Contemporary Arts Practice MA

Duration

13 Months

2 Years

Location

Stoke-on-Trent campus

Stoke-on-Trent campus

Mobilise your art practice: from production to encounter. You’ll get to work in our on-campus studio spaces and project spaces, hosting public exhibitions and exploring new forms of public engagement. You will be supported to build meaningful professional relationships with local and global communities and audiences and encouraged to work on off-site projects.

For 25/26 entry.

This dynamic MA in Contemporary Arts Practice will equip you with transferable and industry-relevant skills, including end-to-end creative project management, enabling you to become resilient and independent as a practitioner.

The course is ideal for students with visual arts backgrounds, but also relevant to other arts-related disciplines. You’ll have scope to use a diverse range of materials, processes and approaches, and will benefit from working in a trans-disciplinary environment.

There will also be plenty of opportunities to spark critical artistic discourse and explore cultural contexts by creating work through public encounters. Artists are instrumental in rethinking social and physical environments, helping to build cultural infrastructure through critical thinking. On the MA you will draw on issues you feel passionate about as a ‘citizen-artist’.

The MA encourages you to investigate the vital relationships between the local and the global in the contexts of contemporary culture and society. Other forms of public engagement include connecting with groups and organisations in Stoke-on-Trent and London through fieldwork and residencies.

On campus, you will have your own individual studio space, and access to our full range of workshops, enabling you to engage with digital and analogue processes and materials.

You will work alongside our highly-skilled technicians and academic staff, who engage a range of interdisciplinary topics and are national and international artists and researchers.

For 25/26 entry.

This dynamic MA in Contemporary Arts Practice will equip you with transferable and industry-relevant skills, including end-to-end creative project management, enabling you to become resilient and independent as a practitioner.

The course is ideal for students with visual arts backgrounds, but also relevant to other arts-related disciplines. You’ll have scope to use a diverse range of materials, processes and approaches, and will benefit from working in a trans-disciplinary environment.

There will also be plenty of opportunities to spark critical artistic discourse and explore cultural contexts by creating work through public encounters. Artists are instrumental in rethinking social and physical environments, helping to build cultural infrastructure through critical thinking. On the MA you will draw on issues you feel passionate about as a ‘citizen-artist’.

The MA encourages you to investigate the vital relationships between the local and the global in the contexts of contemporary culture and society. Other forms of public engagement include connecting with groups and organisations in Stoke-on-Trent and London through fieldwork and residencies.

On campus, you will have your own individual studio space, and access to our full range of workshops, enabling you to engage with digital and analogue processes and materials.

You will work alongside our highly-skilled technicians and academic staff, who engage a range of interdisciplinary topics and are national and international artists and researchers.

On successful completion of study, we will issue the following award: MA Contemporary Arts Practice

On successful completion of study, we will issue the following award: MA Contemporary Arts Practice

Course content

The programme offers a sequence of core modules in practice-based research, providing methodological, theoretical and contextual foundations for developing a robust and relevant practice.

Students gain practical experience through direct engagement with places and communities and develop their own creative directions through their final major project.

Faculty and students build close and supportive relationships through structured critiques and tutorials, seminars, and informal conversations.

The programme offers a sequence of core modules in practice-based research, providing methodological, theoretical and contextual foundations for developing a robust and relevant practice.

Students gain practical experience through direct engagement with places and communities and develop their own creative directions through their final major project.

Faculty and students build close and supportive relationships through structured critiques and tutorials, seminars, and informal conversations.

Modules

The tables provide an indicative list of the modules that make up the course for the current academic year. Each module is worth a specified number of credits. Our teaching is informed by research, and modules change periodically to reflect developments in the discipline. We aim to ensure that all modules run as scheduled. If for any reason a module cannot be run we will advise you as soon as possible and will provide guidance on selecting an appropriate alternative module.

Modules

The tables provide an indicative list of the modules that make up the course for the current academic year. Each module is worth a specified number of credits. Our teaching is informed by research, and modules change periodically to reflect developments in the discipline. We aim to ensure that all modules run as scheduled. If for any reason a module cannot be run we will advise you as soon as possible and will provide guidance on selecting an appropriate alternative module.

Year 1 compulsory modules
Year 1 compulsory modules
Connected Practices 20 credits
Dimensions Of Contemporary Practice 40 credits
Year 2 compulsory modules
Year 2 compulsory modules
Contemporary Practice Final Project 60 credits
Contexts Of Contemporary Practice 40 credits
Critical Discourses And Encounters 20 credits

Entry requirements

All programmes are subject to Staffordshire University’s Admissions Policy.

The entry requirements for the course are normally a 2:1 Honours degree in a subject related to art practice.  Applicants who have a 2:2 Honours or with different qualifications who have relevant experiential learning will also be considered.

A minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (the International English Language Testing System) or the equivalent is the normal requirement for students for whom English is not a first language.

All programmes are subject to Staffordshire University’s Admissions Policy.

The entry requirements for the course are normally a 2:1 Honours degree in a subject related to art practice.  Applicants who have a 2:2 Honours or with different qualifications who have relevant experiential learning will also be considered.

A minimum score of 6.5 in IELTS (the International English Language Testing System) or the equivalent is the normal requirement for students for whom English is not a first language.

