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Tyler School of Art and Architecture

The Tyler School of Art and Architecture is based at Temple University, a large, urban, public research university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] Tyler currently enrolls about 1,350 undergraduate students and about 200 graduate students in a wide variety of academic degree programs, including architecture, art education, art history, art therapy, ceramics, city and regional planning, community arts practices, community development, facilities management, fibers and material studies, glass, graphic and interactive design, historic preservation, horticulture, landscape architecture, metals/jewelry/CAD-CAM, painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture and visual studies.[2]

Tyler School of Art and Architecture
TypeArt and architecture school
Established1935
(as Stella Elkins Tyler School of Fine Arts)
Parent institution
Temple University
DeanSusan E. Cahan
Students1,550
Location, ,
United States
CampusUrban
Websitetyler.temple.edu

Founded in 1935 by Stella Elkins Tyler and sculptor Boris Blai in nearby Elkins Park, Pennsylvania,[3] Tyler moved to a new, 255,000-square-foot facility at Temple's Main Campus in 2009 with the cornerstone financial support of an allocation of $61.5 million from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[4] In 2012, Tyler's Architecture programs moved into a new facility connected to the main Tyler building.[5] Temple's programs in Landscape Architecture and Horticulture (based primarily at Temple's suburban Ambler Campus) and its programs in Main Campus-based City & Regional Planning and Community Development programs joined Tyler in 2016, unifying all of the university's architecture and environmental design disciplines in one school for the first time.[3]

In 2017, arts administrator, art historian and curator Susan E. Cahan, formerly associate dean and dean for the arts at Yale College at Yale University, was appointed dean of the Tyler School of Art and Architecture by Temple President Richard M. Englert.[6]

In 2018, Temple University's board of trustees approved changes to Tyler's structure and identity in order to unify the school, integrate disciplines in architecture and environmental design, support cross-disciplinary studies and reflect current understanding of creative practice and research. On July 1, 2019, the school's name officially expanded from the Tyler School of Art to the Tyler School of Art and Architecture.[7][8]

Academic programs and accreditation

The Tyler School of Art and Architecture offers a wide range of degree and certificate programs in the areas of art, architecture and environmental design, graphic design, art history and art education.

Susan E. Cahan, has been Tyler's dean since 2017.[9]

Tyler's academic degree programs:[2]

  • Architecture (BSArch, MArch, MSArch)
  • Art Education (BSEd, BFA with Art Education Concentration, BSEd, MEd with Major in Art Education)
  • Art History (BA, MA, MA Fine Arts Administration Track, PhD)
  • Art Therapy (BA)
  • Ceramics (BFA, MFA)
  • City & Regional Planning (MS)
  • Community Development (BS)
  • Facilities Management (BS)
  • Facilities Planning (MS)
  • Fibers & Material Studies (BFA, MFA)
  • Foundations (non-degree granting program for first-year students)
  • Glass (BFA, MFA)
  • Graphic & Interactive Design (BFA, MFA)
  • Historic Preservation (BS)
  • Horticulture (BSHort, ASHort)
  • Landscape Architecture (BSLA, MLArch)
  • Metals/Jewelry/CAD-CAM (BFA, MFA)
  • Painting (BFA, MFA)
  • Photography (BFA, MFA)
  • Printmaking (BFA, MFA)
  • Sculpture (BFA, MFA)
  • Visual Studies (BA)

Temple also has a BA in Art program at Temple University, Japan Campus, located in Tokyo.[10]

The Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University is a non-profit, accredited member of the National Association of Schools of Art and Design and the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools. Tyler's MArch degree program is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board, and the school's BLArch and MLArch programs are accredited by the National Landscape Architecture Board and the Landscape Architecture Accreditation Board. Tyler's MS program in City and Regional Planning is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board. The BS program in Facilities Management is accredited by the International Facilities Management Association.[11]

Facilities

In 2009 Tyler School of Art moved to a new location, a 255,000-square-foot building designed by architect Carlos Jiménez,[4][12] Tyler's architecture program moved into a new, 50,000-square-foot Architecture Building in 2012.[5] The two structures, which are connected by a passageway and are located at Temple University's Main Campus in Philadelphia. Their location adjacent to Presser Hall (part of Temple University's Boyer College of Music and Dance) and Temple Theaters (part of Temple's School of Theater, Film and Media Arts) has created an arts quadrant in the northeast corner of campus.[4]

