The origins of the School of Art lie with the
Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, who founded the
Birmingham Government School of Design in 1843.
George Wallis (1811–1891),
Wolverhampton-born artist and art educator, was its headmaster in 1852–1858. In 1877, the
Town Council was persuaded by the school's energetic headmaster
Edward R. Taylor to take the school over and expand it to form the United Kingdom's first municipal college of art. With funding coming from
Sir Richard and George Tangye, the current building was commissioned from architect
John Henry Chamberlain. In 1885, the school became the first Municipal School of Art. It later becomes the leading centre for the
Arts and Crafts Movement. An associated School of Architecture was formed in 1909 and received recognition by the
Royal Institute of British Architects in 1923. By the 1960s, the School had outgrown the original Margaret Street building and expanded into the campus of the
University of Aston in
Gosta Green. In 1971, with the founding of Birmingham Polytechnic, the School of Art lost its independence and became the Polytechnic's Faculty of Art and Design. In 1988, this in turn absorbed the former
Bournville College of Art to form the
Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, the largest centre for education in art, design and the media in the United Kingdom outside
London. Birmingham Polytechnic gained
university status in 1992 as the University of Central England, which was renamed
Birmingham City University in 2007. ==Building==