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The National Art School (NAS) is a
tertiary Tertiary ( ) is a widely used but obsolete term for the geologic period from 66 million to 2.6 million years ago. The period began with the demise of the non-avian dinosaurs in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, at the start ...
level
art school An art school is an educational institution with a primary focus on the visual arts, including fine art – especially illustration, painting, photography, sculpture, and graphic design. Art schools can offer elementary, secondary, post-seco ...
, located in , an inner-city suburb of
Sydney Sydney ( ) is the capital city of the state of New South Wales, and the most populous city in both Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Sydney Harbour and extends about towards the Blue Mountain ...
,
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
,
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
. The school is an independent accredited higher education provider offering specialised study in studio arts practice across various disciplines. With its origins in the formation of Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts in 1843, NAS has been in operation on the historic
Darlinghurst Gaol The Darlinghurst Gaol is a former Australian prison located in Darlinghurst, New South Wales. The site is bordered by Darlinghurst Road, Burton and Forbes streets, with entrances on Forbes and Burton Streets. The heritage-listed building, predom ...
site in East Sydney in various forms since 1922 and was formerly part of East Sydney Technical College, known as East Sydney Tech. Today NAS is a centre for education, research, scholarship and professional practice in the visual arts and related fields. In 2022 the school marks 100 years occupying the sandstone buildings of the former Darlinghurst Gaol, combining a long artistic tradition with its modern role educating Australia's future contemporary artists.


NAS Tertiary Degree Program

NAS has three full-time visual art degrees: Bachelor of Fine Art (BFA), Master of Fine Art (MFA) and Doctor of Fine Art (DFA). Within the BFA and MFA degrees, students select a major from six artistic disciplines: ceramics, drawing, painting, photomedia, printmaking and sculpture. In addition to learning the skills of their chosen practice, all students also study art history and theory for the duration of their degree. The degree courses at NAS follow a studio-based teaching model, taught by experienced practicing artists. Each student is allocated their own studio space, and their practical skills are underpinned by core study in drawing for all BFA students. Entry to the NAS degree program requires core academic qualifications and the submission of a portfolio of work by the applicant which is reviewed by academic staff. *Bachelor of Fine Art degree: comprises three inter-related study areas of Studio, Drawing and Art History and Theory. Studio Specialisation is offered in the disciplines of Ceramics, Painting, Photomedia, Printmaking and Sculpture. Drawing and Art History and Theory are core subjects that underpin the studio-based study throughout the course. *Master of Fine Art degree: enables graduates to develop the specialised knowledge and skills required for professional practice and further learning, with an advanced and integrated understanding of their chosen discipline and the broader contexts of visual arts practice. *Doctor of Fine Art degree: provides a platform for integrating professional expertise and scholarly enquiry within the visual arts, with graduates acquiring an in-depth understanding of the technical and theoretical skills expected of a professional practitioner in the visual arts.


NAS Alumni and Lecturers

NAS has taught generations of the country's most renowned and accomplished artists, including Margaret Olley, Lyndon Dadswell, Guy Warren, John Olsen, Tim Storrier, Cressida Campbell, Fiona Hall, James Gleeson, Peter Atkins, Lucy Culliton, Karla Dickens, Juz Kitson, Guy Maestri, Mitch Cairns, Joan Ross and Natasha Walsh. (See list below for more alumni.) Many alumni have returned to NAS over the years to teach or talk to students. Lecturers at NAS are professional, often award-winning practicing artists across various disciplines. In the 2021 Archibald, Wynne and Sulman Prizes at the Art Gallery of NSW
31 of the 112 finalists
were NAS staff and alumni. Since the Archibald Prize began 100 years ago in 1921, nearly a third of its
winners Winners Merchants International L.P is a chain of off-price Canada, Canadian department stores owned by TJX Companies. It offers brand name clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, fine jewelry, beauty products, and housewares. Products are at a ...
have been NAS alumni or teachers, including multiple winners such as Sir William Dobell and Brett Whiteley.


