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student holding a print TEF 2023 Silver logo

Fine Art Printmaking BA(Hons)

  • Intro
  • Entry
    criteria
  • Course
    content
  • Careers
  • Fees
    and costs
  • Location and
    student life
  • Stay in
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Intro

This rare specialist degree blends traditional printmaking with contemporary image-making processes, including drawing, collage, photography, artists’ books, letterpress and digital imaging.  

You will be working in one of the UK’s best-equipped printmaking workshops, where you’ll be able to explore etching, screen printing, lithography, relief, large-format digital print, letterpress, bookbinding, and traditional photography.  

There are opportunities to engage with local arts communities through schools, galleries and studios, and enhance your professional practice through exhibition visits and guest lectures. 

We offer two other undergraduate courses within our fine art subject area.

  • Fine Art BA(Hons)
  • Fine Art Painting BA(Hons)

Key facts

Location 91¶¶Òõ: City campus

UCAS code W140

Full-time 3 years

What are my next steps?

Open days are the best way to find out about your course, the campus where you'll be based, and get a feel for the 91¶¶Òõ.

Book your place: City campus open day 7 June

Or if you're ready,

Open days are the best way to find out about your course, the campus where you'll be based, and get a feel for the 91¶¶Òõ.

Book your place: City campus open day 7 June

Access our digital prospectus for 2026

When I attended the open day I was amazed by the workshops and resources, which are why I chose the degree. I really enjoyed the course, all of my lecturers were absolutely amazing, knowledgeable and helpful. I learnt a lot and experimented with various printmaking techniques. I am also especially grateful for the printmaking technician team

Reka Ujvari, 2023 graduate

Printmaking student using facilities
Our extensive printmaking workshops are on the light-filled top floor of our central 91¶¶Òõ Grand Parade building.
Printmaking student exhibiting her work
At the end of your degree you with exhibit your work in our major graduate show – this is Liberty Quinn with her piece, Perpetual Depth.
Printmaking students in their workspaces
Students working on a wall-drawing project in their dedicated studio spaces.
Students creating prints outside
Your creative exploration will often take you out of the classroom to work in 91¶¶Òõ’s beautiful natural surroundings.
We have facilities for intaglio, relief, lithography and screen printing in our spacious workshops.
We have facilities for intaglio, relief, lithography and screen printing in our spacious workshops.

Entry criteria

Entry requirements

A-levels or BTEC
Entry requirements are in the range of A-level BBB–BCC (120–104 UCAS Tariff points), or BTEC Extended Diploma DDM–MMM. Our conditional offers typically fall within this range. We are looking for highly motivated and creative students. We will consider you on an individual basis. Your portfolio is the most important and mandatory part of your application. If your predicted or actual grades fall below the range below but you can evidence your thinking, ideas and abilities through a high-quality portfolio we will still consider your application.

Art foundation diploma
Pass. A foundation diploma is not a requirement for entry – it is just one of a range of qualifications that is accepted for admission to this course. 

International Baccalaureate
30 points, with three subjects at Higher level.

Access to HE diploma
Pass with 60 credits overall. Art and design courses preferred. At least 45 credits at level 3, and 30 credits must be at merit or above.

Studied before or got relevant experience?
A qualification, HE credits or relevant experience may count towards your course at 91¶¶Òõ and could mean that you do not have to take some elements of the course or can start in year 2 or 3. 

English language requirements
IELTS 6.0 overall with a minimum of 5.5 in each element. Find out more about the other English qualifications that we accept.

International requirements and visas

International requirements by country
Country name
Albania
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Belarus
Belgium
Bermuda
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Bulgaria
Burma (Myanmar)
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Guyana
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kosovo
Kuwait
Latvia
Lebanon
Liechtenstein
Libya
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macedonia
Malaysia
Malawi
Malta
Mexico
Moldova
Montenegro
Morocco
Namibia
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palestinian National Authority
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Romania
Russian Federation
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Syria
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Tanzania
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United States
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Vietnam
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe

We can help you meet our English language or academic entry requirements.

View our English language courses

For pre-sessional English preparation courses.

For degree preparation courses.

Visas and immigration advice

Applying for a student visa

Check out our step-by-step guidance.

