UMA Undergraduate Guide 2013-2014 Art, Architecture, and Art History Academic Departments and Programs Studio Arts The Majors
The Majors
The major in Studio Arts leads to a Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Studio Arts or the Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Studio Arts. The B.A. degree major incorporates more courses outside the Department of Art, Architecture, and Art History and is designed to provide an aesthetic and historical knowledge of the visual arts while affording an opportunity to develop creative ability in several media. Students completing the B.A. need to fulfill the foreign language and other requirements of the College of Humanities and Fine Arts, which include University General Education courses in addition to departmental requirements. Students completing the B.F.A. degree must meet University General Education course requirements and departmental requirements, but not the foreign language requirement. The B.F.A. Studio Arts degree offers nine concentrations: Animation, Art Education, Ceramics, Digital Imaging, Interdisciplinary, Painting, Photography, Printmaking, and Sculpture. During the first year all majors take courses in the Foundations Program. This two-semester experience evolves through a weekly seminar which provides concepts, art history, demonstrations, guest artists, and field trips to major museums in New York City, Boston, and throughout the area. The Foundations Program helps students develop their proficiency in drawing, two- and three-dimensional design, and color, while providing an introduction to a variety of media and techniques basic to all the upper-level major disciplines. All Studio Arts majors are required to take a minimum of four Art History courses. It is recommended that students take introductory Art History survey courses while they are taking Foundations courses. Acceptance to the University as a B.F.A. major does not guarantee acceptance into any particular concentration within the Studio Arts Program. Upon successful completion of the Foundations Program, a B.F.A. major is then eligible to apply to a selected concentration. A B.F.A. major's portfolio must be accepted by the area faculty to gain entrance into a concentration. Students pursuing a B.A. do not apply to a specific concentration and therefore do not go through a second review of their portfolio. Art students are encouraged to take advantage of course offerings and faculty beyond the boundaries of the department. The University and the Five College consortium offer rich opportunities for expansive study in the arts. All B.F.A. candidates are required to complete a B.F.A. Degree Project in their senior year. Admission to the Majors Undergraduate application to the department’s Studio Arts programs is a two-part process. Applicants submit an application to the Undergraduate Admissions Office and submit a portfolio directly to the Studio Arts Program. For acceptance into the studio programs (both the B.A. and the B.F.A.), applicants must be accepted by both the Admissions Office and the Portfolio Review Committee of the Studio Arts Program. For more information about this process, visit www.umass.edu/art, email the Undergraduate Program Director, Francis Merrigan, at fmerrigan@art.umass.edu, or call the department’s main office, tel. (413) 545-1903. Transfer students are not automatically accepted into the Art major. Interested applicants should plan to submit their portfolios directly to the department, observing University application deadlines, to ensure timely review of their portfolios and avoid delay in academic progression. For more details, visit www.umass.edu/art. Certain local Massachusetts community colleges’ transfer students are accepted directly into the department if they have fulfilled their Foundations requirements. Contact the University’s Admissions Office for more details. Students already attending the University should contact the department at (413) 545-1903 for more information on application to the department. |
© 2014 University of Massachusetts Amherst • Site Policies
This page is maintained by the Center for Educational Software Development