MATER IN SCULPTURE
Taito City, Japan
DURATION
LANGUAGES
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PACE
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APPLICATION DEADLINE
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EARLIEST START DATE
Apr 2024
TUITION FEES
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STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
Scholarships
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Introduction
The Department of Sculpture was launched in 1887 with the establishment of a sculpture course as a specialist program. This was later expanded into a plastic arts department in 1899. With the school’s transformation into Tokyo Geijutsu Daigaku in the 1949 educational reforms, the department once again became the Department of Sculpture.
The current sculpture building on the Ueno Campus was built in 1971, and the doctoral program was established in 1977. Each year, a certain number of graduate students do their creative work at the Toride Campus.
Educational philosophy:
The Department of Sculpture stresses the importance of developing highly sensitive graduates capable of developing a vision for the future of art from a broad-ranging, global perspective, based on the history of art to date and the traditions of Japanese art. It attempts to instill this perspective by focusing on a broad-ranging study of the plastic arts and seeks to cultivate graduates capable of working as creative artists, as well as providing instruction in various arts-related areas.
In the master’s degree program, students are supported by and work within a unique educational structure based on studios tailored to each student’s research goals.
In addition, community involvement programs encourage each student to draw fully on his or her talents, unconstrained by preconceived domains of practice and materials, thereby providing opportunities to examine the possibilities of art in connection with society.