Our aim at the RCA is to provide an experience that
equips every student to succeed in their chosen
professional career. Whatever their chosen discipline,
our priority is to encourage each of our students
to develop their personal brand of imagination and
creativity, to help them acquire the knowledge,
skills and experience needed to realise personal
ambitions and to find their unique voice as an artist
or designer. In addition, we provide the opportunities
for students to engage in a broader postgraduate
educational experience; we encourage them to explore
contemporary themes that connect all the visual arts
and enable them to acquire the basic business skills
that success in any career demands.
The primary focus of all our teaching is on the
individual. As such, a high level of responsibility
is placed on each student to direct his or her own
learning and development. The curriculum may vary
from programme to programme, but learning and
teaching is almost always project-led.
In fine art, students generally embark on personal,
self-set projects from the start. In other areas,
especially in the first year, there is a more structured
programme with individual or team projects set by
staff to encourage development of core skills or new
ways of thinking.
During the second year of the MA the focus in every programme is almost completely on personal project
work, which leads up to the final examination and
the Show, the annual exhibition of graduate work.
Some students, especially those who have experienced
highly structured and formally taught courses before
they come to the College, may find the shift to self-motivated
and self-directed study difficult, but all
students need to be prepared to face this challenge.
Staff are there to help through meetings and regular
tutorials and every student is assigned a personal tutor
who is responsible for monitoring academic progress.
This close, informal working relationship between
students and staff is one of the qualities that students
graduating from the College often remark on as having
contributed greatly to their enjoyment of their studies.
The College provides a unique environment for
postgraduate art and design students to reflect upon
their own practice and to engage with students from
their own and other disciplines. All first-year studiobased
MA students study a Critical and Historical
Studies programme which aims to encourage debate,
understanding, intellectual confidence and selfexpression
in the history, philosophy and criticism
of the various disciplines taught at the College. The
programme is designed to enhance each student’s
experience at the College by engaging with important
ideas that are relevant to their studio work in an
exciting and challenging manner.
Every programme has a strong sense of identity and
a particular vision of the discipline it teaches. Many
students feel a strong sense of attachment to their own programme and concentrate their studies and practice
within their own discipline. However, staff and students
increasingly recognise the energy and creativity that
can be generated by working across the discipline
boundaries. Every year sees new collaborations on
projects between disciplines as diverse as sculpture
and architecture, for example, or textiles and vehicle
design. The most valuable resource for every student is
the community of amazingly talented students working
around them. In the RCA ‘ideas factory’, everyone is
learning from everyone else.