course leader
language
Italian
admission:
limited
> visual arts track: 48 places
41 places
for EU and EU-equated applicants
7 places
for non-EU candidates residing abroad
> fashion design track: 48 places
43 places
for EU and EU-equated applicants
5 places
for non-EU candidates residing abroad
ministerial degree code
LM-65 Scienze
dello spettacolo e produzione multimediale
The
master’s degree in fashion and visual arts responds to the growing demand
for professionals with a high cultural and artistic profile who can work at the
European level to direct the creative and production processes behind events in
the field of visual arts and fashion.
The production
and design of events include artefacts, performances, clothing and fashion
events, as well as curatorial practices in galleries and museums, critique and
history of artistic phenomena, specialised publishing, cultural consultancy, artistic
direction of festivals, cultural institutions and coordination of creative
processes in the fashion sector.
The study
programme is structured in experimental workshops, theoretical-critical courses
and seminars designed to provide adequate and continuously updated tools in the
fields of historical, critical and methodological expertise in the artistic
disciplines, philosophies of the arts and social sciences.
During the
workshops, students can develop both individual and group projects. The
thematic areas may also be defined on the basis of specific collaborations with
companies, public and private institutions, foundations, and museums.
Workshops
and seminars are conducted partly in English.
The continuous
intertwining of theoretical knowledge and practical skills makes the study
programme unique in Italy. It is open both to students wishing to focus on the
artistic practices of fashion and visual discourse and to those wishing to
engage in historical-critical and curatorial practices in the same areas.
The master’s
degree in fashion and visual arts includes two tracks - one in fashion and the
other in visual arts – whose courses are divided into thematic blocks of theoretical
modules and workshops.