Moore College of Art and Design
Moore College of Art and Design is a private women's college in Philadelphia specializing in art and design education, founded in 1848 as the Philadelphia School of Design for Women. It's the first and only women's art and design college in the United States, and the school remains committed to women's education while opening graduate and continuing education programs to all genders. Situated in the Parkway Museums District, Moore offers BFA and graduate programs in fine arts, design, curatorial studies, and related fields, preparing students for careers in creative industries while maintaining its historic focus on women's professional advancement.[1]
History
Sarah Peter founded the Philadelphia School of Design for Women in 1848. She responded to a real problem: women had almost no access to professional training in design and industrial arts. The school started with practical subjects. Textile design. Illustration. Teaching. These fields gave women a path to economic independence through work, something most couldn't access elsewhere. This vocational focus reflected the constraints of the Victorian era while offering genuine alternatives to the severely limited occupations available to women at the time.[1]
Over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the institution expanded its programs without losing sight of its core mission. In 1932 it became the Moore Institute of Art, Science and Industry, then later Moore College of Art. The school kept pace with changing creative fields while staying true to its commitment to women's advancement. That 1990 name change to Moore College of Art and Design signaled its modern focus while still honoring where it came from.[1]
Academic Programs
The college offers Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees across a solid range of disciplines: animation and game arts, curatorial studies, fashion design, fine arts, graphic design, illustration, interior design, and photography and digital arts. Graduate students can pursue a Master of Arts in art education with special populations emphasis, a low-residency Master of Fine Arts, or a Master of Arts in socially engaged art. These combine serious studio work with the professional training students need, emphasizing portfolio development and real job readiness.[1]
The Locks Career Center handles career services, internship placement, and professional development work. It connects students directly to creative industries. Philadelphia itself is an asset. Museums, galleries, design firms, cultural institutions. They're right there, serving as both learning sites and places where students find jobs. Moore's focus on art and design education for women creates something larger institutions can't match: an intimate community with targeted support built around students' actual needs.[1]
Campus
Moore's campus sits on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in one of Philadelphia's greatest cultural corridors. The Barnes Foundation is nearby. So are the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Rodin Museum, and other major institutions. That location isn't accidental. It puts students in constant contact with major art collections and puts them within walking distance of Center City's cultural resources. The campus houses studios, computer labs, galleries, and residential facilities for roughly 400 undergraduate students.[1]
The Galleries at Moore show work by contemporary artists, student pieces, and collection materials. Students get real gallery experience while the exhibitions contribute to Philadelphia's art scene. What sets this program apart is its focus: women artists, social engagement, underrepresented perspectives. These reflect Moore's mission in a way that distinguishes it from other galleries around Philadelphia.[1]
Women's Education Legacy
Being a women's college shapes everything here: campus culture, academic programs, the institution's mission itself. Single-sex education in art and design creates space where women lead, where they compete and collaborate without the dynamics that often disadvantage women in creative fields. Contemporary students connect to traditions of women's professional advancement and feminist cultural production through that history.[1]
Women's colleges produce disproportionate numbers of women leaders, scientists, and professionals according to research on educational outcomes. Moore channels that reality toward creative industries through its focused mission. But the college's commitment goes beyond the undergraduate years. Graduate programs, continuing education, community engagement. All of it works to support women's participation in art and design throughout their careers.[1]
See Also
- Benjamin Franklin Parkway
- Women's Education
- Art and Design Education
- Barnes Foundation
- Philadelphia Museum of Art