The Artistic Lyceum was established in 1946 and was given the name of World War II
People's Hero Jordan Misja, who had been a painter. For several decades it was the only artistic high school in Albania. It used to have five departments: Theoretical,
Canto, Dramatic Arts, Choreography, and Figurative Arts (with several specialties). In 1973, following a speech from March by
Enver Hoxha, then Albania's communist dictator, Agron Dushku, a delegate of the Central Committee of the
Party of Labor of Albania, reported to the Central Committee that the Lyceum had a low level of communist behavior and that there was indifference to the Party's
big-character posters placed at the school. He also reported that
Albanian folk music was not taught at the school, that there was heavy
absenteeism, and that most of the communists at the school were in administrative rather than teaching positions. In 1990-1991 many protests, which ended up with the
fall of communism in Albania, occurred in front of the building of the Lyceum. On December 9, 1990, one of the first anticommunist protests in Tirana, several thousand students began marching at Student City and ended right in front of the Lyceum. There, the police suppressed the protest with batons. On February 15, 1991, the students made it further past the Artistic Lyceum building, and were headed to the
Blloku quarters where the nomenclature lived, but they were water hosed by police and had to disperse at the
Enver Hoxha Museum and along the main boulevard, thereby not being able to reach their goal of the Blloku quarters. As of 2014 the building housing the school was in a dire state and the school museum with its history of famous alumni no longer existed. In 2016 the building underwent a full reconstruction, whose inauguration was attended by Albanian Prime Minister
Edi Rama. On December 7, 2017, students and professors of the school performed in a classical music concert at the
Resurrection Cathedral in Tirana. == Teachers and alumni==