UT Dallas 2024 Graduate Catalog

Harry W. Bass Jr. School of Arts, Humanities, and Technology

Visual and Performing Arts

Overview

The Graduate Programs in the Visual and Performing Arts (MA, PhD) foster integrated study and practice in the arts. The MA and PhD programs provide students with an interdisciplinary context in which to pursue research and practice across a wide range of creative and academic traditions and critical and theoretical approaches spanning the Visual and Performing Arts (VPAS). Students can focus their studies in film, visual art, performing arts, and art history. Students have the opportunity to enrich their practice in the performing and visual arts and to participate in seminars in disciplines outside of the VPAS such as history, philosophy, and literature.

Faculty

Professors: Fred I. Curchack, Adrienne L. McLean, John J. Pomara, Thomas P. Riccio, Robert Xavier Rodríguez, Charissa N. Terranova, Michael Thomas, Marilyn Waligore

Associate Professors: Shelley D. Lane, Mark Rosen, Shilyh Warren

Clinical Professors: Carie King, Catherine Parsoneault, Maribeth (Betsy) Schlobohm

Clinical Associate Professors: Linda Salisbury, Lorraine Tady

Clinical Assistant Professors: Paul Galvez, Shelby Hibbs, Sarah Kozlowski

Professors of Instruction: Kathy Lingo, Christopher (Chris) Ryan

Associate Professors of Instruction: Diane Durant, Kelly P. Durbin, Kathryn C. Evans, Melissa Hernandez-Katz, Jonathan Palant, Monica M. Saba

Assistant Professors of Instruction: Barbara Baker, Lori Gerard, Janece Glauser, Christina Montgomery, Misty Owens, Allison Templeton, Patricia Totusek

Doctor of Philosophy in Visual and Performing Arts

60 semester credit hours minimum beyond the master's degree

Coursework: 42 semester credit hours

Forty-two semester credit hours of which at least twenty-one are taken as organized graduate-level courses in Visual and Performing Arts (VPAS).

Required Courses: 30 semester credit hours

VPAS 6300 Proseminar in Visual and Performing Arts1

ARHM 6310 Team-Taught Interdisciplinary Seminar

15 semester credit hours of organized graduate-level VPAS courses

9 semester credit hours of Field Exam Preparation, of which at least 6 semester credit hours must be VPAS 8305

Elective Courses: 12 semester credit hours

12 semester credit hours of electives in any graduate-level courses.

Foreign Language

Students in all PhD programs in the Harry W. Bass Jr. School of Arts, Humanities, and Technology are expected to demonstrate intermediate-level reading proficiency in a foreign language (equivalent to two years of foreign-language study at the undergraduate level). Students must fulfill the language requirement before scheduling doctoral field examinations.

As part of its approval of a dissertation proposal, the Graduate Studies Committee will consider the appropriateness of a candidate's language preparation for the research or creative project. Faculty members chairing field examinations and dissertations should ensure that students possess the necessary language proficiency to carry out their proposed doctoral research.

The requirement can be satisfied upon enrollment in a Ph.D. program by demonstrating evidence of one or more of the following:

  • Completion of a second-semester, intermediate-level foreign language course or higher (e.g., an undergraduate literature course in a foreign language) with a grade of B or better.
  • Completion of a graduate course taught in a foreign language or with more than 25% of its required readings in a foreign language.
  • An undergraduate major, graduate degree, or certificate in a foreign language.
  • Successful completion of graded coursework at a foreign university at which the primary language of instruction is not English.
  • A degree in any discipline from a foreign university at which the primary language of instruction is not English.

The requirement can be satisfied during graduate study at UT Dallas in one of the following ways:

  • Completion of a second-semester, intermediate-level foreign language course or higher at UT Dallas or elsewhere with a grade of B or better.
  • Successful completion of LIT 6326 Translation Workshop with a grade of B or better.
  • Passing a written translation exam in an approved foreign language at UT Dallas.

Doctoral Field Examinations

The doctoral field examinations consist of two written sections and an oral defense. The examining committee, composed of three members of the faculty (at least two of whom must be in the Visual and Performing Arts Program) oversees definition and preparation of the two examination fields. Initial committee formation must take place during the semester in which students complete thirty-six semester credit hours of coursework, which will typically be followed by nine semester credit hours of Field Exam Preparation, of which at least six semester credit hours must be VPAS 8305.