Portfolio advice 

Admission to this course involves reviewing your portfolio. After you apply, we will ask you to share a link to an online portfolio of your work. This enables us to see your potential and understand your approach and motivations.

We will ask you to log on to to share your portfolio link. We will not be able to progress your application to 91¶¶Òõ until you share your portfolio.

  • Find out about the specific requirements for your course.

Creating your portfolio
We’ve put together advice and guidance to help you create and share your portfolio and we run regular online portfolio advice sessions where you can get help from our expert team.

Contextual admissions

At 91¶¶Òõ, we understand that not everyone has the same opportunities, and some may face extra challenges to meet grade requirements. Every 91¶¶Òõ applicant is treated as an individual and we value creativity, persistence, resourcefulness and big ideas alongside grades.

If you meet our contextual admissions criteria, your offer from us will be at least two grades or 16 UCAS tariff points lower than the standard for your course.

Sign up for an .

If we make you a contextual offer, you may be eligible for extra financial support through our 91¶¶Òõ Boost cost of living package. Find out about the 91¶¶Òõ Boost.

Graphic with the text 'Potential + possibility'

Course content

Top reasons to choose this course

  • We allow you the space and give you the guidance to think through making, turning ideas into tangible creative outcomes.
  • You will gain skills in working with a range of materials and processes, understanding that new discoveries can be made by engaging with materials and processes.
  • You will be working in one of the UK’s best-equipped printmaking workshops.
  • Lecturers are practising artists who bring a diverse range of skills and experience to your learning.
  • You will plan, organise and execute exhibitions of artwork for public audience.
  • We give you the tools to communicate ideas in visual, written and spoken forms.
  • Strong links with local arts communities provide volunteer and employment opportunities.
  • Over the course you will develop tenacity, resourcefulness, resilience and self-motivation, fundamental aspects of sustaining an art practice or working within the creative industries.
  • There is space to discuss, articulate and critically evaluate your own and others artwork.
  • You will graduate knowing how to develop professional proposal documents that communicate planned work in visual and text form and include ethical and health and safety considerations.
  • At the end of your degree you will exhibit a body of work in the university’s graduate show and graduating students often organise a self-funded show.
  • You have the opportunity to apply for an exchange programme with the University of Nagoya, Japan.

 

Year 1

You will explore a variety of ways of working, including investigating drawing in an expanded way, colour theory and ideas development. You’ll have theoretical lectures and seminars as well as technical inductions into all the main processes of printmaking (etching, lithography, screen, relief, Photoshop and Illustrator). You will be supported to develop research into interests and concerns that motivate you as an individual. You will also collaboratively plan a group exhibition and take part in a print edition project.

Modules

  • Studio Practice 1: Orientation

    This module orientates you to the main elements of studio practice. Research informed teaching introduces you to various methods of contextual and critical exploration that will underpin the development of your practice, informing the development of professional skills. Seminars and tutorials will give you the opportunity to discuss your interests with each other, helping to generate and develop creative ideas.

  • Studio Practice 2: Enquiry, Edition, Exhibition

    This module provides you with the opportunity to match your imaginative and intellectual concerns against the constraints and potentials of editioned printmaking, a skill set that contributes to professional employability. This experience will lead to the planning and presentation of a year group exhibition. By demonstrating an increasingly fluent, critically informed understanding of your visual research, you will develop a convincingly progressive printmaking practice.

  • Printmaking Technical Inductions

    This module provides technical demonstration and direct workshop engagement with the main processes of etching, lithography, screen printing, relief and digital printmaking processes. You will also compare and contrast the potential of the processes to which you are introduced.

  • Theories and Practices of Fine Art: Introduction to Global Art Histories and Art Writing

    This module introduces you to global art histories underpinned by art writing and art practice. You'll explore and critique Western art history, indigenous, decolonial, punk, feminist and queer art histories, high and low art theory, art criticism, art journalism and artist's experimental writing.

Making sure that what you learn with us is relevant, up to date and what employers are looking for is our priority, so courses are reviewed and enhanced on an ongoing basis. When you have applied to us, you’ll be told about any new developments through .


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Year 2

The second year is when you really begin to develop your work and your autonomy of practice, testing your ideas and research methodologies, and clarifying what aspects of printmaking you want to refine. The fine art exhibition, held in and around the university gallery, gives you the opportunity to exhibit your work with your peers from other disciplines. A public engagement module provides connectivity between studio and workshop activity, usually a school- or artist-led project, and a professional working environment.

