Taipei National University of the Arts

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Taipei National University of the Arts
國立臺北藝術大學
TNUA administrative building 20100123.jpg
Former name
National Institute of the Arts
TypeNational university
Established1 July 1982 (as National Institute of the Arts)
1 August 2001 (as TNUA)
PresidentChen Kai-huang
Vice-presidentLee Chia-yi
Location25°08′01.6″N 121°28′17.6″E / 25.133778°N 121.471556°E / 25.133778; 121.471556Coordinates: 25°08′01.6″N 121°28′17.6″E / 25.133778°N 121.471556°E / 25.133778; 121.471556
Websitewww.tnua.edu.tw
Image-Taipei National University of the Arts Logo.jpg
Taipei National University of the Arts
Traditional Chinese國立臺北藝術大學

The Taipei National University of the Arts (TNUA; Chinese: 國立臺北藝術大學) is a national university in Guandu, Beitou District, Taipei, Taiwan.

History[]

The preparatory committees to establish the school was formed on 22 October 1980. The National Institute of the Arts (Chinese: 國立藝術學院) was then founded on 1 July 1982 as an institute of higher learning for the arts. The institute was housed in Luzhou, Taipei County (now New Taipei City), from 1985 until its relocation in 1991 to its permanent campus in Kuandu, Taipei. The Institute was renamed Taipei National University of the Arts in 2001.

Faculties[]

  • School of Music
  • School of Fine Arts
  • School of Theatre Arts
  • School of Dance
  • School of Film and New Media
  • School of Culture Resources
  • Interdisciplinary Multimedia Performing Arts Collaborative Technology Music Program

Presidents[]

  •  [zh] (July 1982 – July 1991)
  • Ma Shui-long (August 1991 – August 1994)
  • Liu S. Lian (September 1994 – August 1997)
  • Chiu Kun-liang (October 1997 – January 2006)
  •  [zh] (August 2006 – July 2013)
  • Yang Chyi-wen (August 2013 – July 2017)
  • Chen Kai-huang (since August 2017)

Campus[]

The campus buildings are designed in a neo-Chinese classical style. Aside from the colleges and departments, the university houses a Music Hall, the Performing Arts Center, including a theater hall and a dance recital hall, the Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts, a library, an Olympic-size swimming pool, the Center for the Study of Traditional Arts, a computer center and the Center for the Study of Art and Technology.

Events[]

Festivals organized by TNUA or using its campus:

  • Guandu Arts Festival
  • Guandu Flower Festival (Guandu Flower Art Festival)
  • Kuandu International Animation Festival
  • Kuandu Lights Festival

International and local cooperation[]

Asia
 Taiwan

  • National Tsing Hua University
  • National Taiwan University of Science and Technology

 Mainland China

 Hong Kong

  • The Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts

 Japan

 South Korea

 Singapore

  • Lasalle College of the Arts

 Thailand

 Israel

  • Tel Aviv University

 Philippines


Oceania
 Australia

  • Griffith University
  • Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
  • Edith Cowan University
  • Queensland University of Technology

Europe
 Austria

 Czech Republic

  • Academy of Fine Arts in Prague

 Finland

 France

 Germany

 Poland

 Russia

 United Kingdom

  • Northumbria University
  • The Arts University College at Bournemouth
  • University of the Arts London


America
 United States

  • Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
  • State University of New York
  • University of Michigan
  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Ohio State University
  • Goucher College
  • Chapman University

 Canada

  • University of British Columbia

Name censorship[]

In 2016, the Hong Kong Government's Leisure and Cultural Services Department was criticized as in breach of freedom of expression for blocking use of the university name in any form that included the word 'National'/'國立'. The department, responsible for most of the territory's arts venues, told TNUA graduate Law Shuk-yin, an art administrator and executive producer for drama company , that she could not use the name in her biography in promotional material for her production at a theatre it managed.[1]

Honorary doctors of art[]

Notable Honorary Doctors of Art from TNUA include cellist and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich, composer Ma Shui-long, choreographer Lin Hwai-min, and theatrical set designer Ming Cho Lee.

Notable alumni[]

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

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