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BA Photography
About this course
Photography is more than a technical craft. It is a way of seeing and thinking about the world, a medium through which artists, journalists, scientists, and storytellers have shaped public understanding since the mid-nineteenth century. The photographic image carries evidential weight and aesthetic power simultaneously, and studying it seriously means grappling with questions about representation, truth, memory, and the shifting boundaries between art and documentation. At the University of Suffolk, this three-year full-time degree gives you space to develop a genuine photographic practice with your own distinct voice. You will work across a range of media and techniques, learning to match your technical choices to the context and audience for your work. Critical and theoretical study runs alongside practical production, so you will engage with the histories and debates that have shaped photography as a discipline, from documentary traditions and fine art photography to the current conversations around digital image-making and social media. The emphasis on individual authorship means you are encouraged from early on to take creative risks and to build a body of work that reflects your own ideas and perspectives rather than simply replicating received conventions. The skills you develop, including visual thinking, contextual awareness, technical fluency across analogue and digital processes, and the ability to research and develop a sustained project, are valued across a surprisingly wide range of fields. Many graduates build careers as practising photographers, working in editorial, commercial, documentary, or fine art contexts. Others move into art direction, picture editing, curation, or arts education. The critical and analytical capacities the programme develops also translate well into roles in communications, publishing, and the broader creative industries. Postgraduate options include fine art, photojournalism, and arts management, as well as teacher training for those who wish to bring photography into schools.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (69% response rate)
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