| History of Art with Gallery and Museum Studies | | |
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School | University of East Anglia | | |
Location | Norwich, EGL, United Kingdom | | |
School Type | University | | |
School Size | Full-time Undergraduate: 12,888 Full-time Graduate: 3,984 | | |
Degree | Bachelor | | |
Honours | | | |
Co-op | | | |
Length | 3 Year(s) | | |
Entry Grade (%)* | | | |
Prerequisites | | | |
Prerequisites Notes | Please refer to each course page for specific A Level and IB requirements. Students studying for Canadian High School or Secondary School Diplomas, usually completing study in the twelfth grade, will be considered for entry to our undergraduate degree programmes. Most courses will require an overall score of between 70% and 80%. For some disciplines, a slightly lower average percentage may be considered. Holders of the Diplome d'Etudes Collegiales (from Quebec) will also be considered. | | |
Cost | Tuition fee is converted from £18,000 and is subject to change due to exchange rates. | | |
Scholarships | | | |
Description | Study art history whilst discovering how art has been collected, curated and displayed in the past and in the present. Find out about the history of art, its makers and its meanings, while exploring art’s role in public museums and private collections. You will also study key topics for those interested in a career within museums, galleries or the heritage sector. You will examine art’s interface with the public, exploring the history of museums, the implications of different kinds of display, and the varied practices of those working in such institutions, as curators, conservators and educators.
You will explore what it means to think of objects as having biographies; considering the strange and varied ‘lives of objects’ as they move through different contexts. You will also question how the discipline of art history may interact with other approaches to material culture used by anthropologists and archaeologists, as well as considering how your historical studies relate to contemporary debates about the status of art and the role of galleries and museums in the present.
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