Finding A Niche, or, Dissertations Are Your Friend
It turns out I came all the way to the UK and ended up concentrating on an American artist. Go figure. I’m an American postgraduate student from North Carolina, and […]
It turns out I came all the way to the UK and ended up concentrating on an American artist. Go figure. I’m an American postgraduate student from North Carolina, and […]
I loved studying Art History at Nottingham. I enjoyed the majority of my modules, had a fairly well-rounded work/life balance, a bunch of hobbies, and rarely found myself feeling bored […]
Originally posted on S h e r r ! d e n:
Last year I took a leap of faith and decided to study abroad for autumn semester of my final year.…
There is something wonderfully serendipitous sometimes about how teaching plays out. Take, for example, a first year module on Caravaggio and his contemporaries in seventeenth-century Rome, and a raft of […]
Reblogged from renaissanceissues.wordpress.com Source: Teaching and adventures in China
It’s always been important for graduates to have a range of practical and professional skills alongside the subject knowledge that they gain from their degree. Of course, skills like visual […]
During one of my first visits to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, when I was still in primary school, I saw Giuseppe Arcimboldo’s composite heads for the first time. I […]
It is probably fair to say that a feeling of disquieted apprehension about the future is a feeling all University students share. In a bid to lull this feeling for […]
This year I ended my first year on a high and kick-started my summer in China. I went to study for two weeks at The University of Nottingham Ningbo campus […]
Gaining insight into an artist’s motives is an opportunity to be relished. Our own Mark Rawlinson orchestrated one such opportunity at the Djanogly Gallery last weekend. A symposium accompanying the And […]