ACV210 - Art in Public Space
Year: | 2025 unit information |
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Enrolment modes: | Trimester 2: Burwood (Melbourne), Community Based Delivery (CBD)* |
Credit point(s): | 1 |
EFTSL value: | 0.125 |
Prerequisite: | Nil |
Corequisite: | Nil |
Incompatible with: | Nil |
Study commitment | Students will on average spend 150-hours over the teaching period undertaking the teaching, learning and assessment activities for this unit. This will include educator guided online learning activities within the unit site. |
Scheduled learning activities - campus | 1 x 3-hour on-campus seminar per week |
Note: | *Community Based Delivery (CBD): only for students of the National Indigenous Knowledges, Education, Research and Innovation NIKERI Institute (located at the Waurn Ponds campus) |
Content
Art in Public Spaces is a unit that enables students to develop their critical thinking and creative practice through the making of artwork outside the gallery context. Focusing on strategies for art making across studio, community, site-responsive and collaborative contexts, this unit seeks to develop the assorted skills for making temporary interventions in public settings across two, three and four dimensions. From the studio environment students will undertake activities that engage in real world outcomes and creative, material interventions by exploring historical, every day and alternative practices from a selection of approaches to public art including: drawing, murals, video, installation, performance, text, and place-based intervention. Current trends as well as the history and theory of public art will be integrated into the program in studio activities, a public art project, collaborative learning tasks, and online. The major project offers students the opportunity to grapple with the latest ideas in contemporary public practice. In week 1 students will be introduced to a thematic concept and will work individually and where relevant collectively over 11 weeks to develop a series of works in response to selected sites. The seminars give students the opportunity to develop key technical and conceptual skills in many facets of public art while developing projects that respond to and question contemporary issues around: place-making; contemporary visual narratives; public spaces; social practice; the artist as provocateur; collaboration; and spectacle and the object.
Unit Fee Information
Fees and charges vary depending on the type of fee place you hold, your course, your commencement year, the units you choose to study and their study discipline, and your study load.
Tuition fees increase at the beginning of each calendar year and all fees quoted are in Australian dollars ($AUD). Tuition fees do not include textbooks, computer equipment or software, other equipment or costs such as mandatory checks, travel and stationery.
For further information regarding tuition fees, other fees and charges, invoice due dates, withdrawal dates, payment methods visit our Current Students website.