NAS Short Courses and Schools Programs

In addition to its tertiary degrees, NAS has an extensive program o
short courses and workshops
taught by experienced artists that run on campus and online throughout the year, catering to students of all ages, backgrounds and levels of experience in the visual arts. The school holiday program offers art classes for students from Kindergarten to Year 12, and NAS runs annual outreach education programs such as th
Dobell Drawing School for Year 11
students and the Dobell Regional Teachers’ Workshops, funded by the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation.


Cell Block Theatre

The sandstone Cell Block Theatre on the NAS campus was originally D Wing of Darlinghurst Gaol which held some of Sydney's most notorious female criminals including Kate Leigh. After the closure of the gaol the buildings became derelict until East Sydney Technical Collage moved onsite in 1922. The women's wing was transformed into the Cell Block Theatre, which became a hub of Australia's avant-garde music, theatre and dance scene in the 1960s and 70s, hosting early performances from artists such as John Bell, Yvonne Kenny, Peter Sculthorpe, David Malouf, Jim Sharman and Nick Cave. It is now used by the school as an educational space for events including lectures, talks, symposiums and exhibitions, and also as a venue for hire.


Galleries and exhibitions

In addition to its role as an educator, NAS presents a professionally curated annual public exhibition program. Exhibition spaces on campus include the Rayner Hoff Project Space, The Drawing Gallery (opened in 2021) and the two-storey NAS Gallery, which presents up to four major public exhibitions each year as well as the annual NAS Grad Shows featuring the work of graduating students. NAS's galleries attract more than 30,000 visitors a year, and the critically acclaimed exhibition program promotes and supports Australian contemporary artists alongside other Sydney public art institutions such as the Art Gallery of NSW, the Museum of Contemporary Art and the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences. In 2021, NAS presented the ''Dobell Drawing Prize#22'', a long-running biannual prize supported by the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation; ''Queer Contemporary: Skin Deep'', a performance art project and exhibition for the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras; ''From the Mountain to the Sky: Guy Warren Drawings'', celebrating the 100th birthday of NAS alumnus Guy Warren; and ''John Olsen: Goya's Dog'', a major retrospective for NAS alumnus and former teacher John Olsen. NAS exhibitions are accompanied by scholarly catalogues and public programs including talks, workshops and symposia to foster the interpretation, understanding and appreciation of art. In 2021 NAS co-presented the Frame of Mind: Mental Health and the Arts public program with Edith Cowan University in Perth, including talks, exhibitions, symposia and a publication. NAS has been a participating venue for the Biennale of Sydney, the Sydney Festival, the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, VIVID, Sydney Craft Week, and the annual Sydney Contemporary art fair, exhibiting the work of recent NAS graduates.


Dobell Drawing Prize

In 2019 NAS partnered with the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation to produce the Dobell Drawing Prize #21. The
Dobell Prize The Dobell Drawing Prize is a biennial drawing prize and exhibition, held by the National Art School in association with the Sir William Dobell Art Foundation.The prize is an open call to all artists and aims to explore the enduring importance ...
for Drawing had previously been presented by the Art Gallery of NSW, starting in 1993. The new iteration of the Prize at NAS aims to showcase technical skill, innovation and expanded definitions of drawing, with a major exhibition of finalists open to the public in the NAS Gallery. In 2019, the $30,000 acquisitive prize was awarded to Justine Varga, who uses photographic processes as a means of drawing. In 2021, the Dobell Drawing Prize #22 showcased drawings by 64 finalists from around the country, and guest judge artist and NAS alumna
Lucy Culliton Lucy Culliton (born 1966) is an Australian artist, based in Hartley. She is known for her paintings of landscapes and still life. Early life and education Culliton was born in Sydney in 1966. She studied fine art at the National Art School, gr ...
awarded the prize to
Euan Macleod Euan Macleod (born 1956) is a New Zealand-born artist. Macleod was born in Christchurch, New Zealand and moved to Sydney, Australia in 1981, where he lives and works. He received a Certificate in Graphic Design from Christchurch Technical Col ...
for his pastel on paper work ''Borderlands – Between NSW and QLD'' (2020). A People's Prize was awarded for the first time in 2021 to Joanna Gambotto for her work ''Hill End Interior 1 (Denningtons Cottage: Kim and Lino's)'', which pays tribute to the vital role the small NSW town of Hill End has played and continues to play in the Australian visual arts, attracting and inspiring generations of artists. The Dobell Drawing Prize exhibition is part of the NAS Festival of Drawing, a biennial event organised by the School's National Centre for Drawing which was established in 2020. The festival includes talks, workshops and a research symposium, and with the Dobell Drawing Prize complements the School's rigorous academic drawing program. Drawing is a core component of all studies at NAS and is taught throughout each degree.


