AHT3138 - Space, place and society - 2019

6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL

Undergraduate - Unit

Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.

Faculty

Art, Design and Architecture

Organisational Unit

Department of Fine Art

Chief examiner(s)

Dr Luke Smythe

Coordinator(s)

Dr Luke Smythe

Unit guides

Offered

Caulfield

  • Second semester 2019 (On-campus)

Prerequisites

12 credit points at second year level in Art History and Theory, or Theory of Art and Design, or Visual Culture, or permission from Unit Coordinator.

Prohibitions

AHT2138, AHT3138, TAD2138

Notes

This unit was formerly coded TAD3138

Synopsis

This unit focuses on the representation, design, experience and interpretation of space, both in Australia and abroad. Concepts of space and place are central to any understanding of modern society and culture and are at the forefront of scholarship and thought in several disciplines. This unit considers the aesthetics, politics and ethics of a wide range of social spatial environments, discourses and environments, with a particular emphasis on the ideas of space as inclusion and space as exclusion.

Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this unit students will:

  1. Be aware of current discourses in art, indigenous studies, public space and architecture that deal with the representation, experience and interpretation of space;
  2. Be able to identify the social dynamic in key examples of recent art, architectural and design practice concerned with the articulation of place and spatial experience;
  3. Have an awareness of how the notion of place differs across the various historical, cultural and political circumstances in which art is made;
  4. Have acquired a good understanding of the multiple ways in which space is articulated and experienced within an Australian context that is grounded in Indigenous culture and history;
  5. Have developed the skills to perform a critical analysis of spatial environments;
  6. Have become aware of the theoretical and cultural precedents for and dimensions of their own practice.

Assessment

100% in-semester assessment

Workload requirements

12 hours per week including 3 contact hours plus 9 hours of independent study, or equivalent.

See also Unit timetable information