Oregon College of Art and Craft. Image via Oregon College of Art and Craft website.

Higher education institutions of all kinds are under intense pressure today. Art schools are no exception, and the effects are driving a rift through the field.

In a thorough, well-researched report for InsideHigherEd, reporter Rick Seltzer lays out the situation. Most strikingly, he notes data from the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design (AICAD) that shows an increasing split in the fortunes of art colleges: “With a few exceptions, most of the association’s member institutions that enroll more than 500 students have seen enrollment rebound in the last few years, while those with fewer than 500 have seen it fall.”

While these trends are really just “a microcosm of the higher ed environment,” according to Deborah Obalil, president and executive director of AICAD, there are specific factors that have hit art education particularly hard. According to the report:

Curricular changes make it more difficult for some students to take classes before they graduate from high school, meaning art schools must work harder to reach prospective students at an early age. Meanwhile, art schools remain capital-intensive operations to run, as supplies, equipment, small class sizes and generous faculty-to-student ratios keep expenses high.

Memphis College of Art, Memphis, Tennessee. Photo by Kenneth C. Zirkel. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Top institutions like Rhode Island School of Design and California Institute of the Arts are doing well. Overall, AICAD member schools enroll 34,466 undergraduates in 2018—up about 2.4 percent from a decade ago (though this excludes schools that have closed or merged, so the trend doesn’t necessarily tell you about the situation of individual schools).

At the same time, “about a fifth” of the 43 AICAD institutions have faced some sort of crisis in the last few years. Among them:

  • The Oregon College of Art and Craft had been exploring mergers with two different institutions, “only to have talks fall apart.” It will not offer degrees after 2019.
  • The University of New Haven decided in August to end degree-granting programs at Lyme Academy, whose academic programs it took over under an agreement five years ago
  • Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle announced it is cutting tuition by 20 percent in the 2019-20 academic year, adopting a tuition-reset strategy that’s frequently been deployed by institutions seeking a shot of attention to help boost enrollment
  • The New Hampshire Institute of Art is in the midst of merging into New England College.
  • In 2017, the Memphis College of Art said it would close and has since detailed plans to shutter after the last of its students graduate in 2020
  • In 2016, the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston reached an agreement to have its educational operations acquired by Tufts University
  • The Art Institute of Boston, which merged with Lesley University in 1998, moved from Boston to Cambridge to join its sister colleges in 2015, taking on the new name of the Lesley University College of Art + Design.
  • In 2015, the Montserrat College of Art explored merging into Salem State University. The two sides ultimately ruled out the move
  • In 2015, George Washington University decided to acquire the Corcoran College of Art + Design in Washington.

Obalil tells InsideHighEd that it’s hard to make general conclusions, and that each closure or merger situation is unique to some degree. “What commonalities I’ve seen often line up… with size and the inability to scale,” she said.

One solution, intriguingly, seems to be for smaller arts colleges to broaden their training to prepare students to enter the growing field of art-adjacent jobs as “creatives.” Knowing that not all graduates move on to join a gallery roster or get a teaching post—and in light of the financial burdens taken on by students—Pacific Northwest College of Art Don Tuski took a pragmatic view.

“We still want students to do great, experimental, edgy artwork,” he told InsideHigherEd. “But if they learn to apply that creativity in multiple ways, that’s what society wants and needs, and that’s why I think art schools, if they get their business models together, can be leaders in society.”


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