The College is celebrating its birthday with The Perfect Place to Grow, an exhibition of over 350 works produced by some 180 staff and alumni. Curated by current rector Paul Thompson and Robert Upstone, former Tate curator and Director of the Fine Art Society, it boasts an impressive and diverse line up, from Edwin Lutyens and Henry Moore to Konstantin Grcic and Tracey Emin, whose 2001 installation The Perfect Place to Grow inspired its name. While Emin's title hints at the exhibition's promotional remit, it opens with a promise not to shy away from those times when the College has been "anything but perfect", echoing Emin's own infamous verdict that the best thing about the RCA was receiving her acceptance letter.
The Perfect Place to Grow is spread over three gallery spaces in the RCA' s South Kensington campus. The exhibition is itself showcase for the College's creativity; it was designed by Casson Mann (Dinah Casson is a former head of architecture) while Research Studio, founded by Dean of Communications Neville Brody, was responsible for the graphic design. This includes a striking timeline in the first room that uses paintings, photographs, letters and other ephemera to chart the history of the RCA, from its birth in 1837 as the Government School of Design to its recent expansion into South London's Battersea area.
For the opportunity to see works by so many prestigious practitioners from such different fields together in one place, and to get a glimpse into British art and design education history, this is an exhibition worth seeing
The Perfect Place to Grow: 175 of the Royal College of Art
Royal College of Art, South Kensington campus
Kensington Gore, London
