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The names of important local, national and even international artists who have studied, taught or guest-lectured at the Art Academy of Cincinnati in its 150-year history could fill a book.
A quick few: Frank Duveneck, Julian Stanczak, Jim Dine, Charley and Edie Harper, Maybelle Richardson Stamper, Jim Flora, Paul Chidlaw, Petah Coyne, Emily Hanako Momohara, John Ruthven, Thom Shaw, Josef Albers, Maria Longworth Nichols Storer, Thomas Satterwhite Noble, Tom Bacher, Chris Sickels, Tom Wesselmann, Elizabeth Nourse, Richard Felton Outcault you get the idea.
But, strangely, there never has been a published book until now. Getting a jump on the upcoming 2019 sesquicentennial, Art Academy 150: Make Art. Make a Difference was just released with a celebratory party at Rookwood Pottery on Oct. 27. The initial printing consists of 200 numbered copies, each in a 9-inch square format with an angle-cut, upper-right corner a traditional Art Academy graphic style.
It was written by local historian Jeff Suess and designed by Art Academy graduate Steve Weinstein of Envoi Design. Joan Kaup, who had the idea for the publication, served as publisher/managing editor.
The book chronicles the schools journey during its 150 years starting in 1869 as the independent, downtown-based McMicken School of Design; becoming part of the new University of Cincinnati in 1871; changing its name to the Art Academy of Cincinnati in 1887 after leaving UC to partner with the new Cincinnati Art Museum and have its own building on that institutions idyllic Eden Park campus; separating from the museum to move in 2005 to former commercial buildings at 1212 Jackson St. in what was then still-gritty, not-yet-chic Over-the-Rhine.
The Art Academy of Cincinnati is located at 1212 Jackson St., Over-the-Rhine. For more info on the schools anniversary and to order the book, visit artacademy.edu/news-events/150th-anniversary.
Art Academy students in the cafe, 1940s
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveArt Academy students, 1976
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveCharley Harper painting outdoors
Photo: Brett HarperLife drawing class, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveFrank Duveneck (standing left) teaching a class
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveThe Beaux Arts Ball, 1931
Photo: Art Academy of CincinnatiWomen in painting class, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveThe Art Academy Eden Park campus
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveThe Beaux Arts Ball, 1931
Photo: Art Academy of CincinnatiThe Beaux Arts Ball inside the Cincinnati Art Museum
Photo: Art Academy of CincinnatiNoel Martin shows typeblock to students
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveThe Beaux Arts Ball, undated
Photo: Art Academy of CincinnatiLife drawing class with Lewis Cass Lutz
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveArt Academy faculty and students, undatedConnie Lucas AlexanderThe Beaux Arts Ball, undatedThe Beaux Arts Ball, 1934
Photo: Art Academy of CincinnatiGraphic designer Jim Flora. Flora attended the Art Academy from 1935 to 1939, studying illustration
from Maybelle Stamper.
Photo: Image courtesy the heirs of Jim FloraArt Academy students, 1970s, with professor Anthony Batchelor
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveStudents, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveEdie Harper painting outside the academy
Photo: Brett HarperStudents, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveThomas Noble taught the first classes and insisted that everyone master drawing before moving on to other disciplines.
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveArt Academy painting class, 1940Women painting in class, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveCaroline Lord class
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveArt Academy students, undated
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveProfessor Arthur Helwig and students at Coney Island in 1942
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveCaroline LordCharley Harper with student
Photo: Cincinnati EnquirerThe Art Academy of Cincinnati in Eden Park
Photo: Cincinnati EnquirerPaul Chidlaw attended the Art Academy from 1919 to 1923, then spent the rest of the 1920s in Paris with Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway and Aaron Copland. He then taught painting at the Art Academy from 1947 to 1963.
Photo: Cal KowalCharles Cutler
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveArt Academy faculty, 1975
Photo: Mary R. Schiff Library and ArchiveE.T. Hurley was known for his Rookwood decorations and etchings of Cincinnati.
Photo: Cincinnati EnquirerGraphic designer and typographer Noel Martin studied painting, drawing, and printmaking at the Art Academy of Cincinnati from 1939 to 1941, and from 1945 to 1947.
Photo: Cincinnati EnquirerF. Van Houten Raymond
Photo: Cincinnati EnquirerThe Art Academy of Cincinnati in Over-the-Rhine today