The History of Design MA course offers three specialisations, as follows:
The Renaissance MA specialism offers
a unique opportunity to pursue postgraduate
study in the context of one of the world’s outstanding
collections of Renaissance decorative arts, held
at the Victoria and Albert Museum. The academic
and intellectual framework is provided by the Royal
College of Art, and the MA examines a broad range
of theoretical approaches to the study of objects and
design. The MA provides a training in independent
and original research, and, through the Museum
Placement, also offers practical experience of working
in a national museum.
The specialism Design and Material
Culture 1650 to the present introduces students
to a range of approaches for understanding and
interpreting design and material culture from a
variety of theoretical and historical perspectives.
It prepares them to undertake independent and original research and to present their findings in
appropriate academic ways. Throughout the first
year of the course, the curatorial departments of
the Museum are integrated into the teaching
programme.
This
route consists of one year of full-time coursework
and a further year of full-time independent research.
The course covers a wide geographical range, taking
in the Middle East, South and South-east Asia, China,
Korea, and Japan. The collections and curatorial
staff of the V&A play a central role in the teaching
of this new programme and the museum’s holdings
of material unparalleled outside Asia provide the
backdrop to the taught programme.
All groups
share a common programme in the first term
and specialisms are taught separately following
this. Students come together for work-in-progress
seminars when shared approaches to methodology
are discussed.