An Augustana liberal arts education introduces students to the world of ideas, and gives them the tools to explore that world. As an artist or graphic designer, you’ll have the best background and raw material for your original ideas, allowing you to create anything out of your own curiosity and chosen media.
You can major or minor in studio art or graphic design, or choose the art education specialist program if you want to teach art in secondary schools.
Studio art majors focus in one of these six areas: ceramics, drawing, painting, photography, sculpture or printmaking. Some double-major in such areas as art history, multimedia journalism and mass communication, psychology, biology, education or business.
A faculty advisor will work with you to integrate your experience, including art-related internships, toward future goals. That often means preparing for graduate school or a career in art administration or education, art therapy, medical illustration or museum work or with a design agency.
All throughout, you’ll work closely with professors and other students in small classes and studios. Building your own design rationale and style, you’ll complete a body of work to present in a senior exhibition, and for your portfolio for employers or graduate schools as proof of your versatile skills and creative thinking.
Distinctions
• Beginning classes have only 15-20 students, and upper-level courses are usually smaller. The close faculty-student relationship is especially important for hands-on work in studio art and graphic design. Students learn to express their own ideas and emotions through art, and at the same time learn about larger social and disciplinary contexts.
• The art department is housed in six buildings on campus with facilities for painting, 2D design, ceramics, sculpture, photography, drawing and wheel-throwing. The ceramics studio has a wood fired kiln and a rolling gas car kiln, high-quality kilns generally available only to graduate students.
• Art and graphic design majors also take art history courses, and draw from their liberal arts education (valuable background for every academic field). As a result, they develop both deeper perspective and broader awareness, fueling their creativity and originality.
• Through traveling exhibitions and the extensive permanent collection in the Augustana Center for Visual Culture, students view works of art as primary texts for class discussion and research, and as inspiration for their own original work.
• Along with internship opportunities, art and art education majors can work as assistants for Augustana’s summer Kaleidoscope art classes for children and in local schools, gaining skills for their future careers. The Quad Cities also has different-sized commercial graphic design studios and companies for potential internships.
• Many Augustana study-abroad programs include an art component. Art and graphic design majors have joined Augustana programs in Spain, Ghana, Morocco, Senegal, The Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Japan, Italy, Greece and more. $2,000 with Augie Choice helps cover living and travel expenses.
Recent grads
Carly Davis '23 is a reporter for Adams Publishing Group in Fort Atkinson, Wis.
Annie Wheeler '21 is a senior UX/UI designer at Spark DSG, based in Philadelphia.
Austin Elledge '20 is a graphic designer/animator for the National Football League in Los Angeles, Calif.
Monica Wierzbicki '18 is a medical illustrator and graphic artist at Body Scientific International in Chicago.