Art Academy of Cincinnati
Motto | "Make Art, Make a Difference" |
---|---|
Type | Private college of art, design and art history |
Established | 1869 |
President | John M Sullivan |
Dean | Mark Thomas and Kim Krause (Co-Deans) |
Undergraduates | 193 |
Postgraduates | 21 |
Location | Cincinnati, Ohio, United States |
Campus | Urban |
Colors |
Orange and Prussian Blue |
Mascot | Stinker, the Skunk Soccer mascot |
Website | http://www.artacademy.edu |
The Art Academy of Cincinnati is a private college of art and design in Cincinnati, Ohio, accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design. It was originally founded as the McMicken School of Design in 1869, and was a department of the University of Cincinnati, and later in 1887, became the Art Academy of Cincinnati, the museum school of the Cincinnati Art Museum.
In 1998, the Art Academy of Cincinnati legally separated from the museum and became an independent college of art and design. It currently offers four undergraduate degrees: Bachelor of Fine Arts in Fine Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Art History, and an Associate of Science in Graphic Design. It also offers a Master of Arts in Art Education, which is taught during summer semesters.
The Art Academy moved into its current facility at 1212 Jackson St. in the Over-the-Rhine neighborhood in the fall of 2005.[1] This move has been pivotal in the Over-the-Rhine revitalization and renovation as an arts district. The new facility provides 24-hour access for students with around the clock security. Students are guaranteed studio spaces in Junior and Senior years. The 12th and Jackson St. building also features an open air atrium, connecting two formerly separate buildings, enlarged classroom spaces, computer labs, a student commons area, lecture hall, and Learning Services Center. In 2008, the Art Academy facility received Leadership in Energy and Environment Design (LEED) Green Building certification by the United States Green Building Council (USGBC).
AAC housing is required for out-of-town Art Academy freshmen at the Academy Housing Facility at the nearby corner of 12th and Vine streets. Spaces are also available to local freshmen. Twelve suites for 28 students are available each with fully equipped kitchens and with washer/dryer. A Resident Advisor is also available and lives on the premises.
Notable alumni and faculty
- Wilbur G. Adam (1898–1973) divided his career between Cincinnati and Chicago and is best known as a portrait painter and for his landscapes of western United States.
- Paul Chidlaw (1900–1989) was a modern American painter and long-time instructor at the Academy. Chidlaw Gallery is named after him.
- Petah Coyne, is an internationally recognized sculptor and installation artist.
- Jenny Eakin Delony,(aka: Jenny Delony, Jenny Meyrowitz, Jenny Eakin Delony Rice) (1866–1949) was an American painter and educator. She specialized in portraiture, but her subject matter also included miniatures, landscape, wildlife, still life, and genre.
- Frank Duveneck (1848–1919) was an American figure and portrait painter who taught at the Art Academy during the 1890s and later became its chairman. He notably fought with the Cincinnati Art Museum administration for students' right to study directly from the live nude model.
- James Flora (1914–1998) idiosyncratic album cover illustrator for RCA Victor and Columbia Records during the 1940s and 1950s, commercial illustrator, fine artist, and author/illustrator of seventeen popular children's books
- Tim Folzenlogen is a contemporary realist painter based in New York City.
- Daniel Garber (1880–1958) was an American landscape painter and member of the art colony at New Hope, Pennsylvania.
- Charley Harper (1922–2007) was a Cincinnati-based American Modernist artist, best known for his highly stylized wildlife prints, posters and book illustrations.
- Eli Harvey (1860-1957) American sculptor, painter and animalier.
- John Augustus Knapp (1853-1938) is known for illustrating novels penned by John Uri Lloyd, including the science fiction classic Etidorhpa, and books for Manly P. Hall, including The Secret Teachings of All Ages, The Lost Keys of Freemasonry, and the Knapp/Hall Tarot.
- Noel Martin was a nationally recognized graphic designer who revolutionized type and publication standards for American museums, and later a professor at The Art Academy of Cincinnati, as well as The University of Cincinnati.
- Lewis Henry Meakin (1850-1917)
- Myra Musselmann-Carr (b. 1880) was a sculptor who exhibited at the Armory Show in 1913.
- Frank Harmon Myers (1899–1956) was an American painter. His work includes a variety of topics but he is best known for his seascapes.
- Thomas Satterwhite Noble (1835-1907) was an American painter and teacher.
- Elizabeth Nourse (1859-1938) Realist and Genre painter later based in Paris. Best known for her depictions of peasant women.
- Roy Cleveland Nuse (1885-1975) was a Pennsylvania Impressionist artist and a respected teacher at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
- Louis Rebisso (1837–1899) sculptor and teacher whose students at CAA included William Jacob Baer, Solon Borglum, Janet Scudder, Mary Chase Perry and Eli Harvey.
- John Ruthven (b. 1927) American artist best known for wildlife paintings.
- Paul Sawyier (1865–1917) was a Kentucky artist and an American impressionist.
- Mary Given Sheerer (1865-1954), ceramicist and instructor affiliated with Newcomb Pottery.
- Joseph Henry Sharp, (1873-1892), was one of the six founding members of the Taos Society of Artists.
- Julian Stanczak, is an internationally recognized abstract painter, founder of the Op Art movement.
- Edward Charles Volkert (1871–1935) a Cincinnati-based post-impressionist painter who was known for his oil and watercolor cattle paintings from the Old Lyme Art Colony.
- John Ellsworth Weis (1892-1962) graduate and faculty member
- Tom Wesselmann, pop artist of The Great American Nude series of paintings.
- Ruthe Katherine Pearlman (1913-2007), Cincinnati-based artist and educator who was working with Art Beyond Boundaries[2] from its inception in 2005, Pearlman gallery is named after her.
Galleries
The college features three public galleries that offer changing art exhibitions, the Pearlman Gallery, the Chidlaw Gallery and the Convergys Gallery. Exhibitions include emerging and professional artists, students, faculty and alumni artists.
References
- ↑ Smith, Steve; et al. (2007). "The Head of the Class". Cincinnati USA City Guide. Cincinnati Magazine. p. 22. Retrieved 2013-05-06.
- ↑ Art Beyond Boundaries http://www.artbeyondboundaries.com/
External links
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Coordinates: 39°06′32″N 84°30′50″W / 39.1089°N 84.5139°W