Academy of Art University should not be confused with San Francisco Art Institute.
Academy of Art University | |
Former Name: | Académie of Advertising Art, Academy of Advertising Art, Richard Stephens Academy of Art, Academy of Art College |
Motto: | Built by artists for artists |
Established: | 1929 |
Country: | United States |
Faculty: | 126 full-time 492 part-time |
Students: | 6,786 |
Undergrad: | 4,555 |
Postgrad: | 2,231 |
The Academy of Art University (AAU, or ART U), formerly Academy of Art College and Richard Stephens Academy of Art, is a private for-profit art school in San Francisco, California. It was founded as the Academy of Advertising Art by Richard S. Stephens in 1929.[1] The school is one of the largest property owners in San Francisco, with the main campus located on New Montgomery Street in the South of Market district.[2]
In fall 2023, it had 126 full-time teachers, 492 part-time teaching staff, and 6,786 students; it claims to be the largest privately owned art and design school in the United States.[3]
It was founded in 1929 as Académie of Advertising Art,[4] a school for advertising art, at 215 Kearny Street.[5] The founder, Richard S. Stephens,[6] a painter and editor for Sunset Magazine, led it until 1951 when his son Richard A. Stephens took over. In 1992, Stephens was replaced by his daughter, Elisa Stephens.[7] Under her presidency, student numbers increased to 18,000 by 2011.[8]
The university owns and operates the Academy of Art University Automobile Museum with 200 vintage cars, a collection that started in the 1990s.[9] [10] [11]
The school has been participating in the NY Fashion Week event bi-annually since 2005.[12] [13] [14] Every year, the university hosts a spring show that highlights student work from the school's 75 disciplines.[15]
In 2006, AAU acquired the Commodore Hotel for approximately $15.7 million; the building was then converted into co-ed student housing, called "Commodore Hall."[16]
In 2009, four former admission officers alleged that the school had compensated them based on how many students they could enroll, which was an incentive-based recruitment technique.[17] [18] The former employees sued the school in U.S. District Court in Oakland in 2009.[19]
In May 2016, the city of San Francisco brought a lawsuit against Academy of Art University after possible violations of city land-use laws, including the unauthorized conversion of rent-controlled housing to academic use.[20] [21] In December 2016, the school was ordered pay the city $20 million in fees and $40 million in housing concessions, such as providing low-income housing for seniors.[22] [23] In January 2020, the agreement was amended, requiring the Academy of Art University to pay $37.6 million to build affordable housing.[24]
In 2023, ten architecture and landscape projects by AAU students were featured in Dezeen magazine.[25]
In 2024, AAU sold the Da Vinci Villa, a 153-unit student housing complex in Russian Hill, for $16.5 million.[26] It was also announced that AAU plans to sell the 114-unit Commodore student dorm building and restore its former use as a hotel. The university currently lists student housing options at 560 Powell St.; 620 Sutter St.; 680 Sutter St.; 1080 Bush St.; and 655 Sutter St.[16]
The school offers associate, bachelor's[27] and master's degrees[28] in about twenty-two subjects. Some courses are offered online.[29] As of 2015, the school had not published job placement rates since 2006, and was disagreeing with the US Department of Education over whether it is required to do so.
Academy of Art University received regional accreditation from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) in 2007.[30] In interior architecture and design, the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree (taught or online) and Master of Fine Arts degree are accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation.[31] The Master of Architecture degree has, since January 1, 2006, been accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board while the Bachelor of Architecture program was granted as of January 1, 2015.[32] [33]
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 45% of students who began their studies in fall 2013 completed a four-year degree within 150% of that time (the "6-year graduation rate"). For online-only students, the 6-year graduation rate was 6% and 3% for part-time students in mid-2015. Approximately 35% of all students were online-only in 2015. In 2016, roughly 7% of students completed a four-year degree within the allotted time.
According to data from the National Center for Education Statistics in 2019, the school's graduation rate for "full-time, first-time" students was 45%.[34] The school has open admissions and an admission acceptance rate of 100%. In 2016, its accreditor expressed concern over low graduation rates; 37% of students who enrolled in 2010 graduated by 2017.[35]
See main article: Academy of Art Urban Knights. The school sports teams, the Urban Knights, compete as members of the Pacific West Conference in 14 sports in NCAA Division II.[36]
In the 2014 - 2015 season, the men's cross country team had a second-place finish and the women's team had a record fourth-place finish, earned at the Pacific West Conference Championships. Valentin Pepiot, their third NCAA Nationals individual qualifier, was one of the top finishers from the PacWest in the postseason finale.[37] Academy of Art earned a record 10 PacWest postseason honors. For the 2015 indoor and outdoor track and field seasons, they had seven All-American honors and one NCAA individual champion in Jordan Edwards.
In May 2023, the San Francisco Shock announced a partnership with Academy of Art University for its 2023 OWL season. The university's campus will be the official home of the Shock, allowing access to its facilities and housing.[38]
Past and present faculty of the school include: