art-schools-in-glasgow
We extensively test and research all services we review. Here's why you can trust us.

5 Best Art Schools in Glasgow with Industry-Expert Instructors

  • Portfolio-to-progress pipeline - Do they actively help you build a coherent body of work (crits, tutorials, portfolio prep, and application support), not just set briefs then leave you to flounder?
  • Studio access and facilities that match your practice - We checked for real, usable access to studios or workshops (printmaking, wood/metal, photography, digital labs, ceramics, etc.), plus how easy it is to book time and get technician support.
  • Teaching quality and critique culture - Great schools have lecturers who still practise, give specific feedback, run critiques that are honest but not toxic, and teach how to talk about your work without pretending.
  • Career and community connections - We want visible links to Glasgow’s art ecosystem: exhibitions, placements, live briefs, visiting artists, partnerships with galleries/creative studios, and support for showing your work.

I spend most of my days in The Glasgow Gallery, so I can spot a serious portfolio from a mile off. I’ve also watched plenty of late bloomers turn amateur pottery classes and sketchbooks into a full-blown art career!

If you’re aiming for a degree, you can expect entry to hinge on your portfolio first, with academics in the background. If you’re not chasing a degree, Glasgow’s still stacked with evening and open-studio classes where you can learn without formal entry requirements (and still leave with better craft).

With that in mind, this review compares the best art schools in Glasgow and courses by specialism, facilities, and whether they’ll actually help you level up. 

How much does art school in Glasgow cost?

Art school costs in Glasgow depend heavily on what you’re enrolling in (degree vs college vs short course) and your fee status (Scottish/home vs rest of UK vs international).
For a degree, Scottish “home” undergrad tuition is capped at about £1,820 per year, while rest-of-UK students typically pay around £9,535 per year.
For international undergrads, fees are much higher, starting at around £24,800 per year for undergraduate programmes. 
Costs can be lower if you’re after non-degree learning, with listings of around £185 for an evening course.

1. The Glasgow School of Art (GSA)

the-glasgow-school-of-art-gsa

Address: 167 Renfrew Street

Contact: +441413534500

Business hours: Monday to Saturday, 8 AM–9 PM

Website

As a postgraduate hunting for specialist degrees with global clout, The Glasgow School of Art feels like a true creative engine room, with serious studio culture, not cute craft night. It’s that rare place where the hobbyist, the career-switcher, and the specialist postgrad (AKA me) can all find a route in. 

What I love is the range of levels you can dip into, such as full undergraduate and postgraduate degrees, plus Open Studio short courses and proper portfolio-prep options when you want to sharpen your application work. If you want your practice to move across disciplines (or collide them on purpose), GSA basically encourages it.

It sits across four specialist schools: Fine Arts, Design, Architecture, and Innovation and Technology, so you’re never stuck in one lane. Specialism-wise, it’s stacked, with architecture sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with fine art and design, and the Innovation and Technology side keeping things future-facing, minus the tech demo feels.

Facilities are where it starts to feel unfair (but in a good way): you’ve got proper workshops and technical support with 3D making, laser cutting, 3D printing, electronics/soldering, metalwork, woodwork, plastics, plus architecture-specific kits like large-format printing and computer suites.

Add the in-house galleries and studio-first rhythm, and I reckon it’s built for people who actually want to create…a lot.

That said, it’s intensive, competitive, and the expectations ramp up fast. It’s brilliant if you thrive on pressure, but grim if you need a gentler pace. 

Pros

  • Serious multi-discipline powerhouse
  • Proper technical workshops
  • Not just degrees
  • Future-facing specialisms

Cons

  • Not the cheapest option
  • Pace and critique experience can be intense for those not used to pressure

Customer Reviews

I have found it to be a great place to learn and connect with outstanding lecturers 

I’m happy to share my experience at The Glasgow School of Art! The institution’s commitment to delivering high-quality education is evident in every aspect. As a student specialising in design, I have found it to be a great place to learn and connect with outstanding lecturers with a lot of both practical and theoretical experience. Even as a first-year student who joined as an advanced learner from year 3, I’ve been thoroughly enjoying every moment and discussion with my tutors. The classes are of great quality, providing valuable insights and fostering practical learning. It’s been a rewarding experience, and I highly recommend The Glasgow School of Art for anyone seeking an enriching and fulfilling education in design.

It has advanced my knowledge and understanding 

This is by far the best and most user-friendly circle of fifths I have come across. It has already advanced my knowledge and understanding in just a few weeks of using it. Would recommend this to not only beginner guitarists, but experienced players as well!

