Architect
Martin Gropius was the school's organizer and first director. The program developed from two existing schools within the Academy, an "arts and trade union school" and a drawing school. Gropius also designed their new building at Klosterstraße 75 (demolished in 1931). After
German unification, the art school in 1872 expanded into teacher education. In 1874 women were first admitted. On the death of Gropius in 1880, painter
Ernst Ewald assumed the directorship. (Ewald was simultaneously the director of the small teaching institute at the
State Museum of Decorative Arts.) Impressionist painter
Philipp Franck became director in 1915, after the beginning of World War I. When painter
Elise Blumann completed a two-year course at the school between 1917 and 1919, as a woman she could choose from the School of Applied Arts, the Berlin School for Women Arts founded in 1868, and the Royal School of Art. The Academy did not accept female fine arts students until October 1919. Blumann graduated with an art teacher's diploma. Following the 1918 abdication of the Kaiser and the
German Revolution of 1918–19, the establishment was renamed the
State Art School of Berlin (
Staatliche Kunstschule zu Berlin), and moved into new purpose-built facilities at Grunewaldstraße 2–5,
Schöneberg. Painter
Alexander Kanoldt assumed the directorship in 1933, as the Nazis came to power. His work would eventually be seized and destroyed as
degenerate art. Kanoldt resigned in 1936, and the school was renamed the
State College of Arts (
Staatliche Hochschule für Kunsterziehung). Hans Zimbal was among its final directors in the war years before its closure in 1945. == References ==