I'm applying to transfer to CUHK Fine Arts from a self-financing university and I have a question : no matter what your major is (art history or art studio), is it compulsory to take at least some Chinese art modules? If yes, at least how many do I need to take? Can you use the art studio main stream as an example since I want to pick the art studio as my major?
Hello there~ yeah, I should say no matter which stream you belong to. You still gotta take some Chinese art courses. Cause if you look back at the first table I mentioned in the “degree structure” part, there are 21 units of required courses (part of them are related to Chinese art). But besides the required courses, you can totally have the freedom to pick neither Chinese or western art courses. (But honestly, every semester they won’t provide all the courses listed from the undergraduate student handbook. It depends on which courses they are open for registration that period of time tho~ hope that’s clear for you haha🤔
hi, I was wondering how it would be if let's say I could speak english and mandarin but not cantonese? like would it be hard to survive the cantonese classes or are there resources/friends who could help out with that
Thanks so much for your sharing!! So I’m now a F5 student aiming for cuhk fine art, however I didn’t study art in high school, do u think it will affect much?🥲
I remember its not a must, but it’s preferred. I think you might go check the admission official website or contact the office for more updated information. (But honestly I think your art portfolio matter the most🤔
I'm applying to transfer to CUHK Fine Arts from a self-financing university and I have a question : no matter what your major is (art history or art studio), is it compulsory to take at least some Chinese art modules? If yes, at least how many do I need to take? Can you use the art studio main stream as an example since I want to pick the art studio as my major?
Hello there~ yeah, I should say no matter which stream you belong to. You still gotta take some Chinese art courses. Cause if you look back at the first table I mentioned in the “degree structure” part, there are 21 units of required courses (part of them are related to Chinese art). But besides the required courses, you can totally have the freedom to pick neither Chinese or western art courses. (But honestly, every semester they won’t provide all the courses listed from the undergraduate student handbook. It depends on which courses they are open for registration that period of time tho~ hope that’s clear for you haha🤔
@@The_Emme All clear! Thank you so much!😊😉
Thank you for your sharing! Looking forward to your next video😍
Thanks for watching! Hope it’s useful haha🤣🤍
hi, I was wondering how it would be if let's say I could speak english and mandarin but not cantonese? like would it be hard to survive the cantonese classes or are there resources/friends who could help out with that
Cause majority of the courses gonna use Cantonese, especially studio art courses. So I think it’s bit difficult to survive🤧
@@The_Emme ok thank you!
it was good idea to pick chinese art, but i never imagined that will be more complicated,i guess you went through a lot Emme nice job
Thanks Ahmed🤣🙌🏻
You are the Chinese art my friend I really like your process
Honestly not really tho🤣 but thanks for your support my friend!!! 🧚🏻
@@The_Emme 😂😂
Hello, I’m planning to apply to CUHK for art but I don’t speak mandarin or Cantonese, only English. Will it still be fine?
Umm I would say it’s gonna be a bit hard, cause most studio art courses gonna teach in Cantonese🤔🤧 only minority of courses teach in English tho
我要考!
Gayau!! 🔥
P r o m o s m
Thanks so much for your sharing!! So I’m now a F5 student aiming for cuhk fine art, however I didn’t study art in high school, do u think it will affect much?🥲
I remember its not a must, but it’s preferred. I think you might go check the admission official website or contact the office for more updated information. (But honestly I think your art portfolio matter the most🤔