Master of Visual Effects
| Offered By | ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences |
|---|---|
| Minimum | 48 units |
| Academic Contact | Martyn Jolly |
| Academic Plan | 7122XMVFX |
| CRICOS Code | 061774D |
| UAC Code | 832619(Master of Visual Effects) |
The Master of Visual Effects is a new creative flagship program aimed at professionals and graduates wishing to advance their creative media experience in the visual effects arena. The MVFX is a one year program designed for people developing their professional experience in the broadcast and production industries, creative design arts and media research.
Prerequisites
Applicants are expected to have completed an appropriate three year undergraduate qualification at a high level of achievement, and to have demonstrated significant achievement in their area of expertise. They should be able to demonstrate intellectual creativity through evidence of a practice portfolio or showreel, and documentation of written analytical skills.
In exceptional circumstances professional experience and proven expertise in the field may be taken as equivalent qualification for admission to the course. There is no provision for advanced standing.
APPLICATIONS
A Postgraduate Coursework application should be made on the forms available at this link http://www.anu.edu.au/sas/forms and must be accompanied by evidence of meeting the admission requirements.
All applications must be accompanied by a portfolio of work.
The guidelines for presentation of a portfolio are flexible. Works do not need to be constrained to a digital format, and may consist of any or several of the following:
- DVD - Video
- Executable Data CD
- Audio CD
- Online
- Portfolio of visual work
- Evidence of written work
The MVFX program has one intake per year in semester 1, with the academic year running from February through to November.
More information:
http://www.anu.edu.au/admission
The information published on the Study at ANU 2010 website applies to the 2010 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2009 website.




