Arts University Plymouth is an independent university-sector Higher Education (HE) provider located in Plymouth in South West England. The former Plymouth College of Art was officially granted university status in 2022.[1] In April 2019 the specialist college was awarded taught degree awarding powers (TDAP) by the Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA), granting the institution the authority to award and accredit its own BA (Hons) degrees and Masters awards.
The University provides creative education at undergraduate, postgraduate and pre-degree level, specialising in the fields of art, design, crafts and media. Pre-Degree courses include Foundation Diploma in Art and Design.[2]
The Gallery, Plymouth Arts Cinema[3] and Fab Lab Plymouth[4] are located in the city centre campus, offering a range of short courses, masterclasses, and National Art & Design Young Arts Club. The college is a UK Advisory Council Member of the Creative Industries Federation, a Member of the Crafts Council Advisory Group, a founding associate of Tate’s Tate Exchange programme and a Steering Group Member of the Cultural Learning Alliance.
The University caters for approximately 2,000 students, with around 85% of full-time students on Higher Education courses in 2017.[5] Over 400 members of staff are employed by the college. Students are enrolled from the local area, the wider south-west region, and further afield in the United Kingdom. The college also attracts international students,[6] with Erasmus+ partnership institutions across Europe including Design Academy Eindhoven and National Academy of Art, Sofia.[7]
The University is administered by a corporation.[8]
Founded as the Plymouth Drawing School in 1856,[9] Arts University Plymouth is one of the last specialist art schools in the United Kingdom.[10]
The College has delivered higher education (HE) provision for over 20 years, initially as part of an indirect funding partnership with the University of Plymouth to develop foundation degrees. In 2006, the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) awarded directly funded student numbers to Plymouth College of Art, and the College transferred its validation arrangements to the Open University (OU).
In December 2008, Plymouth College of Art and Design was renamed to Plymouth College of Art.[11]
In 2013, the college founded the city-centre free school for 4 to 16-year-olds Plymouth School of Creative Arts. Together the school and college have established a radical and progressive continuum of creative learning and practice in the region that extends from early years to Masters level study. The school's landmark building The Red House was formally opened by Tate Director Sir Nicholas Serota who hailed the opening as "a historic event in the history of education in this country".[12]
In 2019, Plymouth College of Art received Taught Degree Awarding Powers (TDAP), granting them, as an independent Higher Education Institution, the power to award their own degrees. In autumn 2020, the first cohort of undergraduate and postgraduate students graduated from Plymouth College of Art with an award accredited by the institution.
In May 2022, the College was awarded University status and was renamed Arts University Plymouth. [13]
In 2024, Arts University Plymouth was ranked as the top university in the South West region, 2nd in the UK in the category of Facilities, ranked 4th in the UK in the category of University of the Year, 4th in the UK in the category of Lecturers & Teaching Quality, and 3rd in the UK for Student Support at the Whatuni Student Choice Awards (WUSCAs). [14]
Arts University Plymouth was also the highest scoring arts university in the UK in the National Student Survey in 2024, ranked highest in 20 out of the 27 questions that students are asked in the NSS 2024.
In 2009, the university awarded two honorary degrees which were conferred by The Open University. Artist Anthony Frost was awarded an honorary Master of The Open University and Raindance founder Elliot Grove was awarded an honorary Doctor of The Open University for their services to art and education and culture, respectively.[15]
The university has since awarded honorary fellowships to artist David McKee, Toby Gorniak MBE, filmmaker Bela Tarr, Pablo Helguera, curator Anne Barlow, Jo Arscott, ceramic artist Clare Twomey, Professor Penny Hay, artist George Shaw, Zowie Broach, artist Kurt Jackson, Peter Jenkinson OBE, Sir John Sorrell CBE and Lady Frances Sorrell OBE, and Sir Nicholas Serota and Richard Deacon CBE,[16] Mike Westbrook OBE, musician, as well as photographer Suki Dhanda and former Director of Plymouth Arts Centre Bernard Samuels, and more.
Arts University Plymouth Students' Union, usually abbreviated "AUP:SU" is based at the Tavistock Place campus. It was established in 1998. Each year, students elect a paid Student Union President who will represent them for the following year, along with a team of voluntary Student Union Executive Committee positions. The Union offers a range of services (such as the Student Union Food Bank) and a number of events throughout the year, including Freshers.
The current Student Union President is Beth Evans, elected for a second term in 2024/25. [17]
In 2021, Arts University Plymouth Students’ Union (AUP:SU) won Best Campaign Supporting Student Wellbeing at the 2021 Think Student Awards, beating leading international universities to be selected as the winner by the Student Pulse panel of 40,000 students.[18]