NSCAD University

Coordinates: 44°38′58.02″N 63°34′26.23″W / 44.6494500°N 63.5739528°W / 44.6494500; -63.5739528

NSCAD University
Motto Head, Heart, and Hand
Type Public
Established 1887 Victoria School of Art and Design (1887-1925). Subsequent names, Nova Scotia College of Art (1925-1969), Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (1969-2003), and now, NSCAD University.
President Dianne Taylor-Gearing
Academic staff
85 (regular staff)
Students 971[1]
Undergraduates 942
Postgraduates 29
Location Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Campus Urban
Colours Purple      and Green     
Affiliations UACC, CBIE, AICAD
Website http://nscad.ca/

NSCAD University, also known as the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, is a post-secondary art school located in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

During the 1970s NSCAD was hailed as a cutting edge art school, which emphasized artistic innovation, and political art. Currently the university is forging relationships with galleries, museums and other cultural institutions in Canada and around the world.

Academics

NSCAD offers Bachelor's degrees in Fine Art (BFA), Design (BDes), and Art History (BA). It also offers Master of Fine Art and Master of Design degrees at the graduate level.

Faculties

Libraries and Museums

Historical fine arts and ceramics; contemporary fine arts and printmaking collections are housed in the Anna Leonowens Gallery.[2] The Gallery hosts exhibitions of the work of undergraduate and graduate students, faculty members, visiting artists and curators. [3]

History

Granville Street mall showing NSCAD University on the left.
School buildings along Granville Street. The university occupies the upper floors of virtually the entire block.
Lunenburg Community Residency building
Port Campus, designed by MacKay-Lyons Sweetapple Architects of Halifax

NSCAD was founded in 1887[4]:2,12 by Anna Leonowens (of Anna and the King of Siam fame).[4]:3[lower-alpha 1] It was originally called the Victoria School of Art and Design to commemorate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. It was renamed to the Nova Scotia College of Art in 1925[4]:94–95[lower-alpha 2] under the leadership of its president Dr. Frederick Sexton.[4]:104[lower-alpha 3]

One of the notable artists to be associated with the school in its early years was Arthur Lismer, who was a member of the Group of Seven and spent several years as the school president.[4]:69–78

NSCAD and conceptual art

Main article: NSCAD conceptual art

In 1967, the artist Garry Kennedy was appointed President, and he immediately moved to remake the College from a provincial art school into an international centre for artistic activity. He invited notable artists to come to NSCAD as visiting artists, particularly those involved in conceptual art. Artists who made significant contributions during this period include Vito Acconci, Sol LeWitt, Dan Graham, Eric Fischl, Lawrence Weiner, Joseph Beuys and Claes Oldenburg.

NSCAD University Press

Under the direction of Kennedy, The Press of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design was established as a vehicle to publish books by and about leading contemporary artists. The Press was important in establishing the university's international reputation. Between 1972 and 1987, 26 titles by such artists as Michael Snow, Steve Reich, Gerhard Richter and Yvonne Rainer were published. Re-launched in 2002, The Press has once again become a source for the publishing of primary documents and scholarly works in the fields of contemporary art, craft and design.

Timeline

NSCAD has existed under various names and locations.

School of Extended Studies

NSCAD has a long and distinguished history of offering the public the opportunity to study in a visual arts environment. The School of Extended Studies continues this tradition by offering the public a wide variety of non-credit studio and audit lecture courses in fine arts, media arts, craft and design. The School also manages the 30-credit Visual Arts Certificate for Teachers program, the 30-credit Visual Arts Certificate in Studio and the pre-university summer study credit program. Credit programs have admission requirements. Noncredit programs have no admission requirements although prerequisites must be met for some courses.

Adult Programs The adult studio-based and audit lecture courses are available to individuals who are 16 years or older. These courses are designed to meet personal and professional development interests and to prepare for studies in an undergraduate visual arts degree program. Curricula incorporate skills, processes, and health and safety issues. New approaches and ways of seeing, analyzing, experimenting and problem solving through observation are promoted. To ensure program quality, planning is ongoing with other areas of NSCAD University. New courses are added regularly to introduce different subject matter and in response to public demand.

Children and Teen Programs Saturday Children’s Art Classes began in 1887 and are one of the earliest known examples of such programs in North America. Children in grades 1 – 6 participate in a variety of fun age-appropriate activities that introduce basic visual arts skills.

Teen Art Studio courses for students in Grades 7 -12 introduce fundamental visual art skills and processes, introduce NSCAD facilities and provide older teens an opportunity to build a portfolio for admission to an undergraduate visual arts degree program. Saturday teen courses are offered during the fall and winter and week-long courses are offered during summer. One-day March Break workshops are offered during the Provincial school break.

Night Shift Exhibit An annual Night Shift Exhibition to display student work completed in Extended Studies course is held in the Anna Leonowens Gallery located on the NSCAD Granville campus. Family and friends are encouraged to attend this popular exhibit and enjoy a variety of different works of art created by all ages.

Notable people

University history

See also

References

  1. "Full-time plus Part-time Enrollment" (PDF). Association of Atlantic Universities. 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  2. "Anna Leonowens Gallery, NSCAD University". Virtual Museum of Canada. Government of Canada.
  3. "Anna Leonowens Gallery". NSCAD University.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Soucy, Donald; Pearse, Harold (1993). The First Hundred Years: A History of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Fredericton: University of New Brunswick. ISBN 0-920114-27-X.

Notes

  1. Soucy & Pearce (1993) give four “initiators” in ch. 1: Anna Leonowens, a Mrs. Jeremiah Kenny (first name not known), Ella Almon Ritchie, and Alexander McKay. However, speaking of Anna Leonowens, “Most people agree that the Victoria School of Art and Design was her idea.” (p. 3)
  2. “In 1925, thirty-seven years after it first received its charter, the Victoria School of Art and Design was no more.… a legislative act elevated the institution’s status to that of a college.” (p. 94) “Along with the new status came a new name, the Nova Scotia College of Art, and a motto, ‘Heart and Head and Hand.’” (p. 95)
  3. “When Sexton, as President, oversaw the Art College’s new Legislative Act of 1925,…” (p. 104)

External links

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