Visiting artists and scholars

Tyler also hosts a variety of visiting artist, architect and scholar programs that bring leaders in their disciplines to the school to address the Tyler community and work with students in their classrooms and studios. Flagship visiting artist and scholar programs include:

The Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artist Symposium, an endowed visiting artist program that brings artists and thinkers to campus to work with Tyler students and present a free public lecture each year. Past Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artists:

Tyler Architecture alumni endowed a lecture series to honor Brigitte Knowles, professor emerita and former associate dean, that brings architects, landscape architects and designers to campus. Past lecturers include:

Temple Contemporary

Temple Contemporary is Tyler's exhibitions and public programs unit. It was led by founding director Robert Blackson, Tyler's director of exhibitions and public programming from 2011 to 2021.[21] Jova Lynne, formerly the Senior Curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, was hired as the Director of Temple Contemporary in 2021.[22] Temple Contemporary's galleries and offices are located in the Tyler building at Temple University's Main Campus, although much of its programming takes place in the surrounding Philadelphia community.

Temple Contemporary's community-focused programming that has earned national attention includes "Funeral for a Home" (2014),[23][24] an extended commemoration of at-risk urban housing stock and the lives that soon-to-be-demolished homes contain; "reForm" (2014-2015),[25][26] a response to the closure of public schools and its impact on urban communities and their children by artist and Tyler faculty member Pepón Osorio; and "Symphony for a Broken Orchestra" (2017-2018),[27][28] a citywide effort to collect, display, repair and return broken instruments belonging to Philadelphia's public schools, highlighted by the composition of music for the broken instruments by composer David Lang and the music's performance by a diverse orchestra of local residents. All three of the projects above were funded in part by the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage.[29][30]

Notable alumni

Notable current and past faculty

History

Arts patron Stella Elkins Tyler (of the Elkins/Widener family) donated her estate in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, to Temple University in the early 1930s. With an interest in progressive education and a deep appreciation of her mentor, the sculptor Boris Blai, Tyler offered her estate with the expressed wish that, through Boris Blai, it would become an environment for the advancement of the fine arts, scholarly study in the arts and individual creativity. As founding dean of what was then known as the Stella Elkins Tyler School of Fine Arts, Blai instilled the school with a commitment to progressive education emphasizing the student's mastery of technique within the framework of a liberal arts curriculum. Blai insisted upon individual attention to each student's needs as the basis of successful teaching. During his 25-year tenure as dean, Blai shaped the school into one of the finest visual arts centers in the country, and his founding ideals still remain paramount to Tyler's educational philosophy.[32][3]

In 1960, Charles Le Clair succeeded Blai. Under Le Clair, the Tyler campus was improved with construction of a residence hall and two studio/classroom buildings. In 1966, the school's name was changed to the Tyler School of Art, and Le Clair founded the Tyler Study Abroad program in Rome, Italy.[32][3] Tyler's programs at Temple University Rome remain among the most respected fine arts study abroad programs in Europe today. Temple University Rome has expanded to include a full range of liberal arts, architecture, business and law courses with an emphasis on those relating to Rome, Italy and Europe.[33] Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Tyler's curriculum continued to grow in response to new definitions of art-making and the role of art in society. New programs and modern facilities in design, ceramics, glass, metals and photography were added.[32][3] During this time, Tyler established Art History and Art Education departments on Temple's Main Campus in Philadelphia.[32][3]

The pace of change and growth began to accelerate dramatically in the late 1990s. In 1998, Tyler opened Temple's Department of Architecture. In 2009, Tyler moved from Elkins Park into a new, 250,000-square-foot building at Temple's Main Campus.[32][3] Three years later, Architecture moved into a new 50,000-square-foot facility connected to the new Tyler building.[5] Temple's programs in landscape architecture, horticulture, city and regional planning, and community development became part of Tyler in 2016, for the first time unifying all of the architecture and environmental design disciplines at Temple in one academic unit. In 2017, Susan E. Cahan, who came from Yale University became the first permanent dean of an independent Tyler since the school moved into its new building in 2009.[3][6] On July 1, 2019, more than 20 years after Architecture at Temple became part of Tyler, the school's name officially became the Tyler School of Art and Architecture.[8]

