All societies need reference points to form their future and to orient themselves in the present. Craft constitutes such a reference point through its association with human needs and activities. The subject of craft extends from tradition to science, forming an exciting, artistic arena. The Masters programme in Crafts at HDK-Valand Art and Design, University of Gothenburg is an all-encompassing environment that involves constant exchange and interaction between undergraduate education, research, and society.
The courses in the programme are taken together with students from the three specializations (Jewellery Art; Ceramic Art and Textile Art). During your education you will develop your ability to initiate and resolve artistic projects creating vital confidence with your own working methods. This requires independence and the capacity for experimentation. As a student, you will have the opportunity to broaden your frame of reference, develop exploratory artistic working methods, deepen your technical and theoretical knowledge, reflexive and critical thinking. You will work in close cooperation with fellow students and staff. Additionally, you will have an individually allocated workplace and generous access to the school and be a part of a vibrant and dynamic Department of Craft and Fine Art.
Artistic exploration through materials and concepts is the basis of the programme. Course work encourages the development of skill-based knowledge, fosters debate about the meaning of material inquiries, and investigates the conceptual identity of craft, with specific emphasis on craft’s social meanings. Through studio work, theory, writing, and reflection, you will shape your artistic expression, and have further support with lectures, seminars, and supervision. The artistic and investigatory process comprises the foundation of the programme and you will have access to well-equipped workshops and study places right in the centre of Gothenburg. We invite international specialists and practitioners to come and visit us, to encourage an international network within the subject area.
The first semester starts with a subject-specific practical and theoretical introduction where you will outline your focus and goals for your studies. Material-based, practical, technical, and contextual experiences are broadened through exploratory inquiries and artistic risk taking.
During the second semester you will create in-depth artistic projects in order to develop understanding of your choices, working methods, and the context you are operating in from a historical and contemporary craft perspective.
During the third semester the focus shifts from the self-initiated look to the viewer's gaze: to view and to be viewed. The exhibition format is examined in practice and theory. Prerequisites for a professional life are addressed. You will begin your independent degree project this semester.
During the fourth semester you will complete your independent degree project that includes a major artistic work, a degree report, and a presentation of the project within the framework of a degree exhibition.
Anna Tegeström Wolgers
Professor of Craft, Textile Art
Anna T. Wolgers works across multiple disciplines in arts and craft. For the last 15 years Anna has worked mainly in the textile field exploring the semiotics of textiles and their narrative values. Textile materials, tactile and visual recognition are elements that Wolgers works with.
Wolgers has participated in numerous international and national exhibitions including public commissions and collaborative works with museums, where she has curated projects/exhibitions. Wolgers is chairwoman of the textile network Fiber Art Sweden
Email:
www.fiberartsweden.nu
www.annatw.se
www.kasiden.se
Yuka Oyama PhD
Professor of Craft, Jewellery Art
Yuka Oyama is a Japanese-German artist who grew up in Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan, USA and Germany. Oyama’s artistic practice incorporates sculpture, jewellery, video, photography, public interventions, choreographic experimentations and performances.
Her life-sized, wearable sculptures, object-human hybrids – objectified humans and personified objects – display disconnections often felt in contemporary life: the degeneration of human-to-human emotional communication and our sense of belonging. Oyama employs everyday objects to upset these disconnections, facilitating our ability to act beyond set conventions.
Oyama was one of the core members of the artistic research, Critical Costume 2000 -Costume Agency (2020) based at Oslo National Academy of the Arts, where she acted as the curator and the creative director. Oyama’s research considers critical adornments, material culture, and identity.
Katarina Andersson
Senior Lecturer and Programme Director MA Craft
Katarina Andersson is a senior lecturer and since 2016 is the programme director for MA Craft. She is an artist and designer and her work extend between sculptural objects and tableware. Ceramics and glass are her main materials. Her work involves both semiotics, the relation between materials, objects in relation to space and objects as mediators.
Katarina Andersson has worked as a curator and project leader for various craft projects. She was previously senior lecturer at Konstfack at the Ceramic and Glass department, where she led the pilot project in artistic research Keramiska väggmaterial i offentlig miljö.
Email: