The Royal College of Art (RCA) has announced a new network of partnerships with five leading art and design institutions across the UK and Ireland, creating new pathways into postgraduate study while strengthening collaboration across creative education.
The initiative brings together the RCA with Arts University Plymouth, Birmingham City University, The Glasgow School of Art, Leeds Arts University and the National College of Art and Design (NCAD), Dublin, establishing a framework for closer collaboration in teaching, research, knowledge exchange and student progression.
Designed to increase access to postgraduate education while supporting creative ecosystems across the UK and Ireland, the partnerships include undergraduate and postgraduate teaching alignment, postgraduate application guidance and targeted financial support, alongside opportunities for staff exchange, doctoral research and collaborative curriculum development.
Professor Christoph Lindner, President and Vice-Chancellor of the Royal College of Art, said:
“Creative education – and creative graduates – have never been more important. The ability of creative graduates to ask new questions, bring concepts to life, invent products and systems, and connect to the heart of what makes human creativity special will be crucial to the UK and Ireland meeting the challenges of our times, such as thriving in partnership with AI tools and making sense of a fractured information landscape.”


He added:
“It’s vital that creative institutions work together to share knowledge, increase access to study and champion creative futures. I’m delighted to be announcing these new partnerships, and look forward to the RCA working across the UK and Ireland to best support their creative ecosystems.”
Each partnership has been tailored to the strengths of the participating institutions.
Arts University Plymouth, Birmingham City University and Leeds Arts University have signed articulation agreements creating structured progression routes into selected RCA postgraduate programmes, with enhanced teaching alignment, application support and financial assistance. Birmingham City University’s partnership also includes funding for one fully funded PhD scholarship each year for five years, enabling RCA graduates to undertake doctoral research at the university.
Meanwhile, the Glasgow School of Art and NCAD Dublin have agreed to broader Memoranda of Understanding focused on curriculum development, research collaboration, doctoral education, institutional exchange, and sector leadership.
Professor Zey Suka-Bill, Pro Vice-Chancellor for Education & Student Success at the RCA, said:
“The UK and Ireland have a world-leading network of creative education institutions, at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Its strength comes from its breadth of locations across both countries, attracting a wide range of experience and perspectives and supporting country-wide creative and cultural opportunities.”
She added that the College was looking forward to working more closely with institutions across the UK and Ireland while creating new opportunities for students wishing to continue their creative education through postgraduate study in London.
Admission to the RCA will remain competitive, with students on articulation pathways still required to complete their undergraduate degrees successfully, meet academic and English language requirements, submit portfolios and satisfy programme-specific entry criteria.
The announcement reflects a growing emphasis on collaboration within higher education as creative institutions seek to widen participation, share expertise and strengthen regional creative economies. By linking specialist art and design schools with the world’s highest-ranked postgraduate art and design university, the RCA hopes to create new educational pathways while reinforcing the role of creative education across the UK and Ireland.
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