STUDYING ABROAD

A guest study programme at one of our partner universities is an obvious way to enter international networks. These studies usually last one semester.

There are currently agreements with the following universities:

  • AFDA – The South African School of Motion Picture, Live Recording and Live Performance
  • Al-Quds University, Ramallah, Palestine
  • Beijing Film Academy, Beijing, China
  • Dodge College, Orange County, California
  • ESAV, Marrakech, Morocco
  • Free SZFE, Budapest, Hungary
  • FTII, Pune, India
  • Gobelins l’école de l’image, Paris (animation)
  • INCINE, Quito, Ecuador
  • Kibbutzim College, Tel Aviv, Israel
  • Korea National University of Arts, Seoul, Korea
  • La Salle, Barcelona, Spain (animation)
  • Lindenwood University, St. Charles, Missouri
  • Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design (MOME), Budapest, Hungary (animation)
  • MOPA, Arles, France (animation)
  • NTUA, National Taiwan University of Arts
  • The Animation Workshop, Viborg, Denmark (animation)
  • The Stan Richards School of Advertising and Public Relations in the Moody College of Communication at The University of Texas at Austin (advertising film)
  • Universidad de Valparaiso, Chile
  • Universidad del Cine, Buenos Aires, Argentina

MOBILITY YEAR

After completing their basic studies, students have the opportunity to take a mobility year.
This additional year – between the second and third years of study – enables students to gain extensive international experience at home and abroad. It offers the opportunity to spend semesters abroad, participate in workshops, take on jobs and research trips, or a combination of these elements. The International Office supports students in developing the best strategies for their goals.
After the mobility year, students begin their bilingual project studies with valuable international experience and are ready for their preliminary and final theses in intercultural teams.

Workshops

The International Office organises several excursions and workshops each year, often with the support of external partners. These include the Nollywood Workshop in Nigeria and the Indian Cinema Workshop, which the Film Academy organises in collaboration with the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) in Pune. Further workshops are currently in development.

Indian Cinema Workshop

Since 2018, an annual excursion of 12 students from all disciplines has been organised to the Film & Television Institute of India (FTII) in Pune. The three-week trip is supported by the BWS plus programme of the Baden-Württemberg Stiftung and includes a profound introduction to Indian cinema as well as a week full of visits to film sets and production companies in the “Bollywood” film metropolis in Mumbai. In the winter semester, FTII students visit the International Class of the Filmakademie in return.

Nollywood Workshop

The main objective of the programme is to cross-fertilise ideas from two distinct ecosystems and expose students to alternate film industry models. Nollywood film industry is an audience-driven content production and distribution business. The main characteristics are self-financing, entrepreneurial, lean budget, fast-paced filmmaking, guerrilla production process, but less quality.

On the other hand, the German film industry is widely financed by the public sector or, some would say, through taxes. Their main characteristics are high production quality, methodical filmmaking, and a more organised production process, but certain limitations go along with this approach just as well.

Indian Cinema Workshop

Indian Cinema Workshop

Since 2018, an annual excursion of 12 students from all disciplines has been organised to the Film & Television Institute of India (FTII) in Pune. The three-week trip is supported by the BWS plus programme of the Baden-Württemberg Stiftung and includes a profound introduction to Indian cinema as well as a week full of visits to film sets and production companies in the “Bollywood” film metropolis in Mumbai. In the winter semester, FTII students visit the International Class of the Filmakademie in return.

Nollywood Workshop

Nollywood Workshop

The main objective of the programme is to cross-fertilise ideas from two distinct ecosystems and expose students to alternate film industry models. Nollywood film industry is an audience-driven content production and distribution business. The main characteristics are self-financing, entrepreneurial, lean budget, fast-paced filmmaking, guerrilla production process, but less quality.

On the other hand, the German film industry is widely financed by the public sector or, some would say, through taxes. Their main characteristics are high production quality, methodical filmmaking, and a more organised production process, but certain limitations go along with this approach just as well.

Links & Scholarships

Contact

Contact

Guido Lukoschek

Head of International Office

Contact

Sujatha Dovgal

Regional Manager

Contact

Mark Szilagyi

Regional Manager

Contact

Heide Thon

Coordination Mobility Year

Contact

Alexandra Joshi

Coordination International Network (Animationsinstitut)

Contact

Valentina Boye

Senior Lecturer International Class (ICLA)

Contact

Zoja Volk

Project Coordination International Class (ICLA)