BA Art and Creative Writing
-
UCAS code
QW32 -
Clearing BTEC Extended Offer
MMM -
Clearing Offer
CCD -
Year of entry
2023/24 See 2024/25 entry -
Course duration
Full Time: 4 Years
-
Year of entry
2023/24 See 2024/25 entry -
Course duration
Full Time: 4 Years
Develop as an artist, curator and writer with our BA Art and Creative Writing programme.
Please note that this course is now closed for 2023 applicants.
This four-year, joint honours course reflects recent developments in art and culture. For example, you will:
- learn about new digital art and publishing platforms
- expand your understanding of contemporary literature and art theories
- develop your skills in art writing.
Art and creative writing are a stimulating combination at degree level – they enhance and inform one another. Additionally, studying theories and practitioners across the art and literature disciplines will inspire and influence your own art and writing as you hone your technique and form.
Art
Studying at the Reading School of Art allows you to explore a vast range of media and experiment with emerging art forms.
Over the course of your four years of study, you will:
- work with academics who include artists, curators and researchers
- be encouraged to participate in exhibitions, public art commissions and events
- receive dedicated studio space, accessible 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, and a studio tutor to help develop your individual and professional practice.
You will complement your practical art with modules in contemporary art theory and the history of art. Through the lectures, seminars and studio teaching – as well as weekly visiting artist talks – you will be exposed to the language, vocabulary and debates that have emerged historically and evolved to forge contemporary art.
Creative writing
Explore literature creatively as you develop characters, shape poems, and draw on your imagination. We are ranked 17th for Creative Writing in the Complete University Guide 2024.
You will learn from prize-winning authors and academics who are committed to teaching through the workshop model. These small group sessions are the heart of Reading’s writing community: guided by one of our lecturers, you and your fellow students will gain confidence as your share your writing and help each other improve.
You will also have the opportunity to publish your work – and gain experience in editing and publishing – by participating in our online creative magazine.
Find out more about our creative writing studies, including information about our academics, on our Department of English Literature’s creative writing webpage.
Your learning environment
You will learn through a mixture of:
- seminars
- lectures
- studio teaching
- group workshops
- technical inductions
- one-to-one tutorials
- museum and gallery visits.
You will also receive academic guidance through oral and written feedback.
Your creative writing modules will place a strong emphasis on small-group learning within a friendly and supportive environment, and you will have access to our resident professional writer who advises our students individually.
For your art modules, you will have access to our range of facilities. These include:
- studios for construction, printing and casting
- darkrooms for photography
- digital tools for film and video editing, imaging, sound and web building
- a dedicated audio-visual room and sound-recording booth.
Placement
You will be encouraged to undertake academic placements during your studies.
The Department of English Literature has an innovative placement scheme, and previous art students have:
- interned at Studio Voltaire and the Frieze Art Fair
- performed at the Institute of Contemporary Arts
- taken part in an Arts Council-supported film project at the Museum of Rural Life
- participated in an international exhibition at the Seoul Institute of Arts in South Korea.
Study abroad
In your third year, you can spend a term studying abroad at one of our partner institutions. To find out more, visit our Study Abroad site.
Overview
Develop as an artist, curator and writer with our BA Art and Creative Writing programme.
Please note that this course is now closed for 2023 applicants.
This four-year, joint honours course reflects recent developments in art and culture. For example, you will:
- learn about new digital art and publishing platforms
- expand your understanding of contemporary literature and art theories
- develop your skills in art writing.
Art and creative writing are a stimulating combination at degree level – they enhance and inform one another. Additionally, studying theories and practitioners across the art and literature disciplines will inspire and influence your own art and writing as you hone your technique and form.
Art
Studying at the Reading School of Art allows you to explore a vast range of media and experiment with emerging art forms.
Over the course of your four years of study, you will:
- work with academics who include artists, curators and researchers
- be encouraged to participate in exhibitions, public art commissions and events
- receive dedicated studio space, accessible 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, and a studio tutor to help develop your individual and professional practice.
You will complement your practical art with modules in contemporary art theory and the history of art. Through the lectures, seminars and studio teaching – as well as weekly visiting artist talks – you will be exposed to the language, vocabulary and debates that have emerged historically and evolved to forge contemporary art.
Creative writing
Explore literature creatively as you develop characters, shape poems, and draw on your imagination. We are ranked 17th for Creative Writing in the Complete University Guide 2024.
You will learn from prize-winning authors and academics who are committed to teaching through the workshop model. These small group sessions are the heart of Reading’s writing community: guided by one of our lecturers, you and your fellow students will gain confidence as your share your writing and help each other improve.
