Chelsea College of Arts
Chelsea College of Arts is a constituent college of the University of the Arts London based in London, UK, and is a leading British art and design institution with an international reputation. It offers further and higher education courses in fine art, graphic design, interior design, spatial design and textile design up to PhD level.
History
Polytechnic
Chelsea College of Arts was originally an integral school of the South-Western Polytechnic, which opened at Manresa Road, Chelsea, in 1895 to provide scientific and technical education to Londoners. Day and evening classes for men and women were held in domestic economy, mathematics, engineering, natural science, art and music. Art was taught from the beginning of the Polytechnic, and included design, weaving, embroidery and electrodeposition. The South-Western Polytechnic became the Chelsea Polytechnic in 1922 and taught a growing number of registered students of the University of London.At the beginning of the 1930s, the School of Art began to widen, including courses in craft training and commercial design from 1931. H.S Williamson, the school's appointed headmaster from 1930 to 1958, introduced sculpture shortly after World War II. Notable artists from this period were employed as teachers such as Henry Moore and Graham Sutherland. Alumni from this period included Elizabeth Frink, Edward Burra, Patrick Caulfield, Ethel Walker, Dirk Bogarde, Robert Clatworthy, John Latham and John Berger.
The School of Science separated and became known as the Chelsea College of Science and Technology in 1957, and was later admitted as a constituent College of the University of London in 1966. The Chelsea College of Science and Technology was granted its Royal Charter in 1971 and merged with King's College London and Queen Elizabeth College in 1985.
Chelsea School of Art
The School of Art merged with the Hammersmith School of Art, founded by Francis Hawke, to form the Chelsea School of Art in 1908. The newly formed school was taken over by the London County Council and a new building erected at Lime Grove, which opened with an extended curriculum. A trade school for girls was erected on the same site in 1914.The school acquired premises at Great Titchfield Street, and was jointly accommodated with Quintin Hogg's Polytechnic in Regent Street. The campus at Manresa Road introduced painting and graphic design in 1963, with both disciplines being particularly successful. During this period, Chelsea had the highest enrolment of fine art students in any school of its kind in the country, producing many notable artists such as Ossip Zadkine, Mark Gertler and Paul Nash.
Lawrence Gowing, painter and art historian, was appointed as the first headmaster of the Chelsea School of Art. He was responsible for the integration of history and theory with practice, employing artists rather than art historians to teach art history and theory. This approach remains intrinsic to Chelsea's teaching philosophy today.
Under Gowing, an option programme was introduced, which encompassed workshops in experimental music, poetry, psychoanalysis, philosophy and anthropology. A basic design course, pioneered by Victor Pasmore and Richard Hamilton, was also developed during the same period, becoming the basis of the college's current foundation course in art and design.
Professor William Callaway, Colin Cina, and Bridget Jackson : These three reformed the school and ensured the redevelopment of the entire academic program, introducing courses at multiple levels from HND to accredited Honours and Postgraduate degrees. Initially, these were validated by the UK Council for National Academic Awards; i.e. in the short period prior to the London Institute gaining degree-awarding powers. Bridget Jackson was appointed Head of College in 1993, retiring in 1997 to be succeeded by Professor Colin Cina who led the college until his retirement in 2003.
London Institute
The Chelsea School of Art became a constituent College of the London Institute in 1986, formed by the Inner London Education Authority to associate London's art, design, fashion and media schools into a collegiate structure. The school was renamed Chelsea College of Art and Design in 1989. The London Institute was granted University status and was renamed University of the Arts London in 2004. In 2013, the College was renamed Chelsea College of Arts.In 2002–2003, Professor Roger Wilson was appointed as the Head of College until his retirement in 2006. He led the relocation to the listed Royal Army Medical College, renovated as a purpose-built art college by the architects Allies and Morrison in 2005. With this move, the Chelsea College of Arts presently resides next to Tate Britain at Millbank, returning to one standalone campus.
Exhibition
The college comprises three notable on-site exhibition spaces:- Chelsea Space is an international and interdisciplinary platform for professional practitioners to exhibit experimental curatorial projects. The gallery also releases regular publications from participating authors, artists and designers.
- The Parade Ground, situated within the college, has been transformed into London's largest open-air gallery hosting events from film screenings to large scale installations in spring 2008. The exhibition ground had previously been used for students and professionals as an open area platform, notably artist Chris Burden's 'A Flying Steamroller' in 2006. Recent exhibitions include Cildo Meireles's 'Occasion', held in association with his exhibition at Tate Modern in 2008.
- The Triangle Gallery, pertaining to its name, has been designed as a modern angular shaped space for students to show their work throughout the year.
Research
- International Centre for Fine Art Research
- Transnational Art, Identity and Nation
- Critical Practice Chelsea
- FADE
- Textiles, Environment, Design
Affiliations
Other
CLIP CETL
Chelsea and the London College of Fashion share the 'Creative Learning in Practice Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning'. The Centre is funded by the British government in recognition of the two colleges' excellent results in developing student learning.Notable alumni
- Valerie Adler
- Anthea Alley
- Rita Angus
- Sophie Aston
- Franko B
- Gwen Barnard
- Celia Frances Bedford
- John Berger
- Quentin Blake
- Flavia Blois, painter
- Delphine Boël,
- Dirk Bogarde
- Irene Mary Browne
- Kathleen Browne
- Edward Burra
- Stephen J. Bury
- Jane Campion
- Seth Cardew
- Anthony Caro
- Leonora Carrington
- Patrick Caulfield
- Helen Chadwick
- Georgina Chapman
- Alexa Chung
- Robert Clatworthy
- Andrew Collins
- Keith Coventry
- John Craxton
- Michael Cummings
- Richard Deacon
- Andy Denzler
- Tom Dixon
- Mary Dobson
- Peter Doig
- Mojeb al-Dousari
- Guy Hendrix Dyas
- Cathie Felstead
- Nicholas Ferguson
- Ralph Fiennes
- Rose Finn-Kelcey
- Jacky Fleming
- Emily Forbes
- Laura Ford
- Elisabeth Frink
- Nick Gammon
- Grace Golden
- Flavia Irwin
- Nicky Hoberman
- David Hockney
- Bob Holmes
- Tom Jenkinson
- Vivien John
- Anish Kapoor
- John Latham
- Elizabeth Jane Lloyd
- Maria Marshall
- Ryuson Chuzo Matsuyama
- Paul McDowell
- Ian McKay
- Steve McQueen
- Ursula Merchant
- Haroon Mirza
- Christopher Monger
- Nicholas Monro
- Mariko Mori
- Jill Mulleady
- David Nash
- Paul Nash
- Mike Nelson
- Karen Newman
- Rupert Norfolk
- Diarmuid Byron O'Connor
- Chris Ofili
- John O'Neill
- Alex Randall
- Nick Raynsford
- James Richards
- Alan Rickman
- Barbara Robb
- Trevor Robinson
- Anthony Rossiter
- Andrew Sabin
- Alexei Sayle
- Conrad Shawcross
- Clare Shenstone
- Jake Tilson
- Winston Tong
- Suzanne Treister
- Gavin Turk
- Rosemary Vercoe
- Ethel Walker
- Mark Wallinger
- Rebecca Warren
- Richard Wathen
- Gillian Wearing
- Chris Welsby
- Claudia Williams
- Fred Williams
- Emily Young
- Ossip Zadkine