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BA(Hons) Photojournalism (incorporating HND award) PDF Print E-mail

Why choose Photojournalism and why at SMU

For most of photography's history its relationship to documentary practice both in its capacity to report, tell stories, describe, and yet also subvert the, often assumed, truthfulness inherent to the medium, has been paramount to photography's success.

The Photojournalism degree course promotes well-established skills associated with this practice: projects emphasise the construction of photo-essays, the use of image and text and the application of journalistic principles to self-initiated ideas, for example.

In addition you will be challenged to find your own voice as a photographer by being made aware of photojournalism's contextual position within contemporary culture and by experimenting with the medium itself. Students engage with notions of subjectivity and expression leading to an extensive and sustained practice.

You will study photography in a creative environment with an emphasis on research, the development of practical skills and the construction of self-initiated, narrative-driven projects. The course not only prepares students to meet the constantly shifting challenges of contemporary photojournalistic practice, but also allows space for students to explore areas that have opened up for documentary practitioners in recent years: gallery and art documentary contexts; web and multimedia applications; the use of documentary skills in commercial spheres including advertising, corporate, fashion and travel photography.

This happens in a department with small class sizes allowing plenty of space for students to interact fully with both staff and their fellow students. We have an open-door policy that helps to create a friendly and informal atmosphere within the photography department. The Staff have their own areas of practice that add to this creative atmosphere with skills not only in photography but also journalism and business practice. Our aim is to produce graduates with individual creativity but also the knowledge and confidence to work in an exciting but highly competitive field.

• The development of a unique personal voice in your work
• Analysis of, and feedback about your work by tutors and fellow students
• Development of appropriate individual and team-based skills to aid interaction in professional environments
• Emphasis on research strategies to enable the successful completion of ideas
• Provision of workshops to encourage the development of practical skills that will aid your creativity

More about the course

Students on both the photography programmes will regularly interact with professional contacts through the exciting series of visiting lecturers, where artists, photographers, curators, editors, writers and agents present their work and talk about their professional experiences. Recent examples include: Richard Billingham (artist/photographer), Clare Grafik (curator The Photographers Gallery), Simon Roberts (photographer), Emma Critchley (photographer), Mark Power (Magnum photographer), and Victoria Lukens (picture editor).

In a more formal way you will also be encouraged to contend with industry standards within the External Project, where you have to find a client to work with. This project allows you to start your professional career whilst receiving supported tuition from academic staff on subjects such as contracts and costings, as well as technical and creative issues.

Previous project examples include: NHS, Atkins Rail, National Trust, Sunday Times, Penguin Books, Corus, Channel 4, The Royal Ballet and Dazed and Confused.

Also the Marketing and Self-Promotion Module continues this dialogue with the professional industry when a photographic agent and curator are brought in to advise the students on their personal practice before returning to assist with interview style assessments. Recent collaborators include: Jason Shenai (Millennium Images), Pippa Oldfield (Impressions Gallery), Susan Bright (free-lance curator and writer) and Helen James (National Portrait Gallery).

The three-year BA (Hons) programme has an embedded HND qualification at the end of the second year.

Course structure & content

The Faculty has excellent industrial links and there is a regular programme of visiting speakers and professionals. Live projects are an integral part of the course and these help you to engage with professional bodies before you graduate.

All work is project based. Students are expected to demonstrate their understanding in the form of practical project work. All assessment is based on 100% coursework.

As well as formal lectures there is also a programme of individual tutorials throughout the three years.
Theory is a major part of your coursework and final degree, constituting about 20% of your studies and marks. There are also workshops to help you enhance your technical studies and creative enquiry.

Year One, students initially complete an intensive series of assigned and self-initiated (personal) practical projects that:

Introduce them to the department

Diagnose and improve key techniques in black and white processing and printing, introduce c-type colour processing and printing

Introduce them to various learning environments through lectures, critiques, seminars and tutorials in which they will discuss and critique their own work and that of fellow students

Provide students with an opportunity to engage with contemporary debates related to their subject area including, for example, the roles of documentary photography and photojournalism, legal and ethical considerations, contexts and markets

Aid the development of important practical and interpersonal skills such as time-management, research and negotiation

In the second semester, assignments specific to Photojournalism introduce the techniques (and question the assumptions) of the photo essay and study photography's long-standing relationship with text. Students will also produce a semester-long self-initiated practical project.

Other modules: Historical and Contextual Studies; Visual Studies

Year Two, students start the year with a Site-Specific Group Project. The ability to research, negotiate - both with fellow group members and external agents - and create work in appropriate yet often experimental contexts leads to a further maturing of their work. A self-initiated project (or projects) reinforces this development leading to the production of a book in the first semester and a presentation, exhibition and portfolio in the second.

Professional Studies introduces students to vocational outcomes for their work. In the second semester, the Visual Studies module includes the ‘article' project in which students have to both write and produce images for a story of their choosing. Historical and Contextual Studies continues, preparing students for the dissertation they will undertake in the third year.

