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Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University

The first degree-granting art school in Canada, through the 1970s it was on the cutting edge of the international art world; for the 21st century, the school has adapted to the more complex and diverse needs of artists and designers in the digital age.
Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
NSCAD University occupies 3 unique campuses, including the historic Granville campus, an interconnected row of heritage buildings in downtown Halifax (courtesy NSCAD University).

Founded in 1887 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, what has come to be called the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design University evolved, over its first century and more, from a conservative provincial art college focused on traditional landscape painting to one of the premier institutions in North America, well known for its promotion of conceptual art and the avant-garde.

Founding an Art College

NSCAD University, also known as the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD), was established in Halifax in 1887, largely through the efforts of one of its founders, Anna Leonowens, the former tutor of the King of Siam depicted in the stage and film productions of The King and I. She was also assisted by Mrs Jeremiah (née Helen Furniss) Kenny and sisters Ella and Eliza Ritchie. Originally named the Victoria School of Art and Design, it began as an artistic enterprise to commemorate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee. Classes at the Victoria School of Art and Design were held in the Union Bank building in downtown Halifax, moved to rented rooms in the Halifax Academy in 1890, and in 1903 relocated again to the Old National School, where it remained for 54 years.

In 1925, Victoria School of Art and Design incorporated by the provincial charter as the Nova Scotia College of Art. In 1969 it became the first independent degree-granting art school in Canada and was renamed the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD). The college was renamed NSCAD University in 2003.

From Art College to Centre for the Avant Garde

Among the college’s early principals was Group of Seven member Arthur Lismer; he served between 1916 and 1919. Lismer’s service as an Official War Artist in the First World War and his practice as an expressive landscape painter shaped the ethos of the college. The principalship was taken over by British painter Elizabeth Styring Nutt, the college’s first female principal, who oversaw renaming it the Nova Scotia College of Art and incorporating it under the provincial charter. After the war, in 1945, having been an Official War Artist like his teacher Arthur Lismer, depicting scenes like the loading of ships with armaments in Halifax Harbour, Donald Cameron McKay was appointed principal. He held the position until 1967.

Evidently seeking change, in 1967 the 32-year-old Gary Neil Kennedy, a Canadian teaching at the Kansas City Art Institute in Missouri, was hired as the first president of what soon came to be called the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. One of Kennedy’s first moves was to hire Gerald Ferguson, then teaching at the Kansas City Art Institute, and Ferguson insisted upon hiring David Askevold, one of his students in Kansas City. These three key figures, all of them significant Canadian artists in and of themselves, ushered in a period of intense engagement with conceptual art, innovation as an institution, and a significant international reputation. In the 1970s, the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design was widely viewed as the most important art school in North America.

In 1969, David Askevold, tired of traditional teaching techniques, introduced what he called the “Projects Class” in which he asked artists to formulate conceptual projects for the class to carry out. As a result, over the next few years, some of the world’s best known and most radical artists, including James Lee Byars, John Baldessari, Dan Graham, Sol LeWitt, Robert Smithson, Mel Bochner, Joseph Kosuth, Vito Acconci, Dennis Oppenheim and Lawrence Weiner, spent time in Nova Scotia . In addition, upon his hiring, Ferguson also insisted on hiring Jack Lemon, a master printer who had worked at the Kansas City Art Institute, to open a lithography workshop. The NSCAD lithography workshop, during the few years of its existence, not only trained students in the craft of printmaking but also produced prints by major Canadian and international artists. The lithography workshop lead directly to the establishment of NSCAD Press, which, under the leadership of the important German art critic and historian Benjamin Buchloh, produced a series of art books now considered classics by figures like Lawrence Weiner, Claes Oldenburg, Donald Judd, Michael Snow, Dan Graham, and Daniel Buren, among others.

NSCAD University in the 21st Century

As of 2013, NSCAD carried a total debt of 18 million dollars, running a deficit of approximately 2.5 million dollars per year, some of which was typically made up by the provincial government. At this point the Nova Scotia Government asked NSCAD to submit a three year plan to draw down its debt and eliminate its deficit, a plan which could involve cost reductions, tuition hikes, and an association with a local university like Dalhousie University and St. Mary’s University. In 2014, Halifax philanthropists Margaret and David Fountain gave the school three million dollars, one of the largest bequests in the school’s history.By 2015 the debt had been brought down to $13 million, with a $2 million deficit.

NSCAD offers instruction in fine and media arts, craft, historical and critical studies, and design. Degrees granted include Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Design, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Master of Fine Arts and Master of Design, as well as Post-Baccalaureate Certificates (the Visual Arts Certificate in Studio, the Visual Arts Certificate for Teachers, and the Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Design).

NSCAD University is situated on three campuses in downtown Halifax: the Victorian terrace-styled Granville campus; the restored Academy Building at the base of Citadel Hill; and the Port Campus on the Halifax waterfront. The university has three public galleries in the Anna Leonowens Gallery, as well as the Port Loggia Gallery on the waterfront, all of which are dedicated to showing the work of students, faculty and alumni. Students and alumni can also exhibit their work at the Seeds Gallery, a not-for-profit commercial gallery located across from the Port Campus. Approximately 1000 full- and part-time students are enrolled at the university.