The principal of an art college has set out his vision of a continuum of art education stretching from the age of three all the way through to masterâs level.
Andrew Brewerton took over as principal of Plymouth College of Art in 2010. The college already had âa Saturday arts club as part of its commitment to the wider communityâ, he said, which each week saw about 160 children aged four to 18 âcome for an experience increasingly unavailable in schoolsâ. Reflecting on âthe marginalising of arts subjectsâ within schools, âa culture of teaching to the testâ and âa preoccupation with league tablesâ, the management team began to ask themselves what they should do.
What they soon realised, continued Professor Brewerton, was that âthe logic of our position was to create a school. We are an art college. We make things. Letâs make a school.â There might have been no precedent, but if faith groups or parent groups could set up free schools, why shouldnât an art college?
Their goal, as Professor Brewerton put it, was to âcreate a school around the ethos of making, as an approach to learning in all subjectsâ. While pupils in many schools think that âpassing exams is not worth getting out of bed forâ, Professor Brewerton and his colleagues hoped to âwork with the intrinsic motivation of young people to learnâ. So they put in an application for what became the Plymouth School of Creative Arts, which opened in 2011 and will soon cover the whole age range from four to 16, plus an early years class for three-year-olds. The final link in the chain was forged by a separate campus (and community centre), where 16- to 18-year-olds can study for an extended diploma validated by the University of the Arts London.
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Plymouth College of Art was one of the founding associates of Tate Exchange, a new initiative in community-facing arts education that opens up the fifth floor of Switch House at Tate Modern for associates to put on an event of their choice. Plymouth therefore brought a group of 23 pupils and students, aged seven to 57, to London to create a school inside the Tate for three days. They also put on what Professor Brewerton called âa pop-up symposium, inviting a series of provocations on learning and creativity in learningâ.
In his own contribution, he described the philosophy that underlies both the college and the school. Their key principle, he said, was that âmaking is as important as reading and writing, as science and mathsâ. Just as individual art students tend to define themselves as fashion designers or film directors rather than as students, âthe purpose of learning is inseparable from that of living your lifeâ. In learning, he added, âtrue certainty is the preserve of politicians (and they are welcome to it)â, while âthe opposite of the aesthetic is the anaestheticâ.
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The school, according to Professor Brewerton, had been consciously intended as âa catalyst for community transformation, social and economic development in Stonehouse, Millbay and Union Street, a red-light area in the west end of inner-city Plymouth that is included among the 10 per cent most disadvantaged neighbourhoods in the countryâ.
One of the places where the school adopted an innovative approach was the seemingly mundane question of food. Even the initial application to the Department for Education to establish the school noted: âFood is creativity and practical understanding: it is nutrition, health and culinary art; it is crafts and economics, design and entrepreneurship. Food is history and geography, it is culture and language in performance. Food culture is fundamental to human identity. Cuisine is teamwork and business and entrepreneurship, applying laws of chemistry and biology and physics.â
How this has played out in practice, Professor Brewerton told the audience at Tate Modern, revealed âthe transformational potential of creative learning and enquiry for individual livesâ.
âSomething radical occurs when, with her learning experience in school, a girl of six years teaches her mother how to cook fish fingers for their supper with fresh ingredients, from scratch. When the child takes a lead in the learning of the family and â no longer consumers of processed freezer-food â mother and child become makers of their own experience, what happens is a moment of deep emancipation.â
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Print headline:Â Maths to fish fingers: arts-led education focuses on making it
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