Cornish College of the Arts

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Kerry Hall, Cornish's oldest building and the last part of Cornish remaining on Seattle's Capitol Hill.
Kerry Hall, Cornish's oldest building and the last part of Cornish remaining on Seattle's Capitol Hill.
Like Kerry Hall, Cornish's main Denny Triangle building is also on the National Register of Historic Places
Like Kerry Hall, Cornish's main Denny Triangle building is also on the National Register of Historic Places

Cornish College of the Arts is a fully accredited institution in the Denny Triangle and Capitol Hill neighborhoods of Seattle, Washington, USA that offers the Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Dance, Theater, Performance Production, Design, and Fine Art, as well as the Bachelor of Music degree.

Cornish was founded in 1914, as the Cornish School, by pianist and voice teacher Nellie Cornish, who was influenced by the pedagogical ideas of Maria Montessori, as well as Calvin Brainerd Cady's ideas on music pedagogy, and who served as the school's director for its first 25 years. Within three years it had enrolled over 600 students, and was the country's largest music school west of Chicago.[1][2]

The Cornish School began its operations in rented space in the Boothe Building and Broadway and Pine Street. Initially, the school taught only children, but it soon expanded to functioning also as a normal school (roughly what would now be called a teachers' college). While music was at the heart of the curriculum, Cornish recruited opportunistically where she saw talent, and the school soon offered classes as diverse as eurhythmics, French language, painting, and dance. The school gathered a board of trustees from among Seattle's elite, who funded her school through the hard economic times during and after World War I, and raised money for a purpose-built school building.[3]

Contents

[edit] Campus

Cornish's 1921 building, now known as Kerry Hall, is on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) as "Cornish School";[4] its Denny Triangle building is also listed on the NRHP, as the "William Volker Building".[5] The Raisbeck Performance Hall is a Seattle City Landmark under the name "Old Norway Hall".[6]

[edit] Notable faculty


[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Berner 1991, p. 92–93
  2. ^ Nate Lippens, short item on Cornish as part of "People Who Shaped Seattle", Seattle Metropolitan, May 2006, p. 59.
  3. ^ Berner 1991, p. 93–94
  4. ^ [http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/WA/King/state2.html WASHINGTON - King County] (page 2), National Register of Historic Places. Accessed online 31 January 2008.
  5. ^ WASHINGTON - King County (page 5), National Register of Historic Places. Accessed online 31 January 2008.
  6. ^ Landmarks Alphabetical Listing for O, Individual Landmarks, City of Seattle. Accessed 28 December 2007.

[edit] References

  • Mildred Andrews, Cornish School, HistoryLink Essay 596, December 26, 1998, updated on June 28, 2006.
  • Berner, Richard C. (1991), Seattle 1900-1920: From Boomtown, Urban Turbulence, to Restoration, Charles Press, ISBN 0962988901 

[edit] External links

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