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Parsons School of Design

Parsons School of Design, known colloquially as Parsons, is a private art and design college located in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City. Founded in 1896 after a group of progressive artists broke away from established Manhattan art academies in protest of limited creative autonomy, Parsons is one of the oldest schools of art and design in New York.[1]

Former names

Chase School
(1896–1898)
New York School of Art
(1898–1909)
New York School of Fine And Applied Art
(1909–1941)
Parsons The New School
for Design
(2005–2015)[1]

1896 (1896)[1]

Yvonne Watson

1,400[4]

5,755[4]

White, Black, Parsons Red[5]
     

Gnarls the Narwhal[6]

Parsons was the first school to offer programs in fashion design, interior design, advertising, graphic design, and lighting design.[1] Parsons became the first American school to found a satellite school abroad when it established the Paris Ateliers in 1921.[7] It remains the first and only private art and design school to affiliate with a private national research university, in 1970 when it became one of the divisions of The New School.[8] Organized in five departments, the school offers undergraduate and graduate programs in a range of disciplines in art and design with students also able to combine additional classes and majors in other colleges of The New School.[9]

Academics[edit]

Programs[edit]

Parsons offers over thirty undergraduate and graduate degree programs, each housed in one of five schools.[43] In addition to their major at Parsons, students are able to take classes at the other divisions of The New School; The New School for Social Research, College of Performing Arts, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, and the Schools of Public Engagement.

Notable Parsons School of Design alumni include:

Jasper Johns: painter, sculptor, and printmaker

Jasper Johns: painter, sculptor, and printmaker

Sara Little Turnbull: industrial designer

Sara Little Turnbull: industrial designer

Alexander Wang: fashion designer

Alexander Wang: fashion designer

Roy Lichtenstein: pop artist

Roy Lichtenstein: pop artist

Tom Ford: fashion designer

Tom Ford: fashion designer

Heron Preston: fashion designer

Heron Preston: fashion designer

Anna Sui: fashion designer

Anna Sui: fashion designer

Julie Umerle: painter

Julie Umerle: painter

Alexander Calder: sculptor

Marc Jacobs: fashion designer

Marc Jacobs: fashion designer

Peter de Sève: illustrator

Peter de Sève: illustrator

Mario Buatta: interior designer

Mario Buatta: interior designer

Paul Rand: art director and graphic designer

Paul Rand: art director and graphic designer

Donna Karan: fashion designer

Donna Karan: fashion designer

Duane Michals: photographer

Duane Michals: photographer

Ai Weiwei: fine artist, activist

Ai Weiwei: fine artist, activist

Jason Wu: fashion designer

Jason Wu: fashion designer

Norman Rockwell: painter, author, and illustrator

Norman Rockwell: painter, author, and illustrator

The New School Free Press, abbreviated as NSFP, is a student-run newspaper covering events around The New School. Periodic printed editions are distributed in newsstands across campus, while their website publishes continuously updated content.

[66]

re:D is the magazine for Parsons alumni and the wider Parsons community, published by the New School Alumni Association.

[67]

Scapes is the annual journal of the School of Constructed Environments.

The Journal of Design Strategies explores and documents collaborative work on the borders of management and design.

[68]

The Parsons Journal for Information Mapping (PJIM) is published quarterly by the Parsons Institute for Information Mapping and focuses on both the theoretical and practical aspects of information visualization.

[69]

BIAS: Journal of Dress Practice published by the MA Fashion Studies Dress Practice Collective started in the spring of 2013 and aims to join elements of "visual culture, fashion theory, design studies and personal practice through a variety of media.

[70]

The Fashion Studies Journal ' is a monthly academic journal for fashion scholarship and criticism. It was established in 2012 as a platform for graduate-level writing[71]

peer-reviewed

In the film , Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro) meets Eady (Amy Brenneman) at the coffee shop and asks where she went to school for graphic design. Eady tells Neil that she went to Parsons in New York.

Heat

The TV show was filmed in Parsons' fashion building, located in the garment district until the building's closure in 2015. One of the show's hosts, Tim Gunn, was a past director of the fashion school.[77]

Project Runway

In the film , Storm Reid plays an aspiring teenage fashion designer hoping to get accepted into Parsons.[78]

The Invisible Man

In the film , Aya Takanashi's character, Hiroko, mentions she attended Parsons School of Design.

Mr. Baseball

In the HBO series season 2, episode 4 "An Offer Refused" Drama claims "I almost went to Parsons."

Entourage

In the film , Yin Chang's character Mei Kwan gets accepted to Parsons.

Prom

At the end of the TV show season 3, episode 10, a prostitute character mentions having a student loan debt to Parsons.

Mr Robot