PG OF CHINA-EU CCS

5 In detail Curating is ubiquitous today. Since the 1990s it has morphed into a creative activity. But how does one become a cultural curator? The programme aims to train you as both a knowledge creator and a intercultural communicator. You will experiment with different formats, different ways of experiencing while creating different meanings. As a contemporary curator you will challenge old formats by re-inventing novel ones, often building on history and previous experiences. As a communicator you will convey rich curatorial data to a larger public, both online and offline. The PG China-EU CCS is unique as it goes beyond mainstream curatorship programmes that operate within the museum sector focusing mostly on high culture. In Flanders in Belgium there are a handful of curatorial studies programmes. The PG China-EU CCS diverges from existing programmes in distinctive three ways: 1 Our programme interprets ‘curatorship’ in a larger sense where ‘curating’ takes place with spill-overs into culture and material culture. 2 A larger geographical scope. Geographically we cover both Europe and China. 3 You will learn how to interact with multilingualism, interculturalism and mobility. The creativity of the curator is key in our programme.

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