Quick Answer: Extra recommendation letters help only when they add genuinely new information that required letters cannot provide — specific creative collaboration, unusual mentorship, or evidence of distinctive character. Sending extra letters without clear added value signals poor judgment and can hurt applications. Most art schools accept one additional letter; more than that risks annoying admissions readers. Korean students should send exactly what each school requires unless a genuinely exceptional additional letter exists.
| School | Letters Required | Who Should Write | Submission Platform |
|---|---|---|---|
| RISD | 2 | Art teacher + Academic | SlideRoom/Common App |
| CalArts | 2 | Art/creative mentor | CalArts portal |
| Parsons | 1-2 | Art teacher preferred | Common App |
| SVA | 1 | Teacher or mentor | SVA portal |
| Pratt | 2 | Art + Academic teacher | Common App/SlideRoom |
| SAIC | 2 | Art teacher + Counselor | Common App |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Who are the best people to ask for art school recommendation letters?
The ideal recommenders for art school applications are: (1) Art teachers who have taught you studio classes and can speak to your creative development—they understand art school expectations better than academic teachers; (2) Mentors who have worked with you on independent creative projects; (3) Professionals (artists, designers, photographers) who know your work through an internship or mentorship program; (4) An academic teacher for programs requiring academic recommendations. Avoid recommenders who know you primarily through extracurriculars or volunteering unless they have directly witnessed your creative work.
Q2. How many recommendation letters do art schools require?
Most undergraduate art programs require 1-2 recommendation letters. Some require exactly one (usually from an art teacher), while others allow 2-3. Graduate programs typically require 2-3 letters, often requiring at least one from an academic supervisor familiar with research capacity. Check each school’s specific requirements carefully—submitting more than the maximum allowed can be a procedural problem. Quality always trumps quantity; one exceptional, specific letter is more valuable than three generic ones.
Q3. What should I tell my recommender to include in an art school letter?
Brief your recommenders with: (1) Your portfolio and artist statement (so they can reference specific works); (2) The specific schools and programs you’re applying to; (3) Key creative experiences or projects they witnessed; (4) Any specific moments of growth or breakthrough they observed; (5) Qualities you hope they’ll address (creative risk-taking, problem-solving, development over time). The most useful letters describe specific works or projects and their significance to your development—not generic praise about being a ‘talented student.’
Q4. How far in advance should I ask for recommendation letters?
Request recommendation letters at least 6-8 weeks before your first deadline, and ideally 3 months in advance if applying to multiple schools with different deadlines. Earlier is better: recommenders are professional people with their own schedules and commitments. Rushing a recommender produces a generic, rushed letter. Follow up politely 2-3 weeks before the deadline to confirm submission, and send a thank-you note after the process regardless of outcome. Building long-term relationships with recommenders supports future applications as well.
Q5. What makes a great recommendation letter for art school?
Exceptional recommendation letters for art school: (1) Describe specific works, projects, or moments of creative growth; (2) Speak to the student’s creative thinking process, not just final outcomes; (3) Compare the student to others the recommender has taught or mentored; (4) Address how the student handles critique, failure, and creative challenge; (5) Connect the student’s current work to their future potential; (6) Demonstrate genuine knowledge of the student’s practice, not just performance. Formulaic letters that list achievements without context add minimal value.
Q6. Can I ask a Korean teacher to write a recommendation letter in Korean?
Most US art schools require recommendation letters in English. If your recommender is more comfortable in Korean, they should write the letter in Korean and have a professional translator (not a classmate or family member) produce a certified English translation. Submit both versions if the school permits. Alternatively, your recommender can work with you to prepare key points in English that they then write in their own words. Admissions readers understand that international students have recommenders whose first language is not English.
Q7. How do I handle recommendations if I’ve been homeschooled or self-taught?
