The MA in Arts Management at Bath Spa University has been developed to take account of the significant changes taking place in the arts and across the creative industries, and we have worked in close collaboration with our sector partners to create a course that is appropriate and adaptive to this changing and challenging environment. Their direct input into the design and delivery of the course is central to its fundamental aim of expanding your theoretical understanding and professional knowledge through hands-on experience and work-based learning.
KEY FEATURES
Developed in close collaboration with sector partners, the course is appropriate and adaptive to a changing and challenging environment.
Taught by academic experts and experienced professionals giving you the opportunity to develop professional contacts and networks.
Professional placement experience with the opportunity to consider arts and cultural management in an international context.
Why study Arts Management?
The course offers a unique opportunity to engage with an extensive range of regional, national and international arts and cultural organisations coverving the full range of the creative industries from dance, theatre and music, to digital creativity, the finar arts and fashion, to hertiage museums and cultural tourism.
The arts stimulate us, educate us, challenge and amuse us. They are of instrumental, as well as intrinsic, value and their social benefits are numerous and beyond doubt. [Maria Miller, Culture Sector Minister, April 2013]
Culture, the arts and the creative industries in the UK are estimated to be worth around £36 billion to our economy – our creative and cultural excellence plays a crucial role in our national identity, and is recognized globally.
In the 21st century, culture and arts policy and practice are being shaped against a background of enormous change and challenge across the creative sectors. Arts managers and administrators are instrumental in the governance and sustainability of the creative sectors. From policy makers to caretakers of arts buildings and infrastructure, from pioneers of economic innovation to leaders of excellence in creative practice, cultural leaders and managers of the arts will increasingly need to be flexible, responsive and imaginative practitioners, equally comfortable in a variety of settings, and adept at working in partnership with a wide range of organisations. They will need to be people who see the arts and culture as a vital part of the wider economy.
Bath, a relatively small city with a resident population of about 80,000, attracts over 4 million visitors every year. It hosts an annual series of internationally renowned arts and cultural festivals, has been a fashionable spa for leisure and pleasure since the 18th century, and is a World Heritage Site with rich offering of museums and galleries. But it is also a city at the heart of the South West, ideally situated between Bristol and London on the M4 high tech and creative industries ‘corridor’.
The MA in Arts Management at Bath Spa University has been developed to take account of the significant changes taking place in the arts and across the creative industries, and we have worked in close collaboration with our sector partners to create a course that is appropriate and adaptive to this changing and challenging environment. Their direct input into the design and delivery of the course is central to its fundamental aim of expanding your theoretical understanding and professional knowledge through hands-on experience and work-based learning.
KEY FEATURES
Developed in close collaboration with sector partners, the course is appropriate and adaptive to a changing and challenging environment.
Taught by academic experts and experienced professionals giving you the opportunity to develop professional contacts and networks.
Professional placement experience with the opportunity to consider arts and cultural management in an international context.
Why study Arts Management?
The course offers a unique opportunity to engage with an extensive range of regional, national and international arts and cultural organisations coverving the full range of the creative industries from dance, theatre and music, to digital creativity, the finar arts and fashion, to hertiage museums and cultural tourism.
The arts stimulate us, educate us, challenge and amuse us. They are of instrumental, as well as intrinsic, value and their social benefits are numerous and beyond doubt. [Maria Miller, Culture Sector Minister, April 2013]
Culture, the arts and the creative industries in the UK are estimated to be worth around £36 billion to our economy – our creative and cultural excellence plays a crucial role in our national identity, and is recognized globally.
In the 21st century, culture and arts policy and practice are being shaped against a background of enormous change and challenge across the creative sectors. Arts managers and administrators are instrumental in the governance and sustainability of the creative sectors. From policy makers to caretakers of arts buildings and infrastructure, from pioneers of economic innovation to leaders of excellence in creative practice, cultural leaders and managers of the arts will increasingly need to be flexible, responsive and imaginative practitioners, equally comfortable in a variety of settings, and adept at working in partnership with a wide range of organisations. They will need to be people who see the arts and culture as a vital part of the wider economy.
Bath, a relatively small city with a resident population of about 80,000, attracts over 4 million visitors every year. It hosts an annual series of internationally renowned arts and cultural festivals, has been a fashionable spa for leisure and pleasure since the 18th century, and is a World Heritage Site with rich offering of museums and galleries. But it is also a city at the heart of the South West, ideally situated between Bristol and London on the M4 high tech and creative industries ‘corridor’.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..