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Undergraduate

BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries

Behind the scenes photograph of students looking at a photoshop mock-up.
Behind-the-scenes photoshoot with musician Yiigaa at Kingswood House.
College
London College of Communication
UCAS code
W645
Start date
September 2024
Course length
3 years

Make an impact in the creative industries by exploring new possibilities in 2D images, 3D images, film and content on BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries.

With a focus on mastering skills in lighting, imaging and post-production, you’ll unlock your creative voice, pitch ideas and form partnerships while responding to client briefs and developing an attention-grabbing portfolio.

Course summary

Applications closed 2024/25 

We are no longer accepting applications for 2024/25 entry to this course.

Visit the Courses with places available page for a full list of UAL courses that are open for application.

Please note: The title of this course has changed from BA (Hons) Commercial Photography to BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries for entry in 2025/26.

Why choose this course at London College of Communication

  • Learn from tutors who specialise in developing collaborations between emerging creatives and iconic lifestyle brands.
  • Develop your professional skills using high-end equipment such as mirrorless and digital medium format Sony, Canon, Fuji and Hasselblad cameras; Profoto and ARRI lighting kits; and free Capture One photo editing software.
  • Experience real-world assignments by taking part in industry collaborations. Past projects have involved partnering with brands like Converse and Jigsaw to create social advertising campaigns.
  • Join UAL’s diverse community of creatives where you’ll exchange ideas, build teams and champion each other’s careers as you establish your own industry connections.
  • Take part in innovative workshops with our network of leaders in contemporary photographic practice. Past workshops have featured Luke & Nik, Katja Mayer, Lola & Pani and Ibby Azab, as well as student-led industry talks with Ronan McKenzie, Yushi Li and Max Ferguson.

Open Days

The next Open Day for this course will be on Saturday 12 October. Book your place.

Explore life at LCC with our interactive Virtual Open Day.

Course overview

BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries is designed to explore new possibilities in photography and commercial practice. It responds to a new generation of genre-bending creatives who are using the medium of photography to blur the boundaries between advertising, editorial, art practice, film, fashion, content creation, installation, influencing, branding and social enterprise.

On this future-facing course, you’ll learn how to challenge traditional definitions of the ‘commercial image’, work with emerging technologies, and use ongoing experimentation to cultivate the highest standards for your professional and personal work. You’ll also discover how image-making can respond to new thinking in climate and social justice.

Ultimately, you’ll graduate with the foundations needed to confidently take on commissions, grow an enterprising mindset, and enhance your employability within the creative industries.

What to expect

  • A new creative vision: With the aim of building a contemporary vision for ‘commercial’ photographic practice, this course will encourage you to champion your own distinctive creative voice and the diverse stories found within your own experiences.
  • An education for creatives: Our units, workshops and teaching sessions have been designed to immerse you in contemporary thinking about photography within the creative industries and how your work can emphasise imagination, collaboration, partnership and innovation.
  • Real-world experience: You’ll develop a real-world understanding of how to respond to briefs and professionally take your ideas from concept to production and delivery.
  • Specialist skills: Workshops in areas such as camerawork, lighting, moving image, production design, graphic design, content creation and post-production will enable you to build an industry-ready range of skills.
  • Transferable skills: You’ll also develop a wide range of transferable skills in areas such as visual communication, art direction, pitching, problem-solving, creative business skills and transmedia storytelling.

Industry experience and opportunities

On BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries, we strongly value the power of real-world collaboration in helping you to become a well-rounded and multi-disciplinary creator.

During your time with us, you’ll be given exciting opportunities to work on live briefs and collaborations with the likes of brand partners, arts organisations and community enterprises.

You’ll also be trained by specialists in employability to confidently seek out partnerships of your own, building up a network of creative talent, teams, collaborators and commissioners for your future career.

Mode of study

BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries runs for 93 weeks in full-time mode. It is divided into 3 stages over 3 academic years. Each stage lasts 31 weeks.

Contact us

Register your interest to receive information and updates about studying at UAL.

Contact us to make an enquiry.

Course units

We are committed to ensuring that your skills are set within an ethical framework and are embedding UAL’s Principles for Climate, Racial and Social Justice into this course.

In common with all courses at University of the Arts London, this course is credit rated. The course is 3 years, levels 4-6. Each year requires you to achieve 120 credit points. To be awarded the BA (Hons) Commercial Photography, you need to accumulate a total of 360 credits.

Year 1

Introduction to unit (20 credits)

Introduction to unit welcomes you to life as a student in the Photography programme at London College of Communication. You will discover the staff, community, facilities and resources that will support you towards finding your creative voice and visual style as a contemporary image-maker. On this unit, you will learn new and key skills in modern image production that will challenge the way you respond to project briefs.

