Colorful abstract artwork featuring waves and stylized trees with bright flowers.
Eli Thorne, 'Blissed & Babbling,' 2025, one of the works on display in 'Open Inquiry: UC Arts,' an exhibition of recent alumni work at the Sausalito Center For The Arts from March 14 to April 12. Thorne is a recent graduate of UC Berkeley. (Courtesy image)
What ‘Open Inquiry: UC Arts’ Reveals About the Future of Arts Education



Students across the nation are finding that opportunities to get a degree in the arts are dwindling. In the past several years, several prestigious arts and design universities have closed, including in California, where the California College of the Arts, San Francisco Art Institute, and Mills College have shut their doors.

All the more important, then, that UC’s doors are open — and the arts are more popular than ever.

On March 22, three deans from UC arts programs gathered to discuss arts education, surrounded by the works of young alumni as part of a new show, “Open Inquiry: UC Arts,” hosted by the Sausalito Center for the Arts until April 12, 2026. Curated by Ginny Duncan, formerly of UC Davis’ Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum, and UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture Board member Jennifer Bailey Wechsler — herself a UC Berkeley and UCLA alumna — the show highlights the arts as a necessary form of public engagement in which UC students are as relevant and successful as ever.

Three of the fastest-growing majors at UC Berkeley are not related to science or technology, noted Sara Guyer, dean of the Division of Arts & Humanities at UC Berkeley, but music, art practice, and film and media studies. Students are actively seeking an embodied research experience that cuts across all fields of research and open inquiry. 

A panel discussion with participants seated at a table, audience facing them in a bright space.
University of California deans Lionel Popkin, Noah Guynn, Sara Guyer and Will Kane, executive director of news and media relations at UC Berkeley, take part in the 'From Studio to Society: The Value and Future of UC Art Education' discussion. (Photo by Mike Lewis)

“What defines Berkeley’s signature is that the arts are not contained, they are embedded across the university. Artists here are in constant dialogue with scholars in every field, and that exchange doesn’t just inform their work; it reshapes how knowledge itself is produced,” Guyer said. “In a world dominated by automation and artificial intelligence, our students will be even better prepared for careers because they’ve been trained to think in an open-ended way.”

Students in the studio arts are anxious not to be in front of a screen, added Noah Guynn, associate dean of the faculty in the Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies in the College of Letters and Science at UC Davis. Applications for MFA programs at UC Davis are dramatically on the rise, he said, as the campus expands its ability to support arts programming thanks to Maria Manetti Shrem, who gave the campus one of the largest private gifts to an artist studio program in the history of the U.S. 

“There is a great deal of heartache in the community for the loss of these private institutions for the arts,” Guynn said. “But we’re very proud of the fact that we serve the public and then maintain really healthy arts programs.” 

Lionel Popkin, interim dean of the UCLA School of Arts and Architecture, noted the many ways in which UC campuses can serve the public. “What’s amazing about the West Coast is that exceptional artists want to teach, to be part of the discourse and move fields forward. If there are fewer art schools around, there are fewer people to invent, and that’s bad for all of us.”

Across UC campuses, arts offerings are a boon to communities — UCLA’s Fowler and Hammer Museums alongside CAP UCLA’s performing arts series, for example, offer cutting-edge arts programming to half a million visitors each year. 

“The porousness between the community and the campus is crucial to the vibrancy of the city,” Popkin said. 

“Although so many art schools across the state and the country are closing, the University of California has a thriving art school culture people may not fully realize is here,” said Open Inquiry curator Jennifer Bailey Wechsler. “The young alumni of these art programs we are featuring have signed on with galleries, have shown in the most prestigious fairs, like Frieze, and receive mentorship from some of California’s most notable artists. University of California arts education is more important than ever.”

A version of this article was originally published by the UC Newsroom


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