Southwest School of Art and Craft

300 Augusta St.
http://www.swschool.org

The Southwest School of Art and Craft is housed in the facilities of the former Ursuline Academy, a Catholic school for girls. The Ursuline Academy was established in 1851 under the leadership of Bishop Jean-Marie Odin of New Orleans. Following Texas’ independence from Mexico in 1836, the Catholic Church in the Republic began to wane, so efforts were initiated to revitalize Catholicism. Bishop Odin and Sisters from the Ursuline Order of New Orleans estabablished an academy in Galveston in 1847 to provide education and religious instruction for young girls. In 1848, Bishop Odin purchased 10 acres of land in San Antonio and construction began to establish a second academy. The building was not yet completed in 1851, when Father Claude Dubuis brought seven Ursuline nuns with him to operate the San Antonio school, but Ursuline Academy managed to open within a few short months. The first academy building was constructed by French trained architect Francois Giraud (assisted by Jules Poinard) utilizing the pise de terre or rammed earth method of construction. Over the next 50 years, the school grew to include a small chapel in 1851, a dormitory building in 1866, and a much larger Gothic-Revival style chapel by Francios Giraud in 1868. A priest’s house was added in the 1880s, and a second academy building was constructed in 1910.  

In 1965, the Ursulines left the facility and relocated to northwest San Antonio. The academy buildings were abandoned and fell into disrepair until 1971 when the San Antonio Conservation Society purchased part of the complex.  Over the next decade, the historic Ursuline Campus was acquired and restored by the Southwest Craft Center, a small non-profit art education center established in La Villita in 1965.  In 1998, the center purchased and renovated the former Sears building across the street on Navarro, which now serves as the Navarro Campus, and the Southwest Craft Center changed its name to the Southwest School of Art and Craft.  

Today, the nationally recognized facility provides art education for adults, teens, and children through classes and workshops, lectures, concerts, exhibitions, and a certificate program. Classes include ceramics, papermaking, weaving, sculpture, photography, print making, metals, digital imaging, drawing, and painting.  Other amenities include a Mobile Arts Program for school children, a Young Artists Program, a Visitor Center Museum, a Gallery Shop, and the Copper Kitchen Café. Club Giraud, also on the Ursuline Campus, is a private dining club located in the former kitchen, laundry building, and carriage sheds of the academy.  The original limestone buildings, stained glass of the chapel, and gracious gardens and courtyards provide a picturesque setting for the SWSAC’s mission to “teach, preserve, and enhance the visual arts.” (Southwest School of Art and Craft website: www.swschool.org; and National Register Nomination: Ursuline Academy, 1969. Texas Historical Commission)

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Related Items: Ursuline Order of New Orleans, Francois Giraud, Navarro Campus - Southwest School of Art and Craft, Club Giraud, Copper Kitchen Café