Art and design admissions tutors explain how your personal statement can serve as a taster of your creative potential (and your interview).
The underlying message is that tutors want to know about you, your practice, your inspirations, and your aspirations, and for your personal statement to act as written accompaniment to your portfolio and performance at interview.
‘Stay on task, focus it, and try to get across your personality and your commitment and enthusiasm for the subject. I love to see some notion that you’ve done something off your own back, like relevant books you’ve read or exhibitions you’ve visited, and how this has informed your own practice. I’m especially impressed when applicants make reference to items they’ll be bringing in their portfolio and write about their approach to a project and what their influences are. I find this very insightful and it makes us feel we really want to meet you. Giving us a sense of where you see yourself going in the future is great too.’ David Mcgravie | School Of Creative Arts Associate Dean – University Of Hertfordshire
Admissions tutors prefer to read personal statements that don't stick to a predictable formula – here are a few tactics to ensure yours packs a punch.
It's all summed up nicely by Arts University Bournemouth whose advice is:
'Be focused on the field you're applying for (no scattergun approach), name artists or designers you admire, think contemporary, reflect on exhibitions or galleries or events you've visited, and don't think "I'll tell them at the interview" – put it in the statement!'
Find out more about studying art and design, including entry requirements, why you should study it, and possible careers it could lead on to.