mshchem
Subscriber
Tough decision.
So expensive.
I loved college
Graduate degree required to be a moderator on Photrio
So expensive.
I loved college
Graduate degree required to be a moderator on Photrio


Graduate degree required to be a moderator on Photrio![]()

There are really only two reasons to get an MFA that will help you financially. If you want to teach and if you want to go the gallery route. Your success in either will highly depend on the school you go to. At this point there really are only a few schools that will help and they aren't in Texas. You also need a lot of talent as well. Photography is a talent just like many other things. You have to ask yourself if you have the talent to do it, otherwise an MFA is just a waste of money. On the other hand, if you are really talented, then you won't need an MFA, it will just help in opening doors. You don't even need an MFA to teach in that case. I've known several people that were recruited into it. I did a short stint at a large university myself.
If you want to be a photographer then you are better off not going to school for it and just learning about it in the real world. Get a job as an assistant to someone who is really good doing the kind of photography you want to do. That will open lots of doors itself.
Good luck.
Which doors do you hope this will help open for you? Sorry, I can't comment, but it might help others with the required experience to make their answers more concrete/applicable to your case. E.g. I can imagine there's a difference between creative and commercial types of doors.
I was there at the end of Henry's career and he was very bitter. He just got tired of seeing his students end up in low paying jobs. He always wanted students to study business. By that time Reg Herron who was a dear friend of mine was taking over Henry's duties.
If you would like to teach in the US, high school or college, the MFA will be valuable if not essential to be considered for a position. A position teaching art is very competitive unless you have already made a big impression in your field.
Its hard to say whether it would be a good investment without knowing more about your specific goals.
I think this is the best advise you can receive. Especially in USA where are the best of the best. Make a top ten list of photograhers you admire and apply for an intership or similar.
I got my MFA in Fine Arts, rather than in photography.
Though my thesis show was almost all photography with some videos.
I got the degree mostly for myself while I was trying to figure out what to do with my life.
I had wanted to continue the photographic work and ideas I developed in my undergraduate education.
I was a graduate, teaching associate in the art department, so the degree didn’t really cost me anything. In fact I actually got a stipend while working on the degree.
Hello,
(I am not sure if this is the best section for this post, as nothing seemed correct.)
I am considering earning my MFA in photography. I am thinking this will open more doors for me. For example, I'll be able to teach. There are two universities nearby that I will be able to drive to to work on it. Both offer a three year program. I am hoping to be able to have a professional paying career at some point, and this is what I am thinking would offer the best opportunities.
What are some thoughts from those of you who do have an MFA? Why did you pursue it? What do you wish you had known prior to attending? What opportunities did/does having an MFA open for you?
Thank you for your insight!
Hello,
(I am not sure if this is the best section for this post, as nothing seemed correct.)
I am considering earning my MFA in photography. I am thinking this will open more doors for me. For example, I'll be able to teach. There are two universities nearby that I will be able to drive to to work on it. Both offer a three year program. I am hoping to be able to have a professional paying career at some point, and this is what I am thinking would offer the best opportunities.
What are some thoughts from those of you who do have an MFA? Why did you pursue it? What do you wish you had known prior to attending? What opportunities did/does having an MFA open for you?
Thank you for your insight!
Trying to figure out what to do with what is left of my life.
Maybe this is what I am doing. Trying to figure out what to do with what is left of my life. I don't want to work at a retail print lab for the rest of it, I want to do something worth while and to make a living, not just supplemental income.
Except that the cost of living in the big cities is skyrocketing, and you're stuck there (gosh, who would want to live in Dallas or Houston?), and getting those positions to begin with can be difficult; plus the education debt itself is vasty higher that it was in my day. And in the current climate, the plug is being pulled on university funding in numerous categories on a quite fickle basis. There is far more money and opportunities to be had via industrial and tech apprenticeships with no need of a higher degree. My wife used here UC degree just as a stepping stone to an entirely different career, then flipped the income of that into yet another degree and new career path. I went more the hardscrabble path, but retired with good benefits, and in the meantime, did my own kind of photography without needing to bend to any academic protocols.
(gosh, who would want to live in Dallas or Houston?)
What's wrong with the teaching profession? You can combine it with getting your MFA and still have a secure career with a pension at the end. My wife didn;t start until around 36 years old and retired at 61 with a nice pension from NYC. Teachers in the bigger cities like Houston, Dallas or Austin start at $60K-$64K, substantially less at 40-45K in the small rural districts but usually pay a lot more just to attract talent. Pensions are caluclated below with average from the highest five years.
Years of Service X 2.3% X Average Salary (average of five highest years)=Annual Pension. So let;s say you average $70k and work 20 years. The pension would be $32,200 per annum. $40,250 if you work 25 years. Plus Social Security, another $25K annually.
What's wrong with the teaching profession? You can combine it with getting your MFA and still have a secure career with a pension at the end. My wife didn;t start until around 36 years old and retired at 61 with a nice pension from NYC. Teachers in the bigger cities like Houston, Dallas or Austin start at $60K-$64K, substantially less at 40-45K in the small rural districts but usually pay a lot more just to attract talent. Pensions are caluclated below with average from the highest five years.
Years of Service X 2.3% X Average Salary (average of five highest years)=Annual Pension. So let;s say you average $70k and work 20 years. The pension would be $32,200 per annum. $40,250 if you work 25 years. Plus Social Security, another $25K annually.
I am not sure. That was one of the reasons I am asking. I know teaching will be available, and the possibility of receiving more grants and the like ( as I was told by a MFA). I am looking at my options moving forward as I do not wish to work a retail lab job the rest of my life.
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