2. Glasgow Clyde College

glasgow-clyde-college

Address: 19 Hatfield Drive

Contact: +441412729000

Business hours: Monday to Friday, 8.45 AM–4.45 PM

Website

My cousin is a local school leaver, and Glasgow Clyde College is exactly the kind of bridge I’d want for him with clear HNC/HND routes that take your portfolio from “keen” to “with teeth.” Their Art & Design pathway is openly geared toward building work for entry into art school/university (even direct progression goals), so it doesn’t waste your time. 

Level-wise, it’s a proper ladder, with portfolio-prep options including an advanced UAL route, then HNC Art & Design, and onward into more specialised higher-level courses. If you’re not ready for full-time study, they also run part-time/evening-style learning streams to build skills without committing your full time to the studio.

They have quietly flexed specialisms. You can stay broad in Art & Design (digital plus traditional plus mixed media), or, like my cousin, veer into focused lanes like Fashion Textiles (print/knit/weave/embroidery). 

For portfolio builders, that range matters because it lets you find your thing before you apply somewhere ultra-competitive. Plus, the course culture is plugged into the city, with big-name artist talks and creative residencies at venues like House for an Art Lover and Kelvingrove to give students real-world context.

However, for a college bridge, I told my cousin that if he expects the same international prestige-name halo as a famous university, he’ll need to earn that through progression with consistent work. 

Pros

  • Built-for-portfolio bridge routes
  • Serious portfolio-prep support
  • Clear ladder of art pathways
  • Fashion/textile depths for specialists

Cons

  • Broad-first = non-specialist feels
  • Hustle is needed as portfolio-driven courses move fast

Customer Reviews

The learning is fun, and the instructor is engaging

This is a good facility which hasan Italian beginners class in an eight-week block at night. The learning is fun, and the instructor is engaging. Gives an insight into both the language and the Italian culture. Would love to have further classes to build on the knowledge gained here.

You’ll definitely learn a lot of things about the subject

I’ve been studying in this college for 2 weeks as an Erasmus student, and I have to say that I got a general idea about CNC technology. If you take this course here, you’ll definitely learn a lot of things about the subject.

3. City of Glasgow College (City Campus)

city-of-glasgow-college-city-campus

Address: 190 Cathedral Street

Contact: +441413755555

Business hours: 

Monday to Thursday, 8 AM–6.30 PM

Friday, 8 AM–5.30 PM

Website

I have an art gallery co-worker who wanted evening/weekend study minus that freshers’ week energy she loathed back in college. City of Glasgow College felt like a good fit for this particular upgrade in her adult life.

Their evening course runs through the same system as the main programme listings, so it’s easy to find what’s actually available and when. There are also NQ portfolio-building routes, HNC Fine Art/Art & Design, and specialist design options if you want a qualification that still fits around your work.

Alongside Fine Arts, she found Computer Art & Animation (HND) and plenty of craft/design lanes like interior/product/modelmaking, jewellery, furniture, and art glass. It’s ideal for people like her who want to keep one foot in the gallery but level up their making skills.

She liked that the courses are openly project-based and portfolio-driven, so she can leave with work she can show, not just notes she’ll never open again. The facilities are also the clincher: the Creative Industries hubs have pro-grade studios, including TV/radio studios and a dedicated photography studio and darkroom.

Do note that evening/weekend options can be limited compared to daytime study, so you may have to plan around what’s running that term rather than your dream timetable. 

Pros

  • Made for working adults
  • Legit creative industries kit
  • Loads of choices under one roof
  • City-centre convenience

Cons

  • Evening/weekend classes can be patchy by term
  • Scheduled access to specialist cases (some are shared across programmes)

Customer Reviews

The lectures were outstanding

I studied here for 4 good and amazing years. The lectures were outstanding, the lecturers were awesome and very helpful, and I wouldn’t be where I am without them. I had my graduation in November 2025, an amazing night it was. Love COGC and many thanks again and again.

Fantastic place to study

Fantastic place to study and super friendly staff. The main building is beautiful and definitely worth visiting! Always best as Glasgow College of Nautical Studies.

4. The Craft Pottery Studio

the-craft-pottery-studio

Address: Studio 102A, 102B, and 109, 48-54 Washington St

Contact: +447585216561

Business hours: 

Tuesday to Wednesday, noon–4 PM

Friday to Saturday, 11 AM–6 PM

Sunday, 11 AM–4 PM

Website

Mum declared one day that she wanted a wheel course that feels like proper learning, not a one-off novelty thing. Thankfully, she found The Pottery Studio and liked how it runs like a serious training space, with courses structured for real improvement.

