Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - New york visual art school profile

New york visual art school profile

School of visual arts (SVA) is a private art school in new york, USA, located in Manhattan, new york, USA. The school was founded in 1947 by cartoonists and illustrators Silas H. Rhodes and Burne Hogarth. At that time, it was called Comics and Illustrators College, and 1956 was renamed school of visual arts. SVA is a member of the American Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design, which is the main alliance association of 35 art colleges in the United States.

SVA can get a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree after completing the four-year course 120 credits. It includes 72 credits for studio course, 30 credits for humanities course, 0/2 credits for art history course/kloc-0, and 6 credits for elective courses. The Master of Fine Arts needs 60 credits and thesis projects. As of 2006, the college has offered bachelor's degree courses in advertising, animation, comics, computer art, film and video, fine arts, graphic design, illustration, interior design, photography, vision and critical research. 1983, the school opened the first postgraduate class, and the master's courses included fine arts painting, painting and sculpture. Since then, she has studied nine postgraduate courses: art education, art criticism and writing; Art therapy; Computer art; Design; Design criticism, digital photography; Visual prose and photography, social documentaries, television and related media. There are also non-degree courses in art history and humanities.