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MA in Visual Culture 

Our MA in Visual Culture is a distinctive interdisciplinary programme that invites students to develop their knowledge of visual culture in relation to working practices in cultural institutions, including museums, galleries and other heritage organisations. It will interest students from a wide range of humanities and social science disciplines, as well as visual arts and visual culture professionals who wish to reflect upon their practice in historical or theoretical contexts. 

What is the study of visual culture? 

‘The illiterate of the future’, wrote the Bauhaus artist and theoretician László Moholy-Nagy in 1920, ‘will be the person ignorant of the camera as well as of the pen’.

The importance of critical visual literacy in the contemporary world cannot be exaggerated. But what is visual culture? And how does it saturate societies, both past and present? To study visual arts and culture is to learn to engage with and shape phenomena that are literally everywhere. 

Our programme facilitates the development of critical visual literacy by:

  • focus on the specificity of visual objects, images and events
  • investigation of the nature of perception, asking how we make meaning out of what we see
  • study of how our relationships with other people, and with things, are bound up in the act of looking

 

Hand paintings at the Cave of Hands in Santa Cruz

MA in Visual Culture

Find out how to apply, all course details and structure, entry requirements and more.

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Why study visual culture in Durham? 

The MA in Visual Culture benefits from Durham University’s strengths in visual culture. These include the Centre for Visual Arts and Cultures, which hosts a wide range of events and brings together researchers across the University’s different departments and faculties. The University possesses considerable resources for the study of visual culture in the holdings and expertise of our Museums, such as the Oriental Museum, and of Palace Green Library

The MA in Visual Culture encourages interdisciplinary work and allows each student to pursue their own research interests in consultation with relevant subject specialists. In addition, students may have the opportunity to work with a range of partner institutions across the North East, including Auckland Castle and the Bowes Museum, and beyond. 

 

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"Discover something more"

Find out why Billy Errington decided to get a Master's degree in Visual Culture at the School of Modern Languages and Cultures at Durham University

Find out more about the MA Visual Culture

What can you do with a postgraduate degree in Visual Culture? 

This programme has been designed to provide preparation for students who intend to proceed to a PhD in Visual Culture with a view either to pursue a research career in academia or to seek a position in other cultural organizations. The MA in Visual Arts and Cultures, however, also offers a qualification in its own right, allowing students to embark upon a range of careers in the cultural sector.  

 

Lighting

Durham's partnership with the British Film Institute (BFI)

Our partnership with the BFI is a creative collaboration giving students the unique opportunity to learn from industry experts and to access landmark independent films on the BFI player. The partnership has led to a careers week, student placements, film festivals and competitions.

Find out more about the Durham-BFI partnership