Tyler's leaders:

  • Boris Blai, dean (1935-1960)
  • Charles Le Clair, dean (1960-1974)
  • Donald M. Lantzy, acting dean (1974-1975)
  • Jack Wasserman, dean (1975-1977)
  • David Pease, interim dean (1977-1978) and dean (1978-1984)
  • George Bayliss, dean (1984-1989)
  • Rochelle Toner, dean (1989-2002)
  • Hester Stinnett, acting dean (2002-2005)
  • Keith Anthony Morrison, dean (2005-2008)
  • Therese Dolan, interim dean (2008-2009)
  • Robert Stroker, interim dean and dean of Center for the Arts (2009-2015)
  • Hester Stinnett, interim dean (2015-2017)
  • Susan E. Cahan, dean (2017–present)

References

  1. ^ "Schools and Colleges | Temple University". www.temple.edu. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  2. ^ a b "Academic Programs". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Mission, Vision and Values". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  4. ^ a b c "Tyler move creates Temple arts hot spot". Temple Now | news.temple.edu. 2009-02-05. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  5. ^ a b c "Architecture moves into dedicated building". Temple Now | news.temple.edu. 2012-01-26. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  6. ^ a b "Susan E. Cahan appointed dean of Tyler School of Art". Temple Now | news.temple.edu. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  7. ^ "Trustees approve Tyler changes". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2019-04-18.
  8. ^ a b "New era, expanded name for Tyler". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2019-07-01.
  9. ^ "Meet Tyler dean Susan Cahan". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  10. ^ Campus, Temple University, Japan. "Art Major - Undergraduate Program, Temple University, Japan Campus". www.tuj.ac.jp. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  11. ^ "Accreditation". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  12. ^ "Tyler School of Art (2005-2009)". Carlos Jiménez Studio. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  13. ^ "Rick Lowe coming to Tyler". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-25.
  14. ^ "Nick Cave at Tyler". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  15. ^ "Critical Dialogue Series: Cecilia Vicuña, The 2020 Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artist". Tyler School of Art and Architecture. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  16. ^ "Wolgin Visiting Artist: Jennie C. Jones | Tyler School of Art and Architecture". tyler.temple.edu. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  17. ^ "TYL Architecture Alumni Lecture in Honor of Brigitte Knowles". www.alumni.temple.edu. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  18. ^ "Brigitte Knowles Honored at Snøhetta Lecture Sponsored by Architecture Alumni". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  19. ^ "Knowles Architecture Alumni Lecture: Sharon Johnston: Art and the City". Tyler School of Art and Architecture. Tyler School of Art and Architecture. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  20. ^ "Knowles Architecture Alumni Lecturer: Olalekan Jeyifous | Tyler School of Art and Architecture". tyler.temple.edu. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  21. ^ "Who We Are". Tyler School of Art. Retrieved 2018-10-17.
  22. ^ Bowditch, Alex (2022-01-26). "Tyler School of Art and Architecture Selects Jova Lynne as New Gallery Director". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  23. ^ "Funeral for a Home". Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  24. ^ "In Nod To History, A Crumbling Philly Row House Gets A Funeral". NPR's "All Things Considered". Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  25. ^ "reForm". reForm. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  26. ^ "Art Show Captures the Wrenching Effects of Closing a School". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  27. ^ "Symphony for a Broken Orchestra". symphonyforabrokenorchestra.org. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  28. ^ "A Symphony Breathes Life Into 400 Broken School Instruments". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  29. ^ "Rob Blackson". The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  30. ^ "Symphony for a Broken Orchestra - GRANT". The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. 2016-11-30. Retrieved 2018-10-18.
  31. ^ "Marlo Pascual Dead: Rising Star Dies of Cancer at 48". ArtNews. ArtNews. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  32. ^ a b c d e Hilty, James (2010). Temple University: 125 Years of Service to Philadelphia, the Nation, and the World. Temple University Press. pp. 227. ISBN 1439900191.
  33. ^ "50 YEARS OF TEMPLE ROME – Temple University Rome Campus". rome.temple.edu. Retrieved 2018-10-15.

