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VAP3100 Professional Visual Art Project 1

Semester 1, 2023 Online
Units : 1
School or Department : School of Creative Arts
Grading basis : Graded
Course fee schedule : /current-students/administration/fees/fee-schedules

Staffing

Course Coordinator:

Requisites

Pre-requisite: VIS1010 and VIS1020 and VIS2010 and VIS2020
Enrolment is not permitted in VAP3100 or VAP3200 if BCA3000 and BCA3001 have been previously completed

Overview

This course is one of two visual art studio capstone courses aimed at industry preparedness. The aim of these capstone courses is to facilitate the integration of advanced learned knowledge and the industry standard for employability and project outcomes. Students consolidate their experience in a range of professional concepts, techniques and skills in order to critically apply and professionally engage with their arts. The expectation is that at completion, students should have a clear idea of the high level of competency, project management and other professional issues required to produce successful outcomes. This process includes the use of dynamic concept and project development, of evaluation, re-evaluation, and adjustment. This course aims to equip students as self-reflective and independent practitioners/researchers/arts professionals, which is necessary for entry into further Honours and/or postgraduate study, or employment in the creative industries.

This course will require students to draw on the knowledge, research skills and technical abilities acquired in the foundational and intermediate studio pre-requisites and utilise these to carry out a self-directed project. Across this course, students will put forward a project proposal and develop a body of work as a continuation of the ideas raised in this. All stages of the project development will be carried out under the supervision of the studio lecturers, who will conduct individual and group consultations, and provide ongoing critiques and feedback. Students will be introduced to the various career pathways within professional arts industries. These include: practicing artist, curator, gallery administrator, art education officer, art teacher, art writer and more. This enables the student to cater their learning to individual career aspirations.

This is the first of two visual art project courses that present students with the opportunity for focused, in-depth, individualised arts outcomes. VAP3100 and VAP3200 complement VIS3010 and VI3020, and all four, along with the four pre-requisite studio courses, are necessary to complete a major in Visual Arts and professional competency.

On campus students will be required to undertake relevant WH&S inductions and employ the safe handling of materials, processes and equipment.

Course learning outcomes

  1. Identify an individual area of inquiry and issues of interest, and discuss these with reference to relevant artist/industry research;
  2. Develop and enact experimental strategies to identify potential solutions;
  3. Evaluate experiments and refine project approach based upon relevance, interest and originality;
  4. Develop and adhere to an individual project schedule;
  5. Implement, plan and complete developed artworks or arts-based projects to demonstrate industry standard outcomes;
  6. Articulately and logically self-evaluate project and explain final outcomes in regard to field inquiry and establish potential future implications resulting from the work.

Topics

Description Weighting(%)
1. Planning creative outcomes: Art Project Proposals (including the implementation and development of project milestones). 10.00
2. Resolutions, evaluating directions and developing the next iteration. 70.00
3. Advanced Knowledge of Presentation, Justification and Positioning Practice within Industry. 10.00
4. Adhering to Project Timeline, Accountability and Studio/Professional Ethics. 10.00

Text and materials required to be purchased or accessed

Stiles, K & Selz, P 2012, Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art: A Sourcebook of Artists’ Writings, Second edn, ¾«¶«´«Ã½app of California Press, California.

Student workload expectations

To do well in this subject, students are expected to commit approximately 10 hours per week including class contact hours, independent study, and all assessment tasks. If you are undertaking additional activities, which may include placements and residential schools, the weekly workload hours may vary.

Assessment details

Approach Type Description Group
Assessment
Weighting (%) Course learning outcomes
Assignments Written Planning document No 20 1,4
Assignments Creative Creative work No 50 3,5,6
Assignments Oral Presentation (ind, grp, mltmd) No 30 2,3,4
Date printed 9 February 2024