Fine Art Studios
Please ensure you have enrolled in the Fine Art Studio course in enrolment online.
You will not need to preference this course: students will be allocated to their home studios course relevant to their year level.
The Fine Art Studios are offered under the following course codes:
Fine Art Studio 5 VART 3648 (3rd year)
Fine Art Studio classes are 24 credit point courses and will require 6 contact hours per week.
For more information about a course, please contact the Studio Lead of the offering studio or course coordinator.
Please find link to the course guide VART646 or VART3648.
Please note: although we would like to offer all of the Fine Art Studio options below, classes are subject to viability and may not run if numbers are too low.
Course Information
Offering Studio & Studio Lead/Coordinator
Franz West exhibition, Installation View, Tate Modern 2019, Photo credit: Simon Perry
Advanced Sculptural Practice - Fine Art Studio 5
Kristin Burgham 2017
Independent Ceramic Research Project - Fine Art Studio 5
In this course you will undertake a semester long research project to produce an archive of your process and final resolved ceramic works. You will extensively investigate an area of direct interest to you and your ceramic practice, that will engage you physically and mentally, working independently with the guidance of your lectures. This course will assist in developing your ability to conduct and document research that is integral to the ongoing practice in all creative disciplines. .
Ellie Tessa Godworth, 2019
Inside Out - Fine Art Studio 3
John Lund, Complex Freeway Interchange Network 2018. Photograph.
Intersections: Exploring the analogue digital interface through print discourses - Fine Art Studio 3
Kirsten Haydon, 2012
Jewellery & Object Major Research Project - Fine Art Studio 5
Katharina Grosse, The Horse Trotted Another couple of Metres, Then it Stopped, (Detail) 2018
Paint on 8000 metres of fabric.
Photo: Peter Ellis
Painting: Advanced Studio - Fine Art Studio 5
Dana Schutz
Trouble and Appearance 2019, Oil on canvas
Painting: Thinking Through Making - Fine Art Studio 3
Emily Kooter, Corridor-butterfly affect, 2018, pigment on paper, torchlight
Passages: Art and Encounter - Fine Art Studio 3
In this course you will develop your emerging practice as contemporary art employing and disrupting conventions of making and extending ideas of authorship and agency beyond the studio to exhibition. We are in a critical time where histories and narratives are being challenged and rethought/reactivated. A lot of this work is being done by artists testing the idea of art as an experiential threshold. You may explore personal, public or political ideas relevant to your studiowork leading to the development of resolved and self-directed projects. The course is framed by theories of the viewer and the art object, how meaning is generated within the contexts of local & global histories, exhibition spaces and artist initiatives. You will position and test new ways of making your work, navigating the path from studio to installation .
Image Credit: Franz West exhibition, Installation View, Tate Modern 2019, Photo credit: Simon Perry
Sculptural Practice - Fine Art Studio 3
Caelan Renfree Dyer 2017
The Narrative Through Clay - Fine Art Studio 3
Alison Alder
L to R 'Get Out Quick', 2015, 'Goodbye from Sirius', 2015, 'Real Estate', 2015.
The Politics of Print: Protest and Power - Fine Art Studio 5
The audience at a screening of Tony Conrad’s The Flicker,
Fourth New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center, New York, 1966.
The Screen and the Spectator - Fine Art Studio 3 & 5
Caspar David Friedrich, Chalk Cliffs on Rügen, 1818, Oil on Canvas
Wonderlust: Studio as Research - Fine Art Studio 5
In this course you will explore and research ideas of contemporary art practice that may be medium specific, or cross various media. Your thinking may form through almost any strategy of making: from picture making, narrative, figuration or installation to time-based practices or event-based work. You will investigate thematic and self-directed projects that address meaning within the production and exhibition capacity of your emerging art practice. Wonderlust is the desire to be in a heightened state of wonder, so in responding to this idea of wonder, and wandering, you will be given opportunities to work through experimental ideas, practices and processes. You will investigate thematic and self-directed projects to consider ideas of what an art practice and the dynamics of an art practice could be in terms of how ideas may be evolving within our current times, leading to the development of resolved projects.