The academy was founded in 1752 by
Charles VII of Naples and had its origins in two schools, the Accademia del Disegno (Academy of Drawing) and the Accademia del Nudo (Academy of the
Nude). It was originally housed in buildings attached to the church of
San Carlo alle Mortelle. For many years its administration remained under the control of the Reale Laboratorio delle Pietre Dure (Royal
Gemstone Laboratory) and the Reale Fabbrica degli Arazzi (Royal
Tapestry Factory). Under
Joseph Napoleon,
King of Naples from 1806 to June 1808, it was given the name
Reale Accademia di Belle Arti. Reforms in 1822 resulted in a name change to the
Reale Istituto di Belle Arti, a name it would retain until 1923, when the
Gentile reform of the Italian educational system, restored it to
Reale Accademia di Belle Arti. , the academy's founder With the
unification of Italy in 1861, the school was reconstituted with its own administration led by its principal professors and subject to the
Ministry of Public Education. In the mid-1860s, after a period in the Palazzo degli Studi (formerly the seat of the
University of Naples and now the
Naples National Archaeological Museum), the academy moved to its present site, a large building on the Via Santa Maria di Costantinopoli designed in the
neo-Renaissance style by
Enrico Alvino. It had been converted from an 18th-century convent attached to the church of
San Giovanni Battista delle Monache and was part of a large-scale urban development project led by Alvino and Francesco Saponieri (later Director of the Accademia di Belle Arti). The academy's school of architecture, highly active in the 19th century, was transferred to the University of Naples in 1935. The academy closed during
World War II, and from 1943 until the end of the war, its building was occupied by
Allied troops. After the
abolition of the monarchy in Italy in 1946, the
Reale (Royal) was dropped from its name. In 1999 following national educational reforms, the academy (along with most other fine art academies and music conservatories in Italy), was recognized as part of the university sector with their highest level diplomas equivalent to the Italian
laurea. The academy elected its first woman Director, the art historian Giovanna Cassese, in 2007. She was succeeded in that post by another art historian, Aurora Spinosa, who was appointed in October 2013. Spinosa is the daughter of the painter
Domenico Spinosa (1916-2007) and also serves as curator of the academy's museum, the Galleria dell'Accademia di Belle Arti. s ==Alumni==