The arts tend to be less than fully appreciated, so it’s not like I thought art departments would be immune to the current swath of budget cuts, but it’s still depressing. Everyone’s taking a hit, but the NY Times has highlighted several painful examples: If you are looking for a sign of how strapped the [...]
The arts tend to be less than fully appreciated, so it’s not like I thought art departments would be immune to the current swath of budget cuts, but it’s still depressing. Everyone’s taking a hit, but the NY Times has highlighted several painful examples:
If you are looking for a sign of how strapped the University of California, Los Angeles, is for cash, consider that its arts and architecture school may resort to holding a bake sale to raise money. California’s severe financial crisis has left its higher-education system — which serves nearly a fifth of the nation’s college students — in particularly bad straits. But tens of thousands of students at public and private colleges and universities around the country will find arts programs, courses and teachers missing — victims of piercing budget cuts — when they descend on campuses this month and next.
At Washington State University the department of theater arts and dance has been eliminated. At Florida State University the undergraduate program in art education and two graduate theater programs are being phased out. The University of Arizona is cutting three-quarters of its funds, more than $500,000, for visiting classical music, dance and theater performers. Wesleyan University’s Center for the Arts, which supports four departments — dance, music, theater and visual arts — is losing 14 percent of its $1.2 million budget over the next two years. The Louisiana State University Museum of Art, one of the largest university-affiliated collections in the South, saw 20 percent of its state financing disappear. Other private and state institutions warn of larger classes, trimmed offerings, higher tuition and fewer services, faculty and visitors.
I’m hoping everyone can just hunker down and try to hang in there until things improve. Because things have to improve at some point, right?
Further Reading:
Univ. of Calif. Makes Cuts After Reduction in State Financing
WSU Announces Layoffs, Program Cuts
Florida’s Financial Crisis, An Unnatural Disaster
Univ. of Arizona: Update on University Budget Cuts
Wesleyan University: Economic Downturn FAQs
Posted by Alexa Harrington