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 Royal Academy of Arts - Definition 

This article refers to an art institution in London. For other meanings of Royal Academy see Royal Academy (disambiguation).

Royal Academy
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Royal Academy

The Royal Academy is an art institution based in London.

Contents

History

The Royal Academy was formed to rival the Society of Artists after an unseemly leadership dispute between two leading architects, Sir William Chambers and James Paine. Paine won, but Chambers vowed revenge and used his strong connections with the King to create a new artistic body, the Royal Academy, in 1768. It was formally launched the following year.

Its forty founder members, all admitted on 10 December 1768, included a father/daughter combination (George Michael Moser and Mary Moser) and two sets of brothers (George Dance the Younger and Nathaniel Dance-Holland, and Paul and Thomas Sandby).

Sir Joshua Reynolds was its first president, and Benjamin West its second.

Activities

Old Burlington House
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Old Burlington House

The Royal Academy does not receive financial support from the state or crown. One of its principal sources of revenue is hosting temporary public art exhibitions. These are of the highest quality, comparable to those at the National Gallery, the Tate Gallery and leading art galleries outside the United Kingdom.

The Academy also hosts an annual Royal Academy summer exhibition of new art, which is a well known event on the London social calendar. However it is not as fashionable as was the case in earlier centuries, and is largely ignored by the trendy Brit Artists and their patrons. Anyone who wishes may submit pictures for inclusion and those which are selected are displayed alongside the works of the Academicians. Most of the works are available for purchase.

The Academy also runs a postgraduate art school and a research library.

Location

Until 1771, the Academy was based in Pall Mall. Shortly afterwards, it was able to move into premsies at the new Somerset House, a government building which had been designed by Sir William Chambers, and was intended to provide accommodation for a number of learned societies. In 1837, the Academy moved to the recently constucted National Gallery in Trafalgar Square and then, in 1868, to its present home at Burlington House in Piccadilly. Major extensions were made to to the building to designs by Charles Barry (junior), architect son of Sir Charles Barry.

Membership

Full membership of the academy is limited to 80 Academicians or "RAs", who must be professional painters, printmakers, sculptors or architects. Within the total, there must always be at least 14 sculptors, 12 architects and eight printmakers; the balance is made up of painters. New Academicians are elected by the existing RAs.

Academicians ("RAs") by year of election

(incomplete list)

Presidents

External links




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