For equivalent entry requirements in your home country, please see the information on our country pages.

Choose your country

Check our entry and English language requirements for your country.

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Facilities

We have course-specific studio spaces with a communal area and a dedicated space for each student.

Our workshops include specialist areas for digital, smart and emerging technologies, featuring laser cutters and VR. We also have workshops for metals, wood, plastics, ceramics and resin, and are one of the few universities in the country to have ceramic 3D printers.

At our comprehensive art shop, you can stock up on supplies at affordable prices.

Careers

Students are supported to build career paths connecting their art practice with contemporary cultural contexts. The MA could lead to careers in social and environmental justice, public policy, public art, curatorial practices, art education, art writing, urban planning, landscape architecture, and other professional and creative practices.

We will support you to manage budgets and oversee creative projects, leading to possible work as a project manager, cultural manager or arts and engagement officer.

You may also decide to continue your studies by specialising in research through a PhD.

All students have access to Career Connect, our dedicated careers team.

Teaching and assessment

Assessment

You will be assessed on coursework for each module. It may consist of the following components:

  • Sketchbooks and portfolios
  • Research
  • Artistic developments and conclusions
  • Written work
  • Presentations

As part of the assessment, you will also write an abstract for a conference. The skills you will learn through this assignment, such as how to research and present your work and discuss your ideas, are good preparation for undertaking a PhD.

You will be assessed on coursework for each module. It may consist of the following components:

  • Sketchbooks and portfolios
  • Research
  • Artistic developments and conclusions
  • Written work
  • Presentations

As part of the assessment, you will also write an abstract for a conference. The skills you will learn through this assignment, such as how to research and present your work and discuss your ideas, are good preparation for undertaking a PhD.

Learning support

Your course tutors will provide lots of support. But you can also take advantage of our Academic Skills team, who can help you with:

  • Study skills (including reading, note-taking and presentation skills)
  • Written English (including punctuation, grammar)
  • Academic writing (including how to reference)
  • Research skills
  • Critical thinking
  • Revision, assessment and exam skills (including time management)

Additional support

If you have additional needs like dyslexia or a sensory impairment, then our Student Inclusion Services are here to help make sure nothing stands in your way.

Staff

Our teaching team are all professional contemporary artistic practitioners, and active researchers with extensive experience.

Michael Safaric Branthwaite

Associate Professor

I am a Contemporary Fine Artist as well as an active researcher in integrated practices. My main area of interest is the use of technology and the digitisation of History and Heritage

Michael's profile

Professor Ian Brown

Professor

Prof. Brown’s research investigates how contemporary social identity is constructed through rituals of consumption within popular culture. His research also explores the Invented World and the Natural World, including plant/human relations.

Ian's profile

Rebecca Nunes

Associate Professor Of Lens-Based Media

Becky Nunes is an artist and educator whose work has been awarded, published & exhibited locally and internationally. Nunes’ lens-based practice considers the complexities of land use and amplifies marginalised and polyphonic voices.

Rebecca's profile

Professor Neil Brownsword

Professor

Prof. Brownsword is an artist, researcher and educator. His research into the legacy of deindustrialisation in relation to North Staffordshire's ceramic industry, has had national and international cultural impact.

Neil's profile

Fees

For the course starting on 22 September 2025 the tuition fees are:

Tuition fees for MA-Full-time
Study option UK / Channel Islands International
Full-time £9,165 per course £16,750 per course

For the course starting on 23 September 2025 the tuition fees are:

Tuition fees for MA-Full-time
Study option UK / Channel Islands International
Part-time £9,135 per course £16,740 per course

If you would like to know more about the fees listed and what this means to you then please get in touch with our Enquiries Team.

Alumni discount

If you've previously completed a University of Staffordshire undergraduate degree (excluding HND and foundation degrees) you may be entitled to a discount of up to 25% off your course fees for any subsequent postgraduate taught course (terms apply, see the alumni discount page for details). If you have any questions about how this relates to you, please contact feesandbursaries@staffs.ac.uk.

Accommodation and living costs
Accommodation and living costs

Accommodation and living costs are not included in our fees. 

For more information on accommodation and living costs, please see: Accommodation

Sources of financial support

Providing you are studying towards a full Masters qualification you may be able to apply for a postgraduate loan of up to £11,570 to help with tuition fees, maintenance and other associated costs. Student loans are available for many of our postgraduate degrees and are provided by the Student Loans Company (SLC). The loan can cover a wide range of postgraduate study options; part-time, full-time and distance learning. 

For more information and how to apply visit masters loan.

Apply

Location Award Study option Start date Apply Link
Stoke-on-Trent campus MA Full-time 22 September 2025 Apply now

Rules and regulations

If you are offered a place at University of Staffordshire, your offer will be subject to our rules, regulations and enrolment conditions, which may vary from time to time.

Students of University of Staffordshire enter into a contract with us and are bound by these rules and regulations, which are subject to change. For more information, please see: University Policies and Regulations

Have you considered?

in the UK for Quality Education

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of Research Impact is ‘Outstanding’ or ‘Very Considerable’

Research Excellence Framework 2021

of Research is “Internationally Excellent” or “World Leading”

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