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Bournville Centre for Visual Arts

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Type
  
Art school

Website
  
bcu.ac.uk/biad

Campus
  
Urban

Phone
  
+44 121 331 5775

Bournville Centre for Visual Arts

Former names
  
Bournville School of Art Bournville College of Art Bournville Centre for Visual Arts

Location
  
Birmingham, West Midlands, England, United Kingdom

Affiliations
  
Birmingham City University Birmingham Institute of Art and Design International Project Space

Address
  
Linden Rd, Birmingham B30 1JX, UK

Similar
  
Bournville College, BIAD User Lab, mac, The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Birmingh City University

The School of Art, Bournville (formerly Bournville College of Art and Bournville Centre for Visual Arts but better known as Bournville School of Art) was an art school in Birmingham, England. It was located at Ruskin Hall on Linden Road in the area of Bournville. It became part of Birmingham Institute of Art and Design (BIAD) at Birmingham City University when it merged with the university in 1988 when the latter was still Birmingham Polytechnic.

The school was refurbished for £6 million in 2002 and reopened on 21 October 2002, precisely 100 years after the foundation stone for Ruskin Hall was laid. It is home to the International Project Space, and is the site of Birmingham's annual Creative Partnerships exhibition, a showcase of contemporary and visual art produced by local school students. The centre was the subject of controversy in 2008 regarding an exhibition honouring the work of author J. G. Ballard, which included sexually explicit images (described as "heavily pornographic" by a local councillor) and the wreckage of a car.

Alumni of the school include photographer Richard Billingham, artists Roger Hiorns and Donald Rodney, illustrator John Shelley, video artist Marty St. James, and actress Marjorie Yates.

From 2013, the School's courses moved to Birmingham City University's new Parkside Building in Birmingham city centre, with the Bournville site becoming home to the University's International College.

References

Bournville Centre for Visual Arts Wikipedia