You will also have the opportunity to publish your work – and gain experience in editing and publishing – by participating in our online creative magazine.
Find out more about our creative writing studies, including information about our academics, on our Department of English Literature’s creative writing webpage.
Your learning environment
You will learn through a mixture of:
- seminars
- lectures
- studio teaching
- group workshops
- technical inductions
- one-to-one tutorials
- museum and gallery visits.
You will also receive academic guidance through oral and written feedback.
Your creative writing modules will place a strong emphasis on small-group learning within a friendly and supportive environment, and you will have access to our resident professional writer who advises our students individually.
For your art modules, you will have access to our range of facilities. These include:
- studios for construction, printing and casting
- darkrooms for photography
- digital tools for film and video editing, imaging, sound and web building
- a dedicated audio-visual room and sound-recording booth.
Placement
You will be encouraged to undertake academic placements during your studies.
The Department of English Literature has an innovative placement scheme, and previous art students have:
- interned at Studio Voltaire and the Frieze Art Fair
- performed at the Institute of Contemporary Arts
- taken part in an Arts Council-supported film project at the Museum of Rural Life
- participated in an international exhibition at the Seoul Institute of Arts in South Korea.
Study abroad
In your third year, you can spend a term studying abroad at one of our partner institutions. To find out more, visit our Study Abroad site.
Clearing A Level CCD BTEC offer MMM
A level: CCD, including C in an English-related subject, plus Art (specific grade not required)
BTEC: MMM
Accepted subjects: English subjects: English Language/Literature, English Language and Literature, Drama and Theatre Studies, Creative Writing. Art subjects: Art, Fine Art, Art & Design, Photography, Graphic Design, Fashion/Textile Design.
We've listed A level and BTEC qualifications here, but please be assured that we also accept a wide variety of A level-equivalent qualifications.
For more information about Clearing at Reading, please visit our Clearing pages.
You can also visit our international student pages for information about English language qualifications.
Structure
Compulsory modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
EN1CW | Introduction to Creative Writing | DR Conor Carville |
EN1GC | Genre and Context | DR Chloe Houston |
EN1PE | Poetry in English | DR Aisling Byrne |
FA1ART | Art Studio | MISS Wendy McLean |
Optional modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
EN1SL | Shelf Life | DR Paddy Bullard |
FA1DS | Drawing skills | DR Florian Roithmayr |
FA1ED | Expanded Drawing | PROF John Russell |
FA1MM | Modernisms & Mythologies | DR Jenny Chamarette |
FA1PF | Postmodernisms & Other Fictions | MISS Lisa Barnard |
ML1COMP | What is Comparative Literature? | DR John McKeane |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Compulsory modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
EN2CWP | Creative Writing: Poetry | PROF Peter Robinson |
FA2S2 | Part 2 Studio including Career Management Skills | MS Tina O'Connell |
Optional modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
EN2BB | The Business of Books | DR Nicola Wilson |
EN2CF | Contemporary Fiction | DR Madeleine Davies |
EN2CMN | Chaucer and Medieval Narrative | DR Aisling Byrne |
EN2CRI | Critical Issues | DR Stephen Thomson |
EN2CWN | Creative Writing: Creative Nonfiction | MS Shelley Harris |
EN2CWP | Creative Writing: Poetry | PROF Peter Robinson |
EN2CWS | Creative Writing: The Short Story | MS Shelley Harris |
EN2MOD | Modernism in Poetry and Fiction | DR Mark Nixon |
EN2OEL | Introduction to Old English Literature | DR Aisling Byrne |
EN2RP | The Romantic Period | DR Matthew Scott |
EN2RTC | Renaissance Texts and Cultures | DR Alanna Skuse |
EN2SH | Shakespeare | PROF Lucinda Becker |
EN2VIC | Victorian Literature | DR Lucy Bending |
EN2WA | Writing America | DR Sue Walsh |
EN2WGI | Writing, Gender, Identity | DR Stephen Thomson |
EN2WPS | Writing in the Public Sphere | DR Mary Morrissey |
FA2IMW | Visual Thinking and Material Writing | PROF Alun Rowlands |
FA2IPA | Philosophies and Theories of Art | DR James Hellings |
FA2IS | International Study | PROF Alun Rowlands |
FA2IS3 | International Study 2 | PROF Alun Rowlands |
FA2ISP | Independent study with Work Placement | DR Kate Allen |
FA2IWC3 | What is the Contemporary? 3 | MISS Julia Crabtree |
FA2IWC4 | What is the Contemporary? 4 | MISS Julia Crabtree |
