Anonymous wrote:Ranking are meaningless in art schools. You go to the program that is best for your area of study. The best ceramic school is Alfred university. But I guarantee no one has ever heard of it. We felt RISD had a weird vibe and dc did not apply there. They spend too much time boasting on their link with Brown, and little time telling me what they offered. Also a good one is Temple University. They actually just absorbed another smaller art school in Philly. There art studios were impressive. National Portfolio Day is vital.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges with strong undergrad art programs:
Williams, Yale, UCLA, VCU, USC, Wash U, Michigan, Indiana.
An alarming number of art colleges have dissolved over the last year. If your kid is going to art school, I'd only send her to the most reputable, wealthiest schools, which will likely remain solvent in the decades to come. If your kid isn't likely to thrive at one of the best art colleges, I'd recommend enrolling in a regular college/university.
Op here - Are the highly competitive schools listed above looking mainly at the art portfolio or the students academic grades ?
Anonymous wrote:Colleges with strong undergrad art programs:
Williams, Yale, UCLA, VCU, USC, Wash U, Michigan, Indiana.
An alarming number of art colleges have dissolved over the last year. If your kid is going to art school, I'd only send her to the most reputable, wealthiest schools, which will likely remain solvent in the decades to come. If your kid isn't likely to thrive at one of the best art colleges, I'd recommend enrolling in a regular college/university.
Anonymous wrote:Ranking are meaningless in art schools. You go to the program that is best for your area of study. The best ceramic school is Alfred university. But I guarantee no one has ever heard of it. We felt RISD had a weird vibe and dc did not apply there. They spend too much time boasting on their link with Brown, and little time telling me what they offered. Also a good one is Temple University. They actually just absorbed another smaller art school in Philly. There art studios were impressive. National Portfolio Day is vital.
Anonymous wrote:I’m an art school grad. It really really depends on what your dc is interested in. SAIC and Carnegie Mellon are very conceptual. RISD is more traditional. Ringling is a pipeline to Disney and Pixar. Pratt is great for illustration and architecture, and being in NYC offers a ton of work and internship opportunities in a wide range of artistic or art adjacent fields.
I went to SAIC, btw.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - thank you for replies. Everyone mentions RISD as top, what other art schools are 2,3, 4 in terms of reputation.
Anonymous wrote:Just art schools, or is DC also interested in universities with large art programs?
My DC applied to both. The big art school names are RISD, CalArts, Pratt, SAIC, SCAD. There's also Ringling and Parsons. Each school has a unique reputation and they vary wildly with regard to acceptance rates. SCAD accepts the majority of applicants; RISD accepted 14% for the class of 2028.
DC should attend National Portfolio Day to see where they stand and to learn about the different programs.
Anonymous wrote:Don't forget about MICA in Baltimore!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RISD— get to hang with the Brown students.
That’s why I wanted to Brown! (I mean, I didn’t, but I thought I would go to awesome parties)
Anonymous wrote:RISD— get to hang with the Brown students.