The Royal College of Art started life in 1837 as the Government
School of Design, located in Somerset House in the Strand. Following
the Great Exhibition of 1851, this relatively small-scale operation was
radically transformed to accommodate art as well as design, leading the
institution to be rechristened the National Art Training School at its
new home in South Kensington. In 1896 it became the Royal College of
Art.
In its early days the RCA was dominated by a distinctive
version of the Arts and Crafts philosophy. However by the early 1900s
that atmosphere changed. The RCA was the birthplace of The New
Sculpture movement in Britain and continued to be a major centre of
influence in the new century, with students including such luminaries
as Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore.
Throughout the 1930s and 40s the College’s scope and reputation
continued to grow. A new emphasis was placed on the teaching of product
design and on the provision of highly specialised, professional
instruction. New courses were introduced, such as Graphic Design,
Industrial Design and Fashion, with the consistently high calibre of
students including the likes of Robin and Lucienne Day.
The 1950s and 60s saw the RCA at the centre of the explosion of Pop
Art culture, a vibrant, invigorating movement that waved a final
goodbye to Britain’s post-war austerity. This generation of students
transformed British art and design, counting Peter Blake, David Hockney
and R B Kitaj among its ranks. Meanwhile, the Fashion and Textiles
Department was leading its own design revolution with soon-to-be
household names Ossie Clark and Zandra Rhodes studying here. Ridley and
Tony Scott studied film.
The College embraced this period of
dramatic social change with changes of its own – in 1962 all design and
applied art courses moved to the new Darwin Building in Kensington
Gore. Then, in 1967 the College was granted a Royal Charter, endowing
it with university status and the power to grant its own degrees.
The 1960s also saw the Industrial Design
course establish itself as a discipline in its own right. Under the
leadership of eminent designer Misha Black, some of the bold new design
talent emerging at this time included product design duo, Richard
Seymour and Dick Powell. Another course newcomer was Vehicle Design in
1967, early graduates of which went on to devise cars such as the Audi
Quattro (Martin Smith), the Aston Martin DB7 (Ian Callum, now Head of
Design at Jaguar) and the Porsche 911 (Tony Hatter).
No
department, it would seem, was immune to change. Applied arts such as
Ceramics & Glass began to find a new, contemporary way forward in
the 1970s, at last shedding their ‘craft’ image. Students such as
Elizabeth Fritsch and Alison Britton quickly established themselves as
leading lights, while over in Silversmithing & Jewellery (as
GSM&J was then known), Eric Spiller and Michael Rowe were doing the
same.
The 1960s and 70s were also a heady time for the
Communications Department. Its alumni designed some of that period’s
most iconic images, including the film poster for A Clockwork Orange
and the now-famous Rolling Stones lips logo, as well as many of the new
style magazines. This was an era that also saw Industrial Design
student James Dyson develop the idea for the ‘Seatruck’ while studying
Interiors.
It was all change during the 1980s and 90s as a comprehensive
programme of cross-college reconstruction, re-equipment and expansion
of departments began. Such development was reflected in the growth of
Product Design with internationally renowned designers such as Jasper
Morrison, Tord Boontje and Ross Lovegrove. The new facilities
encouraged innovative approaches to printmaking under former student
Tim Mara, while in this period Animation became a department in its own
right, producing Brian Wood, author of the Cramp Twins series, and Alan
Smith and Adam Foulkes (directors of Honda’s recent ‘Hate Something:
Change Something’ advertisement).
These decades also saw the
establishment of a fully-fledged Humanities Department. History of
Design was introduced in 1982, followed by Conservation (run in
association with the Victoria and Albert Museum) in 1987 and Visual
Arts Administration (now Curating Contemporary Art) in 1992. Graduates
of these courses include Laura Davies, conservator of Sculpture at Tate
Gallery, design writer and critic Rick Poynor, and Kitty Scott, Chief
Curator at the Serpentine Gallery.
Throughout the 1990s, the
Fashion Department produced some of today’s famous names: Philip
Treacy, Julien Macdonald, Christopher Bailey, Alice Temperley and
Andrew Fionda. Meanwhile, over in Fine Art, a new type of art student
was emerging, with Gavin Turk, Tracey Emin and Jake and Dinos Chapman,
who went on to become part of the movement that became known across the
world as the ‘Young British Artists’. The College was also the star of
a six part BBC documentary in 1999 – watched by over two million people.
Not that the story ends there. As we progress through the 21st
century, RCA graduates continue to influence the culture surrounding
all of us. At the forefront of contemporary art and design today are,
to name but a few, graduates such as painter Chris Ofili, designer
Thomas Heatherwick, architect David Adjaye, fashion designer Christopher Bailey, photographer Tom Hunter and
product designer Sam Buxton.
Innovations such as the Ford Ka and
Jaguar XK8, the PS furniture range for Ikea, Concrete Canvas – a
shelter that will revolutionise disaster relief – and the Eglu chicken
coop, are all the work of recent alumni. The names of these products’
designers are not yet as familiar as some of the others listed here,
but they, like the thousands of graduates who passed through the RCA’s
doors before them and the thousands more who will follow, continue to
shape and enhance the way each and every one of us lives our lives.
Looking to the future, the RCA is expanding its Battersea campus, which currently houses Painting and Sculpture, to offer first-class, purpose-built studio spaces to Printmaking and Photography, and the Applied Art programmes.