Publishing and Social Change (20 credits)

Publishing and Social Change looks at how personal work, writing and publishing have helped photographers and artists to create new questions around the possibilities of social change. You will learn about the histories, cultural shifts, and debates that made this change possible and experiment with new skills in creative writing, image-making and publication design to translate this knowledge into your first publishing concept.

Casting (20 credits)

Casting is the first part of a 2-unit structure. This unit focuses on an expanded idea of ‘casting’, and will ask you to make ethical, logistical and managerial considerations as you use diverse casting practices for a multi-media editorial project.

The Casting Project (20 credits)

In this workshop-orientated unit, you will begin to experiment with new camera technologies and both still and moving studio production techniques to help you realise your editorial concepts from the ‘Casting’ unit.

Contemporary Studio Practice (20 credits)

In this second workshop-orientated unit, you’ll explore expanded ideas of studio practice in photography including lighting techniques, set design and art direction for creative projects produced indoors and on location.

The workshops on the unit will be designed and delivered by specialists who will give you a professional working knowledge of industry-standard camera technologies and software for image capture, processing and output.

Creator Identities (20 credits)

For Creator Identities, you’ll independently identify, liaise and collaborate with a creator of your choosing to produce a new visual identity and online branded campaign for their work.

Year 2

The Live Brief (Industry, Community and Collaboration) (20 credits)

The Live Brief (Industry, Community and Collaboration) will provide professional insights into working with industry partners from the arts, creative industries and social enterprises. This unit will give you the opportunity to work with a team of creatives and students on a brief set by a real-world industry partner. Working with your team, you will ideate, pitch, develop and produce assets that innovate in response to the brief’s objectives.

Image Production (40 credits)

Image Production is designed to cultivate a working knowledge of emergent image-making techniques. You will question how photographic work impacts people, and be challenged to produce work that uses available technologies to rethink how campaign work engages audiences in new ways.

Disrupting Brand Identity (20 credits)

Disrupting Brand Identity invites you to explore the role that individual artist practices have played in reshaping advertising and branding content. You’ll be asked to identify an opportunity to rebrand an existing brand, collective, community, organisation or campaign content. You will then produce a presentation that unpacks brand histories with representing communities, and then begin to pitch an ethical, creative, or cultural necessity for a rebrand.

The Live Brief (Creative Networks) (40 credits)

The Live Brief (Creative Networks) unit provides an exciting opportunity to begin defining your creative practice, to project manage, and to develop your own network of contacts. You’ll be introduced to strategies in independently sourcing creative partners and working in collaboration with them to produce deliverables for a negotiated brief.

Year 3

Creative Direction and Enterprise (40 credits)

Creative Direction and Enterprise will give you the tools to act as a producer on the development of a creative enterprise project.

Research Project (20 credits)

You’ll develop a specialised Research Project to question ideas, innovations, theories or practices within contemporary photography, visual culture or the creative industries.

Major Project (40 credits)

The Major Project will bring together all of the expertise developed during your studies, translating it into a work that defines your future ambitions as a creative practitioner.

Creative Futures (20 credits)

To prepare you for graduation and entry into the creative industries, Creative Futures will give you the skills to develop an attention-grabbing portfolio and social profile.

Optional Diploma between Years 2 and 3

Between Years 2 and 3 of the course, you’ll also have the opportunity to undertake one of the following additional UAL qualifications:

Diploma in Professional Studies (DPS) (Optional)

This optional diploma can be taken between years 2 and 3. With support from your tutors, you’ll undertake a series of industry placements for a minimum of 100 days/20 weeks. As well as developing industry skills, you’ll gain an additional qualification upon successful completion.

Diploma in Creative Computing (Optional)

Between Years 2 and 3, you can undertake the year-long Diploma in Creative Computing. This will develop your skills in creative computing alongside your degree. After successfully completing the diploma and your undergraduate degree, you’ll graduate with an enhanced degree: BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries (with Creative Computing).

Learning and teaching methods

  • Interactive lectures
  • Seminars
  • Guest talks
  • Group project work
  • Individual projects
  • Workshops
  • Individual tutorials
  • Group tutorials
  • Study visits

Assessment methods

  • Portfolio
  • Live Presentation
  • Live Brief Response
  • Editorial Project
  • Creative Identity
  • Development Proposal
  • Pitch Deck
  • Microsite
  • Audio Visual Presentation
  • Creative Strategy
  • Treatment for Project Concept
  • Online and Social Media Assets for Project Concept
  • Brand Identity Guidelines
  • Case Study
  • Production Blog

Virtual Open Event

(Recorded November 2023)

Course Leader, D Wiafe, gives an overview of studying BA (Hons) Photography and Creative Industries.

