Nottingham Trent University Funded PhD Studentship, 2017

selection.jpg

The School of Art and Design, Nottingham Trent University invites applications for a University Funded PhD Studentship in collaboration with New Contemporaries.

University Funded PhD Studentship, 2017

DATE

10 October 2016

A collaboration between two Schools at Nottingham Trent University (Art and Design and Arts and Humanities) and New Contemporaries, the PhD is titled Archives and ‘Contemporaneity’: art schools, art institutions and the cultural economy, and is supervised by Professor Tom Fisher. It is a key element in the university’s multi-disciplinary engagement with cultural life through critical and creative practice. It builds on an archive relating to the history of New Contemporaries going back to 1949, when it started as ‘Young Contemporaries’. Through the second half of the C20, selecting and curating the annual open submission exhibitions and events associated with New Contemporaries – showing the ‘pick of the crop’ of each year’s art school graduates – has reflexively characterised the culture of the moment. New Contemporaries has had a role in defining what it means to be ‘contemporary’. This has defined contemporaneity in art, and articulated the relationship of art school education to wider culture.

The purpose of the research is to extend from the extant archive material to understand what this reflexive relationship played out through curation and selection has amounted to. The research process will take advantage of contacts with still living participants in New Contemporaries. Given that many of the artists who have been selected for New Contemporaries are still alive, as are many of the selecting panel members, the archive work will be combined with oral-history interviews. One consequence of the work will be to feed the results of both aspects of the process into New Contemporaries public face through web access to the enhanced archive.

Suitable applicants will have a good first degree and a Masters qualification in an arts/humanities subject, preferably with a focus on curation. They will either have experience of data gathering through interview or be prepared to acquire the necessary skills at an early stage of the studentship by completing appropriate training at NTU.

Entry Criteria:
UK Masters qualification (or UK equivalent according to NARIC) in an arts/humanities subject, preferably with a focus on curation.

The closing date for the applications is 6th of December 2016. Please see the project description and application details here: www4.ntu.ac.uk/research/document_uploads/189330.pdf

For informal discussion regarding the project, please contact: tom.fisher@ntu.ac.uk