Art History · Pennsylvania

Art History colleges in Pennsylvania

CampusPin lists 152 U.S. colleges in Pennsylvania that offer Art History programs. Compare tuition, acceptance rate, and enrollment in the table below, every figure links back to the institution's official IPEDS data.

Art History studies how art was made, used, and understood across cultures and eras, suiting students who pair close visual analysis with research and writing.

Schools in Pennsylvania that offer Art History

Art History programs in Pennsylvania: by the numbers

A quick comparison of the 50 schools (of 152 total) listed above, drawn from each institution's published IPEDS data.

Schools listed

152

Public / private

12 / 38

Universities / 2-year

38 / 12

Cities represented

37

In-state tuition range

$4,632–$68,300

Median in-state tuition

$29,347

Figures reflect the schools currently listed and each institution's most recent reported data. Verify current tuition and admissions details with the school before applying.

What you'll study in a Art History program

  • Survey of Western and global art across periods and regions
  • Formal analysis of composition, style, medium, and technique
  • Iconography and the interpretation of visual symbols
  • Art-historical research methods and historiography of the discipline
  • Provenance research and the study of collecting and the art market
  • Principles of preservation and conservation of artworks and objects
  • Foreign-language reading for primary sources and scholarship
  • Museum and gallery practice, including curatorial and exhibition work
  • Critical writing and the construction of evidence-based visual arguments

Where a Art History degree can lead

  • Museum Curator
  • Gallery Manager
  • Art Conservator
  • Archivist
  • Auction House Specialist
  • Arts Administrator

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 curators median $61,770).

Art History examines the visual record of human cultures, asking how works of art and architecture were made, who made them, what they meant to the people who used them, and how those meanings shift over time. Students learn to look closely at objects, identify style and technique, and place a painting, sculpture, print, photograph, or building in its social, political, and religious setting. Coursework moves through periods, regions, and themes, and trains the eye and the argument together: you describe what you see, interpret it through evidence, and defend a reading in written and spoken form. The major draws on theory and methods such as iconography, formal analysis, provenance research, and the historiography of the discipline, and it overlaps with museum and conservation practice. It differs from studio art, where the goal is to make objects, and from visual or media studies, which centers contemporary culture and screens rather than the historical analysis of objects and built spaces.

Most programs award a bachelor's degree built on a survey sequence followed by upper-level seminars, often a foreign language for primary-source and scholarly reading, and a research paper or thesis; some include internships in galleries, archives, or collections, and hands-on work with objects in a museum or print study room. A bachelor's opens roles in education, arts nonprofits, publishing, and the art market, while many positions in museums, academic teaching, and conservation expect graduate study. Art conservation in particular usually requires specialized graduate training in materials and chemistry, and roles such as registrar or curator are typically entered through advanced coursework and supervised experience rather than a single license. Graduates work in museums and galleries, auction houses, archives and libraries, historic sites, universities, and cultural agencies; where programmatic accreditation or specific credentials apply to a graduate or conservation track, prospective students should verify current requirements directly with the program.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of curators, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $61,770 and projects employment to grow about 7% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

Find more Art History schools

Use CampusPin's filter-first search to narrow 152+ Art History programs in Pennsylvania by tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting.