Cleveland Institute of Art
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The Cleveland Institute of Art is a private college of art and design located in University Circle, Cleveland, Ohio. It was founded in 1882 as the Western Reserve School of Design for Women. From 1891 until 1948 it was named Cleveland School of Art. During the Great Depression the school participated in the WPA Federal Art Project in the Cleveland area. During World War II mapmaking and medical drawing were added to the usual curriculum in drawing, painting and sculpture.
It is accredited by North Central Association of Colleges and Schools and the National Association of Schools of Art and Design and is also a member of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design and the Northeast Ohio Council on Higher Education.
In addition to being an historically acclaimed art school and arguably a valuable component of the cultural community of University Circle, the Cleveland Institute of Art also houses the main exposition center of the Cleveland Cinematheque. It counts among its graduates such notable artists as Victor Schreckengost Richard Anuszkiewicz, Robert Mangold, Julian Stanczak, Winifred Lutz, and Dana Schutz.
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[edit] History
Originally concentrating on 'practical' rather than 'academic' skills, the Cleveland School of Art aimed to train designers and craftspeople. The school began offering a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1947, just before the name change in 1948. The Institute gradually incorporated more lecture-based courses into the curriculum, such as literature and art history, and the program expanded to five years by 1969. Since the 2006 school year the Institute has transitioned from a five-year to a four-year degree track. The Institute has recently focused funding on new facilities. Financial struggles have forced the Institute to incrementally raise tuition and decrease scholarship availability. In 2007 the tuition was raised twenty-percent.
[edit] Majors
- Ceramics
- Drawing
- Enameling
- Fiber & Material Studies
- Film, Video, & Photographic Arts
- Glass
- Communication Design
- Illustration
- Industrial Design
- Jewelry & Metals
- Painting
- Printmaking
- Biomedical Art (non-accredited)
- Sculpture
- T.I.M.E. Digital Arts
[edit] Selected faculty
- David Demming - President
- Saul Ostrow - Environmental Chair of Visual Arts and Technology (V.A.T.)
- Charles E. Tucker - Environmental Chair of Integrated Media Environment (I.M.E.)
- Dan Cuffaro - Environmental Chair of Design
- Gretchen Goss - Environmental Chair of Material Culture
- Rita Goodman, Ph.D. - Environmental Chair of Liberal Arts
- Petra Soesemann - Environmental Chair of Foundations
- Kristen Baumlier - Department Chair of Technology Integrated Media (known as TIME)
- Amanda Almon - Department Chair of Biomedical Arts
- Julie Langsam - Department Chair of Painting
- Troy Richards - Department Chair of Drawing
- Brent Kee Young - Department Chair of Glass
- Knut Hybinette - Professor of Game Design
[edit] Notable professors and students
- Brian Bram, artist for American Splendor
- Giuseppe Delena, chief designer at Ford Motor Co.
- Jerry Hirschberg, designer of the Infiniti J30 and the 1971 boatail Buick Riviera
- Larry Nagode, principle designer, Fisher Price
- Ryan Nagode, chief designer, Chrysler
- Joe Oros, designer of the 1965 Ford Mustang
- Viktor Schreckengost, creator of the largest freestanding ceramic sculpture in the world
- Paul Timman, prominent American tattoo artist
[edit] References
- Case Wiki article - retrieved July 29, 2006