You must submit your application to the college prior to uploading portfolio/audition materials. We will notify applicants via email when the submission module is available on .
BFA and BMus programs are only available to fall applicants.
Your submission will also be considered for the Faculty Recognition Award. The Faculty Recognition Award is 淫妻社's talent-based scholarship program for new, incoming students. Awards range from $500 to full-tuition. Five full-tuition awards are available annually.
On this page, you'll find details on the portfolio and audition submission guidelines for direct entry into Columbia's Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) and Bachelor of Music (BMus) programs. If you are interested in a Bachleor of Arts (BA) or Bachelor of Science (BS) program, you can find those requirements here.
A note for students applying via the Common App.
Columbia receives data from the Common Application every 24 hours. If you applied through the Common Application, you should receive an email with instructions for activating your Columbia Connect account within 24 hours of submitting your Common App. You will not be able to upload your portfolio/audition materials until AFTER you activate your Columbia Connect account. Common App applicants are advised to factor this 24-hour processing period into their Columbia application timeline.
Still undecided about your intended major?
BFA and BMus applicants cannot apply as undecided—you must select a specific major. If you wish to apply as an undecided student, you may choose to submit your work under any of the guidelines listed for BA and BS degrees; please note you can only select one.
Submitting Materials
- How do I submit my materials?
After submitting your application, you can upload your work via the submission link in the “Portfolio” section of Columbia Connect will always be the most up-to-date location for information about what we need from you.
- What should I submit?Submit work that adheres to the guidelines for your intended major. Work in other disciplines will not be considered for the award. You can find detailed guidelines by major below.
- When should I submit?
Requirements and deadlines can vary, so please read the section covering your program carefully. The checklist in will be your best resource to stay on track with your required materials.
A pre-screening process is required for the Acting for Stage and Screen, BFA; Musical Theatre, BFA; Performance and Songwriting, BMus programs. For students applying to these programs, the deadline to submit all materials (application to the college, transcripts, portfolio files, and prescreening items) is 11:59 p.m. (CST) on Monday, November 1, 2025. Selected students will be invited to continue in the audition process in January. We will follow up with those students with information on how to schedule their auditions at that time.
For all other BFA programs, the deadline to submit all materials (application to the college, transcripts, portfolio files, and scheduling your audition/interview) is 11:59 p.m. (CST) on Thursday, January 15, 2025.
An interview is required for students applying to Fashion Design, BFA program. We will follow up with information on how to schedule your audition or interview.
BFA/BMus Requirements
- Acting for Stage and Screen (BFA)
All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Prescreening materials
- Submit a full resume of your theatrical history including name of show, role played, and venue.
- Submit a full-color headshot.
- Submit a statement of purpose with no more than 500 words. This statement should include your reasons for pursuing a BFA in Acting.
- Please prepare, record, and upload two contrasting monologues totaling no more than three minutes.
- OPTIONAL: Wild Card Video—This media can be ANYTHING you want: a special skill, an interesting story about yourself, a passionate speech, an instrument that you play, etc. “What do you want us to know about you?” and “What makes you unique?”. This submission should be no longer than 90 seconds.
What happens next?
All BFA applicants selected through pre-screening will be invited to participate in a virtual or on-campus audition.
Interview Expectations
- Conduct a short conversation with faculty: Be prepared to talk about who you are, why you want to study acting, what you like about Columbia and the program, and how you want to grow as an actor.
- Work briefly on ONE of the two monologues you submitted with your portfolio. This is a ‘no pressure’ exploration of your work, but please be prepared to do either of the two monologues you submitted.
- Comedy Writing and Performance (BFA)All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Resume: This can be a theatrical resume or it can be a one-page document that discusses your experience and interest in any aspect of comedy writing or performance or both.
Full color headshot or a current full color photograph of your face
A sample of your comedic work, (pick one) :
1) A 2-minute video of you performing a comedic monologue written by someone else
2) A 2-minute video of you performing original comedy created by you (could be stand-up, a character monologue, or a personal comedic story). Note: if you are submitting a video of you improvising or performing with someone else, make sure to identify yourself.
