual research through group appraisal
- To promote collaborative inter-disciplinary research within the university and beyond.
- To generate networks and encourage research partnerships to a national and international level.
To do this, the Initiative is split into six interlinked topics:
- Art & Technology - studio and process-based research
- The Art Cell - inter-disciplinary research, linking art and bio-medical science
- Art & Performance - ‘live’ and audio-visual research that explores the interface between these two disciplines
- Innovation in Teaching & Learning - student placements and pedagogic collaborations
- Art in the Environment - research carried out as a response to climate change and natural phenomena
- Inclusive Arts - research collaborations with communities who, traditionally, work outside the artworld)
- Drawing Research Interest Group (DRIG) – research into expanded notions of drawing
As part of its continual development of research the group holds regular peer discussions, reviews, exhibitions, awaydays and symposia.
A collaborative project that explored how design students could learn from archives through the medium of an online exhibition
Development and evaluation of downloadable audio files for design students to use with a visit to the V&A museum
A printed magazine devised by students to showcase the creative talent within Grand Parade
An investigation of the use of ICT in the reproduction of historical texts, including archival materials, in museum contexts
RIBApedia - A wiki-based collaboration tool led by the Research & Development Department at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA)
Enhancing students’ experience and understanding of the Screen Archive South East online resource
This project is a CETLD funded PhD which aims to develop a conceptual framework of visual research to inform design pedagogy
Analysis and evaluation of the role of experimentation in the designing and making of three-dimensional artefacts
This collaboration between two distinct disciplines, endeavoured to inspire a deeper appreciation of Museum collections within HE
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