Founding (1928–1935) VCUarts was started as part of
Richmond Professional Institute (RPI), the historical predecessor to Virginia Commonwealth University, as the "School of Art" in 1928. Initially, the school relied on private donations and the solitary work of its first teacher Theresa Pollak for funding and admissions. According to Henry Horace "H.H." Hibbs, the first director of RPI, the catalyst for the school's establishment as a formal institute of art and design was an inaugural gift of $1,000 from
Colonel A.A. Anderson, a New York portrait-painter, designer, and conservationist. In 1928, a board of private citizens (later to be known as the RPI Foundation) purchased for $7,500 a disused brick and concrete stable on Shafer Street; earlier that same year, Anderson—who traveled much of his life—purchased 900 acres of land where
Richmond International Airport stands today. Hibbs, learning of Anderson's career as a painter and philanthropist, appealed to the Colonel while he was in Richmond by informing him of the board's acquisition of the stable and their intention to convert the loft on the property into the school's first art studio. Immediately interested, Anderson offered his $1,000 gift. Additional contributions by the citizens of Richmond totalling $24,000 allowed the school to open for classes by September. Two years prior, artist Theresa Pollak had returned to her home in Richmond after four years studying in the
New York Art Students' League. Hibbs also approached Pollak, proposing her a position as an hourly drawing and painting teacher. According to Hibbs'
History of RPI, her lack of salary pay was allegedly a common practice in music schools of the time. Restricted by a small working budget, Hibbs explained to Pollak that for her to begin classes, she would have to corral her own students. Before the school's first semester in the fall of 1928, Pollak "was on the telephone every day contacting everyone I knew who evinced even the slightest interest in art"; within the first year, she was able to enroll eight full-time students and nearly 30 on a part-time basis., the school's inaugural benefactor By 1930, the
state government was interested in supporting the School of Art as a public institute. The
State Board of Education ruled that RPI's art school had become eligible for financial aid from both the Commonwealth of Virginia and the federal government, a decision that helped the school gain a foothold in Richmond. The sudden influx of funding allowed the school to expand its curriculum beyond drawing and painting. In addition to what VCUarts today calls the department of painting and printmaking, over the next 17 years the School of Art would add the departments of commercial art (1930–36), interior decoration (1934–36), costume design and fashion (1936), and art education (1947). For five years, the gallery was the only exhibition space in Richmond where modern art could be seen first-hand, until the opening of the
VMFA in 1936. That year, RPI decided to convert the Anderson Gallery into a library, which slowed its programming until the gallery's original intentions were obscured. During this time, and for the next 33 years, RPI continued to develop the Anderson Gallery as a multi-use facility, hiring full-time librarian Rosamund McCanless and adding a third-story reading room, a mezzanine, an extended book stack five stories tall, and safety features. However, the library continued to keep a selection of artist's prints, many of which were donated from Hibbs' private collection. Hibbs himself bemoaned the school's many alterations to the space, noting that the changes were made to appease the
Southern Association of Colleges, RPI's accreditor. Over three decades later, Hibbs took part in reviving the gallery's use as an art space.
Expansion and new leadership (1935–1966) From the 1930s to the 1960s, as RPI itself expanded rapidly, the School of Art sought to organize itself into a formal place of learning rather than a small curriculum of courses. Marion M Junkin joined Theresa Pollak in 1934, and together they ran the school for eight years until Junkin moved to
Washington and Lee University. During their joint leadership, students at the School of Art would win about ten scholarships from the New York Art Students' League by 1948. In the years before RPI became VCU, the School of Art became one of the largest schools within the institute. By 1941, two photographs from the art school had been published in
Life magazine. During the mid-20th century, the leadership of each department within the school would help to shape its character. Raymond Hodges served as chairman of Theatre, founded in 1942; he directed over 100 stage productions and guided the department until his retirement in 1969. The Raymond Hodges Theatre at the W.E. Singleton Center for the Performing Arts was named for him in 1985.During her tenure, Pollak was invited eminent New York artists to Richmond for critiques and lectures, such as
Kimon Nicolaïdes,
Edmund Archer, Edward Rowan, and
Harry Sternberg. Abstract expressionist
Clyfford Still was hired to teach at RPI in 1943. While Still's students and Pollak herself grew to admire the artist and his work, he departed RPI after only two years for unknown reasons. In her writings, Pollak claims that no one in Richmond heard from him again, and that his stay at RPI was omitted from most of his biographical material. Though Pollak was not enamored with all
modern art (she remarked in 1968 that "subjective, expressive painting has become hard, schematic, ugly, or minimal"), she worked to ensure that the School of Art was an active steward of
contemporary work. This would occasionally result in backlash from the traditionally conservative Southern community in Richmond. In particular, her school and leadership endured considerable censure by the administration of RPI when sculptor