3) 400-600 words of your original comedic writing (may be in the form of a sketch, an essay, or a story)
Note: Videos should start with you (as yourself) saying your name, and identifying the piece you are performing (along with the author if it is not you)
A two-to-three-minute Wild Card video :
This video can be anything that you want to share with us. It does not have to be funny. What makes you unique? What do you want to show us that the other materials don’t convey? Feel free to experiment and be creative.
A 300- 500 word double-spaced answer to one of the following questions :
If hell existed, what would be your own very specific version of hell? What would you have to do? Who would you have to spend time with? How else would you be tortured?
An undercover spy is going to have to impersonate you in every aspect of your life. What instructions do you give them?
As you put together your materials for us, keep in mind that we value voice, creativity, and effort over polish and production value.
- Fashion Design (BFA)
All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Portfolio Requirements
- Submit a portfolio of 10-15 pieces (captions and commentary with images are encouraged).
- Submit an essay (300 words minimum, 500 words maximum) answering the following question: How do you approach problem-solving through a critical design practice?
Interviews
All BFA applicants will be required to participate in a virtual interview. We encourage applicants to visit campus for an Admitted Student Day (taking place in February through April) or a
Virtual Interview Process
Virtual interview events will take place via Zoom. A link to the event will be emailed shortly before the event begins. Visit zoom.us to set up an account prior to the event.
Interview Expectations
- Conduct a 15-minute conversation with faculty: Be prepared to talk about your portfolio, who you are, why you want to study fashion design, what you like about Columbia and the program, and how you want to grow as a designer.
- Film and Television (BFA)
All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Portfolio Items:
Part I - The Essay
The BFA in Film and Television is a program of study with an emphasis on one particular concentration; Directing or Cinematography. This focused study, culminating in capstone work, allows for limited exploration in other areas of Film and Television, and demands a commitment to your chosen concentration. The BFA is differentiated from the BA in Film and Television which allows for a more general program of study across disciplines.
Write a brief essay (approximately 250 words) discussing your creative and professional goals and why you wish to pursue a BFA in Film and Television. Please speak to your commitment to the specific concentration you are interested in, Directing or Cinematography, include insights on your creative process, and discuss the role collaboration has played or will play in your work.
Part II – The Creative Submission (Select One)
Option 1: The Portfolio Visualization Project
Construct a visual narrative in 8-12 frames. You can draw pictures, shoot them with a still camera, or use existing shots. If you use existing frames, from a video or from the internet, you must not simply duplicate a scene from an existing film, but must tell an original story using material from more than one source. What is important is that the pictures you use introduce and clearly define a main character and tell a clear, cohesive, original story with a beginning, middle and end. Do not use text, titles, shot descriptions or captions. This is strictly visual storytelling. Do not use more than two frames per page.
Option 2: The Portfolio
Please submit one sample of your completed work that best demonstrates your creative efforts in your selected BFA Concentration, either Directing or Cinematography.
Part III – The Creative Submission Self-Assessment
Please assess your work on the portfolio sample or visualization project you submitted (250 words). What was your objective to creating this piece? What was the Theme you explored? How successfully did you achieve your objective and articulate your Theme? What did you learn from this process and what would you do differently? What areas of Directing or Cinematography do you feel most confident in and what areas do you feel you most need to focus on in your studies.
- Fine Arts (BFA)
All application and portfolio materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Part I - The Artist Statement
Submit a 250-word artist statement that describes your creative work, influences, and what you hope to explore or communicate through your art.
Part II – The Creative Submission (Select One)
Option 1: Traditional Portfolio Submission
Submit 15–20 samples of your best work in a variety of media and subjects that may include drawings, prints, digital, web, and motion graphics. Work samples should represent classroom assignments as well as independent projects. Whenever possible, work samples should demonstrate drawing from life or imagination, rather than from photographs.
Please be sure to include dimensions of your work and a one- to three-sentence description for each image.
Option 2: Alternate Portfolio Piece
If you are applying without a traditional portfolio, you may choose to complete this creative prompt instead. This is an opportunity to show us how you think, how you make, and how you communicate ideas through visual art.
Interruption
Create one original work of art in response to the idea of “interruption.”