National Centre for Drawing

In 2020 NAS launched the National Centre for Drawing, which seeks to promote and nurture practice, research and scholarship in drawing, and in 2021 opened The Drawing Gallery, a new exhibition space on campus dedicated to drawing. The inaugural show in The Drawing Gallery was ''From the Mountain to the Sky: Guy Warren Drawings'', a retrospective of NAS alumnus Guy Warren's drawing practice which opened on his 100th birthday, April 16, 2021.


Governance

Originally under the management of the
NSW Department of Education ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , e ...
, in 2009 the School was re-established by the
New South Wales Government The Government of New South Wales, also known as the NSW Government, is the Australian state democratic administrative authority of New South Wales. It is currently held by a coalition of the Liberal Party and the National Party. The Governme ...
as a
public company A public company is a company whose ownership is organized via shares of stock which are intended to be freely traded on a stock exchange or in over-the-counter markets. A public (publicly traded) company can be listed on a stock exchange (l ...
limited by guarantee, with two members, the NSW Minister for Arts and the NSW Minister for Education. The Ministers appointed a Board of Directors to oversee governance of the institution.


History

The National Art School is on Gadigal land in Darlinghurst, Sydney, with its inner-city campus on the heritage-listed site of the former Darlinghurst Gaol which dates from 1822. In 2022 NAS celebrates 100 years teaching art at this location, but the School's history dates back to 1843, when regular art classes were held by John Skinner Prout at the Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts in Pitt Street, Sydney. Forty years and several re-organisations later, in 1883 the Technical and Working Men's College became known as the Sydney Technical College, which included the Department of Art. This department was relocated to the former Darlinghurst Gaol in 1922, and was then part of East Sydney Technical College. The 1920s saw the development of NAS's distinctive studio model of teaching, offering its first five-year Diploma in Art in1926 under Lecturer-in-Charge Samuel Rowe and the English sculptor G Rayner Hoff. In the 1950s and 1960s, the size and reputation of the Department of Art expanded. Renowned artists such as Colin Lanceley, Ann Thomson, Elisabeth Cummings, Peter Powditch, Ken Unsworth, Martin Sharp, Garry Shead,
Janet Mansfield Janet Mansfield (19 August 1934 – 4 February 2013) was an Australian potter known for her salt glazed works. She was also a publisher and author. Early life and education Mansfield was born in 1934 in Sydney, Australia. She trained at th ...
, Tim Storrier and Vivienne Binns graduated from the Diploma Course. At this time, NAS was part of the NSW Government's Department of Technical Education. From 1974, NAS went through a long period of upheaval and uncertainty, with a proposal to move the art school out of the Darlinghurst Gaol campus. The decision was fought and protest marches were held but in 1975 the School of Fine Art was transferred to a new institution that would evolve into today's UNSW Art and Design in Paddington, formerly the College of Fine Arts (COFA). A much-diminished School of Art and Design remained at the Darlinghurst Gaol site as part of the Department of Technical and Further Education (TAFE), offering short certificate courses. Through the efforts of art staff members, and with the support of the newly formed Friends of the National Art School (FoNAS), the visual art program was slowly rebuilt. In 1996, after much lobbying, NAS gained independence from TAFE. In 1999 it first offered an accredited Bachelor of Fine Art degree, and a Master of Fine Art in 2001. At this time NAS still sat within the Department of Education and Training (DET), and in 2006 it was under threat of being incorporated into one of NSW's existing universities. After more lobbying and activity by FoNAS and other NAS supporters, in 2009 the School moved out of DET management and became a fully independent tertiary education provider. Since then NAS has expanded its degrees, short courses and public programs, including offering a Doctor of Fine Art from 2019. In 2019, NAS was designated a State Significant Organisation by the NSW State Government (on par with Sydney's Museum of Contemporary Art and Carriageworks), which secured ongoing funding for the School and recognised its important role as a leading tertiary education institution. NAS was also granted a 45-year lease on the former Darlinghurst Gaol site, providing crucial stability for the future. In 2020 NAS received a significant grant from the NSW State Government for restoration and upgrading of the campus's historic buildings and structures, with the works being undertaken in 2021. The site was also listed on the NSW State Heritage Register in 2021. Building began on the original Darlinghurst Gaol in 1822, with convicts hand-carving the sandstone blocks for the surrounding walls which stood 21 feet (6.5 metres) high when completed in 1824. Built in a distinctive panopticon design, the gaol complex held prisoners from 1841 to 1914 including poet Henry Lawson; newspaper editor JF Archibald; murderer and artist Henry Louis Bertrand; bushranger Captain Moonlite; Aboriginal outlaw Jimmy Governor; female bushranger Jessie Hickman; Kate Leigh, who became Sydney's famous razor gang madam; and Louisa Collins, the last woman to be hanged in NSW. In 2022 NAS will mark 100 years since moving into this site, and 200 years since convicts first began building the Darlinghurst Gaol walls in 1822.


