Arts At The University Of Brighton
About Arts At The University Of Brighton
College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Brighton
Arts At The University Of Brighton Description
The University of Brighton's historic Faculty of Arts was established in 1859 and is located across four campuses in Brighton and Hastings. We provide a vibrant and exciting environment for the study of Art, Architecture, Design, English, Fashion, Humanities, Media and many other courses at undergraduate, postgraduate and research levels.
We also maintain an on-site exhibition gallery and theatre, hosting events of international standing. Alongside one of the country's best art and design libraries are the internationally renowned Design Archives (including the Design Council Archives) and the Aldrich Collection of artworks.
To find out more please visit http://arts. brighton. ac. uk /
or call us on + 44 (0)1273 600 900
Or follow us on Twitter: www. twitter.com/artsbrighton
Reviews
A special screening of Human Harvest, an award-winning documentary. 20 Sep 7pm. Grand Parade http://bit.ly/2uXEi86
Women Over 50 Film Festival. 50+ short films, Q&As, workshops. 16 - 17 Sep. Grand Parade. http://bit.ly/2vgbrY8
National Geographic 2017 Travel Photographer of the Year: the best entries
Emergence - UBIC Arts and Design end of year show End of year exhibition of work by students from The University of Brighton's International College (Pre-Masters for Arts, Design and Media Foundation Certificate for Arts, Design and Media). 3 - 8 August 2017. Grand Parade
Great video about the Brighton & Hove Albion: a journey from nowhere to the Premier League
Guernica Remakings. An exhibition exploring the ongoing power of Pablo Picasso’s iconic painting Guernica (1937) through a display of contemporary reworking. 31 July - 23 August 2017. University Gallery
How we made Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket
“Trauma, Storytelling and Time Travel” by Leslie Kendall Dye
The first UK film biography of the world-renowned Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849), whose print The Great Wave is as globally famous as Leonardo's Mona Lisa.
What happened to the French army after Dunkirk
Within this political and ideological landscape of Tory cuts, austerity, threats of privatisation, editorial control and neo-liberalism, it's time to consider the history, politics, production and public role of British medical television. British Medical Television Conference. 27-28 July, Edward Street.
MBE for Product Design grad Emily Brooke http://bit.ly/2tIFgQF