You may interpret this concept in any way that is meaningful to you — as a visual, emotional, physical, or conceptual interruption. Consider how interruptions might appear in time, space, thought, routines, systems, conversations, images, or even in your own creative process.There is no wrong way to approach this prompt. You can use any medium you like, including (but not limited to):
- Drawing or painting
- Photography
- Illustration (digital or traditional)
- Collage, mixed media, or sculpture
- A short video or animation
- Any other format that feels right for your idea
What to Submit:
- 1 completed artwork
- A short, written explanation (250–500 words)
In your writing, tell us about your idea, how you interpreted the theme, the materials you used, and the choices you made during the process. We’re not looking for a polished essay — we just want to understand your thinking and creative approach.
What We’re Looking For:
- Your ability to think creatively and conceptually
- Your willingness to experiment or take risks
- Your skill in working with your chosen materials
- Your voice as a visual thinker and maker
- Graphic Design (BFA)
All application and portfolio materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Portfolio Items- Submit an artist/designer statement.
- Submit 15–20 work samples that showcase your interest and skills in design through typography, applied drawing, information design, branding identity, web graphics, packaging, advertising design, and publication design. Work submitted may include drawings, digital, web, motion graphics, and experimental design. Your work samples may represent classroom assignments as well as independent projects. Please include a brief description of materials and dimensions of your work.
- Illustration (BFA)
All application and portfolio materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Part I - The Artist Statement
- Submit a 250-word artist statement that describes your creative work, influences, and what you hope to explore or communicate through your art.
Part II – The Creative Submission (Select One)
Option 1: Traditional Portfolio Submission
Submit 15–20 work samples that incorporate a variety of media and subjects. Samples may include drawings, prints, paintings, photographs and lens-based media, digital media, sculpture, ceramics, jewelry, furniture, and 3D objects.
Whenever possible, drawing and painting work samples should demonstrate observation from life or imagination, rather than just from photographs. Special emphasis should be given to work that reflects your imagination and a consistent, original vision, or independent project. Please include a brief description of the materials and dimensions of your work.
Option 2: Alternate Portfolio Piece
If you are applying without a traditional portfolio, you may choose to complete this creative prompt instead. This is an opportunity to show us how you think, how you make, and how you communicate ideas through visual art.
Interruption
Create one original work of art in response to the idea of “interruption.”
You may interpret this concept in any way that is meaningful to you — as a visual, emotional, physical, or conceptual interruption. Consider how interruptions might appear in time, space, thought, routines, systems, conversations, images, or even in your own creative process.There is no wrong way to approach this prompt. You can use any medium you like, including (but not limited to):
- Drawing or painting
- Photography
- Illustration (digital or traditional)
- Collage, mixed media, or sculpture
- A short video or animation
- Any other format that feels right for your idea
What to Submit:
- 1 completed artwork
- A short, written explanation (250–500 words)
In your writing, tell us about your idea, how you interpreted the theme, the materials you used, and the choices you made during the process. We’re not looking for a polished essay — we just want to understand your thinking and creative approach.
What We’re Looking For:
- Your ability to think creatively and conceptually
- Your willingness to experiment or take risks
- Your skill in working with your chosen materials
- Your voice as a visual thinker and maker
- Interior Architecture (BFA)
All application and portfolio materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Portfolio Items
- Submit 10-15 images of your best creative work that evidences your abilities and interest, particularly in interior spaces; please be sure to include dimensions of your work and a short description for each image. You are invited to submit past projects or images that you have collected, showing evidence of thought regarding spaces, human interactions, materials, graphics/signage, furniture, lighting, etc. If you have worked on interior projects in the past, please include images of perspectives, drawings/sketches, and examples of materials.
- Additional portfolio requirement for transfer applicants: If you have taken courses in Interior Design, Architecture, and/or Interior Architecture, include examples of completed projects along with the syllabus for each course.
A minimum 2.75 high school GPA is required for all freshman applicants to the Interior Architecture BFA program.
- Musical Theatre (BFA)
All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Prescreen Materials
Overall
Each piece can be filmed/uploaded as a separate piece of media or a continuous video. Please do not exceed five (5) minutes total.Slate
There should not be a separate “slate” video—slates are to appear at the beginning of each piece. To slate for a song, share your name, the title, and show in which it appears. To slate for a monologue, share your name, the title of the play, and the playwright.Songs & Monologues Options
1 song and monologue OR 2 songs (total of: 2 contrasting songs from the musical theater canon OR 1 song and 1 monologue)Songs
When submitting two (2) songs: these should be contrasting pieces from the musical theatre canon.- One song should be a ballad and one song should be up-tempo.
