Explore, imagine and create.
Are you inventive, authentic and want to create? Here, you’ll receive conceptual and technical instruction from faculty and mentors who are immersed in the visual arts. The stunning natural beauty of our 27,000 acres and multiple ecosystems surround you with inspiration. You’ll have 24-hour access to your own studio space and two on-campus museums provide opportunities to gain professional experience in the art world. The Berry community is a built-in support system as you hone your techniques, find your voice and create your masterpiece.
Concentrations: studio art, art history and art education
You’ll get the chance to work in our museums, collaborate with visiting artists and lecturers or assist in the ceramics shop learning how to curate, manage and maintain art spaces.
Art FACULTY
A scholar of twentieth century art and design, in particular how modern artists perceived, collected and appropriated ancient and non-Western textile patterns and technology for modern use, Dr. Troy teaches a variety of art history courses, coordinates art internships and is the art education point person. She has authored two books, The Modernist Textile: Europe and America 1890-1940, and Anni Albers and Ancient American Textiles: From Bauhaus to Black Mountain.
Earn a paycheck while building your art résumé at our on-campus Moon Gallery and Oak Hill Museum. Access our 2D, ceramics and personal studios at 2:30am—or any other hour of the day or night.
Art Courses
Study two-dimensional design by solving and executing problems using a variety of traditional and digital-imaging media, study and application of color theory.
Learn ceramic hand-building techniques, earthenware glazing and surface decoration methods, and basic clay and glaze formulation. Emphasis on creativity, imagination and technical proficiency.
Examine the impact of women artists and depictions of women throughout history with particular emphasis on historical context, artists’ writings and current scholarship.
The Berry College Moon Gallery serves as a unique resource to members of the Berry community and beyond with exhibitions, public talks and workshops. Visitors are able to engage with work by artists with different backgrounds and experiences through a range of methods and materials.
Art LIVES
Rebecca Buglio ’13 was an art major with concentrations in art education and ceramics. Inspired by Berry’s 27,000-acre campus, her artistic style is based on the cycles of nature, of growth and decay, striving to capture in ceramic memory what is ever changing. Working now as the Program and Studio Manager at the Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in Gatlinburg, Tenn., she continues to observe natural processes and express them through clay, while inspiring others in their artistic journeys.
HERE?