Dissertation

Students are formally advanced to Ph.D. candidacy when they have successfully completed the doctoral field examinations. After that examination, a four-person supervising committee is formed, normally from the examining committee plus an additional faculty member, to oversee dissertation work. The supervising committee must then approve a formal dissertation proposal before the student submits it to the Graduate Studies Committee for final approval.

Each candidate then writes a doctoral dissertation, which is supervised and defended according to general University regulations.

Master of Arts in Visual and Performing Arts

33 semester credit hours minimum

Coursework: 33 semester credit hours

Thirty-three semester credit hours of which at least eighteen semester credit hours are taken as organized graduate-level courses in Visual and Performing Arts.

Required Courses: 21 semester credit hours

VPAS 6300 Proseminar in Visual and Performing Arts1

ARHM 6310 Team-Taught Interdisciplinary Seminar

15 semester credit hours of organized graduate-level VPAS courses

Free Electives: 12 semester credit hours

Twelve semester credit hours of electives in any graduate-level courses.

Professional Option

Students in the professional option must complete thirty-three semester credit hours of coursework. They are not required to complete a portfolio or meet the foreign language requirement.

Research Option

Students in the research option must complete thirty-three semester credit hours of coursework, fulfill a foreign language requirement, and complete a portfolio.

Foreign Language

The research option MA degree requires demonstrated proficiency in an approved foreign language. The requirement can be satisfied upon enrollment in the MA program by demonstrating evidence of one or more of the following:

  • Completion of a second-semester, intermediate-level foreign language course or higher (e.g., an undergraduate literature course in a foreign language) with a grade of B or better.
  • Completion of a graduate course taught in a foreign language or with more than 25% of its required readings in a foreign language.
  • An undergraduate major, graduate degree, or certificate in a foreign language.
  • Successful completion of graded coursework at a foreign university at which the primary language of instruction is not English.
  • A degree in any discipline from a foreign university at which the primary language of instruction is not English.

The requirement can be satisfied during graduate study at UT Dallas in one of the following ways:

  • Completion of a second-semester, intermediate-level foreign language course or higher at UT Dallas or elsewhere with a grade of B or better.
  • Successful completion of LIT 6326 Translation Workshop with a grade of B or better.
  • Passing a written translation exam in an approved foreign language at UT Dallas.

Portfolio

Two research papers or a creative project plus a scholarly essay originating in or completed for graduate courses are revised and presented in a portfolio for evaluation by a master's committee.

Graduate Certificate in Arts Management and Leadership

13-15 semester credit hours

The Graduate Certificate in Arts Management and Leadership is jointly offered by the Harry W. Bass Jr. School of Arts, Humanities, and Technology, program in Visual and Performing Arts and the School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences program in Public and Nonprofit Management.

This graduate certificate focuses on the knowledge and skills necessary to work in the nonprofit sector professional settings providing visual or performing arts content and services.

The Graduate Certificate in Arts Management and Leadership is designed for individuals who are interested in the practical management side of the arts. This could involve running a nonprofit museum, repertory dance company, or music performance organization; managing an art gallery; or simply managing a professional creative's personal brand.

Admission Requirements

The Graduate Certificate in Arts Management and Leadership requires current enrollment in any UT Dallas graduate program (master's or doctoral level) or completion of an undergraduate degree.

Coursework

Foundational Courses: 6 semester credit hours

PA 6382 Nonprofit Management

VPAS 6313 Advanced Studies in Creative Arts Leadership (Course is still under institutional review)

or VPAS 6395 Advanced Studies in Performing Arts Leadership (Course is still under institutional review)

Focus Courses and Internship/Professional Experience: 7-9 semester credit hours

PA 6335 Resource Development for Nonprofit Organizations

or PA 6369 Grant Writing and Management

or PA 6374 Financial Management for Nonprofit Organizations

PA 6386 Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Organizations

or SOC 6386 Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Organizations

or PA 6389 Volunteer Management

or PA 6345 Human Resources Management

PA 6V97 Internship

or VPAS 6V97 Internship/Portfolio in Arts Leadership (Course is still under institutional review)

1. Must be taken during the first Fall semester of enrollment in the program.

Updated: 2024-08-29 10:02:18 v12.9a4a5c