Manchester School of Art in Manchester, England, was established in 1838 as the Manchester School of Design. It is the second oldest art school in the United Kingdom after the Royal College of Art which was founded the year before.[1] It is now part of Manchester Metropolitan University.
History
The school opened in the basement of the Manchester Royal Institution on Mosley Street in 1838. It became the School of Art in 1853 and moved to Cavendish Street in 1880. It was subsequently named the Municipal School of Art. In 1880, the school admitted female students, at the time the only higher education available to women, although men and women were segregated. The school was extended in 1897.[2]
The school became responsible for the non-degree courses of the Manchester Municipal College of Technology by 1996, when the rest of that institution became the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology. This transfer gave a historical link to the Manchester Mechanics' Institute established in 1824.
Architecture
The Manchester Municipal School of Art was built in Cavendish Street in 1880–81 to the designs of G. T. Redmayne. On a rectangular plan it was constructed in sandstoneashlar with buff terracotta dressings. It is two storeys high above a basement and has slate roofs with glazed skylights. Its symmetrical facade, built in the Neo-Gothic style, has large gabled wings with pinnacles at either side of its buttressed and blind arcaded main range. In the centre is a chamfered doorway with a moulded arched head and carved spandrels above which is a cantedoriel window with a steep roof against a gable with pinnacles and a finial at the top. The building is Grade II listed.[6]
In 2014 the 1960s Chatham Tower (named after the adjacent street) was refurbished and the Benzie Building was built,[3] to provide additional studio and exhibition space for the art school. The design, by Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, was shortlisted for the Stirling Prize in the same year.[8] It was renamed the Lowry Building in 2024.[9]
John Mayall enrolled at the School of Art in the 1950s. British bluegrass music pioneers Tom Travis and Tom (Smiley) Bowker enrolled at the School of Art in the 1950s.[citation needed] Other notable musicians to attend the school include Mick Hucknall, who studied Fine Art in the 1980s and formed Simply Red.[19][20]
^"Lowry Building". Manchester Metropolitan University. 2024. Retrieved 4 November 2024. In 2024 it was renamed the Lowry building (previously Benzie) in honour of one of Manchester School of Art's most famous alumni, LS Lowry.
^"John Cassidy RCA, RBS", Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951, University of Glasgow, retrieved 20 May 2017
Bosbach, Franz; Filmer-Sankey, William (2000), Prinz Albert und die Entwicklung der Bildung in England und Deutschland im 19. Jahrhundert / Prince Albert and the Development of Education in England and Germany in the 19th Century, Walter de Gruyter, ISBN978-3-11-095440-1
Henderson, William Otto; Barrie, Michael Ratcliffe (1975), Great Britain and Her World, 1750-1914: Essays in Honour of W. O. Henderson, Manchester University Press, ISBN978-0-7190-0581-7