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Leeds Arts University

Specialist arts university in Leeds, England

Leeds Arts University

Summary

Specialist arts university in Leeds, England

FieldValue
nameLeeds Arts University
imageLeeds_Arts_University_logo_2017.png
image_altLogo consisting of white script with 1846 year on dark pink irregular-polygon base
established
University status - 2017
typeArts university (HE and FE)
chancellorSkin
vice_chancellorProfessor Simone Wonnacott
students()
undergrad()
postgrad()
cityLeeds
provinceWest Yorkshire
countryUnited Kingdom
coor
former_namesLeeds School of Art
Jacob Kramer College
Leeds College of Art and Design
Leeds College of Art
website

University status - 2017 Jacob Kramer College Leeds College of Art and Design Leeds College of Art | Times/Sunday_Times = 92

Dedicated [[Blue plaque]] at the Vernon Street site

Leeds Arts University is a specialist arts further and higher education institution, based in the city of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, with a main campus opposite the University of Leeds.

History

Main campus in 2018

It was founded in 1846 as the Leeds School of Art. From 1968 to 1993 it was known as Jacob Kramer College, after Jacob Kramer, having lost part of its provision to Leeds Polytechnic (the future Leeds Beckett University). It was known as Leeds College of Art and Design until 2009, and then as Leeds College of Art. In August 2017, the school was granted university status and the name was changed to Leeds Arts University.

Skin, DJ, fashion icon, actress, activist and lead singer of Skunk Anansie, was appointed as the university's chancellor in 2021.

Locations

The University today has city centre sites at Blenheim Walk and at Vernon Street.

Academic profile

Further education courses

  • Extended Diploma in Creative Practice
  • Foundation Diploma in Art & Design - one of the largest in the country, with 280 students validated by the University of the Arts London

Undergraduate courses

  • BA (Hons) Animation
  • BA (Hons) Comic & Concept Art
  • BA (Hons) Creative Advertising
  • BA (Hons) Creative Writing
  • BA (Hons) Fashion Branding with Communication
  • BA (Hons) Fashion Design
  • BA (Hons) Fashion Photography
  • BA (Hons) Filmmaking
  • BA (Hons) Fine Art
  • BA (Hons) Graphic Design
  • BA (Hons) Illustration
  • BA (Hons) Photography
  • BMus (Hons) Popular Music Performance
  • BA (Hons) Textile Design
  • BA (Hons) Visual Communication

Postgraduate courses

  • MA Animation
  • MA Creative Practice
  • MA Fine Art
  • MA Graphic Design
  • MA Illustration and Graphic Novel
  • MA Photography

Student body

Like many of the 'traditional' British art schools, it has a modest annual intake, at higher education students in . Out of UK higher education institutions, it is the largest.

Notable alumni

  • Norman Ackroyd (1938–2024), artist
  • Sam Ainsley (b. 1950), artist
  • Kenneth Armitage (1916–2002), sculptor
  • Glyn Banks, co-founder of Art in Ruins art practice
  • James Bateman (1893–1959), painter
  • Glen Baxter (b. 1944), artist
  • Trevor Bell (1930–2017), artist
  • Alison Britton (b. 1948), ceramics tutor at the Royal College of Art
  • Henry Carr (1894–1970), painter and war artist
  • Michael Chapman (1941–2021), guitarist, musician and singer
  • Paul Clark (b. 1962), musician
  • Elisabeth Collins (1904–2000), painter and sculptor
  • Raymond Coxon (1896–1997), painter
  • Diz Disley (1931–2010), musician and graphic artist
  • Leigh Francis (b. 1973), comedian
  • Marcus Harvey (b. 1963), painter
  • Barbara Hepworth (1903–1975), sculptor
  • Damien Hirst (b. 1965), artist and 1995 Turner Prize winner
  • Jocelyn Horner (1902–1973), sculptor
  • Thomas Houseago (b. 1972), sculptor
  • Percy Hague Jowett (1882–1955), artist and arts administrator
  • Vivien Knight (1953–2009), art historian and gallerist
  • Jacob Kramer (1892–1962), painter
  • Edna Lumb (1931–1992), painter
  • Henry Moore (1898–1986), sculptor
  • Peter Murphy (b. 1959), Stuckist artist
  • Stass Paraskos (1933–2014), painter and founder of the Cyprus College of Art
  • Bob Peck (1945–1999), actor
  • Vivian Pitchforth (1895–1982), artist
  • Adrian Riley (b. 1971), artist and designer
  • Victor Sloan (b. 1945), visual artist
  • Bernard Schottlander (1924–1999), sculptor
  • Ria Sharma (b. 1992), founder of Make Love Not Scars
  • Georgina Starr (b. 1968), artist
  • Cecil Stephenson (1889–1965), artist
  • Frankie Vaughan (1928–1999), singer
  • Hilda Annetta Walker (1877–1960), artist
  • Harold Sandys Williamson (1892–1978), painter
  • Trevor Winkfield (b. 1944), painter and writer
  • Joash Woodrow (1927–2006), painter

References

References

  1. "Skin set to stay as Leeds Arts University Chancellor".
  2. "Senior Management Team".
  3. [http://edquarter.com/Article/arts-college-achieves-university-status ]{{dead link. (February 2021)
  4. {{HESA citation
  5. (8 July 2009). "Leeds College of Art". The Independent.
  6. "Leeds Arts University Established As Leeds College Of Art Gains University Status!".
  7. "Our Chancellor". Leeds Arts University.
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