Art + Design Foundations

Everything in art and design begins with visual communication.

Creative Strategy + Practice 

Creativity in all forms takes strategy and practice — often starting with a sketch — to bring what you see and feel into the world. The Tyler School of Art and Architecture teaches you that and more. It’s why you spend your first year in Temple University’s art and design degrees  immersed in the Art Foundations Program. Your success builds upon it.  

Expand
Your Talents  

Tyler requires a full year of art foundation classes to build your creativity and your technical and practical skills.

Beginning with foundational experiences in drawing, 2D, 3D, time-based, and digital media, you will expand your creative abilities, develop essential studio practices, and discover your full potential as a maker and thinker. 

Bonus?

You also gain transferable skills like these, no matter which art major you choose: 

  • Learn holistically  
  • Be open to revisions  
  • Experiment with materials and methods 
  • Think critically  
  • Take ideas through to final piece 
  • ​​​​​​Integrate technology  
  • Think across disciplines 
  • Improve through self-reflection 
  • Engage with your peers 
  • Consider cultural and global contexts 
  • Prepare for professional roles and growth 
  •  
3 students facing away from the camera, drawing on paper

Discover Tyler

Learn more about everything Tyler offers by requesting more information,  seeing everything in person and meeting our incredible team. And, when you’re ready, we are happy to consider your admission application.  

Creative Skills for Art Majors

Tyler’s first-year Foundations Program gives you the opportunity to begin your art school career by expanding your mind and building your art studio skills.  

A guy squats in front of a minimalist wooden structure, with a large floor-to-ceiling window behind it, allowing plenty of sunlight to pour in, illuminating the space with natural light.

Observe With an Open Mind

Slow down and truly see everything around you with fresh eyes and a clear head. 

A student wearing a gray shirt is writing in class, focused on her work as she looks down. Another student sits behind her, also writing, creating a quiet, studious atmosphere.

Study the Creative Process

Balance your creative bursts and experimental tangents with ways to hone your focus (that work for your brain and how your rhythms of inspiration hit).  

A close-up shot of a student rolling a metal pole with hot glass on a metal table, carefully shaping the molten glass. The heat and intensity of the process are evident in the glowing glass.

Build Your Identity as a Creative

Experiment with your work persona, materials, and methods to find clarity about your messages and motivations.

student walks on a runway inside

Move Beyond Preconceptions

Question and move beyond what you already believe about the creative process, visual communication, and design. That’s where innovators and change-makers thrive.

Two students sit on stairs, wearing freshly decorated Tyler t-shirts, with the camera positioned above them. They are not looking at the camera, instead looking towards in front of them.

Join an Unstoppable Community of Peers

Transform your life and creative work with the support and feedback from your clever and welcoming classmates.

The Power of Visual Communication

Your creative education encourages you to explore what’s possible and to establish meaningful bonds.

“I love teaching in Foundations — I teach drawing. No matter what you’re going to do as a designer or an artist, you’re going to need to communicate visually with people. Drawing is super direct and connects people.”

Gerard Brown sits on a metal stool with his legs extended straight out. Behind and to the left of him, large canvases featuring drawn artworks are displayed, creating an artistic and focused atmosphere around him.

Gerard Brown

Associate Professor

Meet the Art Foundations Faculty

Meet the faculty who teach Tyler’s first-year foundation courses for all art majors. 

Watch Now

The Tyler School of Art and Architecture offers students a close-knit community of interdisciplinary thinkers, makers and boundary pushers who believe in the power of creative disciplines to promote change.

Student Work

Experience the creativity, art, and expression of your future classmates.

Image of the exterior entrance to the Tyler School of Art and Architecture building on Main Campus

WCC test publication

Alumni

Image of the exterior entrance to the Tyler School of Art and Architecture building on Main Campus

WCC test publication

Alumni

Image of the exterior entrance to the Tyler School of Art and Architecture building on Main Campus

WCC test publication

Alumni

Art Foundations FAQ

You ask. We answer the most common questions about why and how Tyler structures art degree programs and design degree programs for your academic and career success.

Why does Tyler require art majors and design majors to take art foundations classes the first year?

Short answer? Because art and design basics matter a lot. The highly structured, immersive, and trans-disciplinary art foundations classes prepare you for success — before and after graduation. These courses give you the chance to try various types of art and potentially uncover new talents and interests. 

How does the Foundation Program support my goals?

Natural creativity and talent only take you so far. Successful artists, designers, and other creative professionals need trans-disciplinary knowledge and practical skills too. Via foundational art courses, you gain these skills and beyond.

  • By studying these foundations of art, you better root your studio practice in the legacy of those who came before you across time and across creative disciplines.  
  • By learning the elements of the creative process from an idea’s spark through technical challenges of art materials and art methods, you build flexibility and problem-solving skills. It’s important to recognize the common places creatives get stuck. It’s even more important to know effective ways to get unstuck.  
  • By learning time management strategies that work with your brain and creative rhythms, you learn to be a reliable and valued professional in any career you choose or imagine. 
Is Tyler School of Art and Architecture part of Temple University?

Yes, Temple University houses 17 schools or colleges, including the Tyler School of Art and Architecture on its campuses in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Depending on your chosen major and other interests, your classes include options from both Tyler and Temple.