University for the Creative Arts
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 2005 (as the University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone and Rochester)[1] |
Chancellor | Dame Zandra Rhodes DBE RDI |
Vice-Chancellor | Professor Simon Ofield-Kerr PhD FRSA |
Location | , |
Affiliations | GuildHE |
Website | uca.ac.uk |
The University for the Creative Arts is a specialist art and design university in the south of England.
History
The university was formed in 2005 as University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone and Rochester, through the merger of the Kent Institute of Art & Design and Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College. It was granted full university status by the Privy Council in May 2008 and adopted its current name officially in September 2008. The origin of the university lies in a number of independent public art and design colleges in the counties of Kent and Surrey, almost all of which had origins in the Victorian period. In the 1990s these merged to form multi-campus art and design institutes in their respective counties, before merging into one organisation in 2005.
In its previous forms and current form, alumni of the UCA as well as students have achieved artistic excellence with very considerable commerciality and critical merit of certain alumni's work such as Tracey Emin, Michaël Dudok de Wit, Chris Shepherd, Zandra Rhodes, and Karen Millen.
Following the election of a Coalition government, the Department for Business Innovation and Skills introduced legislation to increase tuition fees while reducing government spending on Higher Education in real terms[2] and the University for the Creative Arts was revealed to be the fourth most-cut university in England with a cut of 7.8% (10.2% in real terms).[3]
The University for the Creative Arts announced in February 2011 that it was discussing designating part of its Maidstone campus for use by MidKent College.[4] Further to this, MidKent College expressed its willingness to buy the Maidstone campus from 2012 and phase out the UCA presence at the campus by 2014.[5]
Campuses
UCA has campuses in Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham and Rochester, together with teaching bases at the Royal School of Needlework and The Maidstone Studios.[6] It previously had a campus in Maidstone, which was closed in 2014.[7]
The University also validates provision at, or co-delivers courses with, a number of other educational institutions and arts organisations in the U.K. and overseas: Barking and Dagenham College, Farnham Maltings, Laine Theatre Arts, Millennium Performing Arts, Open College of the Arts, Turner Contemporary, MIT Institute of Design, and Hong Kong Design Institute.[8]
Organisation and academic life
It is a large art and design institution, by UK standards, with around 10,000 students, and offers courses in a very wide range of art, design, fashion, moving image and architecture subjects. Courses are offered at non-degree further education such as diploma and BTEC, degree and doctorate level.
Notable alumni
Where known, alumni are listed by the component institution at which they studied.
Kent Institute of Art and Design (comprising the three Kent campuses)
- Karen Millen, fashion designer
- Zandra Rhodes, fashion designer
- Julie Verhoeven, illustrator/artist and fashion designer
Canterbury College of Art
- James Burgess, Ministry of Sound DJ and Sound Engineer
- Roger Dean, artist
- Martin Lambie-Nairn, graphic designer
- Humphrey Ocean, artist
- Mary Tourtel, illustrator and creator of Rupert Bear
Maidstone College of Art
- Tracey Emin, 1999 Turner Prize nominee
- Tony Hart, TV presenter
- Bob Holness, TV and radio presenter
- James Swain, filmmaker, artist
- James Mayhew, writer and illustrator of children's books
- Gordon Frickers, marine artist
- Martin Handford, creator of Where's Wally?
- Edd Gould, animator, creator of Eddsworld
- Richard Spare, artist
Medway College of Design (Rochester)
- Tracey Emin, 1999 Turner Prize nominee
- Zandra Rhodes, fashion designer
- Karen Millen, fashion designer
Surrey Institute of Art and Design (Farnham & Epsom)
- Linda Barker, TV presenter
- Pauline Baynes (9 September 1922 – 1 August 2008) was an notable English illustrator
- Sara Bor (née Hirst) Painter, Animation Producer / Director
- Simon Bor Animation Producer / director Wolves Witches & Giants
- Davide Cinzi, cinematographer
- David Hulin, Animation Director
- Michaël Dudok de Wit, Academy Award-winning animator
- Gareth Edwards, British film director best known for directing Godzilla, 2014
- Robert Morgan, filmmaker and award-winning animator
- Dominic Mitchell, screenwriter/playwright, creator of In The Flesh
- Sean Parker, singer-songwriter of Istanbul-based Sean Parker Band
- Chris Shepherd, animator and film director
- Suzie Templeton, director of BAFTA and Academy Award winning animated films
- Jun Yoshino, Video Game Producer
References
- ^ "The University's History – UCA: University for the Creative Arts". University for the Creative Arts. 2008. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
- ^ BBC Article referring to student fees and impact on various universities. Accessed 23 April 2012
- ^ "University for the Creative Arts faces 7.8% funding cut". BBC News. 17 March 2011.
- ^ "UCASU".
- ^ "UCA Maidstone campus page".
- ^ "UCA - Top specialist arts uni for student satisfaction". UCA. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
- ^ "End of an artistic era as University for the Creative Arts in Maidstone prepares to pack up brushes for last time". Kent Online. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
- ^ "UCA - Partnerships". UCA. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
External links
- University for the Creative Arts
- Art schools in England
- Education in Canterbury
- Education in Medway
- Epsom and Ewell
- Maidstone (borough)
- Culture in Kent
- Culture in Surrey
- Fashion schools in the United Kingdom
- Design schools in the United Kingdom
- 2005 establishments in England
- Educational institutions established in 2005