The Academy of Fine Arts Vienna was founded in 1688 as a private academy modelled on the
Accademia di San Luca and the Parisian
Académie de peinture et de sculpture by the court-painter
Peter Strudel, who became the
Praefectus Academiae Nostrae. In 1701, he was ennobled by Emperor
Joseph I as
Freiherr (Baron) of the
Empire. With his death in 1714, the academy temporarily closed. , 1787 On 20 January 1725, Emperor
Charles VI appointed the Frenchman
Jacob van Schuppen as Prefect and Director of the academy, which was refounded as the
k.k. Hofakademie der Maler, Bildhauer und Baukunst (Imperial and Royal Court Academy of painters, sculptors and architecture). Upon Charles's death in 1740, the academy at first declined, however during the rule of his daughter Empress
Maria Theresa, a new statute reformed the academy in 1751. The prestige of the academy grew during the deanships of
Michelangelo Unterberger and
Paul Troger, and in 1767 the archduchesses
Maria Anna and
Maria Carolina were made the first Honorary Members. In 1772, there were further reforms to the organisational structure. In 1776, the engraver Jakob Matthias Schmutzer founded a school of engraving. This Imperial-Royal Academy of Engraving in the Annagasse soon competed with the Court Academy. Chancellor
Wenzel Anton Kaunitz integrated all existing art academies into the
k.k. vereinigten Akademie der bildenden Künste (Imperial and Royal Unified Academy of Fine Arts). The word "vereinigten" (unified) was later dropped. In 1822 the art cabinet grew significantly with the bequest of honorary member
Anton Franz de Paula Graf Lamberg-Sprinzenstein. His collection still forms the backbone of the art on display. In 1872, Emperor
Franz Joseph I of Austria approved a statute making the academy the supreme government authority for the arts. A new building was constructed according to plans designed by
Theophil Hansen in the course of the layout of the
Ringstraße boulevard. On 3 April 1877, the present-day building on Schillerplatz in the
Innere Stadt district was inaugurated, the interior works, including ceiling frescos by
Anselm Feuerbach, continued until 1892. In 1907 and 1908, young
Adolf Hitler, who had come from
Linz, was twice denied admission to the drawing class by academy professor
Christian Griepenkerl. He stayed in Vienna, subsisting on his orphan allowance, and tried unsuccessfully to continue his profession as an artist. Soon he had withdrawn into poverty and started selling
his amateur paintings, mostly
watercolours, for meagre sustenance until he left Vienna for
Munich in May 1913. During the Austrian
Anschluss to
Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1945, the academy, like other Austrian universities, was forced to purge its staff and student body of Jews and others who fell under the purview of the racially discriminatory
Nuremberg Laws. After
World War II, the academy was reconstituted in 1955 and its autonomy reconfirmed. Eduard von Josch, the secretary of the academy, was dismissed for being a member of the
Nazi Party. The academy has had university status since 1998, but retained its original name. It is currently the only Austrian university without the word "university" in its name. == Structure ==