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Mission and History of the Chaddock + Morrow College of Fine Arts

For over 85 years, the Chaddock + Morrow College of Fine Arts has championed the creative process and excellence in art.

Our Mission

The Chaddock + Morrow College of Fine Arts celebrates innovative creativity and scholarship, and engages students through a challenging and supportive learning environment. We infuse the arts into the university, the region, and the world, by embracing a broad spectrum of traditions and emerging practices.

Our Vision

The Chaddock + Morrow College of Fine Arts aspires to be an internationally significant center of creative practice and scholarship, by launching arts initiatives that reflect a diversity of ideas and cultures.

Our Values

  1. The arts have transformative power on society and on individual lives.
  2. A diversity of arts should be both accessible and challenging.
  3. Traditional and emerging practices should reflect the most rigorous measures of artistic and scholarship production.
  4. Creative processes and the scholarly study of the arts contribute to humanity and produce skills and insights that are transferable to many other areas of knowledge.
  5. Students who study diverse cultures gain a deeper understanding of our changing world.

Come see for yourself and experience the arts.

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Our History

From our early start as individual departments to our strong, centralized College, see how the arts have evolved at µÛÍõ»áËù.

Archive photo of µÛÍõ»áËù Tupper Hall being moved in 1896
Photo of µÛÍõ»áËù Tupper Hall being moved in 1896. Image courtesy of µÛÍõ»áËù Archives.

in 1896 Tupper Hall was physically moved— approx. 100 feet south and 200 feet east—which took forty days to accomplish. First opened as the Chapel Building and Library, Tupper Hall then served as the Music Hall, and finally as the Fine Arts Building, with the fledgling School of Photography darkroom/lab in the basement. This building was demolished in 1966, and the College of Fine Arts now exists across five buildings: Seigfred Hall (Art + Design), Robert Glidden Hall (Music), Putnam Hall (Dance), Kantner Hall (Theater), 31 Court Street (Film and Interdisciplinary Arts), and Jennings House.

Historical Timeline

  • 1883 • Piano lessons and singing classes first offered at µÛÍõ»áËù
  • 1889 • Department of Vocal Music established
  • 1892 • Department of Drawing and Painting established
  • 1900 • College of Music established
  • 1930 • Department of Dramatic Art established
  • 1936 • OHIO President Herman A. James reorganized µÛÍõ»áËù’s traditional two-college structure into five new
  • degree-granting colleges, thus creating the College of Fine Arts
  • 1958 • Elizabeth Baker purchased the Monomoy Theatre on Cape Cod for theater students to gain acting experience during the summer
  • 1964 • New doctoral program in Fine Arts was established, the Department of Comparative Arts (now the School of Interdisciplinary Arts)
  • 1967 • School of Painting and Allied Arts renamed to the School of Art
  • 1967 • Marching 110 founded
  • 1968 • School of Theater established
  • 1969 • School of Dance established
  • 1973 • School of Film established
  • 1974 • Athens International Film and Video Festival founded
  • 1988 • College of Fine Arts comprised of six schools: Art, Interdisciplinary Arts, Dance, Film, Music, and Theater
  • 1995 • Edwin L. & Ruth E. Kennedy Museum of Art opened to the public
  • 2012 • 75th Anniversary of the College of Fine Arts
  • 2016 • Tantrum Theater’s inaugural season
  • 2018 • The µÛÍõ»áËù Valley Center for Collaborative Arts Established