Upcoming events
Featured: Robyn Beeche Award
MONDAY 30 NOVEMBER — SUNDAY 13 DECEMBER 2020
Robyn Beeche Foundation Award Outstanding Graduate Folio 2020
Established in 2016 The Robyn Beeche Foundation is committed to maintaining and promoting Robyn Beeche’s photographic archive, in order to provide charitable support to emerging artists and cultural exchange.
In partnership with RMIT Photography, the Foundation provides a $2000 cash award to support an outstanding graduate student.
Inez Brookes, Ryley Clarke, Teva Cosic, Wil Edgar, Liam Folie, Emmie Guy, Fiona Lewis, Hannah Phemister, and Lucas St Grima.
Featured: Fine Art Dean’s Awards
11.45AM AEDT
MONDAY 30 NOVEMBER 2020
ONLINE: TEAMS LIVE
Presented by Professor Kit Wise, Dean, School of Art.
Featured: Negotiating Constraint
MONDAY 30 NOVEMBER — SUNDAY 13 DECEMBER 2020
Using limited options to propel creative breakthrough has been an ongoing theme in 2020. Students in the RMIT School of Art Master of Photography have demonstrated remarkable technical and conceptual problem-solving skills, resulting in strong resolved bodies of work.
2020 graduates of the Master of Photography are Yulin Du (aka Mona), Xiaoxiao Jia (aka Terri), Thomas Kunyoul Lee, Hongya Liu (aka Leaya), Wenxiao Liu (aka Elsa), Sarah Lynch, Morganna Magee, Jon Tubby, Huan Wang (aka Max), Zitian Wang, and Michelle Williams.
Online exhibition curated by Dr Alison Bennett, Master of Photography Program Manager.
Featured: Print Studio LIVE Printing
2–4PM AEDT
WEDNESDAY 2 DECEMBER 2020
ONLINE: COLLABORATE ULTRA
Students & Staff demonstrate various printing techniques used to produce graduate artworks.
Leah Clarke, Mae Hartrick, Ela Schuster will be on campus in the Print Workshops with Chloe Bennett, Eleanor Franks and Susana Rivas online monitoring questions.
Staff: Richard Harding and Kyoko Imazu will be on site to assist.
Featured: MFA Radio
WEDNESDAY 9 DECEMBER 2020
Welcome to MFA Radio, two hours of music playlisted by students graduating from the program along with members of staff. There’s no need to re-hash any tired cliches about the fruitful (and sometimes strained) relationship between pop-music and art school, what we’re presenting here is far looser than that. Some of what’s included relates directly to an artist’s practice, while other songs are favoured soundtracks for those bleary-eyed nights spent writing methodology reports.
Threads include ice-cream themes, punk, indy, Persian blues, Chinese classical, dub, jungle, Miami Bass, cumbia, salsa, industrial, electro, no-wave, proto-techno, dancehall, and more.