Title of article
The Doctorate in Fine Art: The Importance of Exemplars to the of Exemplars to the
Author/Authors
Macleod، Katy نويسنده , , Holdridge، Lin نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی 2 سال 2004
Pages
14
From page
155
To page
168
Abstract
The doctorate in Fine Art has had a troubled
history in the UK. Although there are growing
numbers of doctorates being undertaken and
over forty institutions which offer doctoral study,
there is still little understanding of this research
culture. There is a developing literature, but it
remains curiously focused on research methods
and protocols rather than on establishing the
character of the culture through what is being
produced by doctoral students. Macleod and
Holdridge have produced an AHRB-funded study
of selected exemplars of doctoral submissions.
The study seeks to make both a practical and
strategic intervention in the ongoing ‘making/writing’,
‘theory/practice’ debate. It also seeks to
clearly demonstrate how artist researchers have
dealt with the academic requirements of the PhD
and how the production of a substantial written
text (generally 30,000 words plus) showing a
keen knowledge and criticality of the subject field
has been achieved. The exemplars demonstrate
both the distinctive and the normative character
of the PhD in Fine Art. However, the underpinning
empirical research for the study (1996 – ) has also
demonstrated the critical independence of such
exemplars within the broader field of academic
research. Through a brief analysis of three doctoral
submissions selected from the study, the paper
seeks to draw out some of the more important
findings and their implications for the developing
research culture.
Journal title
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Record number
122746
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