THE UNIVERSITY of EDINBURGH

DEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2024/2025

Timetable information in the Course Catalogue may be subject to change.

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DRPS : Course Catalogue : Edinburgh College of Art : Design

Postgraduate Course: Resolving Critical Making (DESI11205)

Course Outline
SchoolEdinburgh College of Art CollegeCollege of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
Credit level (Normal year taken)SCQF Level 11 (Postgraduate) AvailabilityNot available to visiting students
SCQF Credits60 ECTS Credits30
SummaryThis course is the culmination of your MA Craft programme and, within that, your chosen disciplinary specialism(s) in your chosen craft practice: ceramics, glass, textiles and/or jewellery and silversmithing. This course follows on directly from the Exploring Critical Making and Developing Critical Making courses. This course will enable you to refine and critically reflect upon your craft practice and demonstrate your ability to resolve, prepare and present your final project(s) in a variety of professional contexts and formats. You will explore the wider dissemination and promotion of your critical craft practice to peers, public and professional audiences. This course will help you to resolve your critically engaged making and thinking through your craft practice.
Course description Through this course, you will expand upon your current craft practice within and beyond the expanded field of craft in the context of the post-digital age. This course will enable you to resolve and expose your work, enabling you to critically reflect upon the innovative material-led practices and methods you have explored, developed and resolved during your MA Craft studies. You will evaluate how you have addressed a range of responsible and conscious approaches to materials and making in your work to create a range of sustainable, socially responsible outcomes. You will resolve your craft practice through the lens of critical making. The final outcome of the course will be to resolve and expose (a) self-directed final project(s). Learning how to make work that can withstand critique is integral to this course, which will be delivered within a critical environment driven by both staff and peer review, which will help you evaluate the contribution you have made to your chosen craft discipline(s). You will resolve and consolidate your making skills, through critical self-analysis and reflective appraisal.

Your final project may take the form of a new process, artefact(s) or new series of work(s) or collection. You may also choose to present an exhibition, a conference with a publication, a research website, a collected series of articles/essays or an online podcast series. You will exercise autonomy, initiative, and innovation in organisation through your self-directed project(s) and apply a range of presentation and exposition strategies. You will professionally document, archive and determine the means of individually promoting your craft practice to a range of audiences within and beyond the field of craft. In the final part of the course, you will gather invaluable feedback by presenting your projects to both staff and students. You will conduct user testing, social probes, object handling and/or feedback sessions (as relevant). Research methods such as a reflective journal, sketchbook, a technical notebook and a project book will continue to be used to document your process. You will complete a range of professional practice tasks and activities that will place you in the contemporary craft context. This final project will consist of a series of practical coursework submissions, a final portfolio of work, a project book and a reflective studio blog documenting the final stages which will make up the final outcomes of this course.

Weekly teaching sessions will include 1:1 supervisory meetings with a designated supervisor (30 mins per week). A short series of weekly seminars will be delivered in the first half of the course (1 hour per week - in weeks 1-5). Through group crits, feedback sessions and open studio debate, you will actively seek input and feedback at this final stage. You will create a written position paper that defines and resolves your understanding of craft, to critically position and situate yourself as a critical craft practitioner.
Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites Co-requisites
Prohibited Combinations Other requirements None
Additional Costs The nature of this studio course is that materials will be consumed and used in the development of your prototypes, models, and visualisations (including printing). For this course, it is expected that you might spend an average of £50, but these costs fluctuate significantly depending upon individual projects and your choice of materials involved with the project. At ECA we promote the reuse and recycling of materials, students are actively encouraged to access the free-use hub where possible or appropriate to their projects. We also would like to note that success in the course is not linked to expenditure; novel or sustainable approaches to material use will be commended.
Course Delivery Information
Not being delivered
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
  1. Resolve and complete to an appropriate professional standard an independent inquiry into critical making that demonstrates an integrated relationship between critical craft theory and practice.
  2. Present and disseminate their work persuasively within an appropriate professional context.
  3. Evaluate and critically reflect upon their work, positioning themselves within and beyond their specialist field of craft practice.
Reading List
Adamson, Glenn (2018) The Craft Reader, London: Bloomsbury.

Busek, Maria Elena (2011) Extra/Ordinary: Craft and Contemporary Art, North Carolina: Duke University Press.

Dormer, Peter (1997) The Culture of Craft (Studies in Design and Material Culture), Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Gray, Carole & Malins, Julian Gray, (2004) Visualizing your research, London: Routledge Press.

Harrod, Tanya (2018) Documents of Contemporary Art: Craft, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
Additional Information
Graduate Attributes and Skills Students on the course possess and/or wish to develop a number of key attributes, mindsets and skills, both on personal and a professional level.

University of Edinburgh Graduate Attributes: Mindsets

Aspiration and personal development: Students will draw on their own initiative and previous experience of craft practice to expand and fulfil their potential as future craft practitioners. They will develop a confident and critically reflective approach, which will see them take personal responsibility for pursuing their goals and seeking out opportunities to help them grow their own professional craft practice.

Outlook & engagement: Students will become engaged with the context of craft practice, through both local and national communities, whilst also connecting and situating their practice within the wider international craft context. This mindset will influence and lead them to explore, develop and finally resolve an outlook that positively and critically engages with these contexts and communities. Whilst encouraging them to consider the impact of their work, and to carefully consider the implications of their craft practice on others.

University of Edinburgh Graduate Attributes: Skill groups

Personal and intellectual autonomy: Students will use their personal and intellectual autonomy to critically evaluate ideas, evidence, and experiences from an open-minded and reasoned perspective, becoming situated in the field of contemporary craft.

Communication: Students will be able to synthesise and share complex ideas around their work through a broad range of communication methods and selected platforms. They will find ways to disseminate and resolve their work in ways that are appropriate to reach a variety of audiences, communities, and constituencies.
Keywordscraft,practice,critical making,resolution,dissemination,consolidation,exposition
Contacts
Course organiserDr Kee Ryong Choi
Tel: (0131 6)51 5816
Email:
Course secretary
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