Modules

  • Diary Practice: Making Meaning in Times of Global Challenge

    With our world facing unprecedented challenges, including hunger, poverty and climate change, it is critical to rethink how we live, work and learn. In this module you will explore ways in which fine art practices have engaged with these challenges and sought new ways of connecting communities. During the module, you will develop a project that explores an area relating to the UN’s Sustainability Development Goals.

  • Professional Development

    This module will support the development of your independent practice, explore how your learning can be used to improve your employability and enterprise prospects and identify key skills you have acquired to date. It looks at issues related to your personal and professional practice, including a variety of presentation forms, visual and written documentation, and how these can be used to publicise and disseminate your work and ideas.

  • Theories and Practices of Fine Art: Contexts and Specialisms

    This module will explore the theoretical, analytical and critical frameworks in your field of fine art practice. It addresses how characteristics of disciplines, genres and media have been defined and challenged within an expanding and global field of practice. You will be encouraged to think about and articulate your ideas around art and consider alternative viewpoints to the Eurocentric Western cultural traditions within fine art.

  • Studio Practice 3: Investigation, Experimentation, Public Exhibition and Engagement

    In this module, you will develop a body of work using a self-determined approach to printmaking, testing ideas and processes across print media and related materials. You’ll learn the practical and professional practice skills to prepare and present work for public exhibition, using safe, ethical and inclusive working methods. Post exhibition, you will focus on deepening your practical and critical research and engaging with the public through collaboration with external organisations.

Screen printing

Final year

In your third year the exploration of creative possibilities intensifies as you consolidate your interests in order to plan a resolved body of work for the graduate show. This is an exciting time when the insights and experience gained throughout the course come together to present undergraduate practice at its most inventive, thought-provoking and professional. There is also a focus on the development of your practice after undergraduate study and the course has a proven track record of progression to respected masters-level courses.

Modules

  • Studio Practice 4: Speculation and Integration

    This module builds upon year 2 and offers a period of speculation, reflection and planning in which you will define a self-directed studio practice. Informed by research and investigation, you will integrate the various elements of your studies into a coherent and critically informed practice. The module also encourages you to look ahead to opportunities within and beyond education and record these in a professional development file.

  • Theories and Practices of Fine Art: Articulation of Your Critical Position

    In this module you will continue to work with increasing independence, expanding and refining your work in relation to theory and practice. The practical aspects of this module give you a foundation to explore, develop and shape your independent and reflective positions on art. You will identify a focused area of investigation and articulate an in-depth body of work which demonstrates an understanding of the theories and issues that underpin your subject.

  • Studio Practice 5: Coherence and Syntheses – Degree Exhibition

    This module supports you to develop and complete a coherent and critically informed body of work that best reflects a print language appropriate to your interests and concerns. A body of contextual and theoretical research will underpin the thinking within your practice. You will consider approaches to the professional presentation of your work and refine your skills so you can work safely, ethically and sustainably in an exhibition context.

Student work

Facilities

The course benefits from top-class facilities including:

  • dedicated studio space for each student 
  • facilities for intaglio, relief, lithography and screen printing 
  • expert technical staff to assist you in workshops and inductions into equipment and technologies 
  • essential hand tools available for loan 
  • Media Centre, including specialist equipment such as materials for sound, film and photography available for short-term loan, computer rooms with contemporary software for digital image processing and manipulation, graphic layout and typography, animation, film and sound production and editing
  • the TECH HUB – a team of technical demonstrators based in Grand Parade who provide specialist creative software support including Adobe CC (Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, After Effects etc), Rhino, Blender and C4D, as well as web and blog-related software. They manage digital manufacturing services within the School of Art and Media, including laser cutting, 3D printing, CNC routing, plasma cutting and 3-axis CNC milling. They also have VR headsets and 3D scanners. The TECH HUB has its own dedicated PC suite with all of the software they support as well as standard university programmes
  • Photographic Services Unit including well-equipped dark room, studio and camera loan facilities
  • department print bureau 
  • one of the country’s best-stocked specialist art and design libraries 
  • internationally important Design Archives
  • on-site supplies shop.

