Christoph Lindner has been appointed as president and vice-chancellor of the Royal School of Artwork (RCA) in London, one of the prestigious posts in arts academia. Lindner replaces Paul Thompson who was appointed chair of the British Council earlier this 12 months. Thompson led the RCA for greater than 15 years.
Lindner will be a part of the RCA in April subsequent 12 months from his present position as dean of the Bartlett, College School London’s (UCL) school of the constructed surroundings. He has additionally served as professor of city research at UCL. “Since becoming a member of The Bartlett as Dean in 2019, his focus has been on two foremost areas: fairness, range, and inclusion at UCL and throughout the worldwide design and constructed surroundings fields; and taking motion on the local weather disaster,” a press release says.
Lindner was beforehand Dean of the School of Design on the College of Oregon and Professor of Media and Tradition on the College of Amsterdam, the place he created and led the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Evaluation.
In response to the faculty’s annual report for 2021-22, the vice chancellor’s wage was £256,538. The identical 12 months, the establishment obtained £89.5m in whole revenue with the RCA ending the “monetary 12 months on 31 July with a modest 1% surplus”, Thompson mentioned.
Within the report, the RCA outlines its technique for the following 4 years. The doc says: “We’ll give attention to areas of experience that solely the RCA can provide together with some big-bet propositions the place we have now the urge for food for well-managed threat and we’re ready to enter new ventures with new associates.”
A give attention to “rising the variety of the coed physique” by means of varied philanthropic awards such because the Apple range scholarships has additionally been a spotlight of latest years. “Due to this philanthropy the School has gone from zero to just about 100 scholarships particularly focused at these from under-represented communities within the final two years,” the RCA annual report says.
The RCA has been rated the world’s high artwork and design college for the previous eight years by QS World College Rankings. Based in 1837, the faculty is the world’s largest establishment for postgraduate artwork and design research, with 2,300 college students. Its high-profile graduates embody artists Tracey Emin, David Hockney and Henry Moore. Final 12 months it unveiled a £135m campus growth in Battersea, south-west London.