I suppose the obvious answer would be an artist working in ceramics. Like most people who graduate with any degree in liberal or fine arts, it is going to be tough for you. You could try writing about ceramics for an art magazine, but magazines are tough to break into without a portfolio. You could write for a ceramics or art web site, but you can't expect to make a living doing that, as they rarely, if ever pay. There are industrial uses for ceramics; it's a great electrical insulator for example, and I would suggest you move in that direction and start with a search on Ceramics and Industry.
A bachelors degree in fine arts will help when becoming a visualizer in ad agencies or in any type of creative work field (like places like office tigers). You can become an art critic, an art director, or you can get into client servicing in any creative work lab.
Of course, it is also possible to an Artist.
When you think about it there are wuite alot of jobs to do with art & design such as:
Artist/ Fine Art Painter
Buying & Selling (Retail Fashion)
Artist/Illustrator
Costume & Theatrical Design
Court Room Illustrator
Embroidery & Weaver Technologist
Graphic Designer
Computer Graphics
Advertising/Copywriter
Medical Photographer
Wildlife Illustrator
Photographer
Commercial Art
Producer
Draught Person/Cartographer
Film
Architecture
Video Producer
Town & County Planner
Film Editor
Consultancy
Beauty Therapy
Gardening
Special Effects
Sculpture
Textile Designer
Fashion Designer
Display Work
Set Design
Hairdresser
TV Audio Visual
Photographer
Jewellery Maker
Publisher
Archaeologist
Makeup Artist
3D Designer
Interior Designer
Artist in Metals
Furniture Designer
Ceramics
Animator
Glass Designer
Teacher
Jewellery Designer
Camera Operation
I hope that helped
Right now there are very few jobs for liberal arts graduates.
Bachelor of fine arts would lend itself to work in a museum or gallery, or perhaps teaching art.
What kind of deegree do you have to have to become an art teacher?a bachelors degree
A BA degree is just a Bachelors of Art, and a BFA degree is a Bachelors of Fine Arts. Usually Fine Arts degrees have a more rigorous fine art curriculum and require a portfolio for acceptance into the institution. So it really depends on what you want to do with your degree. If you just want a basic degree in photography, a BA (or even a BS) would do you just fine. However, if you want to go into the area of Fine Art photography, then I would recommend a BFA.
If you attend a four year college you can earn a BFA (Bachelors of Fine Art) with the emphasis on fashion design.
You can apply your bachelors degree in many ways. ?æIn regards to youth ministry, you can teach art classes for troubled youth through your church.
have no clue what the heck your talking about i am in fifth grade
You can do any kind of art you want without any degree.
That would depend on the quality of the credits achieved in attaing the Associate Degree, the type of degree beings sought, and the academic demands required of the University confering the Bachelors degree. Don't expect a course in Art Appreciation or Basketweaving 101 to be of any value if you are seeking a Bachelors in Chemistry.
You can get an MFA with a BA or a BFA, but you do have to have a bachelors degree in and "art" field, that is the "A" in BA, BFA, and MFA
Yes. You can get a Bachelors degree in art history online (as part of a degree completion program) at Mansfield University in Pennsylvania. Masters degree online programs in Art History for U.S. students are, at the present ( July 2011), virtually impossible to find.
You must attend a school which has art as a major. You can get your associates or bachelors. The coursework will usually include everything from art history, to ceramics and sculpting, to drawing and painting.
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Yes. In any major college a music degree will be a fine art. That's why the degree will be a "BA" - Bachelor of Arts