Watch: Looking Back at the Life Room
British artist Naomi Salaman has documented a vanishing model of art education for UCL Art Collections in an exhibition running in the Strang Print Room until 11 June. 'Looking Back At the Life Room' is an exhibition that documents life rooms and dissection theatres of the late Renaissance and reflects on the bygone era of the life room as a mainstay of art education. The life room, in which the human figure is posed and drawn, was established in the first art academies, and institutionalised in art education in the mid-1600s. This exhibition positions the life room as a historical space that marked a distinction between fine art as an intellectual pursuit, and the workshop practices of the guild. UK art education underwent a radical change in the 1960s with the implementation of the 'Coldstream Report'. Named after Professor William Coldstream of the UCL Slade School of Fine Art, the report marked a shift from the life room to 'complementary studies' - a range of courses embracing the 'new art history' formed by Marxist, feminist, semiotic, structualist and psychoanalytical perspectives that still exists today. The tradition of the life classes at the UCL Slade School of Fine Art came to an end in December 2008.