Facilities

Meet the team

Phil Tyler, course leader

Phil Tyler is a practising artist who is interested in the relationship between the materiality of painting and its potential to act as a cypher for grief, loss and the notion of the sublime. His practice involves painting, drawing, printmaking photography, collage, digital image and writing.

He has exhibited work both nationally and internationally since the mid 1980s, including in the ING Discerning Eye, Royal Institute of Oil Painters, The Lynn Painter-Stainers prize, The Garrick Milne Prize, The Royal Over-seas League, East, The National Open and the Whitworth Young Contemporaries competitions, and most recently his work was part of an exhibition of 82 British Artists in Poland and well as The Ruth Borchard Prize. His work is in both public and private collections in this country as well as in America, Australia Finland, Hong Kong and Sweden, including 91¶¶Òõ Museum and Art Gallery.

Other staff include:

  • Chris Hunt, Ray Dennis, Heike Roesel and Wayne Case (technicians).
Portrait by Phil Tyler

Portrait by Phil Tyler

Summer shows 2024

Every year our brilliant art and media students show their work at the 91¶¶Òõ Summer Shows. The shows are finished for 2024, but you can still take a virtual wander and explore our students’ creative work.

More about this subject at 91¶¶Òõ

I knew I wanted to take a course that would provide me with a good range of technical skills, as well as the opportunity to think more deeply about artistic practice from theoretical perspective. I knew 91¶¶Òõ had a brilliantly equipped printmaking department, indeed, one of the best in the UK

Agnieszka Szymaniak, graduate

Careers

What can I do with a printmaking degree?

  • Fine artist
  • Art therapist 
  • Ceramics designer 
  • Gallery manager 
  • Community arts worker 
  • Graphic designer 
  • Illustrator 
  • Teacher 
  • Arts administrator 
  • Conservator 
  • Exhibition designer 
  • Textiles designer 
  • Museum education officer 
  • Curator
  • Advertising.

This degree also opens up a range of postgraduate study options. At 91¶¶Òõ, for example, you could progress on to:

  • Fine Art MA
  • Art and Design PGCE.

You could also choose to study for a PhD at 91¶¶Òõ alongside our team of world-leading researchers.

Showcasing BA Printmaking student work

Professional advice and support 

Outside of your course, our Careers Service is here to support you as you discover (and rediscover) your strengths and what matters to you. We are here for you throughout your university journey as you work towards a fulfilling and rewarding career.

Connect with our careers team

  • Find part-time work that you can combine with your studies.
  • Find, or be, a mentor or get involved with our peer-to-peer support scheme.
  • Develop your business ideas through our entrepreneurial support network.
  • Get professional advice and support with career planning, CV writing and interview top tips.
  • Meet potential employers at our careers fairs.
  • Find rewarding volunteering opportunities to help you discover more about what makes you tick and build your CV.

Whatever your career needs, we are here to help. And that’s not just while you are a student – our support carries on after you’ve graduated.

Find out more about our Careers Service...

Coloured background with the words Be More, Connected, Skilled, Employable
  • Top 35% in the UK for graduate earnings in creative arts and design, three years after graduating, Longitudinal Education Outcomes, 2022

  • Top 20 in the UK for art and design, QS World University Rankings® 2025

Fees and costs

Course fees

UK (full-time) 9,535 GBP

International (full-time) 17,250 GBP

The fees listed here are for the first year of full-time study if you start your course in the academic year 2025–26.

You will pay fees for each year of your course. Some fees may increase each year.

UK undergraduate and some postgraduate fees are regulated by the UK government and increases will not be more than the maximum amount allowed. Course fees that are not regulated may increase each year by up to 5% or RPI (whichever is higher).

If you are studying part-time your fee will usually be calculated based on the number of modules that you take.

Find out more

  • 91¶¶Òõ Boost – cost of living help for our new undergrad students. Find out about how we can help with your study, accommodation or travel costs and more...
  • Fees, bursaries, scholarships and government funding info for UK and international undergraduate students
  • Student finance and budgeting while studying
  • Read our student contract and (pdf) for more on 91¶¶Òõ tuition fees.

What's included

You may have to pay additional costs during your studies. The cost of optional activities is not included in your tuition fee and you will need to meet this cost in addition to your fees. A summary of the costs that are included and any extras that you may be expected to pay while studying a course  in the School of Art and Media in the 2022–23 academic year are listed here.