Notable alumni

*
Jean Appleton Jean Appleton (13 September 1911 – 11 June 2003) was an Australian painter, art teacher and printmaker. She worked with oils, watercolour, charcoal, pastel, pencil and India ink. The second of three children and an only daughter, Appleton did ...
*
Yvonne Audette Yvonne Audette (born 22 April 1930) is an Australian abstract artist. Life Audette was born in Sydney in 1930 and after attending art classes whilst still attending the prestigious private school Ascham, she and her American-born parents we ...
*
Geoffrey Bardon Geoffrey Robert Bardon AM (1940, Sydney – 6 May 2003) was an Australian school teacher who was instrumental in creating the Aboriginal art of the Western Desert movement. Bardon studied law for three years at the University of Sydney, b ...
* Tom Bass *
Charles Blackman Charles Raymond Blackman (12 August 1928 – 20 August 2018) was an Australian painter, noted for the ''Schoolgirl, Avonsleigh'' and ''Alice in Wonderland'' series of the 1950s. He was a member of the Antipodeans, a group of Melbourne painter ...
*
Vivienne Binns Vivienne Joyce Binns (born 1940) is an Australian artist known for her contribution to the Women's Art Movement in Australia, her engagement with feminism in her artwork, and her active advocacy within community arts. She works predominantly i ...
*
Cressida Campbell Cressida Campbell (born 8 July 1960) is an Australian artist. She was born in Sydney in 1960 to Ruth and Ross Campbell. She studied at East Sydney Technical College in 1978 and 1979. Her older sister is actress Nell Campbell. Her first husba ...
* John Coburn * Kevin Connor * Richard Cornish *
Lucy Culliton Lucy Culliton (born 1966) is an Australian artist, based in Hartley. She is known for her paintings of landscapes and still life. Early life and education Culliton was born in Sydney in 1966. She studied fine art at the National Art School, gr ...
* Elisabeth Cummings *
Geoffrey de Groen Geoffrey de Groen (born December 1938) is an Australian artist known for his abstract works in oil and acrylics. De Groen's paintings are included in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery ...
*
Karla Dickens Karla Dickens (born 2 December 1967) is an Aboriginal Australian installation artist of the Wiradjuri people, based in Lismore, New South Wales. Her works are in major public collections in Australia. Early life and education Dickens was bor ...
*
Ken Done Kenneth Stephen Done (born 29 June 1940) is an Australian artist best known for his design work. Although his simple, brightly coloured images of Australian landmarks have adorned a very popular range of clothing and homewares sold under the " ...
*
Max Dupain Maxwell Spencer Dupain AC OBE (22 April 191127 July 1992) was an Australian modernist photographer. Early life Dupain received his first camera as a gift in 1924, spurring his interest in photography. He later joined the Photographic Society ...
* Margaret Fink *
Bert Flugelman Herbert Flugelman (28 January 1923 – 26 February 2013), usually known as Bert, was a prominent Australian visual artist, primarily a sculptor, who had many of his works publicly displayed. He is known for his stainless steel geometric public s ...
*
Fiona Foley Fiona Foley (born 1964) is a contemporary Indigenous Australian artist from K'gari (Fraser Island), Queensland. Foley is known for her activity as an academic, cultural and community leader and for co-founding the Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-o ...
* Merrick Fry *
Todd Fuller Todd Douglas Fuller (born July 25, 1974) is a retired American professional basketball player who was selected by the Golden State Warriors with the 11th overall pick of the 1996 NBA draft. He played in five NBA seasons from 1996 to 2001 for th ...
*