Student work

  • On-Location-At-Kingswood-House.jpg
    On Location at Kingswood House: First year Students working on editorial concepts at the Kingswood House Mansion in South London.
  • Andy-Price-Workshop.jpg
    Andy Price workshop: Students created an experimental sneaker campaign concept in a workshop led by still life photographer Andy Price.
  • Kadeen-Mae-Brown.jpg
    Kadeen Mae-Brown: Photograph by student Kadeen Mae-Brown from the Fashion series OK BOOMER.
  • Zhiwei-Wang.jpg
    Zhiwei Wang: Student Zhiwei Wang experiments with generative AI to create a new campaign concept for the Ralph Lauren Parka jacket.
  • Yuki-Mu.jpg
    Yuki Mu: Student Yuki Mu's series "Heterotopia" explores the otherworldliness of student life.
  • Brand-Collaboration-_-Peugot-and-GQ.jpg
    Brand Collaboration: Peugeot x GQ - Students produce images for the 2023 Peugeot 'Allure' campaign, featured in British GQ.
  • Josie-Ryder-x-GSB_.jpg
    Josie Ryder x GSB: Josie Ryder photographs Krump Collective GSB.
  • Vivi-Lui.jpg
    Vivi Lui: Student Vivi Lui collaborates with womenswear students at London College of Fashion, for a lookbook assignment.
  • Jahvani-Sharma-Workshop.jpg
    Jahnavi Sharma workshop: Stylist and creative director, Jahnavi Sharma leads a workshops in shooting editorials in the studio for first year students.
  • Ryanna-Allen-for-Converse.jpeg
    Brand Collaboration: Converse London Ryanna Allen produces a social campaign for the Converse London.

Facilities

  • Red light indicating recording is taking place.
    Image © Vladimir Molico

    Lens-Based and Audio-Visual

    Find out about the workspaces and studios that support Lens-Based and Audio-Visual practice.

  • Student reading a book in between two bookshelves in the Library
    Students in the Digital Space. London College of Communication, UAL. Photograph: Alys Tomlinson

    The Digital Space

    The Digital Space is an open-plan, creative hub with computers set up with specialist software.

  • Student using a camera and other technical equipment within a studio space.

    Media Photography

    Photography students benefit from access to resources held in the Media Photography areas.

Staff

Fees and funding

Home fee

£9,250 per year

This fee is correct for entry in autumn 2024 and is subject to change for entry in autumn 2025.

Tuition fees may increase in future years for new and continuing students.

Home fees are currently charged to UK nationals and UK residents who meet the rules. However, the rules are complex. Find out more about our tuition fees and determining your fee status.

International fee

£28,570 per year

This fee is correct for entry in autumn 2024 and is subject to change for entry in autumn 2025.

Tuition fees for international students may increase by up to 5% in each future year of your course.

Students from countries outside of the UK will generally be charged international fees. The rules are complex so read more about tuition fees and determining your fee status.

Additional costs

You may need to cover additional costs which are not included in your tuition fees. These could include travel expenses and the costs of materials. For a list of general equipment needed for all UAL courses, visit our living expenses and additional costs page.

Accommodation

Find out about accommodation options and how much they will cost.

Scholarships, bursaries and awards

Find out more about bursaries, loans and scholarships.

If you’re based in the UK and plan to visit UAL for an Open Event, check if you’re eligible for our UAL Travel Bursary. This covers the costs of mainland train or airline travel to visit UAL.

How to pay

Find out how you can pay your tuition fees.

Scholarship search

Entry requirements

The course team welcomes applicants from a broad range of backgrounds from all over the world. The course attracts students who apply direct from A-level (or equivalent) or from Foundation Diploma in Art and Design, or other art or design courses, as well as mature students who may have previously worked in industry.

The standard entry requirements for this course are as follows:

104 UCAS tariff points, which can be made up of one or a combination of the following accepted full level 3 qualifications:

  • A Levels at grade C or above (preferred subjects include: English; Photography, Media; Art and Design, Business Studies, or other subjects within Social Sciences).
  • Distinction at Foundation Diploma in Art & Design (Level 3 or 4).
  • Distinction, Merit, Merit at BTEC Extended Diploma (preferred subjects: Art and Design, IT & Computing, Media).
  • Merit at UAL Extended Diploma.
  • Access to Higher Education Diploma (preferred subject: Digital and Creative Media, Film and Production).
  • OR equivalent EU/International qualifications, such as International Baccalaureate Diploma at 24 points minimum

And 3 GCSE passes at grade 4 or above (grade A*-C)

APEL - Accreditation of Prior (Experiential) Learning

If you do not meet these entry requirements but your application demonstrates additional strengths and alternative relevant experience, you may still be considered. This could include:

  • Related academic or work experience;
  • The quality of the personal statement;
  • A strong academic or other professional reference;
  • A combination of these factors.