  • Typically, practice-based courses incur more costs than text-based subjects. For many courses you will need to budget for the cost of specialist materials, equipment and printing and are likely to spend between £50–£300 per year.
  • For some courses you may also need to budget up to £100 for specialist personal protective clothing which, with care, will last for the whole of your course and beyond.
  • For most courses you will have the opportunity to attend field trips and off-site visits, for example to galleries, exhibitions and studios both in the UK and overseas. These are optional and are not required to pass your course. The amount spent would be based on location and number of trips taken, and typically range between £100 and £700 across the duration of your course.
  • You will have access to computers and necessary software at City campus and Moulsecoomb campus and at other locations across the university. Specialist equipment is provided to cover essential learning. Students may choose to buy their own specialist equipment, these may include cameras, or computers and software, university/student discounts are available for some equipment and software. Budgets can range from £50–£2,000. Buying specialist equipment is best undertaken in consultation with our academic and technical staff. This expenditure is not essential to pass any of our courses.
  • For some courses you will need to budget up to £200 for printing and publishing. Photography courses may incur higher costs (£500–£2,000) when printing and framing images of professional standard for public presentation.
  • Course books, magazines and journals are available in the university libraries. You do not need to have your own copies, but if you wish to, you should budget up to £200 over your course to buy them.
  • For courses in which there is an optional placement year, you will need to budget for living costs (rent, food, travel etc) in that city/country, as if you were on site at the university.
  • For some courses you will need to budget up to £150 for stationery.
  • Final-year graduation shows are opportunities to present your final, independent project work to the public. Practice-based courses will typically incur higher costs. Depending on the specific nature of your final project you will need to budget between £20–£2,500.

You can chat with our enquiries team if you have a question or need more information. Or check our finance pages for advice about funding and scholarships as well as more information about fees and advice on international and island fee-paying status.

Location and student life

Campus where this course is taught

City campus

City campus is located at the heart of central 91¶¶Òõ.

The facilities for making and designing, the theatre, galleries, workshops, studios, archives and the independent arts organisations based on site provide a unique and inspiring environment where creativity thrives.

St Peter’s House library and Phoenix halls of residence are close to the Grand Parade main building where you will find the student centre with careers, counselling, student advice service, and disability and dyslexia support. Edward Street provides extensive teaching and gallery space for media, photography and film.

Also on site are and 91¶¶Òõ .

91¶¶Òõ Pavilion, 91¶¶Òõ Museum and Art Gallery, the iconic pier and beach are a very short walk away. The independent shops and businesses of the North Laine and Kemptown, and 91¶¶Òõ main line station, with frequent express services to London, are 10 minutes walk.

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Accommodation

We guarantee an offer of a place in halls of residence to all eligible students. So if you applied for halls by the deadline you are guaranteed a room in our halls of residence.

91¶¶Òõ: City campus

Halls of residence
We have self-catered halls on all our campuses, within minutes of your classes, and other options that are very nearby.

You can apply for any of our halls, but the options closest to your study location are:

  • Phoenix halls are in the heart of the city, a short walk from City campus – and from the seafront.
  • Varley Park is a popular dedicated halls site, offering a mix of rooms and bathroom options at different prices. It is around four miles from the city centre and is easy to get to by bus.

Want to live independently? We can help – find out more about private renting.

Phoenix Brewery Halls Accommodation

Accommodation for City campus is in the nearby Phoenix Halls

Student kitchen in Phoenix Halls

Student kitchen in Phoenix Halls

Relaxing in nearby Pavilion Gardens

Relaxing in nearby Pavilion Gardens

Local area

One of Time Out's 50 best cities in the world

“91¶¶Òõ has… all the important parts of a sprawling cosmopolitan metropolis (connections to London in under an hour, an array of properly excellent restaurants, energetic late-night spots) … with the easy-breezy beachy attitude to life that makes you feel welcome in an instant.”
Time Out’s 50 Best Cities in the World, 2025

About 91¶¶Òõ

The 91¶¶Òõ is at the heart of our city’s reputation as a welcoming, forward-thinking place which leads the way when it comes to the arts, music, sustainability and creative technology. 91¶¶Òõ is home to a thriving creative community and a digital sector worth £1bn a year. Many of the work-based learning opportunities offered on our courses such as placements, live briefs and guest lectures are provided by businesses and organisations based in the city.