External links

  • Official website

Coordinates: 39°58′59″N 75°09′13″W / 39.983162°N 75.153556°W / 39.983162; -75.153556

tyler, school, architecture, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, with, wikipedia, content, policies, particularly, neutral, point, view, please, discuss, further, talk, page, july, 2020,. A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tyler School of Art and Architecture is based at Temple University a large urban public research university in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1 Tyler currently enrolls about 1 350 undergraduate students and about 200 graduate students in a wide variety of academic degree programs including architecture art education art history art therapy ceramics city and regional planning community arts practices community development facilities management fibers and material studies glass graphic and interactive design historic preservation horticulture landscape architecture metals jewelry CAD CAM painting photography printmaking sculpture and visual studies 2 Tyler School of Art and ArchitectureTypeArt and architecture schoolEstablished1935 as Stella Elkins Tyler School of Fine Arts Parent institutionTemple UniversityDeanSusan E CahanStudents1 550LocationPhiladelphia Pennsylvania United StatesCampusUrbanWebsitetyler wbr temple wbr eduFounded in 1935 by Stella Elkins Tyler and sculptor Boris Blai in nearby Elkins Park Pennsylvania 3 Tyler moved to a new 255 000 square foot facility at Temple s Main Campus in 2009 with the cornerstone financial support of an allocation of 61 5 million from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 4 In 2012 Tyler s Architecture programs moved into a new facility connected to the main Tyler building 5 Temple s programs in Landscape Architecture and Horticulture based primarily at Temple s suburban Ambler Campus and its programs in Main Campus based City amp Regional Planning and Community Development programs joined Tyler in 2016 unifying all of the university s architecture and environmental design disciplines in one school for the first time 3 In 2017 arts administrator art historian and curator Susan E Cahan formerly associate dean and dean for the arts at Yale College at Yale University was appointed dean of the Tyler School of Art and Architecture by Temple President Richard M Englert 6 In 2018 Temple University s board of trustees approved changes to Tyler s structure and identity in order to unify the school integrate disciplines in architecture and environmental design support cross disciplinary studies and reflect current understanding of creative practice and research On July 1 2019 the school s name officially expanded from the Tyler School of Art to the Tyler School of Art and Architecture 7 8 Contents 1 Academic programs and accreditation 2 Facilities 3 Visiting artists and scholars 4 Temple Contemporary 5 Notable alumni 6 Notable current and past faculty 7 History 8 References 9 External linksAcademic programs and accreditation EditThe Tyler School of Art and Architecture offers a wide range of degree and certificate programs in the areas of art architecture and environmental design graphic design art history and art education Susan E Cahan has been Tyler s dean since 2017 9 Tyler s academic degree programs 2 Architecture BSArch MArch MSArch Art Education BSEd BFA with Art Education Concentration BSEd MEd with Major in Art Education Art History BA MA MA Fine Arts Administration Track PhD Art Therapy BA Ceramics BFA MFA City amp Regional Planning MS Community Development BS Facilities Management BS Facilities Planning MS Fibers amp Material Studies BFA MFA Foundations non degree granting program for first year students Glass BFA MFA Graphic amp Interactive Design BFA MFA Historic Preservation BS Horticulture BSHort ASHort Landscape Architecture BSLA MLArch Metals Jewelry CAD CAM BFA MFA Painting BFA MFA Photography BFA MFA Printmaking BFA MFA Sculpture BFA MFA Visual Studies BA Temple also has a BA in Art program at Temple University Japan Campus located in Tokyo 10 The Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University is a non profit accredited member of the National Association of Schools of Art and Design and the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Tyler s MArch degree program is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board and the school s BLArch and MLArch programs are accredited by the National Landscape Architecture Board and the Landscape Architecture Accreditation