The courses are refreshingly clear for her. There are 2-hour wheel intro sessions for people like her, testing the waters, then 5 to 7-week programmes split into Levels 1 to 3 once she’s ready to commit.

Level 1 is genuinely fundamentals-first: throwing, trimming, clay prep, and glazing, so the progress feels like a portfolio of skills and not just luck. Aside from wheel throwing and hand-building, there’s an occasional craft and sip vibe for ceramics with a social twist (which she absolutely loves!).

For hobbyists like her, that focus is the point. She’s not juggling ten disciplines a day, but she’s getting good at clay.

She said the facilities’ access feels practical for senior life. They timetable classes across the week with set collection hours, so she can plan around domestic chores and still keep momentum. 

However, timetables drop quarterly and tend to book up fast, so spontaneity isn’t your friend here. Also, it’s intentionally ceramics-only here, so it’s brilliant for clay skills but irrelevant elsewhere. 

Pros

  • Clear ladder for hobbyists
  • Wheel-first teaching
  • Measurable skills
  • Friendly studio-night out option

Cons

  • Not a qualification route
  • Ceramics-only focus

Customer Reviews

The class went so fast in a relaxed but creative atmosphere

Fantastic class, we really enjoyed it and made some incredible pieces with help from Zoe. The class went so fast in a relaxed but creative atmosphere. Definitely recommend to anyone who is a beginner in pottery crafts and likes to do something different. Totally worth the money.

I’d recommend this course to anyone 

It seemed difficult to find glaze mixing courses in Scotland that I could attend weekly and not need accommodation. Then I found out about the craft pottery studio. I signed up for the five-week course in Glasgow, every Tuesday evening. My course was taught by Brandon Pena, who was very knowledgeable and easy-going. There are other courses worth checking out, also. I’d recommend this course to anyone who wants to increase their glaze mixing knowledge. Many thanks to Brandon for his time and patience.

5. Splatter Art Studio

splatter-art-studio

Address: 15 Osborne Street

Contact: 

Business hours:

Monday, noon–7.30 PM

Thursday to Friday, noon–7.30 PM

Saturday, 10 AM–9.30 PM

Sunday, 10 AM–7 PM

Website

After a lovers’ tiff, my boyfriend and I felt we needed something cathartic that still felt vaguely artistic, and Splatter Art Studio understood the assignment. It’s not a degree or portfolio-prep programme; it’s pure leisure art therapy, with just enough structure to stop it from being chaos for chaos’ sake.

We booked a one-hour splatter session, rock up, suit up, and let the paint do the talking for our unexpressed feelings. Their specialism is delightfully simple, with abstract splatter painting where you throw, flick, pour, or use tools like splatter guns to build a piece that looks remarkably intentional in the end. 

We got our own station, a canvas, loads of paints and kit, proper PPE (poncho, shoe covers, goggles, and hair covers) so we can get feral without getting stained. Bonus points for the take-home box and corkage-fee-free BYOB, so it felt like a proper make-up date. 

They also run other creative “flavours” like pour art/fluid bears, and paint and sip/song, so you can pick your vibe depending on whether you want calm, cute, or (like us) a full Pollock meltdown.

It’s the kind of creative outlet that doesn’t care if you never held a brush before. It’s ideal for when your head’s full of feelings, and you just need colour to splash around and express them.

That said, if you’re after technique-heavy teaching or a critique culture, you won’t get it here. You can get a bit of guidance, but it’s really experience-first rather than learn-to-draw seriously. 

Pros

  • All-feels catharsis
  • No skills required
  • BYOB with no corkage fee
  • Take-home box and full PPE suit

Cons

  • Not an art school in the academic sense
  • Time-boxed sessions

Customer Reviews

Hannah was a brilliant guide and kept us right

I like to make memories with my friends’ kids, so creating something with them is what I like to do. They are getting to the awkward ages of 10 and 15, but they both agreed they’d like to make a fluid bear. They travelled from Edinburgh with their mum, and all four of us went along. We all created one, we all loved the experience and creating our own special one-of-a-kind bear. Hannah was a brilliant guide and kept us right. Would highly recommend, you don’t need to be creative or arty to make something really amazing.

It was such great fun

We had a fantastic time making our bears today. I had been wanting to try this since I saw them while doing the splatter art painting last year. We were taken step by step through the process to create the effects we wanted. It was such great fun. Will definitely try again.

Loading...
Loading...