

BA French and History of Art
About this course
French and history of art at University College London is a four-year combination that brings together two disciplines with deep connections to each other and to European cultural life. French is not simply a language degree: it is an education in French and Francophone culture, literature, history, and society, developing both the linguistic competence to engage with texts, people, and ideas in French and the critical frameworks to analyse what you encounter. History of art is the scholarly study of visual objects and the built environment, asking how images and spaces are made, what they mean, how they relate to the social and political contexts of their creation, and how their interpretation has changed over time. France has been central to the history of art in ways that make these two subjects particularly natural companions, from the royal collections that became the Louvre to Impressionism, Cubism, Surrealism, and the international art world that Paris shaped and in which the French language has been essential. At UCL, you will develop genuine fluency in spoken and written French alongside a deep engagement with art history across a wide range of periods, cultures, and media. The history of art curriculum at UCL is internationally oriented, drawing on the collections of London's major museums and galleries, and the programme encourages you to move between French cultural contexts and broader art historical questions. The four-year structure allows the programme to develop both disciplines seriously, and you will emerge with real expertise in both rather than a superficial coverage of each. Graduates from this combination are well placed for careers in the museum, gallery, and heritage sectors, particularly in institutions with significant French or European collections. The auction house and art market world, conservation, curatorial roles, arts administration, and cultural diplomacy are further destinations. Publishing, journalism, and communications roles that engage with French-speaking markets or with arts and culture are natural applications of the dual expertise. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in art history, French, or related disciplines, and academic research is a common path for those who find a particular area in which they want to develop original expertise.
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