Board Tyler s MS program in City and Regional Planning is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board The BS program in Facilities Management is accredited by the International Facilities Management Association 11 Facilities EditIn 2009 Tyler School of Art moved to a new location a 255 000 square foot building designed by architect Carlos Jimenez 4 12 Tyler s architecture program moved into a new 50 000 square foot Architecture Building in 2012 5 The two structures which are connected by a passageway and are located at Temple University s Main Campus in Philadelphia Their location adjacent to Presser Hall part of Temple University s Boyer College of Music and Dance and Temple Theaters part of Temple s School of Theater Film and Media Arts has created an arts quadrant in the northeast corner of campus 4 Visiting artists and scholars EditTyler also hosts a variety of visiting artist architect and scholar programs that bring leaders in their disciplines to the school to address the Tyler community and work with students in their classrooms and studios Flagship visiting artist and scholar programs include The Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artist Symposium an endowed visiting artist program that brings artists and thinkers to campus to work with Tyler students and present a free public lecture each year Past Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artists Judy Pfaff 2016 LaToya Ruby Frazier 2017 Rick Lowe 2018 13 Nick Cave 2019 14 Cecilia Vicuna 2020 15 Jennie C Jones 2022 16 Tyler Architecture alumni endowed a lecture series to honor Brigitte Knowles professor emerita and former associate dean that brings architects landscape architects and designers to campus Past lecturers include David Adjaye Founder and Principal Adjaye Associates Craig Edward Dykers Founding Partner Snohetta Walter Hood Founder Hood Design Studio Clive Wilkinson President Clive Wilkinson Architects 17 18 Sharon Johnston Founding Partner Johnston Marklee 19 Olalekan Jeyifous 2022 20 Temple Contemporary EditTemple Contemporary is Tyler s exhibitions and public programs unit It was led by founding director Robert Blackson Tyler s director of exhibitions and public programming from 2011 to 2021 21 Jova Lynne formerly the Senior Curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit was hired as the Director of Temple Contemporary in 2021 22 Temple Contemporary s galleries and offices are located in the Tyler building at Temple University s Main Campus although much of its programming takes place in the surrounding Philadelphia community Temple Contemporary s community focused programming that has earned national attention includes Funeral for a Home 2014 23 24 an extended commemoration of at risk urban housing stock and the lives that soon to be demolished homes contain reForm 2014 2015 25 26 a response to the closure of public schools and its impact on urban communities and their children by artist and Tyler faculty member Pepon Osorio and Symphony for a Broken Orchestra 2017 2018 27 28 a citywide effort to collect display repair and return broken instruments belonging to Philadelphia s public schools highlighted by the composition of music for the broken instruments by composer David Lang and the music s performance by a diverse orchestra of local residents All three of the projects above were funded in part by the Pew Center for Arts amp Heritage 29 30 Notable alumni EditDennis Adams artist Polly Apfelbaum artist Timothy App painter Bill Beckley artist Stanley Bleifeld sculptor Moe Brooker artist Harriete Estel Berman artist Karen Boccalero artist nun Regis Brodie artist Skidmore faculty member Donald Camp photographer Ursinus faculty member Syd Carpenter artist 2022 Gallery of Success honoree Barbara Chase Riboud artist novelist poet Manon Cleary painter Cecelia Condit artist Wisconsin Milwaukee faculty member Chuck Connelly painter Marsha Cottrell artist Amber Cowan artist Harvey Dinnerstein painter educator Alix Dobkin singer songwriter Angela Dufresne painter RISD faculty member Allan Edmunds printmaker Anoka Faruqee painter Yale faculty member Louise Fishman painter Jean Foos artist Peter Fox artist Allan Randall Freelon artist Nick Fudge artist Doreen Garner artist Frank Gaylord sculptor Neil Goodman sculptor educator Deborah Grant artist Trenton Doyle Hancock artist Edgar Heap of Birds artist Jessica Hische illustrator designer Catherine Jansen photographer Martha Jackson Jarvis artist Irvin Kershner film director Simmie Knox painter