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Art and Design

This is an archived copy of the 2024-2025 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.iastate.edu.

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The Department of Art and Visual Culture offers degree programs focused on fine arts and visual culture, offering courses in studio arts, art history, and art education, and scientific illustration. Degree offerings include the Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in Art and Design, Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Integrated Studio Arts, and Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Integrated Visual Arts.

The Bachelor of Arts in Art and Design is a four-year degree program with two options: Art and Culture or Visual Culture Studies. Both options require students to complement their studio art or visual culture studies coursework with study in a second area, within or outside of the College of Design. This can include a second major or minor, or an alternative program of study approved by the student's academic advisor.

Flexibility is a key feature of the B.A. in Art and Design. Many students, working with an advisor, design a course of study that allows them to pursue the B.A. degree in conjunction with a second major or minor such as journalism, advertising, business, entrepreneurship, history, or psychology.  

The B.A. in Art and Design can serve as a springboard into a wide array of exciting graduate school and career opportunities, including art criticism, art history, art sales, conservation, corporate art collections, gallery/museum studies, and art therapy.

Art and Culture Option (Fine Arts + another area of interest)

In the Art and Culture option, students combine coursework in studio art with another area of interest. Working with an advisor, students design their own programs of study, which may include another major or minor in addition to the concentration emphasizing studio art.

Visual Culture Studies Option (Art History + another area of interest)

The Visual Culture Studies option is for students seeking a concentrated course of study in art and design history, theory, and criticism. For students interested in museum studies, courses may include up to nine (9) credits of museum or gallery internship. Working with an advisor, students design their own programs of study, which may include another major or minor in addition to the concentration in visual culture studies. Required courses include six (6) history courses at the 3000/4000 level.

Student Learning Outcomes

Students will learn to: 

  • Develop creative problem-solving abilities and traditional and innovative technical skills through the design, research, and creative processes;  
  • Understand and express in multiple media the relationship between objects, aesthetics, and meaning;  
  • Exhibit an awareness of their roles as artists and thinkers regarding the ethical, cultural, and ecological impacts of what they do; 
  • Express through visual, verbal, and written means an awareness of global art movements and a meaningful understanding of historic and contemporary art; and
  • Use their understanding and practice of art to engage with local, national, and global communities where they can participate in broad exchange of ideas.