Robert Morris and dancer
Yvonne Rainer performed nude at a school art festival. Pollak would step down from head of the school in 1950, though she remained on the faculty in a teaching capacity for 19 years. During this period, the former head would later write, the various departments in the School of Art were disjointed and at odds with one another. Pollak opined that through the 1950s and early '60s, "the last vestige of any sense of unity" had been lost, and doubted that any incoming leadership would be capable of reining in each department into a harmonious and unified institution. Herbert J. Burgart assumed the role of dean in 1966, earning praise from Pollak. Writing in 1969, she said, "He has the ability to see things in the large and thus to organize, while at the same time he is aware of and sensitive to the individual." Burgart received a master's and doctorate in education from
Pennsylvania State University, though he did not possess formal training in the arts. In June 1969, founder Theresa Pollak retired. Under VCU, RPI's "School of Art" became the "School of the Arts," and later "VCUarts." It became accredited by the
National Association of Schools of Art and Design in 1973. In 2016, the gallery reopened under the name "The Anderson," which now exclusively exhibits BFA and MFA student programming. Notable exhibitors over the course of the Anderson Gallery's history, both under RPI and VCU, include
Wassily Kandinsky,
Fernand Léger,
Pablo Picasso,
Red Grooms,
Stephen Vitiello,
Larry Miller,
Howard Finster,
Sue Coe,
Steve Poleskie,
Walter Dusenbery,
Komar and Melamid,
Dotty Attie,
Miles B. Carpenter,
Hunt Slonem,
Sonya Rapoport, and
Judy Rifka. Former exhibitors also include Richmond's own Theresa Pollak,
Joseph H. Seipel,
David Freed,
Davi Det Hompson,
Richard Carlyon,
Lester Van Winkle, Frank Cole, Milo Russell,
Teresita Fernández,
Elizabeth King,
Reni Gower,
Sonya Clark,
Babatunde Lawal, and Myron Helfgott.
Dean DePillars leads the modern VCUarts (1977–1995) In 1976, Dean Burgart resigned in favor of a new position, and Assistant Dean Murry N. DePillars became acting dean and eventually assumed the formal role of dean of the School of the Arts in 1977. DePillars, who also received his doctorate from Pennsylvania State (albeit not in education), was the first African-American dean to lead the School of the Arts. Under the new dean's leadership, the performing arts departments expanded into a number of new facilities. In 1976, the RPI Foundation acquired the Grove Avenue Baptist Church and renewed the building as the VCU Music Center, today known as the James W. Black Music Center. The W.E. Singleton Center for Performing Arts opened in 1982; its first concert was by the
Vienna Symphony Orchestra, in its first U.S. performance in a decade. In 1980, the dance program moved to VCUarts from the VCU department of health and physical education, and began offering bachelor's degrees. DePillar's tenure at VCUarts would steward the opening of the VCU Dance Center on North Brunswick Street. The Lee Art Theatre on West Grace Street, a neighborhood cinema turned burlesque theater, was purchased by VCU and converted into the Grace Street Theatre, where students studying film and dance could perform and exhibit their work. By the mid-1980s, the School of the Arts would be the third largest art school in the U.S., with over 2,000 full-time students taught by 150 faculty members. In 1989, as a gesture of international solidarity with the victims of the
Tiananmen Square massacre, VCUarts students erected a "Goddess of Democracy" statue on the university commons lawn as a memorial to their slain Chinese peers. They sought the help of local artists, Richmond's Chinese community members, and the generosity of nearby merchants to complete the project.
Global influence (1996–2012) In 1996, Richard Toscan succeeded DePillars as dean of VCUarts; over the next 14 years, the school's graduate program would see its ranking rise from 25th in the nation (according to
U.S. News & World Report) to fourth.
VCUarts Qatar In 1998, VCU opened the Qatar campus of Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts—the first American university to open a campus in the Gulf state—in what would become
Education City. The
Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development, founded in 1995, was interested in bringing reputable higher education organizations to the capital city of Doha, and VCU School of the Arts was the first to strike a deal with the Foundation. The school offered programs analogous to those at VCUarts in Art Foundation, Communication Arts + Design, Fashion Design + Merchandising, and Interior Design. In 2002, VCU transferred control of the Doha campus to VCU School of the Arts, and the name was changed to Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts in Qatar (also known as VCUarts Qatar). "VCUarts Qatar has substantial involvement with the emerging design industries in Qatar and is a significant catalyst for that growth." During Seipel's tenure the ranking of the program rose to first in the nation. In 1978, Seipel would make his first mark on the city as co-founder of 1708 Gallery on 1708 East Main Street (which moved to 319 West Broad Street in 2001) and the Texas-Wisconsin Border Café in 1982. In 2017,
Shawn Brixey became dean of the school, after previously serving as dean of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design at
York University in Toronto. On August 5, 2019,
VCU announced that
Shawn Brixey would be stepping down from his administrative role as dean of VCU School of the Arts. In 2020, Carmenita Higginbotham was hired as the new dean of VCU's School of the Arts. ==Admission==