WIRAD-Welsh Institute for Research in Art and Design
Welsh Institute for Research in Art and Design
Home | Contact
Aim & ObjectivesResearch ThemesResearch TrainingSeminars & ConferencesResearchersJournalsResourcesNews & EventsNews & Events ArchiveRepository

European Centre for Photographic Research

Established in 2000, the European Centre for Photographic Research (eCPR) provides a focus in Wales for high quality research in photography that builds on both its institutional heritage and internationally renowned scholarship. It aims to develop work that addresses both the cultural histories of photography and the contemporary issues and debates informing photographic and film-based art and documentary practices.

 

The development of a thriving postgraduate research culture within the eCPR has led to the current lively, experimental and contemporary engagement with photography, photography understood not as a fixed discipline but an expanding, multi-faceted field of research, drawing upon a broad range of other academic disciplines, ranging from Art History to Politics. eCPR seeks to be at the forefront of photographic research- research that can be undertaken through practice as well as history and theory. Indeed, with the forthcoming introduction of practice-based Doctorates, eCPR will seek to challenge the existing hierarchies that tend to exist between ‘practice' and ‘theory' within the study of photography.

 

The Centre's staff, Visiting Fellows and associated research students, cover a range of critical interests in photography and these have been concentrated into four areas:

  • Rethinking Documentary

  • The Experience of Place

  • Consumer Culture

  • Photography's Contexts

More on the European Centre for Photographic Research.

Seminar: What is shown in a landscape picture?

 

2-5pm, March 24th 2010
H8A from 2-5pm, University of Wales, Newport


Six practicing photographers/artists will present their current work in order to generate responses to the many and diverse approaches photography has taken towards the land and landscape. More information.

Centre for Photographic Research