Rule book from the Bristol Academy of Fine Arts

Rule book from the Bristol Academy of Fine Arts in the RWA archives
Rule book from the Bristol Academy of Fine Arts in the RWA archives
  • Artist members could be either men or women.
  • Artists who wished to become members, but were not considered advanced enough in their particular area of art were given the opportunity to study at the Academy free of charge.
  • Artist members, on quitting the Academy were required to donate a piece of their own artwork to the Academy
  • Artist members were required to live and practise as an artist of whatever discipline (remember the murals upstairs referring to painting, sculpture and architecture) within 10 miles of Bristol.
  • There were to be annual exhibitions of member artists’ works and first prize would be called The Sharples Prize.
Black and white voting balls for the Bristol Academy of Fine Arts, RWA archive
Black and white voting balls for the Bristol Academy of Fine Arts, RWA archive

The idea of voting is not a new idea. Placing a white or a black ball onto a pair of balancing scales to determine which side is heavier and therefore which side has won, dates back millennia.

The term blackballed derives from this voting system. If a potential member of a club received more black balls than white then they were not allowed in; they were blackballed.

Voting still takes place now, but without the black and white balls.           

Of particular interest: The concepts behind becoming a member of the Academy. Who decides and judges who can become a member is worth thinking about. Would those early academicians have voted for any of the pieces on display in 2016?