Name: Queensland College of Art
Time: 1898 - 1974
Epoch: Late 19th Century
Category: Peformance, Visual Art, and Music
Institution Category: Informing
Institution Group: Public Community Education
Coordinates: -27.4761116666667, 153.028
Street Address: Technical School of Visual Art , Brisbane Central Technical College, George Street, Brisbane City
Suburb: Brisbane City (CBD)
Sector: State
Local Study Area: Spring Hill-CBD-Fortitude Valley-New Farm (Inner City)
Study Stage: MBNH Stage 9 Local Study Areas
In 1879, Joseph Augustine Clarke enlisted the School of Arts President to lobby the Queensland Colonial Government to offer formal drawing classes. In 1881, Clarke began conducting drawing classes from the Brisbane School of Arts. When Clarke died in 1890, the position of Art Master was awarded to Godfrey Rivers, a graduate of the Slade School in London. In 1898, the Technical School of Visual Art was incorporated into the newly established Brisbane Central Technical College, creating its biggest department. By 1916, the Central Technical College had the dual role of training students in applied art and teachers in art subjects, particularly drawing.
Geographic Description 1: Inside The Green Belt
Geographic Description 2: Brisbane River
Geographic Description 3: Flood Plains (Major); High River Banks (still floods); Ridgeline (Slopes off Wickham Tce)
Morrell, Timothy; Cooke, Glenn R. Colonial to Contemporary: Queensland College of Art 125 Years, Griffith Artworks, Brisbane Qld, 2006.
Richards, Mick. (n.d.). Ray Bettie and Bob Mercer at Queensland College of Art, Seven Hills, 1993, Collection reference: 31520 Mick Richards portrait photographs of Queensland artists. State Library of Queensland