Berlin University of the Arts
Berlin University of the Arts
Universität der Künste Berlin | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 1696 |
Budget | € 95.5 million[1] |
President | Norbert Palz |
Academic staff | 473[1] |
Administrative staff | 329[1] |
Students | 3,535[2] |
Location | , 52°30′33″N 13°19′37″E / 52.50917°N 13.32694°ECoordinates: 52°30′33″N 13°19′37″E / 52.50917°N 13.32694°E |
Campus | Urban |
Website | www.udk-berlin.de |
The Universität der Künste Berlin (UdK; also known in English as the Berlin University of the Arts), situated in Berlin, Germany, is the largest art school in Europe. It is a public art and design school, and one of the four research universities in the city.
The university is known for being one of the biggest and most diversified universities of the arts worldwide. It has four colleges specialising in fine arts, architecture, media and design, music and the performing arts with around 3,500 students. Thus the UdK is one of only three universities in Germany to unite the faculties of art and music in one institution. The teaching offered at the four colleges encompasses the full spectrum of the arts and related academic studies in more than 40 courses. Having the right to confer doctorates and post-doctoral qualifications, Berlin University of the Arts is also one of Germany's few art colleges with full university status.
Outstanding professors and students at all its colleges, as well as the steady development of teaching concepts, have publicly defined the university as a high standard of artistic and art-theoretical education. Almost all the study courses at Berlin University of the Arts are part of a centuries-old tradition. Thus Berlin University of the Arts gives its students the opportunity to investigate and experiment with other art forms in order to recognise and extend the boundaries of their own discipline, at an early stage of rigorously selected artists and within the protected sphere of a study course.
Within the field of visual arts, the university is known for the intense competition that involves the selection of its students, and the growth of applicants worldwide has increased during the years due to Berlin's important current role in cultural innovation worldwide. In the same way, the University of the Arts is publicly recognized for being on the cutting edge in the areas of Visual Arts, Fashion Design, Industrial Design, and Experimental Design.
History[edit]
The university's origins date back to the foundation of Academie der Mal-, Bild- und Baukunst (Academy of the Art of Painting, Pictorial Art, and Architecture), the later Prussian Academy of Arts, at the behest of Elector Frederick III of Brandenburg. The two predecessor organisations were Königliche Akademische Hochschule für ausübende Tonkunst (Royal Academy of Musical Performing Art) established in 1869 under Joseph Joachim, which also had adopted the tradition of the famous Stern Conservatory, and the Berlin State School of Fine Arts founded in 1875.
In 1975, both art schools merged under the name Hochschule der Künste Berlin, HdK. The organization received the title of a university on 1 November 2001.
Exchange program[edit]
The exchange program with UDK is a direct enrollment program offered during the fall, spring, and academic year to students interested in the arts and with four semesters of German language study. Each academic year the school receives 100 exchange students on the basis of institutional agreements. Students participating in the exchange are required to subsidize their own accommodations with little help from the school.
Art fair[edit]
Annually, the university opens its doors to the public in its four colleges (UdK Rundgang), offering one of the most important art fairs in Berlin due to new proposals that highlight its young artists.
Notable alumni[edit]
- Claudio Arrau, pianist
- Claudia Barainsky, soprano
- Esther Berlin-Joel (1895–1972), graphic designer
- F. W. Bernstein (1938–2018), poet, cartoonist, satirist and academic
- Norbert Bisky, painter
- Antonia Brico, pianist and conductor
- Antonio Piedade da Cruz, (1895–1982) Indian painter and sculptor[3]
- Daniela Comani, painter
- Marie Fillunger, opera singer[4]
- Caroline Fischer, pianist
- Bruno Flierl, architect and city planner[5]
