needing, at the same time, no regular incorporation with the institution, they may be left to accessory teachers, who will be paid by the individuals employing them; the university only providing proper apartments for their exercise.
It is interesting to think that any person interested in the arts and any sort of subject that was not considered a part of the core sciences, maths, languages, etc. would be expected to pay their instructors separately and themselves. This has luckily changed, but it indicates the attitude the University of Virginia and it's founders took towards the arts: while they found them to be valuable and helpful, they did not see them as crucial or important sections of education. This rhetoric can even be found today- those seeking a degree in art or music are often teased and ridiculed by society, which encourages them to find a more useful area of work. Although arts and the abstract are slowly being weaved into modern education, clearly there is more work to be done before they are fully integrated and accepted as valuable.
Sydney Lear