We provide support and venues for key events in the city’s arts calendar including the 91¶¶Òõ Festival, the Festival Fringe, the Great Escape, the 91¶¶Òõ Digital Festival, 91¶¶Òõ Photo Biennial and the Cinecity 91¶¶Òõ Film Festival. Other annual highlights include Pride, the 91¶¶Òõ Marathon, and Burning the Clocks which marks the winter solstice. Our own 91¶¶Òõ Graduate Show transforms our campus into the largest exhibition space in the South East as we celebrate the outstanding talent and creativity of our students.

As a student you’ll get lots of opportunities to experience these events at first hand and to develop your skills through the volunteering and other opportunities they offer.

You'll find living in 91¶¶Òõ enriches your learning experience and by the end of your course you will still be finding new things to explore and inspire you.

It's only 50 minutes by train from 91¶¶Òõ to central London and there are daily direct trains to Bristol, Bedford, Cambridge, Gatwick Airport, Portsmouth and Southampton.

Map showing distance to London from 91¶¶Òõ
91¶¶Òõ Beach sunset

Maps

City campus map

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Support and wellbeing

Your course team

Your personal academic tutor, course leader and other tutors are all there to help you with your personal and academic progress. You'll also have a student support and guidance tutor (SSGT) who can help with everything from homesickness, managing stress or accommodation issues.

Your academic skills

Our 91¶¶Òõ Student Skills Hub gives you extra support and resources to develop the skills you'll need for university study, whatever your level of experience so far.

Your mental health and wellbeing

As well as being supported to succeed, we want you to feel good too. You'll be part of a community that builds you up, with lots of ways to connect with one another, as well having access to dedicated experts if you need them. Find out more about how we support your wellbeing.

Sport at 91¶¶Òõ

Sport 91¶¶Òõ

Sport 91¶¶Òõ brings together our sport and recreation services. As a 91¶¶Òõ student you'll have use of sport and fitness facilities across all our campuses and there are opportunities to play for fun, fitness or take part in serious competition. 

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Sports scholarships

Our sports scholarship scheme is designed to help students develop their full sporting potential to train and compete at the highest level. We offer scholarships for elite athletes, elite disabled athletes and talented sports performers.

Find out more about sport scholarships.

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Take a tour of sport facilities on our Falmer campus

Stay in touch

Ask a question about this course

If you have a question about this course, our enquiries team will be happy to help.

01273 644644

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Your campus on Instagram
See what art students based at our City campus are sharing on .

Follow the printmaking students on . 

Open days

If you are unable to attend on the advertised dates, you can arrange a visit by contacting the printmaking administrator Zo Bothwell. Z.Bothwell@brighton.ac.uk.

During your visit you will be able to have a tour of the printmaking studios and look around our City campus.

Statistics

Find out more about how the academic year and degree courses are organised and about learning and assessment activities you might get to grips with at 91¶¶Òõ. More specific information about this course is detailed in the programme specification (linked below). You can find out also about the support we offer to help you adjust to university life.

Course and module descriptions on this page were accurate when first published and are the basis of the course. Detailed information on any changes we make to modules and learning and assessment activities will be sent to all students by email before enrolment so that you have all the information before you come to 91¶¶Òõ.

Discover Uni

Discover Uni enables you to compare information when choosing a UK university course. All UK universities publish Discover Uni data on its website.

Course specification

Course specifications are the approved description of each course. They contain a breakdown of the content and structure of the course, learning outcomes and assessment. Course specs are updated following course changes.

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  • Digital Games Development BSc(Hons)

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  • Product Design BSc(Hons)

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  • Fashion Communication with Business Studies BA(Hons)

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  • 3D Design and Craft BA(Hons)

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  • Animation BA(Hons)

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  • Fashion Design with Business Studies BA(Hons)

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  • Graphic Design BA(Hons)

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  • Games Art and Design BA(Hons)

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  • Illustration BA(Hons)

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  • Photography BA(Hons)

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  • Art History and Visual Culture BA(Hons)

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  • Fashion and Design History BA(Hons)

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