Kendall College of Art and Design

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Kendall College of Art and Design, of Ferris State University, is a college of the visual arts in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States. It offers both Bachelor's and Master's degrees (primarily of Fine Arts) in a variety of subjects.

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[edit] Academics

Kendall has undergraduate programs in Art Education, Art History, Digital Media, general Fine Art, Furniture Design, Graphic Design, Illustration, Industrial Design, Interior Design, Metals/Jewelry Design, Painting, Photography, and Sculpture/Functional Art. Most first-year students take a selection of common "foundation" classes and introductory courses in their major, along with some general Humanities, Science, and Art History classes. Later years' studies consist primarily of studio classes in the student's major field and related electives, and additional general education classes.

The graduate programs include an MFA in Fine Art, an MAE (Master of Art Education) and an MBA with a focus on design issues.

Dual enrollment for advanced high school students is available. A variety of non-credit classes for both children and adults are also offered to the community.

[edit] History

The Early Years

Kendall was incorporated in 1928 by a provision in the will of Helen M. Kendall, the second wife of nationally known Grand Rapids furniture designer David Wolcott Kendall. Mrs. Kendall established the David Wolcott Kendall School of Art as a memorial to her husband, to reflect their strong belief in the fundamental principles of art, and to offer encouragement to aspiring artists, as David Kendall had done throughout his life. The school opened its doors on March 1, 1931, with a total enrollment of 35 art students.

David Wolcott Kendall (b. 1851, d. 1910) was born in Rochester, New York, the son of a cabinetmaker who taught him the trade. He came to Grand Rapids, Michigan in 1879 to work for Phoenix Furniture Company, and began a career that had significant and lasting effects on the furniture industry. A man of varied interests and talents, he set up a chemistry laboratory in the basement at Phoenix and developed special finishes that transformed wood such as oak and ash into products more attractive to customers of the period.

David Kendall traveled throughout Europe, Asia, and Central America to study new forms and decorative motifs in furniture design. The many rare and beautiful objects he acquired in his travels are still in the collection of Kendall. His lasting designs earned him the moniker “Dean of American Furniture Designers” and included a version of the Morris Chair that became known as the “McKinley Chair” after President McKinley selected one for installation in the White House. Kendall was also credited with developing an office chair that revolves and reclines. Though he never patented the design, his ideas still reverberate in the office furniture industry that continues to thrive in West Michigan.

The David Wolcott Kendall School of Art was housed in the old Kendall homestead at 145 Fountain Street, amid the lumber baron-era mansions in the area of Grand Rapids now known as Heritage Hill. The school offered a two-year program in the fundamentals of art and by the mid-1930s was making a name nationwide as the heir to the legacy of the craftsmen who built the Grand Rapids furniture industry.

Post-war boom brings growth

The postwar boom brought a wave of new students, including returning veterans. New wings were built on two sides of the Fountain Street building, and a new library housing Kendall’s personal collection was opened to the public in 1945. In 1947 the school’s name was changed to Kendall School of Design, reflecting the school’s national reputation in furniture design and home merchandising. Faculty included some of Grand Rapids finest instructors, including Aurelio Bevelacqua, and others who designed in the "Grand Rapids" style.

In 1961, having outgrown the Fountain Street location, the school purchased a home and land at 1110 College Avenue NE. Through the ‘60s and ‘70s Kendall expanded its programs and campus, adding two new buildings at the College Avenue location. A foundation program for all students was established, and in 1977 an academic program led to the first Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. In 1981, Kendall College of Design was certified as a baccalaureate degree-granting institution and was accredited by the North Central Association of Colleges and Universities.

Back to downtown

Enrollment over the next few years continued to grow. Students from around the world were drawn by the exceptional design programs and by the school’s placement rate of 90%. A committee of trustees, faculty, staff, and students began examining sites where the burgeoning school could relocate.