James Gleeson James Timothy Gleeson (21 November 1915 – 20 October 2008) was an Australian artist. He served on the board of the National Gallery of Australia. Early life Gleeson was born in the Sydney district of Hornsby in 1915 and attended East Sydn ...
*
Peter Godwin Peter Godwin (born 4 December 1957) is a Zimbabwean author, journalist, screenwriter, documentary filmmaker, and former human rights lawyer. Best known for his writings concerning the breakdown of his native Zimbabwe, he has reported from more ...
* Richard Goodwin * Fiona Hall *
Norman Hetherington Norman Frederick Hetherington (29 May 1921 – 6 December 2010) was an Australian artist, teacher, cartoonist (known as "Heth"), puppeteer, and puppet designer. He is best remembered as the creator of one of Australia's longest running childr ...
* Frank Hinder *
Ian Howard Ian Howard (born 17 October 1939) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Footscray in the Victorian Football League The Victorian Football League (VFL) is an Australian rules football league in Australia serving a ...
*
Robert Klippel Robert Klippel AO (19 June 192019 June 2001) was an Australian constructivist sculptor and teacher. He is often described in contemporary art literature as Australia's greatest sculptor. Throughout his career he produced some 1,300 pieces of ...
* Fred Leist *
Keith Looby Keith Looby (born 1940 in Sydney, Australia), is an Australian artist who won the Archibald Prize in 1984 with a portrait of Max Gillies. Early life and education Looby was raised in the Sydney suburbs of Newtown and Bondi. He studied at Ea ...
* Fiona Lowry * Marie McMahon * Guy Maestri * Arthur McIntyre *
Michael McIntyre Michael Hazen James McIntyre (born 21 February 1976) is an English comedian, writer and television presenter. In 2012, he was the highest-grossing stand-up comedian in the world. He currently presents his own Saturday night series, ''Michael Mc ...
*
Reg Mombassa Christopher O'Doherty, also known by the pseudonym Reg Mombassa, is a New Zealand-born Australian artist and musician. He is a founding member of the band Mental As Anything and member of Dog Trumpet (alongside his brother Peter O'Doherty). Ea ...
*
Arthur Murch :'' Not to be confused with the 19th-century illustrator Arthur Murch (illustrator)''. Arthur James Murch (8 July 1902, Croydon (Sydney) – 3 September 1989, Avalon (Sydney)) was an Australian artist who won the Archibald Prize in 1949 with ...
* Susan Norrie *
Rosaleen Norton Rosaleen Miriam Norton (2 October 1917 – 5 December 1979), who used the name of Thorn, was a New Zealand-born Australian artist and occultist, in the latter capacity adhering to a form of pantheistic / Neopagan Witchcraft largely devoted to t ...
* Robert Owen *
Margaret Olley Margaret Hannah Olley (24 June 192326 July 2011) was an Australian painter. She was the subject of more than ninety solo exhibitions. Early life Margaret Olley was born in Lismore, New South Wales. She was the eldest of three children of J ...
*
John Olsen John Wayne Olsen, AO (born 7 June 1945) is a former Australian politician, diplomat and football commissioner. He was Premier of South Australia between 28 November 1996 and 22 October 2001. He is now President of the Federal Liberal Party, C ...
* Roslyn Oxley * Mike Parr *
Ron Robertson-Swann Ronald Charles Robertson-Swann OAM (born 1941, Sydney), is an Australian sculptor, best known for his controversial abstract public sculpture ''Vault'' (1980) located in Melbourne, he also known for his sculpture '' Leviathan Play'' (1985), l ...
* Joan Ross *
Julie Rrap Julie Rrap (also known as Julie Parr, Julie Brown or Julie Brown-Rrap, born 1950) is an Australian contemporary artist who was raised on the Gold Coast in Queensland She was born Julie Parr, and reversed her name to express her sense of opposit ...
*