- Eduard Franck
- Catherine Gayer, coloratura soprano
- Ria Ginster, soprano
- Leopold Godowsky, pianist
- Günter Grass, sculptor, 1999 Nobel prize in Literature
- Burkhard Held, painter
- Carla Henius, mezzo-soprano
- Philip A. Herfort, violinist, orchestra leader
- Arnulf Herrmann, composer
- Li Hua, artist
- Ali Kaaf, artist
- Ingo Kühl, painter, sculptor and architect
- Christian Leden, ethno-musicologist; composer
- Kim Yusob, South-Korean painter
- Otto Kinkeldey, (1878–1966), musicologist, academic music library pioneer
- Otto Klemperer, conductor
- Uwe Kröger, actor, singer
- Felicitas Kukuck, composer
- Josephine Meckseper, artist
- Una H. Moehrke, painter
- Moritz Moszkowski, pianist, composer
- Isabel Mundry, composer
- Adolfo Odnoposoff, cellist
- Rudolph Polk, violinist
- Enno Poppe, composer
- Max Raabe artist
- SEO, artist
- Herbert Schachtschneider (1919–2008), operatic tenor
- Gabriel and Maxim Shamir, (previously Scheftelovich), early 1930s, Graphic Artists
- Christine Schäfer, soprano
- Martina Schumacher, painter
- Paul Gutama Soegijo, composer and musician[6]
- Kathrin Sonntag, artist
- Agnes Stavenhagen, soprano
- Bertha Tideman-Wijers, composer
- Richard Aaker Trythall, pianist, composer[7]
- Agnes Tschetschulin, composer, violinist
- Christa Frieda Vogel, photographer
- Jorinde Voigt, artist
- Ignatz Waghalter, composer, conductor
- Bruno Walter, conductor
- Kurt Weill, composer
- Wang Xiaosong, artist
- Isang Yun, composer
Notable teachers[edit]
- Hito Steyerl
- Ai Weiwei 2012–
- Joseph Ahrens 1945–1969
- Georg Baselitz −2005
- F. W. Bernstein, (1984–1999)
- Jolyon Brettingham Smith 1977–1981
- Beatrix Borchard
- Siegfried Borris
- Katharina Sieverding
- John Burgan 1996–2001
- Massimo Carmassi
- Tony Cragg −2006
- Pascal Devoyon 1996–
- Olafur Eliasson 2009–2014
- Heinz Emigholz
- Valérie Favre 2006–
- Emanuel Feuermann 1929–1933
- Friedrich Goldmann 1991–2005
- Christian Grube 1973–
- Elisabeth Grümmer 1965–1986
- Byung-Chul Han 2012–
- Pál Hermann 1902–1944
- Fons Hickmann 2007–
- Paul Hindemith 1895–1963
- Karl Hofer
- Leiko Ikemura
- Amalie Joachim[4]
- Joseph Joachim 1869–1907
- Gesche Joost 2011–
- Mark Lammert 2011–
- Mitzi Meyerson
- Lula Mysz-Gmeiner 1920–1945
- Aurèle Nicolet 1926–
- Corinna von Rad
- Daniel Richter 2005–2006
- Max Rostal 1928–1933
- Joachim Sauter 1991–2021
- Arnold Schoenberg 1922–1933
- Ernst Gerold Schramm
- Clara Schumann 1819–1896[8]
- Laszlo Simon 1981–2009
- Walter Stöhrer
- Witold Szalonek 1973–?
- Leo van Doeselaar 1995–2019
- Jean-Philippe Vassal 2012–
- Vivienne Westwood 1993–2005
- Josef Wolfsthal 1926–1931
- Ji-Yeoun You 2009–
- Isang Yun (composer) 1970–85
- Siegfried Zielinski 2007–
- Walter Zimmermann 1993–
- Thomas Zipp 2008–
See also[edit]
- Spandauer Kirchenmusikschule, which became part of the Musikhochschule Berlin in 1998
- Universities and research institutions in Berlin
- Humboldt University of Berlin
- Technical University of Berlin
- University of Potsdam
References[edit]
- ^ a b c "Leistungsbericht der Universität der Künste Berlin über das Jahr 2020" (PDF) (in German). Senate Chancellery of Berlin. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
- ^ "Zahlen und Fakten". Berlin University of the Arts (in German). Archived from the original on 7 December 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- ^ J. Clement Vaz, "Profiles of Eminent Goans Past and Present", Concept Publishing Company, 1997, ISBN 978-81-7022-619-2
- ^ a b Manchester Faces and Places (Vol XVI No 2 ed.). Manchester: Geo. Woodhead and Co Ltd. February 1905. pp. 44–45.
- ^ Zajonz, Michael (2 February 2007). "Der Stadttheoretiker: Ein Kämpfer für die DDR-Moderne wird 80: Universität der Künste würdigt Bruno Flierl". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 15 May 2021.
- ^ "Paul Gutama Soegijo". Jakarta Berlin Arts Festival. Archived from the original on 30 December 2018. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
- ^ Don, Randel (1996). Richard Aaker Trythall, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. ISBN 978-0-674-37299-3.
- ^ Bertita Leonarz Harding, Concerto: The Story of Clara Schumann, G.G. Harrap, 1962, p. 191.
External links[edit]
- Berlin University of the Arts (in English)
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