University of North Texas

College of Visual Arts and Design

UNT CVAD - Images
  • CVAD Alum Carl Finch heads the two-time Grammy winning band, Brave Combo.

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  • The CVAD Art Education Doctoral Program is a nationally ranked program, #13 in North America

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  • One of every fifteen students at the University of North Texas is a CVAD major! 

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  • UNT is an institutional member of the National Association of Schools of Art and Design

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  • Three Art Education faculty members (Chris Bain, Rina Kundu, and Nadine Kalin) have served on the Editorial Review Board of the Journal of Art Education, one of the most prestigious journals in the field.

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  • UNT‘s MFA program ranks in the upper 25% nationally according to US News and World Report

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  • CVAD‘s Communication Design students won nine of fifteen Best of Show prizes in this year‘s Dallas Society of Visual Communication 4th Annual National Student Show.

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  • As of Fall 2008, all new CVAD MFA students will receive $1000 scholarships.

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  • In Spring 2008, CVAD donors sponsored over $50,000 in scholarships for undergraduate and graduate students!

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  • The CVAD NAEA student chapter won the 2008 Student Organization Distinguished Service award from the University

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  • The Department of Art Education and Art History prepares more art teachers each year than any other university in Texas.

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  • CVAD‘s Ph.D. program in Art Education is among the top-rated programs in the U.S.

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  • Recent graduates of the art history program have pursued advanced degrees at University of Texas, Tufts University, University of Rochester, City College of New York, University of Arizona, Southern Methodist University, and Texas Christian University.

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  • CVAD art historians were the first UNT faculty chosen to participate in UNT‘s Next Generation course redesign. This program is considered to be a national model.

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  • The Department of Art Education and Art History faculty includes presidents of three national and international professional societies and the 2006 Art Educator of the Year.

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  • CVAD offers regular opportunities to study and travel in countries such as China, England, Ireland, Russia, and Scotland.

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  • CVAD‘s Texas Fashion Collection includes over 15,000 fabulous dresses by designers such as Balenciaga, Dior, de la Renta, and many others.

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  • CVAD Art Education alum Susan Gabbard is the former president of the National Art Education Association.

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  • CVAD alum, sculptor, Jesús Moroles, is on the Board of the Smithsonian Institute

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  • “I learned a lot about the creative process for producing a complete original work.”

    - Jezzalie Gill (Drawing 1)

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  • CVAD‘s Texas Fashion Collection includes over 15,000 fabulous dresses by designers such as Balenciaga, Dior, de la Renta, and many others.

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  • CVAD Art Education alum Susan Gabbard is the former president of the National Art Education Association.

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  • CVAD alum, sculptor, Jesús Moroles, is on the Board of the Smithsonian Institute

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UNT CVAD - Images

About CVAD

Art has been a vital part of UNT since it was first taught in 1894, just four years after the institution was founded. Dr. Cora Stafford, an imaginative leader who served on the faculty and as director for four decades before retiring in 1964, played a major role in guiding the art program to the reputation it maintains today. Determined to keep the program aligned with new ideas, she hired young innovators on the faculty. These included James Prestini and Gyorgy Kepes, two early proponents, in the United States, of the Bauhaus system which endeavored to relate a new design approach to the world of technology and craft. Also on the faculty were Carlos Merida, the internationally known Guatemalan painter and muralist, as well as Octavio Medellin, the celebrated Mexican sculptor and painter. Students included Ray Gough, who became a noted interior designer and UNT professor, and O'Neil Ford, who became one of Texas' most famous architects.

Masters degrees were initiated in the 1930s and the first MS degree in art was awarded in 1937 to Ms. Ann Bookman Williams, a long-time art teacher in the campus demonstration school. UNT's modern art program has been one of continual growth. After World War II, professional pograms in advertising art, fashion design and interior design supplemented traditional studio and art education programs. Following an extensive study of the arts in Texas by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board in the 1960s, North Texas was designated as a major visual arts program in the State and was approved to offer the BFA, MFA, and Ph.D. degrees beginning in 1971. With the Southwest's demographic population shift in the late 1970's and early 1980's, enrollment increased dramatically. At the same time, the department's comprehensive art programs were being recognized for their quality.