Somewhat ironically, the search ended just a block or so from the school’s original location in the old Kendall homestead. Built just after the turn of the century as exhibition space, the Manufacturers Building offered ample room for expansion. Kendall bought the building in ‘81 and moved its operations back downtown in the fall of ‘84.

In 1987 the name of the school was changed to Kendall College of Art and Design to reflect the school’s status in granting four-year degrees and the equal importance of both art and design in Kendall’s curriculum.

Kendall impact recognized nationally

After more than six decades, Kendall’s impact on the design industry nationwide was unmistakable. Most of the well recognized furniture designers in the country were Kendall alumni. Graduates in the school’s other programs were highly sought after by the nation’s top illustration, advertising, graphics, industrial, and interior design firms, as well as graduate schools.

In the summer of 1995, a gala event in New York honored renowned design editor and author Beverly Russell, a member of the Kendall Board of Trustees and recipient of an honorary doctoral degree from the college. Funds from the event were used to establish a lecture fund, which over the next six years, brought a stellar array of international design figures to Grand Rapids including Viscount David Linley, the son of England’s Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon and a furniture designer of international renown.

At about the same time, it was becoming apparent that to maintain the momentum of growth and the college’s national reputation for art and design education, and to provide the technology and services necessary in higher education, further growth was needed. At the same time, Ferris State University was exploring ways to expand from its geographic area, centered for most of the last century in Big Rapids, Michigan. A merger was discussed.

A meeting of minds

The idea of merging the two institutions was attractive to both Kendall and Ferris, offering a partnership of art, design, and technology that optimizes both school’s strengths. In 1996, the schools embarked upon a four-year process of affiliation that culminated in a complete merger in the 2000-2001 academic year.

As the school continued to grow, an ambitious project was undertaken to purchase the old Interstate Building, another turn-of-the-century loft building just around the corner, and connect it to Kendall with a striking three-story atrium. The new facility was opened in May 1998.

The same year, Kendall received a $2 million grant from the Herbert H. & Grace A. Dow Foundation to establish a dynamic, interdisciplinary learning center that explores the potential of linking design, innovation, and technology in for business. The Dow Center serves as a symbol of the ideological link between art, design, and technology that was, in many ways, a driving force in the decision to merge the two schools.

Today, Kendall continues to focus on growing its academic programs and expanding its facilities. In the coming years we intend to add more programs to both our undergraduate and graduate degree offerings in art, design, art education and art history. And we look forward to a future that includes expanding our physical space.

[edit] Facilities

student photo of Kendall Building atrium

The college occupies a 7-story historic building in downtown Grand Rapids. Facilities include color and black-and-white darkrooms, photo studios, a library, two galleries, a furniture collection, sculptural wood- and metalworking shops, a metalsmithing/jewelry design studio, digital fabrication technology such as 2 rapid prototyping systems and 4 CNC milling machines, printmaking equipment, life drawing studios, audio recording booth, 24-hour-access student studios, a coffee shop, a bookstore with art supplies, and classroom/labs equipped with Mac and Windows computers.

A substantial expansion of the college's facilities began around the time it joined Ferris. First it took over the adjoining building, renovating and adding studio, classroom, gallery, and office space, effectively doubling the size of the Kendall building. Later, the college committed itself to acquire and adapt the historical Grand Rapids Art Museum building across the street after the museum finishes relocating in 2005, where it plans to add gallery, auditorium, classroom, studio, and office space.

In 2007 the college launched an initiative to promote the use and ownership of computers by its students, revamping its facilities to better accommodate laptops, and revising the curriculum to take advantage of universal computer availability. Discounts on hardware and software are available to help cover the purchase cost.

[edit] Students

As of Fall 2010 total enrollment (undergraduate and graduate) is just over 1,400 students, with a faculty:student ratio of about 1:14. Most students live in apartments downtown or in nearby neighborhoods such as Heritage Hill and Eastown. The college assists students in finding housing, and also offers renovated, furnished apartments a block from the main building. In the atrium of the building, students often partake in table-top sports such as ping pong and foosball.

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