Belgium Art schools include the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Ecole Supérieure des Arts du Cirque, and La Cambre.
France The oldest art academy in France is Paris Fine Art School, established in 1648 by Charles Le Brun, and most present public art schools are over two centuries old: Nancy (1708), Toulouse (1726), Rouen (1741), etc. Some of those schools were called academies and were prestigious institutions, devoted to the education of great painters or sculptors. Others were called "école gratuite de dessin" (free school for drawing) and were devoted to the education of arts and craft artists. Currently, there are 45 national or territorial public schools of art in France, which deliver bachelor (DNA) and master (DNSEP or DNSAP) degrees. They do not belong to universities.
Germany The
Academy of Fine Arts Nuremberg () was founded in 1662 by
Jacob von Sandrart and is the oldest art academy in German-speaking Central Europe. Fine and applied arts have since formed key sectors of learning, although the emphasis has shifted in one direction or the other over the centuries. Today, learning takes the form of interdisciplinary interaction, and dialogue between fine and applied disciplines. It is flanked by new degree courses and a new media technology study program.
Greece Art education in Greece is provided by institutions such as the
Athens School of Fine Arts, established in 1837, Thessaloniki School of Fine Arts, Florina School of Fine Arts and Ioannina School of Fine Arts. These schools offer programs in various visual arts disciplines, contributing significantly to the cultural and artistic heritage of the country.
Italy In Italy, there are twenty Academies of Fine Arts sustained by the state and eighteen private and public academies legally recognized. The
Florence Academy of Fine Arts in Florence is the oldest Academy of Fine Arts in the world. All these academies, together with all the music conservatories, institutes of musical studies, and other educational institutes, converge in a specific compartment of the Italian Ministry of University and Research named AFAM (Alta Formazione Artistica, Musicale e Coreutica).
The Netherlands Royal Academy of Art, The Hague was founded in 1682 and is the largest and oldest art institution in the Netherlands. Design Academy Eindhoven was founded in 1955. Gerrit Rietveld Academie was founded in 1924 in Amsterdam with a main focus on De Stijl and Bauhaus at that time.,
Vantaa,
Finland Sweden Art schools have existed in Sweden since the first half of the 18th century. Students may attend the Royal Institute of Art, founded in 1735. Established in 1844 originally as a part-time art school for Sunday artisans, the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design known as "Konstfack" is an arts college offering bachelor's and master's degrees in ceramics, glass, textiles, metalworking, and more. There are also tertiary art schools attached to universities in Gothenburg, Malmö, and Umeå.
United Kingdom Art education in the United Kingdom includes institutions like the Royal College of Art, which was established in 1837, and other prestigious schools such as the Slade School of Fine Art and the Glasgow School of Art. These institutions offer comprehensive programs in various art disciplines. Perhaps those most applicable to the definition of 'art school' are the autonomous colleges or schools of art offering courses across both
further and
higher education boundaries, of which there are approximately eighteen, under the banner of United Kingdom Art & Design Institutions Association. Others, whose existence ties in indelibly with that of larger, non-discipline-specific universities (such as the
Slade School of Art) exist. Most art schools of either orientation are equipped to offer opportunities spanning from post-16 to
postgraduate level. The range of colleges span from further education establishments to research-led specialist institutes. The
University of the Arts London, for example, is a federally structured institution that comprises six previously independent colleges situated in London. These include
Camberwell College of Arts,
Central Saint Martins,
Chelsea College of Arts,
London College of Communication,
London College of Fashion, and
Wimbledon College of Arts; others include
The Slade School of Fine Art,
Ravensbourne University London, The
Royal College of Art and
Goldsmiths College, University of London, which each grant
undergraduate and
postgraduate awards under one collegiate arm. The
Royal College of Art with its
degree-awarding arm and singular focus on
postgraduate awards being a most singular exception. Outside of London art schools in the UK include
Arts University Bournemouth,
Coventry School of Art and Design,
University for the Creative Arts,
Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design,
Edinburgh College of Art (part of
University of Edinburgh),
Glasgow School of Art,
Gray's School of Art,
Hereford College of Arts,
Leeds College of Art, Liverpool School of Art (part of
Liverpool John Moores University),
Loughborough University School of Art and Design,
Manchester School of Art (part of
Manchester Metropolitan University),
Norwich University of the Arts, Moray School of Art (
University of the Highlands and Islands),
The Northern School of Art and
Plymouth College of Art and Design. Since the 1970s, degrees have replaced diplomas as the top-tier qualification in the field. In the case of wholly freestanding institutions, degree
validation agreements in liaison with a university have long been the custom for
Bachelor of Arts (Hons) level upward. There has been a general trend for all-encompassing universities to offer programs in the visual arts, and formerly independent art schools have merged with
polytechnics and universities to offer such degrees. A notable exception to this is the
City and Guilds of London Art School, an independent art school solely focused on fine art and related disciplines such as carving and conservation. A few art schools have taken on university status themselves, namely
Arts University Bournemouth,
University for the Creative Arts,
University of the Arts London, and
Norwich University of the Arts. While
Courtauld Institute of Art,
Leeds College of Art and
Royal College of Art are recognised institutions - some with degree awarding powers. Most specialist institutions in the United Kingdom can trace their histories back to the nineteenth century or beyond, originating usually from government initiatives. == Asia ==