, portrait of Jerónimo Antonio Gil, director of the academy The Academy of San Carlos was founded in 1783, being the first arts academy established in America in 1783, with European teachers, and bright students. In 1540 the building was built in order to create the first hospital for people with syphilis. Its name was "Hospital del Amor de Dios", and was closed in 1783 in order to fuse itself with the hospital of San Andrés in the old college of Jesuits on Tacuba street.
Jerónimo Antonio Gil, a famous engraver, established in 1778 an engraving school by the order of the Spanish King. Gil and his partner Fernando José Mangino decided to create a new academy to teach painting, sculpture and architecture. Finally, in 1781 classes started on the Real Casa de Moneda thanks to the donations of rich people, churches, the Tribunal of Trade and the states of
Veracruz,
Querétaro,
Guanajuato,
Córdoba Veracruz, and
Orizaba. Jeronimo Antonio Gil was appointed the school's first director by
Charles III of Spain and gathered prominent artists of the day including
José de Alcíbar,
Santiago Sandoval, Juan Sáenz,
Manuel Tolsá, and
Rafael Ximeno y Planes. Tolsá and Ximeno would later stay on to become directors of the school. The new school began to promote
Neoclassicism, focusing on Greek and Roman art and architecture, advocating European-style training of its artists. This lasted until 1861, when
Benito Juárez removed the lottery and the Academy suffered from a lack of funds. During the
Second Mexican Empire, the school was known as the
Imperial Academy of San Carlos and it received financial support from
Emperor Maximilian I, who was a patron of the arts. After the
restoration of the republic, Benito Juárez passed a public education law that turned the Academy into the
National School of Fine Arts under the Secretarait of Justice and Public Instruction. 's graduate library The school became part of the National University of Mexico in May 1910 and regained the name Academy of Fine Arts in 1913. A glass and iron dome was added to the building's courtyard in order to create an art gallery protected from the weather. The dome parts were manufactured in France by Lapeyrere based on the design of director
Antonio Rivas Mercado, and then shipped to Mexico to be assembled . The academy continued to advocate classic, European-style training of its artists until 1913. In that year, a student and teacher strike advocating a more modern approach ousted director Antonio Rivas Mercado. Following its integratation into the National University of Mexico (now UNAM), it initially kept a large degree of autonomy. In 1929, the architecture program was separated from the rest of the academy, and in 1953, this department was moved to the newly built
campus of UNAM in the south of the city. The remaining programs in painting, sculpture and engraving were renamed National School of Expressive Arts
Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas. Later, the undergraduate fine arts programs were moved to a facility in
Xochimilco, leaving only some graduate programs in the original Academy of San Carlos building. In 2011, the glass and iron dome of the courtyard underwent restoration work in order to address issues such as
corrosion of the beams. == Alumni and associated artists ==