- One song should be written prior to 1970; the other should be written after 1970 and contrast the style of the first.
- Each song file should be 60-90 seconds. This time limit includes the slate at the beginning of the piece.
- Songs should be filmed in a ¾ shot, which means the top of the head to your knees should be visible in the frame.
Monologue
When submitting one song and one monologue: Prepare one age-appropriate contemporary monologue from a play or musical (no television shows, movies, or dialects) no longer than 60 seconds.- This time limit includes the slate at the beginning of the piece.
- Monologues should be filmed in a “close-up” shot, which means the top of the head to the middle of your chest should be visible in the frame.
Dance
Please record and submit two (2) short dance combinations. Choose between:1. BOTH of the combinations linked below.
-or-
2. One of the combinations linked below and an additional combination showcasing & celebrating your special style, technique: Hip-Hop, Tap, Acrobatics, West African, African-Caribbean, Latin, Ballroom are some examples. No barre work. Please stick to vocabulary and steps you are familiar with and can execute well. We just want to see where you are in your dance training—show us YOU through your dance.
Total running time for the dance portion of your video should be 2 minutes maximum.
Statement Video
Thirty (30) second personal artistic statement video. It may address areas of interest (such as performance, teaching, choreography, and/or actor/musicianship) or what makes you unique as an artist that would flourish at Columbia. ANYTHING you want: a special skill, a passionate speech, “What do you want us to know about you?” and “What makes you unique?”Musical Theatre Portfolio Items
(to be submitted prior to your virtual audition or along with your uploaded videos—all submissions due by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Wednesday, November 20, 2024)- A full resume of theatrical history including name of show, role played, and venue.
- A full-color headshot.
What happens next?
All BFA applicants selected through pre-screening will be invited to participate in a virtual or on-campus audition.
These will be group auditions, which will include brief acting, music, and dance sections, plus a group discussion. Be prepared to move in clothes you feel comfortable in. The vocal portion of the event will be a group vocal exercise. Please have your sheet music handy in case you are asked to sing.
- Performance and Songwriting, BMus
All application and prescreening materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Monday, December 1, 2025.
Portfolio Items
- Submit a brief musical resume, listing experience in musical settings. This resume can include private lessons; school, church, and community ensembles; recordings; professional work; and other relevant formal or informal study and performance experiences.
- Submit a Music Personal Statement that expresses your goals and your reasons for pursuing professional studies in Music.
- For instrumentalists and singers: Perform two pieces of your choice (written by composers other than yourself) that best showcase your abilities in your primary performance area(s). Both selections should reflect the contemporary music focus of the program, specifically styles ranging from R&B, Pop, Rock, Jazz, Gospel, Blues, Latin, Hip-Hop, American Roots, and Country, and the two pieces should be in contrasting styles and tempos.
- For singer-songwriters or writers who create music using software: Present two examples of original songs, productions, or instrumental compositions. Video performances are preferable to studio recordings, and may simply be performed live with basic accompaniment.
Auditions
Selected BMus applicants will be required to participate in an on-campus audition. If you are selected and are unable to come to campus, please reach out to your admissions representative to discuss virtual options - virtual options are limited.
Audition Expectations
- During the interview there will be a brief conversation about your resume, and you will be asked to perform repertoire and exercises in your discipline (vocal or instrumental) and demonstrate your technical and musical preparation for BMus level studies.
- The interviewing faculty will ask you to perform prepared work (this may be either the same work or different work than you submitted for your portfolio), and assess your level in sight-reading (sheet music and lead sheets) and improvisation. Due to the time limitation of the interview slot, the interviewing faculty may only be able to hear parts of work submitted or prepared. Please bear in mind that an important aspect of the interview process is to ensure that you are recommended to music courses that are best matched with your level.
- Photography (BFA)
All application and portfolio materials (including transcripts) must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. (Central U.S.) on Thursday, January 15, 2026.
Portfolio Items
Submit ten photographs made within the last twelve months, saved into a single .pdf document.Photography Placement Exam
BFA applicants must complete Columbia's Photography Placement exam with a score of 70% or higher. The exam is administered online. We will follow-up with information on the exam after receiving your submission.