Universidad Nacional de las Artes

National University of the Arts
Universidad Nacional de las Artes
Type Public Liberal Arts
Established 1993 renamed in 2014 UNA Universidad Nacional de las Artes
Rector Sandra Torlucci
Academic staff
1,703
Students 16,806
Location Buenos Aires, Argentina
Campus Urban
Website www.una.edu.ar

The National University of the Arts , in Spanish: UNA - Universidad Nacional de las Artes, formerly known as IUNA[1] - Instituto Universitario Nacional de las Artes, is an Argentine university established in 1996 as an incorporation of various national institutions dedicated to the teaching of fine arts.

The origins of the current UNA University lay in the 1875 founding of the National Society of the Stimulus of the Arts by painters Eduardo Schiaffino, Eduardo Sívori, and others. Their guild was rechartered as the National Academy of Fine Arts in 1905 and, in 1923, on the initiative of painter and academic Ernesto de la Cárcova, as a department in the University of Buenos Aires, the Superior Art School of the Nation.[2]

The latter in 1927 created the Museum of Reproductions and Comparative Sculpture. In 1936 theatre director Antonio Cunill Cabanellas founded the National Institute of Theatrical Studies. These institutions of Performing Arts, including the Carlos López Buchardo National Conservatory of Music, the National Institute of Superior Education and Folklore, the María Ruanova National Institute of Superior Education and Dance, and other National Institutes of Liberal Arts Education, all united forming the new National University of the Arts, "Universidad Nacional de las Artes", issued in 1996 by Argentina's Ministry of Education.

Departments

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. Institutional Transformation IUNA - Law 24.521, Ministry of Justice & Education, Argentina (text in Spanish) / http://servicios.infoleg.gob.ar/infolegInternet/anexos/40000-44999/40779/norma.htm
  2. "Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de la Nación Ernesto de la Cárcova".
  3. Obituary: Eduardo Arnosi Argentinian critic, in Buenos Aires. Opera. March 2013. p. 53.

Coordinates: 34°35′41″S 58°23′58″W / 34.59472°S 58.39944°W / -34.59472; -58.39944


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