A sculpture in rome italy

Study Histories of Art and Visual Culture 

The Art History Department offers a bachelor’s degree, a master’s degree with 2 concentration options, and the one and only PhD currently conferred by the Tyler School of Art and Architecture.  

5 Reasons to Study at Tyler 

Studying art history at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture comes with many benefits:  

  • Immerse yourself within the community and resources available at one of the top art and design schools in the country.  
  • Connect with the art and culture of the historic and vibrant city of Philadelphia and the wider region, stretching from Washington, DC, to New York City.  
  • Earn your degree from Temple University, a public, R1 research university. 
  • Tap into the vast and diverse expertise of our accomplished faculty in smaller classes, where you can truly connect with others and with art. 
  • Learn through assignments that challenge your critical thinking and that build your knowledge and confidence for what comes next in your chosen career.

Inclusive and Global Perspectives

When you study art history at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture, your education focuses on understanding art and visual culture from an inclusive and global perspective. 

students posing outdoors on a trip to San Paulo

Through classroom experiences and encounters with art in museums, galleries and public spaces, you learn to focus on the materials, processes, and technologies of how art gets made. You also learn to analyze the works through more perspectives than your own.

Tyler’s art history faculty promotes the study of global art and cultures, from antiquity to present. You learn to use modes of analysis across regional, national and cultural boundaries.

Your professors guide your exploration of the intersection of art history with race, gender and other lived experiences. Choose Tyler and open your mind to a greater understanding of art and visual culture by stepping away from Eurocentric points of view.

Throughout your studies, Tyler integrates the history of art with both liberal arts and studio arts practices for a greater understanding of how to research, analyze and communicate about global art and cultures. 

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Why Art History Matters 

Understand the context of art from the past to the present to explore the human experience and develop your skills in visual literacy and verbal expression in ways that will impact the rest of your life. 

Explore Our Programs

Tyler offers multiple programs in Art History, providing a range of opportunities for students at both undergraduate and graduate levels.

Undergraduates may also want to consider Tyler's Bachelor of Arts in Visual Studies major. This unique interdisciplinary studio arts degree incorporates research and making, writing and creating within a socially conscious framework of studio practice and seminars.

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Art History Degrees

Students looking at files in a box.

Bachelor’s Degree in Art History

Fundamentally, the study of art history requires you to look closely at the art, material, and methods. Then, you learn to think critically about what you see and then conduct research to build historical context. The combination of these skills helps you understand and explain interpretations of each piece.  

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Students sketching and taking notes in a museum.

Master of Arts in Art History – Research Track

Tyler’s research track challenges you to develop a deep geographical and chronological understanding of art history. You learn to root your analysis in historical, cultural, stylistic and ethical contexts. By working closely with individual faculty members, you graduate with knowledge and skills to:  

  • Conduct original research and organize a sustained project 
  • Work collaboratively with artists, administrators, educators, students and the public 
  • Contribute to the profession and serve communities by elevating artists and ideas 

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Master of Arts in Art History – Arts Management Track 

Tyler’s arts management track provides an advanced cultural practice and specialized degree pathway, led by a 30-year veteran of the New York arts world. Learn both the historical and current forces that shape arts institutions: 

  • Their values and missions 
  • The economics of art  
  • Strategic planning 
  • Governance 
  • Ethics 

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Tyler’s PhD in Art History 

The Art History Department is proud to offer Tyler’s only doctoral program. Whether you plan a teaching, research or curatorial career, the PhD in Art History provides the broad-based training you need to rise to the highest levels of the discipline.  

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Take the Next Step 

Tyler’s embedded admissions team is here to help with answers to your questions and guidance for applying to earn your degree here.

Expansive Research Resources

As a Tyler art history student, you get access to incredible resources that support your cross-disciplinary learning on Temple University’s campus and elsewhere.  

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Charles Library

Temple University's main library is an incubator for collaboration and the exchange of ideas. Designed by Snøhetta, the library is home to maker spaces, a robotic retrieval system, lectures and exhibitions. With fully remote and in-person access to online databases and collections, students can check out books, articles, and more with their Temple Owl Card credentials.

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Duckworth Scholars Studio  

Built for both collaborative work and individual research, the Duckworth Scholars Studio provides technology required for doing textual analysis, handling big data, working in and creating 3-D spaces, visualizing geospatial relationships, and more.   

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Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) 

The Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) is the principal repository for and steward of the Temple University’s rare books, manuscripts, archives and university records. 

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Blockson Collection 

Temple University’s library features one of the nation's leading research facilities for the study of the history and culture of people of African descent.   

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Other Special Collections   

Thanks to the stellar reputations of Tyler’s students, you also get access to a vast array of collections at other institutions in or near Philadelphia.  

Image: The Barnes Foundation, Detail Main Room, North Wall.

Meet the Faculty  

Meet the award-winning faculty who teach in Tyler’s undergraduate and graduate degrees in art history. 

Meet Professors

Contact the Art History Department

In addition to our dedicated admissions team that helps future students, the department’s leadership can also answer specific academic questions.

  • Jane DeRose Evans, PhD

    Jane DeRose Evans

    Professor and Chair of Art History

      Jane DeRose Evans can be found excavating in and studying coins from areas across the Mediterranean basin conquered by the Romans. Her work has taken her to southern France, Israel, Jordan and most recently Turkey, where she is the coin…

    Email Jane

  • Mariola Alvarez sits on a chair inside Tyler School of Art & Architecture, smiling and looking away from the camera.

    Mariola Alvarez

    Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies

    Mariola Alvarez is a historian of Latin American art of the 20th and 21st centuries, with a specialization in the history of abstraction in Brazil.  Contributing to a larger interest in interdisciplinarity and the relationship of art to…

    Email Mariola

  •  John Hatfield looking at the camera with a rainbow-colored wall behind him.

    John Hatfield

    Professor of Practice and Director of Arts Management Track

    John Hatfield has over 30 years’ experience with art organizations including as Executive Director of Socrates Sculpture Park, NY for 10 years, Deputy Director and various positions at the New Museum, NY for 17 years and served as Asst. Vice…

    Email John

  • Erin Pauwels looking at the camera.

    Erin Pauwels, PhD

    Associate Professor of Art History and Undergraduate Advisor

    ON LEAVE, FALL 2024 + SPRING 2025 Erin Pauwels is an historian of modern and contemporary art in the Americas with special interest in photography, Indigenous Studies, and ecocritical approaches to visual culture. Her research explores the…

    Email Erin