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Develop a sense of purpose while learning to express ideas effectively through visual language and a mature studio practice. Our program intentionally embraces diverse styles and working methods, from direct observation from life and photographs to making work entirely driven by abstract ideas.
a painting that encapsulates a few different scenes, with a photorealistic quality, while still appearing hand-painted
Julio Cardenas-Arana BFA Fine Arts '23 Painting, Photography credit: Cary Whittier
Type
Undergraduate, BFA
Courses
Plan of Study
School and Department
School of Art,
Fine Arts

All first-year students take the Foundation program’s core curriculum, along with required art history and liberal arts courses, and begin the fine arts major curriculum in the fall of the second year. While continuing with their required art history and general education coursework, second-year students take more focused courses in their chosen area of emphasis, whether painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture and integrated practices, or jewelry. In addition to their studio requirements, all fine arts students take a series of departmental seminars that address social, historical, and critical issues in contemporary art.

Beyond their major requirements, students may use elective credits to take courses of their choosing, to pursue a minor in a second field or discipline, or to gain internship experience. The senior year is focused on developing a self-directed body of work for the senior thesis exhibition in the spring semester. Departmental courses in professional practice help students prepare their portfolios and make a realistic plan for sustaining their careers after graduation through approaching funders, galleries, residency opportunities, and employers.

four paintings consisting of lines, on four small canvases
Shuyao Huang BFA Fine Arts '23 Painting, Photography credit: Cary Whittier
a painting that resembles a seashell
Sophia Han BFA Fine Arts '23 painting, Photography credit: Cary Whittier

Students will:

  • Understand basic design principles, concepts, media and formats, and the ability to apply them to a specific aesthetic intent;
  • Have functional knowledge of the traditions, conventions and evolutions of painting as related to issues of representation, illusion, and meaning;
  • Have the knowledge and skills in the use of basic tools, techniques and processes sufficient to work from concept to finished product;
  • Be familiar with historical and contemporary movements and issues in the field of painting;
  • Understand the expressive possibilities of various media and the diverse conceptual modes available to the painter;
  • Be able to work independently and develop a final project related to the exhibition of original work
a painting of a outdoor scene
Fanya Imholz BFA Fine Arts '23 Painting, Photography credit: Cary Whittier
painting of a person in a desert
Audrey Ember Doyle BFA Fine Arts '23 Painting, Photography credit: Cary Whittier