David Levine artist illustrator Stacy Levy sculptor E B Lewis illustrator Beth Lipman glass artist Deborah Margo artist Joan Marter art historian Rutgers faculty member Steven Montgomery artist Judy Moonelis ceramic artist Ayanah Moor artist SAIC faculty member Jim Morphesis painter Ree Morton artist Eleanor Moty metalsmith jewelry artist Nicholas Muellner photographer writer Lowell Blair Nesbitt artist Albert Paley artist Laura Parnes artist Marlo Pascual photographer 31 Janet Perr designer art director Amy Pleasant painter Eric Pryor President of Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Erin M Riley artist Paula Scher designer Susan Sensemann artist James Sheehan artist Lorraine Shemesh artist Sarai Sherman painter Sondra Sherman painter jewelry artist Aaron Shikler painter Lisa Sigal artist Laurie Simmons photographer Nina Sobell artist Andrew Spence artist Kara Springer artist John Stango artist Richard Sylbert production designer Patricia Renee Thomas painter draftswoman and art educator Linda Threadgill artist William Villalongo artist Diana Vincent jewelry artist Angela Washko artist Hannah Wilke sculptor photographer Lisa Yuskavage painter Paul O Zelinsky author illustrator Syd Carpenter artistNotable current and past faculty EditAdela Akers textile and fiber artist Philip Betancourt archaeologist and art historian Doug Bucci metals artist Richard Callner painter Jon F Clark glass artist Richard Cramer painter John E Dowell Jr printmaker Coco Fusco artist Mark Thomas Gibson artist Hermann Gundersheimer art historian Marcia B Hall art historian Jesse Harrod fiber artist Amy Hauft sculptor C T Jasper artist Nicholas Kripal sculptor Stanley Lechtzin jewelry and metals artist Roberto Lugo ceramic artist Winifred Lutz sculptor Keith Anthony Morrison artist Dona Nelson painter Odili Donald Odita painter Karyn Olivier artist Pepon Osorio artist Gerda Panofsky Soergel art historian David Pease painter Rudolf Staffel ceramic artist Robert Storr art academic art historian Stanley Whitney painterHistory EditArts patron Stella Elkins Tyler of the Elkins Widener family donated her estate in Elkins Park Pennsylvania to Temple University in the early 1930s With an interest in progressive education and a deep appreciation of her mentor the sculptor Boris Blai Tyler offered her estate with the expressed wish that through Boris Blai it would become an environment for the advancement of the fine arts scholarly study in the arts and individual creativity As founding dean of what was then known as the Stella Elkins Tyler School of Fine Arts Blai instilled the school with a commitment to progressive education emphasizing the student s mastery of technique within the framework of a liberal arts curriculum Blai insisted upon individual attention to each student s needs as the basis of successful teaching During his 25 year tenure as dean Blai shaped the school into one of the finest visual arts centers in the country and his founding ideals still remain paramount to Tyler s educational philosophy 32 3 In 1960 Charles Le Clair succeeded Blai Under Le Clair the Tyler campus was improved with construction of a residence hall and two studio classroom buildings In 1966 the school s name was changed to the Tyler School of Art and Le Clair founded the Tyler Study Abroad program in Rome Italy 32 3 Tyler s programs at Temple University Rome remain among the most respected fine arts study abroad programs in Europe today Temple University Rome has expanded to include a full range of liberal arts architecture business and law courses with an emphasis on those relating to Rome Italy and Europe 33 Throughout the 1960s and 1970s Tyler s curriculum continued to grow in response to new definitions of art making and the role of art in society New programs and modern facilities in design ceramics glass metals and photography were added 32 3 During this time Tyler established Art History and Art Education departments on Temple s Main Campus in Philadelphia 32 3 The pace of change and growth began to accelerate dramatically in the late 1990s In 1998 Tyler opened Temple s Department of Architecture In 2009 Tyler moved from Elkins Park into a new 250 000 square foot building at Temple s Main Campus 32 3 Three years later Architecture moved into a new 50 000 square foot facility connected to the new Tyler building 5 Temple s programs in landscape architecture horticulture city and regional planning and community development became part of Tyler in 2016 for the first time unifying