Module Information

Module Identifier
AR35420
Module Title
Interdisciplinary Practice 6
Academic Year
2026/2027
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 2
Reading List
Other Staff

Course Delivery

 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Assessment Assignment  Portfolio  100%
Supplementary Assessment Assignment  Portfolio  100%

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this module students should be able to:

Produce a coherent self-directed project, demonstrating the development of an initial idea through research, experimentation, refinement, and final realisation in a public exhibition

Employ appropriate techniques, processes, concepts and terminology specific to their self-directed project

Demonstrate an advanced understanding of how creative practitioners communicate and innovate through creative practice

Identify their project within the context of contemporary and historical traditions of art practice and to communicate those ideas through tutorials, seminars and a digital portfolio

Articulate clearly how to intervene with a public site and situation when proposing, pitching and staging a public exhibition of a self-directed project

Demonstrate independence, sustained working and a coherent resolution of ideas to prescribed deadlines

Brief description

This innovative interdisciplinary art practice module provides students with the time, space, and support to develop a self-directed project in response to a theme set by the module coordinator. Past themes have included Home, Time, Love, and Work.

Students can work in any medium—such as painting, textiles, video, photography, or installation—and are encouraged to explore imaginative approaches to the set theme. The module supports each stage of the creative process, from concept development and research to testing materials and techniques, reflecting on outcomes, and refining the final work. By the end of the module, students will plan, propose, and stage their completed project within a public exhibition.

This module is the last in a series of six modules for Creative Arts students and enables them to draw on their unique skills, expertise and experiences across disciplines gained from their chosen module options. It is the last opportunity for students to event mange all aspects of a public exhibition and provides them with excellent professional practice skills and experience.

Aims

This module enables students to develop and realise a self-directed creative project that explores a thematic focus through research, experimentation, and reflective practice. Students stage their completed project in a public exhibition, gaining professional practice skills through assisting in marketing, installation and event management.

Content

This module comprises weekly seminars and workshops exploring methods, materials, conceptual and critical debates common to the historical and contemporary contexts of art practice. A theme set by the module coordinator provides a unifying focus for the syllabus and guides students’ creative exploration. Alongside seminars and workshops, students share their self-directed projects during individual tutorials, group tutorials, providing regular opportunities for tutor and peer feedback.

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Application of Number Where appropriate students will engage with number in relation to developing their projects, their presentations, their research and the exhibition.
Communication This module encourages and includes weekly group communication in workshops, presentations and group tutorials.
Improving own Learning and Performance This will take place continually throughout the suite of 6 modules, taught through lectures/ seminars, workshops, presentations , individual tutorials, public exhibition and event management involvement
Information Technology Practically in relation to completing powerpoint presentations and digital portfolio submitted for assessment
Personal Development and Career planning This will take place continually throughout the suite of 6 modules, taught through lectures/ seminars, workshops, presentations and individual tutorials.
Problem solving Creative approaches to problem solving include identifying personal/professional/creative strengths and weaknesses, workshop designing, workshop management, project management, tailoring self-evaluation to a given specification and staging and installing a completed project in a public exhibition and event management
Research skills Students undertake artist research relevant to their self-directed project throughout the semester
Subject Specific Skills Students will gain specific knowledge of their practice and the context for their practice
Team work In group workshops and when engaging critically with student presentations, providing informal oral and written feedback, working together towards a public exhibition and event management team skills

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6