Self-taught artists and homeschooled students can find strong recommenders from: private art teachers or studio instructors; community art center teachers; instructors at workshops, intensives, or summer programs; working artists who have mentored you informally; or online community leaders if you’ve developed a documented online practice. The admissions process accommodates diverse educational backgrounds. Your portfolio is still the primary evaluation criterion; recommendation letters from instructors who have worked closely with your practice will be taken seriously regardless of institutional affiliation.
Q8. What if my best recommender isn’t a fluent English writer?
Many admissions offices are accustomed to recommendation letters from international educators. Ask your recommender to: write their authentic assessment of your work in whatever language is most comfortable; work with a professional translator for the English version; or indicate their non-native status in the letter itself. What matters is the authenticity and specificity of the content—admissions readers can recognize a genuine assessment translated from another language versus a formulaic English letter. Don’t sacrifice recommender quality for language fluency.
Q9. Should I ask multiple recommenders to ensure I get strong letters?
Asking more recommenders than you need (as backup) is a reasonable strategy if you’re uncertain about letter quality. Approach 3-4 potential recommenders for applications requiring 2 letters, framing it as ‘I’m asking several possible recommenders and will select based on who is able to provide the most specific and enthusiastic recommendation.’ This creates slight insurance against a weak letter. However, don’t treat recommenders as interchangeable—the relationship you have with each person matters, and recommenders who know they’re competing tend to write stronger letters.
Q10. How do online or portfolio-based learning affect recommendations?
Students who’ve developed their practice through online courses, tutorials, or platform communities (Procreate tutorials, Skillshare courses) can still find appropriate recommenders. Online instructors who’ve given you detailed feedback over time know your work authentically. Some online learning platforms have instructor review or mentor programs that can produce legitimate letters. The key is that the recommender has genuinely engaged with your work—not just seen a portfolio online—and can speak to your creative development, problem-solving approach, and potential.
For Korean students navigating US art school admissions, understanding extra recommendation letters matters significantly. At Royal Blue Art & Design in Apgujeong, Seoul, we have guided Korean students through every stage of the admissions process over 19+ years of practice.
This guide covers the essential details with data for the 2025–2026 cycle.

Understanding Extra Recommendation Letters
Art school admissions officers read many applications under time pressure. Each additional letter must justify the time it takes to read. A letter from a famous artist who briefly observed your work adds little value. A letter from a supervisor at a meaningful internship describing specific creative contributions adds real information. The test: would removing this letter reduce what admissions officers know about you? If no, do not send it. Some schools explicitly state ‘one additional letter may be submitted’ — follow that guidance precisely. Sending five letters when two are requested communicates poor reading of application materials.
Korean students should approach this topic strategically — understanding both what US admissions officers actually evaluate and how typical Korean application patterns succeed or fail relative to those evaluations.
How US Art Schools Actually Evaluate This
US art school admissions officers read thousands of applications during each cycle. Their evaluation process is systematic but subjective — portfolio reviews involve multiple readers, discussions about borderline applicants, and collective judgment about which students will thrive at the specific institution. Understanding this evaluation process helps Korean students prepare strategically rather than guessing at what admissions officers want.
For extra recommendation letters specifically, admissions officers look for evidence of genuine engagement, appropriate professional judgment, and alignment with the student’s overall application narrative. Inconsistencies between different application components — portfolio, essays, transcripts, recommendations — trigger scrutiny. Strong applications tell a coherent story about who the applicant is creatively and intellectually.
Common Korean Student Mistakes
At Royal Blue, we see recurring patterns in Korean applications that reflect both cultural differences and information gaps about US admissions processes.
One common mistake involves assuming US admissions work like Korean or Asian admissions — that specific test scores or credentials determine outcomes in predictable ways. US art school admissions are more holistic and subjective, and students who optimize for numeric credentials sometimes underperform relative to students who develop distinctive creative voices and coherent application narratives.
Another common mistake involves cultural differences in self-presentation. Korean educational culture often emphasizes modesty and indirect communication. US application materials require direct, specific articulation of accomplishments and perspectives. Korean students who write application essays in a modest Korean style often underperform relative to their actual capabilities.