FA2MW | Visual Thinking and Material Writing | PROF Alun Rowlands |
FA2PA | Philosophies and Theories of Art | DR James Hellings |
FA2SSA | Study Abroad | MISS Julia Crabtree |
FA2WC1 | What is the Contemporary? 1 | PROF John Russell |
FA2WC2 | What is the Contemporary? 2 | PROF John Russell |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Compulsory modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
FA2IS2 | Part 2I Studio | MR Angus Wyatt |
FA3HS2 | Studio (joint honours) | PROF Susanne Clausen |
Optional modules include:
Code | Module | Convenor |
---|---|---|
EN3AGN | American Graphic Novels | PROF David Brauner |
EN3AH | Hitchcock | DR Neil Cocks |
EN3BAV | British Black and Asian Voices: 1948 to the Present | DR Cato Marks |
EN3CF | Contemporary American Fiction | PROF David Brauner |
EN3CL | Children's Literature | PROF Karin Lesnik-Oberstein |
EN3CW | Creative Writing Dissertation | MS Shelley Harris |
EN3DD | Decadence and Degeneration: Literature of the 1880s and 1890s | DR Lucy Bending |
EN3DIS | Dissertation | DR Stephen Thomson |
EN3LH | Literature and Healing | PROF Andrew Mangham |
EN3LMH | Literature and Mental Health | DR John Scholar |
EN3MAT | Margaret Atwood | DR Madeleine Davies |
EN3MO | Medieval Otherworlds | DR Aisling Byrne |
EN3MPS | Creative Writing Masterclass: Prose | MS Shelley Harris |
EN3MPY | Creative Writing Masterclass: Poetry | PROF Peter Robinson |
EN3PA | Placing Jane Austen | DR Paddy Bullard |
EN3PSY | Psychoanalysis and Text | PROF Karin Lesnik-Oberstein |
EN3RF | From Romance to Fantasy | DR Mary Morrissey |
EN3SHF | Shakespeare on Film | PROF Lucinda Becker |
EN3TBS | The Bloody Stage: Revenge and Death in Renaissance Drama | DR Chloe Houston |
EN3UTD | Utopia and Dystopia in English and American Literature | DR Chloe Houston |
EN3VW | Virginia Woolf and Bloomsbury | DR Madeleine Davies |
EN3WWP | Writing Women: Nineteenth Century Poetry | DR Lucy Bending |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Core modules include:
- Art Studio
- Creative Writing Dissertation
Please note that all modules are subject to change.
Fees
New UK/Republic of Ireland students: £9,250
New international students: £20,300
UK/Republic of Ireland fee changes
UK/Republic of Ireland undergraduate tuition fees are regulated by the UK government. These fees are subject to parliamentary approval and any decision on raising the tuition fees cap for new UK students would require the formal approval of both Houses of Parliament before it becomes law.
EU student fees
With effect from 1 August 2021, new EU students will pay international tuition fees. For exceptions, please read the UK government’s guidance for EU students.
Additional costs
Some courses will require additional payments for field trips and extra resources. You will also need to budget for your accommodation and living costs. See our information on living costs for more details.
Financial support for your studies
You may be eligible for a scholarship or bursary to help pay for your study. Students from the UK may also be eligible for a student loan to help cover these costs. See our fees and funding information for more information on what's available.
Placement year fees
If you spend a full year on placement, you will only pay 15% of your usual tuition fee for that year. For more information, please see our fees and funding pages or contact placements@reading.ac.uk.
Careers
A degree in art and creative writing will prepare you to enter professions across the cultural field. For example, you could choose to work in:
- museum and gallery education
- publishing
- postproduction
- theatre
- television
- public relations.
You will enter the job market with practical experience and highly-developed research and communication skills. You will know how to access reliable information and present your findings in clear and persuasive language. These are valuable skills in today’s economy, where information and communication skills are vital. You will also have the critical and cultural awareness necessary for working in the public sector and the media.
Some of our students decide to continue their studies at postgraduate level; others have successful careers in fields as diverse as law, business administration, web design, teaching, and journalism.
97% of leavers are in work and/or study 15 months after the end of their course (Graduate Outcomes Survey 2018/19; First Degree responders from Art).
Past art and literature graduates have gone on to work for employers such as:
- Tate
- Whitechapel Gallery
- The Burlington Magazine
- Christies
- Microsoft
- BBC
- The Telegraph
- Oxford University Press
- Waterstones
- Cisco Systems
- Royal Mint.