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MA in Critical Craft Studies

Applications received by March 1, 2021 will be considered for a limited number of merit-based scholarships.

The MA in Critical Craft Studies brings together a rotating faculty from multiple disciplines and varied cultural and global locations to develop craft as a field of study. Students investigate research methods from archives to oral histories; public modes of presenting craft from street fairs to museum exhibitions; forms of writing from exhibition reviews to academic journal articles; and alternative forms of documenting and communicating history, such as podcasts, symposia, online platforms, and curricular development. The program challenges the boundaries of craft and spans media-specific work to craft-like contemporary art, folk art to artisanal explorations. We work to shape an inclusive field: our approach is non-canonical and anti-racist. Research as an applied practice is the principle that connects students’ project work in the Swannanoa/Asheville area to that in their own hometowns, offering training in primary and secondary source analysis and experience while studying and shaping a new field: craft studies.

Program design
The graduate program follows a low-residency model. Students begin each semester in intensive on-site residencies alternating between July on the Warren Wilson College campus and January in downtown Asheville at the Center for Craft, the program’s Founding Partner. Residencies initiate independent semester study of craft history, research methods lab and materials lab, with regular online and off-site meetings with faculty and mentors.
The program consists of 2 years plus one additional residency, in which students share their Practicum Projects. Final projects may take a number of forms, from a formal thesis to an exhibition, curricular development to creating a scholarly symposium, or a collection of short form critical writing to podcasts.

To apply
The MA in Critical Craft Studies accepts new students once per year for the semester starting in July. Application to the program includes: a personal essay, an object response to one of two objects provided on the website, up to three additional materials, two letters of recommendation, and transcripts from all undergraduate and graduate programs, and a phone interview with the Program Director. Applications are available online; contact Nathan Wyrick, Director of Admissions at nwyrick@warren-wilson.edu for program questions.

Faculty 2020–21
Core Faculty: Namita Gupta Wiggers, Program Director, Jeff Keith, Ben Lignel, Tom Martin, Mara Holt Skov, and Leslie Roberts. Core faculty teach courses throughout the year.

Workshop Faculty: Sara Clugage, Lisa Jarrett, Kareem Khubchandani, Tim May, Mirzoeff, Tiffany Momon, Melissa Potter, and Jay Roberts. Workshop Faculty teach during our fall (July) and winter (January) residencies.

Visit our online residency in January
Join us to learn more about how the program fits your interests during an information session or during our Winter Semester Residency in January. For more information and to register, contact Nathan Wyrick, Director of Admissions, at nwyrick@warren-wilson.edu.

© Judith Leemann workshop, 2019. Photo: lydia see

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