Sculpture

The Sculpture Program at Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi is dedicated to fostering a dynamic community that examines how ideas can take shape in space. Traditional and non-traditional materials and techniques are studied as students investigate intent and installation when making art.

Working alongside sculpture faculty and graduate students, undergraduate sculpture students are challenged to develop the technical abilities, problem solving skills, and professional practices that will help craft an individual studio practice.  Led by conceptual exploration and visual communication, the artworks generated range from temporary to permanent, miniature to architectural, pedestal to installation. 

Within this dynamic community, as the students’ ideas and intentions develop into individual expressions, a wide variety of historical and contemporary sculptors and sculptural work is explored as we consider the role(s) art plays within the social, political, and economic realities of our present society.

Sculpture Facility 

The sculpture area includes a primary sculpture studio classroom, a wax and plaster room, a woodshop, a large and covered metal casting (bronze, aluminum, iron), metal fabrication, and a digital 3D printing lab. All the sculpture spaces interconnect as well as connect to the Ceramics areaAdditionally, graduate students from all studio art disciplines have large studios nearby, fostering a sense of interdisciplinary community across all levels of the MFA program. 

Graduate Works
Undergraduate Works
Sculpture crew at Sloss Iron Conference