The mission of the Yale School of Art is to provide students with intellectually informed, hands-on instruction in the practice of an array of visual arts media within the context of a liberal arts university. As a part of the first institution of higher learning to successfully integrate a studio-based education into such a broad pedagogical framework, the Yale School of Art has a long and distinguished history of training artists of the highest caliber. A full-time faculty of working artists in conjunction with a diverse cross-section of accomplished visiting artists collaborate to design a program and foster an environment where the unique talents and perspectives of individual students can emerge and flourish.The School of Art is founded on the belief that art is a fundamental force in national and international culture, and that one of the primary standards by which societies are judged is the quality, creative freedom, critical insight, and formal and technical innovation of the visual art they produce. The Yale School of Art teaches at the graduate and undergraduate levels, and consequently the student body consists of those whose primary or exclusive focus is art as well as those for whom art is an essential part of a varied course of inquiry. The school currently offers degrees and undergraduate majors in the areas of graphic design, painting/printmaking, photography, and sculpture.
The Yale School of Art and Yale University acknowledge that indigenous peoples and nations,
including Mohegan(1), Mashantucket Pequot(2), Eastern Pequot(3), Schaghticoke(4), Golden Hill Paugussett(5),
Niantic(6), and the Quinnipiac(7) and other Algonquian(8) speaking peoples, have stewarded through
generations the lands and waterways of what is now the state of Connecticut.
We honor and respect the enduring relationship that exists between thee peoples and nations and this land.
Pronunciation guide:
1: mow.hee.gn
2: mash.an.tuck.et pee.kwot
3: east.ern. pee.kwot
4: skat.ih.kohk
5: gold.en. hill po.gaw.sett
6: ni.han.tic
7: kwihn.ih.pee.ac
8: al-gon-kwihn
Artists and designers of unusual promise and strong motivation are provided an educational context in which they can explore the
potential of their own talents in the midst of an intense critical dialogue. This dialogue is generated by their peers,
by distinguished visitors, and by a faculty comprised of professional artists of acknowledged accomplishment.
The graduate student’s primary educational experience at Yale is centered on the student’s own studio activity. Supporting this
enterprise are the experience, knowledge, and skills gained from rigorous, structured courses such as drawing, filmmaking, the
relativity of color, and the rich academic offerings found throughout Yale. Each student is routinely exposed to many aesthetic
positions through encounters with faculty members and visitors. The School is devoted not only to the refinement of visual skills,
but also to the cultivation of the mind. Students must bring creative force and imagination to their own development, for these
qualities cannot be taught—they can only be stimulated and appreciated.
The School of Art offers an undergraduate art major for students in Yale College (see the bulletin Yale College Programs of Study).
In addition, the School’s courses are open to students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and other professional schools
of the University, and School of Art students may enroll in elective courses in the Graduate School and other professional schools
as well as in the College with permission.
The degree of Master of Fine Arts is the only degree offered by the School of Art. It is conferred by the
University upon recommendation of the faculty after successful completion of all course work in residence
and after a thesis presentation that has been approved by the faculty. It implies distinctive achievement
on the part of students in studies in the professional area of their choice and demonstrated capacity for
independent work. The minimum residence requirement is two years. All candidates’ work is reviewed by faculty
at the end of each term. If the work is not considered satisfactory, the student may not be invited back to
complete the program (see section on Review and Awards under Academic Regulations in the chapter General
Information). All degree candidates are expected to be present at the Commencement exercises in May unless
excused by the dean.
Course work for the Master of Fine Arts degree carries a minimum of sixty credits. The disposition of these credits
varies according to the area of study and is agreed upon at the time of registration between the student and the
student’s faculty adviser.
Each department has its own visitors program in which professionals from outside the School are invited to lecture
to students or take part in critiques.
The School also facilitates a public all-school lecture program, in which ideas of general and cross-disciplinary
importance are explored by visiting artists and members of the faculty in events typically hosted in the evening
that are free and open to the public.
The School of Art’s galleries in Green Hall and EIK at 32 Edgewood Avenue provide a year-round forum for the
exhibition of work by students, faculty, and special guests in the four graduate departments of the School and
the undergraduate program. Green Gallery is open to the public when exhibitions are scheduled, but open hours
vary by semester. EIK is open during limited hours for specific exhibitions and events. Please refer to the
Gallery & Publications page for more information.