Study arts and design in Italy: Politecnico di Milano, NABA, Domus Academy, IED, the Accademia di Belle Arti, fashion in Milan, portfolios, and how to apply.
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Italy is one of the world's leading countries for art, design, fashion, and architecture, and it teaches all of them at a high level. Politecnico di Milano ranks among the top design and architecture schools globally, Milan is a centre of fashion and product design, and the historic Accademia di Belle Arti academies in Florence, Venice, and Rome carry centuries of fine-art tradition. Many programmes are taught in English, which makes Italy a natural choice for international art and design students.
This guide covers the leading schools, portfolio requirements, English programmes, and how to apply. Admissions in this field rest heavily on a portfolio and an interview, which makes it different from the test-driven routes in other fields. For the wider picture, read the Study in Italy pillar guide.
Italy combines deep heritage in fine art and architecture with a living, global industry in fashion, product, and design, concentrated in Milan. That mix gives students access to studios, design weeks, brands, and a teaching tradition that few countries match. Programmes span fine art, design, fashion, architecture, communication, and more.
Funding splits by institution type. Public universities and the public Accademia di Belle Arti and ISIA design institutes charge income-based or modest fees, while private design schools such as NABA, Domus Academy, and IED charge fixed, higher fees and run their own scholarships.
Germany also has strong design and arts schools with low public-university fees. See Study Arts and Design in Germany for that route.
| School | City | Type | Known for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Politecnico di Milano (Design & Architecture) | Milan | Public | Top-ranked globally for design and architecture |
| NABA (Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti) | Milan / Rome | Private | Design, fashion, visual arts |
| Domus Academy | Milan | Private | Postgraduate design and fashion |
| IED (Istituto Europeo di Design) | Milan, Rome, others | Private | Design, fashion, visual communication |
| Accademia di Belle Arti (Florence, Venice, Rome) | Florence / Venice / Rome | Public academies | Fine art tradition |
Politecnico di Milano's design and architecture schools are the most internationally visible and rank among the best in the world; the private schools in Milan are closely tied to the fashion and product industry; the fine-art academies carry long historical reputations. The Top universities in Italy guide adds context, and the sibling Study Business in Italy guide covers fashion and luxury management for those leaning toward the business side.
In art and design, the portfolio is usually the most important part of your application, often weighed alongside an interview and a statement of intent. Requirements differ by school and programme, but in general:
Tailor your portfolio to each programme rather than sending the same file everywhere. A fashion design course and an interior or product design course want to see different things. Read each school's portfolio brief carefully and follow its format exactly.
Portfolio specifications, file formats, and submission deadlines are set per school and per programme and change yearly. Always confirm the current brief on the specific school's admissions page before you prepare your submission.
English-taught programmes are common in Italian art and design, especially at the private Milan schools and in many Politecnico di Milano design master's degrees. Public fine-art academies vary more, with some teaching mainly in Italian. Confirm the language of instruction on each programme's page, and meet the English requirement (usually IELTS or TOEFL) where one applies.
The route depends on the type of institution.
Deadlines vary by school and usually fall in spring or summer for an autumn start, so confirm the date and the portfolio brief on the programme's page early.
Italy's design and fashion industry is a genuine employer, concentrated in Milan, across fashion houses, product and industrial design studios, communication agencies, and architecture practices. Outcomes depend heavily on your portfolio, internships, and network. Italian is an advantage in much of the studio and atelier world, though the international fashion and design scene also operates in English.
After graduating, a study residence permit can be converted to a work permit, and higher-skilled roles may qualify for an EU Blue Card. The Working in Italy guide covers the conversion process and sectors in demand.
Even in a portfolio-led field, schools and employers expect a clean CV alongside your work, and Italy leans on the Europass format. Convert yours with Prezumi's free Europass CV converter, test how applicant-tracking software reads it with the free ATS resume checker, and build from clean resume templates that complement your portfolio.
Yes. Many programmes are English-taught, especially at the private Milan design schools and in Politecnico di Milano design master's degrees. Public fine-art academies vary, with some teaching mainly in Italian. Confirm the language of instruction on each programme's page.
A curated selection of your strongest, relevant work that shows both finished pieces and your process and thinking, presented clearly in the format the school specifies. Requirements differ by programme, so follow each school's portfolio brief exactly.
Yes. Politecnico di Milano's design and architecture schools rank among the best in the world and are the most internationally visible Italian option in the field. It is a public university, so confirm its current programmes and any portfolio or test requirements on its site.
Public academies like the Accademia di Belle Arti and public universities charge income-based or modest fees and carry long fine-art traditions, while private schools like NABA, Domus Academy, and IED charge higher fixed fees, run their own scholarships, and link closely to industry. The right choice depends on your goals and budget.
Strong in Milan's fashion, product design, communication, and architecture industries, with outcomes driven by your portfolio, internships, and network. Italian helps in much of the studio world, though the international scene also works in English. The Working in Italy guide explains post-study work options.
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