Before last summer, the furniture design graduate program at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond was thriving. “Classes had waiting lists, students were making incredible work, getting jobs and fellowships,” says artist, woodworker, and VCUarts associate professor Annie Evelyn. “But then the university started talking about repositioning, which became this big unknown.”
The uncertainty persists. In January, The Commonwealth Times, the school’s paper, reported that VCUarts has quietly paused admissions to the furniture design graduate concentration at its Craft/Material Studies MFA program for the 2026–27 academic year, with no definitive word on the program’s future.
Evelyn, the sole faculty member for the furniture design grad program, learned last summer that her contract would not be renewed, leading many students and peers in the craft field to speculate that the program would not return for the foreseeable future.
In an email, the university confirmed that admissions to the program are currently suspended, stating that the school also paused the furniture design program from 2021 to 2023 before relaunching it. The university also emphasized that undergraduates will maintain access to woodworking courses and that woodshop access for graduate Craft/Materials Studies students will remain unchanged.
