BFA in Art History
Art & Art History majors in the College of Fine & Applied Arts combine historical academic courses with studio and design courses in a curriculum that includes experience in making art along with the study of its histories. These students receive a BFA (Bachelor of Fine Arts) degree.
All of the art history classes include students from both BA and BFA degree tracks, so you will get to know students with a wide range of passions and interests—passions for seeing and thinking like an artist; passions for understanding art as an aspect of history and culture.
The faculty of the Art History Program are active scholars who are internationally recognized experts in their fields offering courses on topics including the arts of ancient Greece, imperial China, medieval and renaissance Europe, and modern and contemporary Africa and the Americas. Your course of study will include small seminars where you might help design an exhibition for the university art museum or research a 15th-century manuscript in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library. In all of your courses you will work with faculty who are committed to helping you develop skills in visual analysis, critical thinking, and effective writing.
Studying art history can lead to careers in museums and galleries, higher education, art librarianship, and the management of visual resources for universities and arts institutions. A degree in art history also provides excellent preparation for careers that require skills such as compelling writing, organization, and clear thinking. Many of our undergraduates go on to professional schools in law, business, and medicine.
Resources
Undergraduate students in Art History can take advantage of many supplemental resources on campus:
- The Society for Art History and Archaeology (SAHA) is a registered student organization at the university. Its primary goal is to promote interdisciplinary scholarship and new research that broadens understanding of the visual arts. Each year, SAHA sponsors several lectures. It also organizes symposia open to students in Art History and related disciplines. Membership is free and open to both graduate and undergraduate students.
- The Art History Common Room is available for use as a meeting room for all Art History graduate students. It is also used by faculty on occasion for meetings.
- The University Library, the largest public university library in the U.S., includes many branch libraries in specific subjects such as History and Philosophy, Modern Languages, Education, and Social Sciences.
- The Ricker Library of Art and Architecture is a branch of the University Library, and its collection includes more than 120,000 books, 33,000 serials, and a wide selection of videos.
- The Rare Book and Manuscript Library, also part of the University Library, includes original illustrated books and rare artists’ editions of books from the 15th through 20th centuries.
- Krannert Art Museum has a permanent collection of over 10,000 works of art from around the world with eight collection galleries, five special exhibition galleries, and an ongoing schedule of student events, artist lectures, and performances. Admission to the museum and student membership are free.
- The Spurlock Museum is an ethnographic museum with a diverse array of functional and art objects that represent past and present cultures from around the globe.
- Japan House is a center for the study of Japanese aesthetics and traditional arts. It offers classes on subjects including Japanese aesthetics, the Way of Tea, and ikebana.
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Inspired by Fresh Press Paper (founded at Illinois in 2012 by graphic design professor Eric Benson), Zayed University recently launched Fresh Press Emirates, a hands-on initiative where students turn discarded hotel linens and plant materials into handmade paper for art and design projects.
The program brings together students across art, science, and sustainability while giving them a closer look at circular design and material reuse. Great to see a project that started at Illinois showing up in creative spaces halfway around the world.🌍📜
Read more at the link in bio! @freshpresspaper
Congratulations to Art Education PhD student Syed Faizaan Ahab on receiving the People’s Choice Award in the 2026 Image of Research competition at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign! 🎉
Here`s how Syed described his award-winning project, "Move:"
This image captures a video-based research project, "Move," at the intersection of movement, listening, and power. The three performers stand facing the viewer, gesturing classical South Asian dance vocabularies. Yet their bodies are held in stillness rather than spectacle. Their hands articulate meaning, but their expressions remain restrained, refusing explanation and performance as entertainment. This tension highlights how embodied knowledge is often rendered hypervisible yet misread within dominant cultural spaces. The stark lighting and frontal composition render the performers almost haunting, neither fully absorbed by the space nor entirely outside it. This visual ambiguity reflects what Allie Martin describes as the politics of listening, where sound and presence are interpreted through social hierarchies rather than neutral perception. Just as Martin argues that sound "happens in interpretation" (Martin, 2025), this image suggests that movement, too, is legible only through the frameworks viewers bring with them. The performers` stillness becomes a form of sonic restraint, an echo of moments where cultural expression is asked to quiet itself to belong. In this way, the image operates as both documentation and critique: a reminder that presence, like sound, does not require permission to exist, even when it is misheard or only partially seen.
Organized annually by the Graduate College and the Media Commons of the University Library, the Image of Research competition celebrates the creativity, innovation, and intellectual diversity of graduate student research across disciplines.
Join us in celebrating Syed’s incredible achievement and the powerful impact of arts-based research! 👏
One more ambassador vlog to close this semester! Here’s a look into Art and Art History major @cc.lopezz ‘s day in the life 🖼️
We have an exciting on-campus symposium coming up on Reading Day, May 7 at Temple Hoyne Buell Hall! Come support and be inspired by these amazing speakers! 📙💙
A recap of last years and an invite to this years annual Art & Design’s fashion show, Re-Fashioned 🧶🌟
📸: @williamslenses
Created by ARTS 381, creatures of all shapes and sizes will be paraded through the grass next to A&D at 3pm next Tuesday, May 5th! 🎊
Interested in building a career as a working painter? Join us and Alum @katelyn_eichwald this Friday! We will eat, converse, and even get a tour senior studios!
🍕Lunch at noon in 128 Flagg Hall
💬 Lecture at 1 pm in 131 Flagg Hall