Year Three involves a major practical module that includes both self-initiated Personal and External work that dominates the, largely self-directed, third year.

The External project requires students to contextualise their work with clients or in the public arena as appropriate to their current practice and ambitions after graduation. Contacts made at this stage are often the starting point for professional contacts after.

The Personal and External projects are negotiated through tutorial contact with staff and provide the basis for the students' portfolios, for the Marketing and Self-Promotion module in which students present their work to either a stock agency director or gallery curator, and exhibitions in both Swansea and London (Exhibition module).

Practical work is underpinned by ongoing visual research and students undertake a Dissertation that both supports and is often informed by their photography. This emphasis of the final year - the culmination of your degree - is crucial in allowing you the freedom to explore your chosen area of practice but also to prepare for a life as a practitioner when you leave.

Journalism Practice

Although this programme is broad in its approach, making it appropriate for people who want to explore highly visual documentary photography, we offer a solid grounding in contemporary journalistic practice.

From the first year you will engage in projects that demand solid research skills, a systematic approach to workflow and cataloguing of images and text, written proposals, an ethical approach and an awareness of the various contexts appropriate to this kind of work. You will learn about building a story, captioning and writing for print, web and exhibition outcomes. Lectures and workshops support these practices in the Image and Text, Event and Spontaneity and dedicated article projects in Year one and then within Professional Studies in Year two.

In Year three you will have the freedom to negotiate and explore a sustained body of work of your own choosing. The areas of practice explored in the previous two years will have provided you with the necessary platform to make a fully informed choice for your major project.

Facilities & Resources

As a photography student at Swansea Metropolitan University, you will have access to industry standard facilities.

In addition to our extensive black & white and colour darkrooms, our digital provision includes MAC computers running the Adobe Creative Suite linked to professional proofing and inkjet printers, a colour-managed digital darkroom with Hasselblad Flextight scanners and large format printing.

A store facility gives you access to medium and large-format film cameras, professional digital SLR, medium format Hasselblad digital cameras and location lighting equipment.

Beyond this specialist photographic equipment, you will also have access to an extensive range of facilities including an excellent library, open-access computer suits and optional workshops in other areas within the art school.

We believe that it is essential for your work to have a professional finish and to this end practical projects are supported by workshops. Having access to additional practical knowledge ensures that you can use the University's excellent facilities with confidence, make informed choices about method and equipment, and ultimately produce work to a professional standard. Workshops cover processing and printing including historical print methods, C-type colour, fibre-based black & white; the use of various camera formats from medium format roll-film and 5 X 4 film, to digital (including medium format); digital workflow and printing; video (shooting and editing); studio and location lighting.

• Colour-managed digital darkroom with large-format printing
• Traditional B&W and colour darkrooms
• Store facility with medium and large-format film and digital cameras
• Technical workshops throughout the course

Student experiences & Employment opportunities

Jonathan Morris
Jonathan graduated in 2009. His major project, the documentation of teenagers that gather in the centre of Swansea, coincided with the development of a book, Nu Fiction and Stuff, published by Parthian Books. After approaching the editor, Jonathan collaborated with them to provide access and updates to his work via Flickr and his blog before the final edit was confirmed. The book was published in July 2009. He is continuing his projects and studying for a Masters in Photojournalism at University of Westminster.
www.jonathanjk.viewbook.com

Richard Baybutt
Since graduating in 2004, Richard has been based in London working on magazine commissions and personal projects. A long-standing interest in photographing and engaging in BMX biking and extreme sports has led Richard to specialize in this area although he also tackles commercial, portrait and fashion commissions. The featured image is from a self-initiated project: a road trip by motorbike to the Alps to snowboard. Three different magazines have published this project not, as Richard feels, just because of the quality of the work, but because the film-based, black and white, panoramic aesthetic is an original take on the subject. Richard's clients include Relentless Energy Drinks, Cycling Weekly and The Daily Telegraph.
www.richardbaybutt.com

Paul Read
During the year of his graduation in 2006, Paul was shortlisted for the Ian Parry Award and won The Guardian Student Photographer of the Year Award. Now based in Manchester, Paul works on editorial, commercial and event photography. He also continues to work on self-initiated documentary projects the latest of which is featured here. With the help of funding from Arts Council England, Paul devised the project Foula - Inside Britain's Most Remote Inhabited Island, a documentation of an island in the Shetlands that is ‘a home to 26 residents and has no shop, no pub and a school with only two pupils.' The exhibition will tour nationally from Autumn 2009.
www.paulreadphotography.com

Student gallery

UCAS Codes, Entry requirements, How to apply, Open days & Fees

UCAS Code: W6P5
Course Code Title: BA/ph

Study Options: 3years Full Time/6 years Part-Time

Information on Entry Requirements, How to Apply and Open Days can be found on our main Faculty Page

Information on Fees can be found here

Contact
Programme Director Paul Duerinckx
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
01792 481285 ext: 3114