An art history major is ostensibly about the study of fine art, sculpture, architecture, painting, decoration, and other forms of artistic expression throughout history. But it’s actually so much more than that. “The magical thing about art history is how it teaches you to think critically and understand how our world is shaped by context. Nothing exists in a vacuum,” says Caroline Ouwerkerk, a career coach who works with liberal arts students and graduates. In truth, art history is used as a lens to study value systems, norms, history, and people.
“My students have found success standing out from a sea of applicants because they have critical writing skills, know how to contextualize or frame big issues, and can write compelling statements that rely on close observation,” says Gloria Sutton, associate professor of contemporary art history at Northeastern University. In addition to more “traditional” creative fields, she says, her students “find success in law and medicine—fields that require close reading, attention to detail, and developing interpretations of how events took place using material evidence."
I have both an undergraduate degree in art history from the University of Notre Dame and a graduate degree in art business from the Sotheby’s Institute of Art. I don’t work for a gallery, museum, or private collection—but as a journalist and entrepreneur, I still use my art history skills every day.
There’s a reason art history is growing in popularity as a major. While it may not immediately seem like the most “practical” course of study, there are a multitude of roles in a range of fields and industries the degree could prepare you for.
Top Skills You Gain as an Art History Major
Art history majors learn important transferable skills that can be useful in a wide variety of jobs—far beyond the traditional ones you’d expect with the major, like gallerist, archivist, and museum specialist. These skills include:
- Research: In this major, you’re tasked with immersing yourself in a particular time period: What was going on historically, socially, and economically during that time? What does art add to our understanding of history? How can you identify, analyze, and synthesize sources to understand more about the art and the artist? Understanding historical importance and holistic context is incredibly transferable to the workplace, where you may be tasked with bringing together information to make an argument or advocate for a course of action, for example.
- Analysis: Art history concerns itself not simply with the surface, but also with deeper meaning. Why did the artist choose the subject and medium? Why and how would an artist insert themself into the piece? What is the artist trying to say? Honing your analytical skills means you can evaluate information, draw conclusions from it, and solve problems, not just in your coursework or when looking at a work of art but also for a potential employer when facing a complex business problem.
- Making connections: A student doesn’t just study one piece or even one artist, but different creators and trends across time and location. How is any given work connected to other contemporary works? What makes it different? What aspects are supposed to be symbols or references—and of or to what? In an art history class or exam, you might be shown a work of art you’ve never encountered and be asked to apply your learnings to it. Forming connections is a soft skill that’s incredibly useful when you need to synthesize any kind of information or data.
- Writing: All of these skills come together in writing. When you’re working on a paper for class, writing isn’t just about memorization and regurgitation but about the creation of new knowledge. You’re making a case for meaning and teaching it to a reader. Writing also requires persuasion, organization, and synthesis—often as part of a timed exam or essay, meaning you learn how to write quickly. Writing skills are essential in any job—even if you’re not a writer, most jobs have an element of communication, whether it’s conveying information via presentation, report, or email.
- Managing long-term projects: As an art history major, you might work on a research paper over an entire semester—which means you have to learn how to sustain focus, manage your time, and break the project into smaller, more achievable action items. Project management is a skill set that can help you stay organized, solve problems, and succeed across different roles and sectors.
It’s clear that an art history major teaches quite a bit beyond the literal subject matter. Check out nine jobs that make particular use of these skills; only three of them require advanced degrees, and several of them are outside the art world entirely. Salary information comes from compensation resource PayScale, reflecting numbers from September 2021 (their database is updated nightly).