A third mistake involves timing. Many Korean students begin serious US art school preparation in their junior or senior year of high school. Competitive applicants to top programs typically begin development in ninth or tenth grade. Starting later means compressing development time — possible but harder.
Strategic Approach for Korean Students
Successful Korean applicants to top US art schools typically share several characteristics. They begin portfolio development early, giving themselves time for genuine creative exploration before portfolio selection. They work with experienced mentors who understand both Korean educational context and US admissions standards. They develop distinctive creative voices rather than following generic portfolio formulas. They write authentic application materials rather than translating Korean-style writing.
For extra recommendation letters, the strategic approach involves understanding exactly what each target school expects, gathering the specific materials or information required, presenting it in formats US admissions officers expect, and integrating it coherently with the rest of the application. Generic approaches produce generic results; targeted approaches produce better outcomes.
What Admissions Officers Say

Over years of consultation with US art school admissions officers through portfolio reviews, campus visits, and direct communication, we have gathered consistent insights about what actually matters in applications. Admissions officers emphasize several themes that Korean applicants often underweight.
First: authentic creative voice trumps technical virtuosity. Technical skills can be taught; authentic artistic perspective cannot. Portfolios demonstrating distinctive individual perspective — even with imperfect technical execution — often outperform polished portfolios without clear voice.
Second: evidence of sustained practice matters more than isolated excellent works. Admissions officers look for patterns of ongoing creative engagement across time. A portfolio showing steady development over 2-3 years communicates more than a single excellent work.
Third: coherent application narratives succeed. When portfolio, essays, recommendations, and academic records all point to the same kind of student — the story is credible and compelling. When different components contradict each other — admissions officers become uncertain about who the real applicant is.
Timeline Considerations
For extra recommendation letters, timing matters. Korean students should understand both the specific deadlines involved and the preparation time required for quality execution. Rushed preparation produces weak results; adequate preparation time produces competitive results.
Most elements of competitive applications require months of thoughtful development rather than weeks of crash preparation. Students who begin early have flexibility; students who begin late must compromise somewhere — quality, quantity, or scope.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does extra recommendation letters matter relative to portfolio?
Portfolio matters most for art school admissions. Extra Recommendation Letters provides supporting information but cannot substitute for strong portfolio. Korean students should prioritize portfolio development while handling extra recommendation letters competently — not the reverse.
Do different US art schools treat this differently?
Yes. Dedicated art schools often weight this element differently than research universities. Check each target school’s specific admissions information and tailor your approach accordingly. Generic approaches cannot match school-specific strategic preparation.
Can Korean students succeed without optimal preparation on this element?
Yes, if other application elements are strong. Art school admissions are holistic. Weaknesses in one area can be offset by exceptional strength in others. However, Korean students should still prepare extra recommendation letters as well as circumstances allow.
Does this matter for transfer applicants?
Yes, though transfer admissions work somewhat differently. Transfer applicants present college-level creative work alongside high school records. The relative weight of different elements shifts. Consult specific transfer admission guidelines at target schools.
Where can I get personalized guidance on this?
Royal Blue Art & Design in Apgujeong, Seoul offers consultations with Korean students preparing for US art school admissions. We help students navigate the specific details of their individual situations rather than applying generic advice.
The Royal Blue Perspective

At Royal Blue Art & Design in Apgujeong, Seoul, we have guided Korean students through the US art school admissions process over 19+ years. For extra recommendation letters, strategic preparation matters more than general awareness. We help students understand what specific target schools actually expect, how to prepare competitively, and how to avoid common Korean-application mistakes that can undermine otherwise strong candidacies.
We have sent students to RISD, Parsons, CalArts, Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, WUSTL, and 50+ other institutions. Every strategic approach is tailored to the specific student’s profile, target schools, and individual circumstances.
Book a free consultation today or review our recent admissions results.
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