Each application will be considered on its own merit. We cannot guarantee an offer in each case.

English language requirements

  • IELTS level 6.0 or above, with at least 5.5 in reading, writing, listening and speaking.

All classes are taught in English. If English isn’t your first language, you will need to show evidence of your English language ability when you enrol. For further guidance, please check our  English language requirements.

Selection criteria

The portfolio, along with the details on your UCAS application (including the academic reference and your personal statement) will be assessed against the following criteria:

  • Demonstration of an appreciation of commercial photography as a specialised discipline
  • Technical skills and experimentation with visual creativity, demonstrated in your own photographic work
  • Evidence of research and development of ideas through practice to achieve specific outcomes
  • Quality of ideas and thought processes in the production of your work

Information for disabled applicants

UAL is committed to achieving inclusion and equality for disabled students. This includes students who have:

     
  • Dyslexia or another Specific Learning Difference
  • A sensory impairment
  • A physical impairment
  • A long-term health or mental health condition
  • Autism
  • Another long-term condition which has an impact on your day-to-day life

Our Disability Service arranges adjustments and support for disabled applicants and students.

Read our Disability and dyslexia: applying for a course and joining UAL information.

Apply now

Applications closed 2024/25 

We are no longer accepting applications for 2024/25 entry to this course. Applications for 2025/26 entry will open in Autumn 2024.

Apply now

Applications closed 2024/25 

We are no longer accepting applications for 2024/25 entry to this course. Applications for 2025/26 entry will open in Autumn 2024.

How to apply

Follow this step-by-step guide to apply for this course

Step 1: Initial application

You will need to submit an initial application including your personal statement.

Personal statement advice

Your personal statement should be maximum 4,000 characters and cover the following:

  • Why have you chosen this course? What excites you about the subject?
  • How does your previous or current study relate to the course?
  • Have you got any work experience that might help you?
  • Have any life experiences influenced your decision to apply for this course?
  • What skills do you have that make you perfect for this course?
  • What plans and ambitions do you have for your future career?

Visit the UCAS advice page and our personal statement advice page for more support.

Step 2: Digital portfolio

We will review your initial application. If you have met the standard entry requirements, we will ask you to submit a digital portfolio.

You’ll need to submit this via PebblePad, our online portfolio tool.

Digital portfolio advice

Your portfolio should consist of recent work that reflects your creative strengths.

It should:

  • be maximum 20 pages of your own original photographic work
  • include work in progress as well as the best examples of your completed projects
  • demonstrate your image-making skills and ability to develop your ideas from concept through to final outcomes. Evidence could include original research notes, sketch books, process development, contact sheets etc.
  • be presented clearly and organised into a suitable narrative.

For more support, see our Portfolio advice and PebblePad advice.

Step 3: Interview

You may be invited to an interview following our review of your application. All interviews are held online and last 15 to 20 minutes.

For top tips, see our Interview advice.

You also need to know

Communicating with you

Once you have submitted your initial application, we will email you with your login details for our Applicant portal.

Requests for supplementary documents like qualifications and English language tests will be made through the applicant portal. You can also use it to ask questions regarding your application. Visit our After you apply page for more information.

Visas and immigration history check

All non-UK nationals must complete an immigration history check. Your application may be considered by our course teams before this check takes place. This means that we may request your portfolio and/or video task before we identify any issues arising from your immigration history check. Sometimes your history may mean that we are not able to continue considering your application. Visit our Immigration and visas advice page for more information.

External student transfer policy

UAL accepts transfers from other institutions on a case-by-case basis. Read our Student transfer policy for more information.

Alternative offers

If your application is really strong, but we believe your strengths and skillset are better suited to a different course, we may make you an alternative offer. This means you will be offered a place on a different course or at a different UAL College.

Deferring your place

You must apply in the year that you intend to start your course. If you are made an offer and your circumstances change, you can submit a deferral request to defer your place by 1 academic year. You must have met your conditions by 31 August 2024. If you need an English language test in order to meet the entry requirements, the test must be valid on the deferred start date of your course. If not, you will need to reapply. Requests are granted on a first-come, first-served basis.

Contextual Admissions

This course is part of the Contextual Admissions scheme.

This scheme helps us better understand your personal circumstances so that we can assess your application fairly and in context. This ensures that your individual merit and creative potential can shine through, no matter what opportunities and experiences you have received.