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Peter Cullum (right) talks to a student during a modeling class

Peter Cullum, associate professor, talks to a student during class. Courtesy Jacob Howell

Alumni | Art and Design | Lion VoicesMarch 30, 2026

Home is Where the Art Is

Written By: Ian Silvester

When Peter Cullum first arrived at the University of 香蕉视频APP 鈥 Fort Smith, then Westark Community College, it changed his life. 

鈥淲hen I first walked onto campus, I knew this was where I was going to be,鈥 he said, smiling as he remembered that day in 1992. 鈥淭his place meant opportunity for me, and it鈥檚 never stopped. 

For the next three years, the university served as the foundation for his art education before he left for the East Coast, where he studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Cullum said the opportunity to head east and experience more of the world and art was all due the great education at UAFS. 

By 2003, he was called back to 香蕉视频APP and UAFS, where he worked as a part-time adjunct professor and graphic designer for the marketing department. Cullum did this for the next 12 years, during which time he witnessed the university rebrand and was responsible for the current athletics logo. 

鈥淎ll the designers got a chance to make a pitch for it,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚 wanted a very aggressive logo. I was looking at saw blades, and I wanted the silhouette of it to look like a saw blade. 鈥 Ultimately, mine was the one that was chosen. It felt surreal when it started appearing all over town.鈥 

In front of the Stubblefield Center, another legacy of Cullum鈥檚 stands鈥攐r rather leaps.  

He was part of the committee that chose the sculptor of the Leaping Lion statue and even has his name on the plaque鈥攁 physical and symbolic representation of his legacy and connection to the university. 

鈥淭hese things live on, and you can do these things that live on at a smaller place like this. I don鈥檛 know that I would have had that opportunity elsewhere,鈥 he said.  

By 2015, Cullum knew he enjoyed teaching and was looking for a way to make it more permanent. So, he packed his bags and headed west to the Flatirons of Colorado, where he earned his master鈥檚 degree from the University of Colorado Boulder in the spring of 2018. 

Even with a combined 15 years at UAFS as a student and employee, there was still more to come. 

Cullum returned to campus, having accepted the role of associate professor of art. He picked up where he left off, teaching students practices to hone their skills as artists. 

He said it makes him a better educator and artist when students challenge ideas that go beyond classroom instruction.  

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 really know something until you try to teach it to somebody else,鈥 he said. 鈥淭eaching is by far the most challenging and creative thing I do, even above and beyond any sort of painting or things like that. Teaching draws on everything, and it demands everything.鈥 

For Cullum, the importance of art is akin to the importance of breathing. He explained it as an ability to explore and problem-solve, and at the core, art is what it means to be human.  

鈥淚n some ways that鈥檚 terrifying, and in other ways, it鈥檚 incredibly exhilarating,鈥 he said.  

Cullum added that he hopes his passion, along with years of experience creating and studying art, will inspire his students.  

鈥淎t the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, they call it the unbroken line. You can trace the art instruction that you receive all the way back to the earliest artists in the United States. (There鈥檚) the idea that you鈥檙e getting involved in a lineage that鈥檚 being passed down and changing and evolving over time,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I came back here, it became really tangible, being part of this thing that鈥檚 being built over time. 鈥 Ultimately, what we鈥檙e doing here is carrying it forward and letting students see what we鈥檝e got.鈥


Watch how Peter is inspired by teaching art:

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The UAFS Office of Communications fields all media inquiries for the university. Email Rachel.Putman@uafs.edu for more information.

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