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The Cyprus College of Art (CyCA) is an artists' studio group, founded in 1969 by the artist Stass Paraskos, on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus. It is located in the village of Lempa, near the town of Paphos. It is known for its radical libertarian attitude to art, which has attracted numerous major figures from the international art world to the College, including Terry Frost, Clive Head, Euan Uglow and Rachel Whiteread,〔See 'Cyprus College of Art' in ''Circa Magazine,'' no. 83 (1998), p.65〕 but which has also caused it serious problems with art and governmental organisations in both Cyprus and abroad.〔Michael Paraskos, 'A Voice in the Wilderness: Stass Paraskos and the Cyprus College of Art' in ''The Cyprus Dossier,'' no. 8 (2015)〕 == History == The Cyprus College of Art was founded in 1969 by the Cypriot painter Stass Paraskos, and is one of the oldest art institutions on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus. In the past it has been housed at different locations. It started life in the city of Famagusta on the east coast of Cyprus in 1969, but after a campaign by local hoteliers against the presence of impoverished artists and art students in a city increasingly focused on mass tourism, the College moved briefly to Larnaca in 1972, and then to Kato Paphos in 1973.〔See Michael Paraskos, 'A Voice in the Wilderness: Stass Paraskos and the Cyprus College of Art' in ''The Cyprus Dossier,'' no. 8 (2015)〕 With the arrival of the mass-tourism industry to Kato Kaphos in the early 1980s, the local authorities here also asked the College to move and it was settled at its present site in the village of Lempa in 1985. In 2002 the College acquired premises in the city of Limassol, run alongside the studios in Lempa, and the Limassol operation moved to Larnaca in 2007, becoming the Cornaro Institute. This was separated from the Cyprus College of Art in 2014 and now operates as an independent organisation. The original aim of the Cyprus College of Art was not to provide formal courses, but to offer artists and art students from different countries the opportunity to spend a period of time making art in Cyprus. However, in the early 1970s the college planned to launch the first postgraduate fine art programme in Cyprus, but this was delayed by the Turkish invasion in 1974, and did not start until 1978.〔David Haste, et al, ''Stass Paraskos'' (London: Orage Press, 2010)〕 With the acquisition of additional premises in Limassol in 2002 the College launched several undergraduate fine art programmes. This included foundation, adult education and degree courses in painting, sculpture, photography and printmaking. Almost all of the programmes taught at the College followed a British art education model, and several were validated in the United Kingdom, although these validations were not accepted by the Cypriot government authorities. In 2007 the College's Limassol site was closed and teaching transferred to a new building in Larnaca which became known as the Cornaro Institute, named after the last Venetian Queen of Cyprus Caterina Cornaro. From this time the site at Lempa concentrated on postgraduate programmes and Larnaca on foundation and undergraduate programmes. Both sites were also used to house visiting artists from around the world.〔The Cornaro Institute, ''The Cornaro Institute: An Introduction'' (Mitcham: Orage Press, 2011)〕 Following the death of the founder of the College, Stass Paraskos, in 2014 the Cyprus College of Art ceased to offer formal educational courses and de-registered as a college of education with the Cyprus Ministry of Education and Culture. The Cornaro Institute in Larnaca was separated from the College and became an independent institution, and the College in Lempa became a studio and residency centre for artists and art students from around the world.〔See Michael Paraskos, 'A Voice in the Wilderness: Stass Paraskos and the Cyprus College of Art' in ''The Cyprus Dossier,'' no. 8 (2015)〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Cyprus College of Art」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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