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Featured Alumn

Gretchen Bataille: Artist Jesús Moroles for Texan of the Year

His art took him from the cotton fields of Texas all the way to the White House. His granite sculptures and plazas express art in unexpected places: building lobbies, city squares and public parks.

Born to cotton-pickers in Corpus Christi, Jesús Moroles displayed an artistic talent from a young age and experienced early success as a painter and silk-screener. But it wasn't until he attended the University of North Texas that he had his first experience with sculpting and encountered a mentor who stoked this passion.

Jesús is my nominee for Texan of the Year because he has defied the odds to bring art into our everyday existence and help shape the way we live. Believing that art can make a difference in people's lives, he has shown us that it has value beyond a museum and should be part of the natural world. Art can motivate us to follow our passion, as it has for Jesús, and art can move us, as it has for the thousands of people who have walked through his granite-and-earthen monument for the Houston Police Officers Memorial.

For his achievements, Jesús recently received the National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to artists and art patrons by the U.S. government. He also is a recipient of the 2007 Texas Medal of the Arts Award by the Texas Cultural Trust.

Just as important, Jesús embodies the American Dream, the tale of a man born into poverty who got an education, worked hard and paid his dues to become the success he is today. And he is a man who believes strongly in using his talent and success to lift up our communities. His story is one that we should never tire of hearing, because it is a reminder that education will take us anywhere we want to go, even places we never dreamed about.

His story strikes a particular chord for me, because, as president of one of Texas' largest and most diverse universities, it is my mission to give rise to many more students like Jesús. And as president of Jesús' alma mater, I am proud that we helped launch his career. He took a workshop with Luis Jiménez, who lectured at the university, and after earning his B.F.A. through our College of Visual Arts and Design, Jesús spent a year as an apprentice learning from the master sculptor. He spent another year in Italy, and during a visit to Monte Altissimo, where Michelangelo acquired his marble, Jesús was inspired to create sculptures in harmony with nature.

Since then, Jesús has crafted works that reflect our place in nature. He has honed a signature style to symbolize that relationship, carving and polishing half of a granite slab while leaving the rest raw and untouched.

His work is shown throughout the world, in museums, in corporate and public spaces and in private collections. His piece Stele Gateway graces Lubben Plaza in downtown Dallas, across from the Belo Building. Lapstrake, across from the Museum of Modern Art in New York, is one of his most visible. His work was part of the landmark exhibition Contemporary Hispanic Art in the United States, which was shown at major American museums. He received a Visual Arts Fellowship and his pieces were included in a two-year traveling museum exhibition. He also earned a National Endowment for the Arts Matching Grant for an environmental installation of 45 sculptural pieces and fountains for the Birmingham Botanical Gardens.

In becoming one of the world's master sculptors, Jesús is a role model for anyone who believes that art can change lives, whether one is creating it or experiencing it.

Original article can be found in the Denton Chronicle.

Welcome to the fall semester!

This is an exciting time for our college and we want you to be part of the excitement!

NEW WEBSITE Thank you for visiting us on the web! Our new website, was designed by UNT alumni Emily and Jeff Charette of IOMATIX in San Francisco. We hope you like it - let us know! We will be updating it regularly.

NEW FACULTY This fall we are welcoming three new tenure-track faculty to the college. Dr. Jeffrey Broome in Art Education, Michele Wong Kung Fong in Communication Design, Elaine Pawlowicz in Drawing and Painting, and a new lecturer, Christi Egeland in Fashion Design. Visiting professors Terry Barrett, Mary Lamb, and Matt Sontheimer will also be joining us. CVAD is truly a collaborative environment with students and faculty engaged in new art forms, new scholarship, and new ways of helping people and communities live better, more creative lives.

NEW CLASSROOMS AND LABS New drawing facilities and new computer labs will greet the students and faculty this fall as we continue to enhance the facilities to meet and exceed national standards. We are now planning for a new Art Building on the Denton campus and new facilities in Dallas to meet the needs of future students.

NEW ACCREDITATION Last year, we were visited by an evaluation team from the National Association of Schools of Design. We were admitted as institutional members of NASAD in October, 2007.

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