Title of article :
Practice-based Doctorates and Questions of Academic Legitimacy
Author/Authors :
Candlin، Fiona نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی 1 سال 2000
Abstract :
Over the last six years there has been a massive
increase in the number of students studying for
practice-based doctorates in Art and Design. It is
now possible to do a practice-based PhD in over
forty departments, although what is expected from
doctoral students varies considerably across institutions.
In 1997 the United Kingdom Council for
Graduate Education (UKCGE) addressed the variance
between practice-based doctorates in the
report Practice-Based Doctorates in the Creative and
Performing Arts and Design. This paper examines
the recommendations made by the report and
asks to what extent does it acknowledge art as a
legitimate research practice within the university.
The UKCGE report recommends that all practicebased
PhDs have a substantial theoretical and
contextualising element that will demonstrate
general scholarly requirements and render the
artwork accessible to judgement. I argue that this
proposal is problematic on several counts; it draws
a firm line between theory and practice, places
academic research in opposition to practice
generally and artwork specifically, maintains the
stereotype of art as anti-intellectual and forgets the
degree to which theory is itself a practice. In addition
it suggests that art practice can only be
legitimised as research when it is framed by a
conventionally academic enquiry. I suggest that
instead of trying to make art practice fit academic
regulations it would be more productive to use the
practice-based PhDs as a way of re-thinking academic
conventions and scholarly requirements.
Journal title :
International Journal of Art & Design Education
Journal title :
International Journal of Art & Design Education