
- Degree Level
- Undergraduate
- Degrees Offered
- Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts
- Department
- Visual and Performing Arts
- school/college
- College of Arts and Sciences
Bachelor’s Degree in Art
A Bachelor of Fine Arts at Arcadia University will expose you to a range of techniques, processes, formats, and tools needed to think creatively and make the most of your career path. Arcadia fosters an environment that encourages you to become an artist with a creative spirit, aesthetic awareness, historical consciousness, critical analysis, technical excellence, and an appreciation for the role of art in a comprehensive education.A degree in art will prepare you for advanced graduate studies or future possibilities for a career as an exhibiting artist and opens doors to careers in business and industry, government and social agencies, and many more.
A liberal arts education with professional preparation for careers in art or design will develop your creative potential. Through courses in the humanities and sciences, you will gain an understanding of the nature of art, humankind and society. You’ll have the chance to try out new media and experiment across disciplines. From our accomplished faculty, you’ll learn skills and techniques that will help you work more creatively, efficiently and consistently. With your peers, you’ll practice the art of critique. In your art history classes, you’ll learn from new and old great masters.
With an internationally-known art gallery and close proximity to Philadelphia, you will have opportunities for real-world art exploration. This includes hands-on internships and apprenticeships that will support your artistic and professional goals. In addition, you have the opportunity to explore the world for a semester or more with our study abroad programs. There are options at the world’s most prestigious art programs in the UK, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.
During your first and sophomore years, all BFA students take a common set of courses in the basic art disciplines, including Art History. In your junior and senior years, you may select one of the studio concentrations listed below, with the permission of your adviser. Additionally, internships and apprenticeships are strongly recommended and are required for some concentrations.
- Ceramics
- Graphic Design
- Illustration
- Individualized
- Metals and Jewelry
- Painting
- Photography
- Printmaking
The Department of Art and Design requires a portfolio review as part of the admissions process. Your portfolio of work must be submitted before acceptance into the program is granted. Portfolio reviews will be conducted during virtual National Portfolio Days and through our online submission platform, Slideroom.
Featured Courses
Studio Art: Foundations I
Required Course
Embark on a series of intensive thematic workshops. You will be dealing with the same ideas through a variety of two-dimensional and three-dimensional materials and processes. Examples of themes covered in this course are: identity, environment and language. Examples of materials used in this course are: acrylic paint, cardboard, water color, wood, plaster, found objects and paper.
Required course for all first-year students.
Color and Design
Elective Course
Want to better understand the behavior and the power of color? Develop a new eye for color and check out this studio course that considers the diverse applications of this understanding, including the properties of color as well as the study of the interaction of colors and the underlying principles that govern their behavior.
Required for some concentrations, elective.
Photography I
Elective Course
Want to learn more about photography? Check out this introduction to the essential of the medium of 35mm photography, covering the materials, processes, history and aesthetics of black and white photography, as well as, introducing the photographic image as a means of personal expression.
Required for some concentrations, elective.
3D Printing/Digital Fabrication
Required Course
Discover how Art meets Science? Learn about new technology surrounding computer-aided-design/computer-aided-manufacturing (CAD/CAM) and it's creative applications within art practices.
Required for some concentrations, elective.
Art and Design Student Artwork






























Jaxson Arnold ’17, Combined Media
Emily Berger ’16, Ceramics
Maggie Martin ’16, Photography
Emily Marchese ’16, Scientific Illustration
Max Santangelo ‘17, Art History
Catherine Everett ’15, Metals and Jewelry
Sophie Green ’13, Drawing
Brianne Velardi ’15, Graphic Design
Nadia Koltsoon ’14, Art History and Ceramics
Amy Perdue ’13, Sculpture
Clifford Koetas ’13, Painting
Isabella Reale ’13, Photography
Julia Lerner ’14, Scientific Illustration
Chanelle Jackson ’13, Metals and Jewelry
Kandice Poole ’14, Ceramics
Jaxson Arnold ’17, Combined Media
Emily Berger ’16, Ceramics
Maggie Martin ’16, Photography
Emily Marchese ’16, Scientific Illustration
Max Santangelo ‘17, Art History
Catherine Everett ’15, Metals and Jewelry
Sophie Green ’13, Drawing
Brianne Velardi ’15, Graphic Design
Nadia Koltsoon ’14, Art History and Ceramics
Amy Perdue ’13, Sculpture
Clifford Koetas ’13, Painting
Isabella Reale ’13, Photography
Julia Lerner ’14, Scientific Illustration
Chanelle Jackson ’13, Metals and Jewelry
Kandice Poole ’14, Ceramics
Why Arcadia?
Jeanine Barnes '18 talks about her awesome first-year experience.