all of the architecture and environmental design disciplines at Temple in one academic unit In 2017 Susan E Cahan who came from Yale University became the first permanent dean of an independent Tyler since the school moved into its new building in 2009 3 6 On July 1 2019 more than 20 years after Architecture at Temple became part of Tyler the school s name officially became the Tyler School of Art and Architecture 8 Tyler s leaders Boris Blai dean 1935 1960 Charles Le Clair dean 1960 1974 Donald M Lantzy acting dean 1974 1975 Jack Wasserman dean 1975 1977 David Pease interim dean 1977 1978 and dean 1978 1984 George Bayliss dean 1984 1989 Rochelle Toner dean 1989 2002 Hester Stinnett acting dean 2002 2005 Keith Anthony Morrison dean 2005 2008 Therese Dolan interim dean 2008 2009 Robert Stroker interim dean and dean of Center for the Arts 2009 2015 Hester Stinnett interim dean 2015 2017 Susan E Cahan dean 2017 present References Edit Schools and Colleges Temple University www temple edu Retrieved 2018 10 14 a b Academic Programs Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 14 a b c d e f g h Mission Vision and Values Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 14 a b c Tyler move creates Temple arts hot spot Temple Now news temple edu 2009 02 05 Retrieved 2018 10 14 a b c Architecture moves into dedicated building Temple Now news temple edu 2012 01 26 Retrieved 2018 10 14 a b Susan E Cahan appointed dean of Tyler School of Art Temple Now news temple edu Retrieved 2018 10 14 Trustees approve Tyler changes Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2019 04 18 a b New era expanded name for Tyler Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2019 07 01 Meet Tyler dean Susan Cahan Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 14 Campus Temple University Japan Art Major Undergraduate Program Temple University Japan Campus www tuj ac jp Retrieved 2019 04 19 Accreditation Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 18 Tyler School of Art 2005 2009 Carlos Jimenez Studio Retrieved 2018 10 14 Rick Lowe coming to Tyler Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 25 Nick Cave at Tyler Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2019 11 27 Critical Dialogue Series Cecilia Vicuna The 2020 Jack Wolgin Annual Visiting Artist Tyler School of Art and Architecture Retrieved 8 March 2021 Wolgin Visiting Artist Jennie C Jones Tyler School of Art and Architecture tyler temple edu Retrieved 2022 05 10 TYL Architecture Alumni Lecture in Honor of Brigitte Knowles www alumni temple edu Retrieved 2018 10 26 Brigitte Knowles Honored at Snohetta Lecture Sponsored by Architecture Alumni Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 26 Knowles Architecture Alumni Lecture Sharon Johnston Art and the City Tyler School of Art and Architecture Tyler School of Art and Architecture Retrieved 8 March 2021 Knowles Architecture Alumni Lecturer Olalekan Jeyifous Tyler School of Art and Architecture tyler temple edu Retrieved 2022 05 10 Who We Are Tyler School of Art Retrieved 2018 10 17 Bowditch Alex 2022 01 26 Tyler School of Art and Architecture Selects Jova Lynne as New Gallery Director Hyperallergic Retrieved 2022 05 10 Funeral for a Home Retrieved October 18 2018 In Nod To History A Crumbling Philly Row House Gets A Funeral NPR s All Things Considered Retrieved 2018 10 18 reForm reForm Retrieved 2018 10 18 Art Show Captures the Wrenching Effects of Closing a School The New York Times Retrieved 2018 10 18 Symphony for a Broken Orchestra symphonyforabrokenorchestra org Retrieved 2018 10 18 A Symphony Breathes Life Into 400 Broken School Instruments The New York Times Retrieved 2018 10 18 Rob Blackson The Pew Center for Arts amp Heritage 2016 11 30 Retrieved 2018 10 18 Symphony for a Broken Orchestra GRANT The Pew Center for Arts amp Heritage 2016 11 30 Retrieved 2018 10 18 Marlo Pascual Dead Rising Star Dies of Cancer at 48 ArtNews ArtNews Retrieved 8 March 2021 a b c d e Hilty James 2010 Temple University 125 Years of Service to Philadelphia the Nation and the World Temple University Press pp 227 ISBN 1439900191 50 YEARS OF TEMPLE ROME Temple University Rome Campus rome temple edu Retrieved 2018 10 15 External links EditOfficial websiteCoordinates 39 58 59 N 75 09 13 W 39 983162 N 75 153556 W 39 983162 75 153556 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tyler School of Art and Architecture amp oldid 1130328777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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