Martin Sharp Martin Ritchie Sharp (21 January 1942 – 1 December 2013) was an Australian artist, cartoonist, songwriter and film-maker. Career Sharp was born in Bellevue Hill, New South Wales in 1942, and educated at Cranbrook private school, where one ...
*
Garry Shead Garry Shead is an Australian artist and filmmaker. His paintings are in many galleries in Australia and overseas, and he has won several awards, including the Archibald Prize in 1992. He has spent time in Japan, Papua New Guinea, France, Austria, ...
*
Jeffrey Smart Frank Jeffrey Edson Smart (26 July 1921 – 20 June 2013) was an expatriate Australian painter known for his precisionist depictions of urban landscapes that are "full of private jokes and playful allusions". Smart was born and educated ...
* Joshua Smith *
Tim Storrier Tim Storrier AM (born 13 February 1949, Sydney) is an Australian artist who won the 2012 Doug Moran National Portrait Prize with ''The Lunar Savant'', a portrait of fellow artist McLean Edwards. Tim won the 2012 Archibald Prize for a 'facel ...
*
Thancoupie Dr Thancoupie Gloria Fletcher James (1937-2011) was an Australian sculptural artist, educator, linguist and elder of the Thainakuith people in Weipa, in the Western Cape York area of far north Queensland. She was the last fluent speaker of the ...
* Ann Thomson *
Dorothy Thornhill Dorothy Thornhill, Baroness Thornhill, (born 26 May 1955) was the first directly elected mayor of Watford, Hertfordshire, England. She was the Liberal Democrats' first directly elected mayor, and was also the first female directly elected may ...
*
Quinton Tidswell Quinton Tidswell (11 May 1910 – 8 May 1991) was a New South Wales–born Australian artist who was known for his etchings and works on paper. For many years Tidswell was a resident of the state of Victoria and the Castlemaine Art Museum hold ...
* Barbara Tribe * Tony Tuckson *
Craig Waddell Craig Waddell (born 18 January 1995) is a Scotland, Scottish Curling, curler, a . He is from Stirling. Teams Men's Mixed Mixed doubles Personal life Waddell is the grandson of 1979 European champion Jimmy Waddell. His older brother Kyle W ...
*
Guy Warren Guy Warren of Ghana, also known as Kofi Ghanaba (4 May 1923 – 22 December 2008), was a Ghanaian musician, best known as the inventor of Afro-jazz — "the reuniting of African-American jazz with its African roots" — and as a member of The T ...
*
Brett Whiteley Brett Whiteley AO (7 April 1939 – 15 June 1992) was an Australian artist. He is represented in the collections of all the large Australian galleries, and was twice winner of the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman prizes. He held many exhibitions ...
*
Wendy Whiteley Wendy Susan Whiteley (; 1941) is best known as the former wife of the Australian artist Brett Whiteley, and as the mother of their daughter, actress Arkie Whiteley (1964–2001). She has become a notable cultural figure, particularly since her ...


NAS Heads and Directors

* Samuel Rowe 1922–1933 * Rayner Hoff 1934–1937 * E. C. Walters 1937–1939 * Frank Medworth 1939–1947 * Roy Davies 1948–1960 * Douglas Dundas 1961–1965 * Harold Abbott 1965–1966 * Lyndon Dadswell 1966–1967 * Harold Abbott 1968–1970 * Peter Laverty 1970–1971 * John Coburn 1972–1974 * Tom Thompson 1975–1976 * Mollie Douglas 1976–1979 * Don Mitchell 1980–1985 * Meg Gregory 1985–1990 * Ted Binder 1990–1996 * Jeffrey Makin 1997–1998 * Bernard Ollis 1998–2009 * Anita Taylor 2009–2013 * Simon Cooper 2013–2014 (acting) * Michael Snelling 2014–2016 * Michael Lynch 2016–2017(interim) * Steven Alderton 2017–present


References


External links


National Art School
(Official website)
National Art School, Sydney at Google Cultural Institute
*
East Sydney Technical College
', Sydney Institute of TAFE. * {{Authority control Darlinghurst, New South Wales