Faison later headed the
Williams College art history department from 1940 to 1969 and directed the
Williams College Museum of Art from 1948 to 1976. While directing the Williams College Museum of Art and art history department, Faison made it his mission to inspire interest in art history among students at Williams College. Dramatically expanding the museum's collections, especially in contemporary art, Faison encouraged his students to see the compatibility of their art historical studies with all aspects of their lives as Williams students, from their fraternity parties to their English literature classes. Many of his students began their freshman year at Williams planning to become doctors, lawyers, and investment bankers, but, upon graduation, found themselves turning to the art world due to Faison's inspirational pedagogy. Adding a new Art Studio curriculum to what was then Williams's "Fine Arts" department, Faison emphasized learning by doing and developed the emphasis on visual analysis of shape, color, and form that has become the most distinctive element of the college's Art History sequence. In 2004, he told the
New York Times: I always stressed two things. One has to do with the connection of art to history, with the fact that every work of art was done somewhere and some when, and that this is very important to understand. The other side has to do with the medium of art, which is quite different from the subject. What we're talking about is color and shape. You'd be surprised at the number of people who come to Williams, and I think this is generally true of American students, with absolutely no idea of what the word 'shape' means or what you can do with it and why it's important. They have easily mastered the medium of language, but many of them know very little about the medium of art. Several of his students went on to direct major museums including
Kirk Varnedoe of the
Museum of Modern Art,
Earl A. Powell III of the
National Gallery of Art in
Washington, D.C.,
Glenn D. Lowry of the
Museum of Modern Art in
New York City,
James N. Wood of the
Getty Trust and
Art Institute of Chicago, and
Thomas Krens of the
Guggenheim Museum in New York. == Monuments Man ==