Prince's School of Traditional Arts
The Prince’s School for Traditional Arts (formerly the Visual Islamic and Traditional Arts) "is one of The Prince’s Charities, a group of not-for-profit organisations of which The Prince of Wales is President: seventeen of the charities were founded personally by the Prince." [1] The School was originally established as the Visual Islamic and Traditional Arts Programme (VITA) at the Royal College of Art in 1984. It was the brainchild of Dr. Keith Critchlow, the Professor Emeritus at the School, who is also the author of several books on Sacred Geometry. The Programme transferred to The Prince of Wales’ Institute of Architecture in 1993 which subsequently became incorporated into The Prince's Foundation in 2000. The School was initiated as a separate charity of HRH Charles, Prince of Wales in April 2004. wiki
- Dr Khaled Azzam, LVO, Director
- Dr Keith Critchlow, Professor Emeritus, Founder, and Director of Research
Contents
Board
Accessed May 2014: [2]
- Sir David Green, KCMG, Chairman
- Mr Syed Mohamad Albukhary
- Rajiv Bendre - British Council
- Professor David Cadman
- Mrs Kavita Chellaram
- Mr Michael Fowle CBE
- Anahita Gharabaghi
- Mr Mohammed Abdul-Latif Jameel
- Paul Kanareck
- Ian Rank Broadley
- Kim Samuel Johnson
- Mr Nader Shenouda
Board (2012)
Accessed March 2012: [3]
- Sir David Green, KCMG, Chairman
- Syed Mohamad Albukhary
- David Cadman
- Kavita Chellaram
- Michael Fowle CBE
- Andrew Hill
- Mohammed Abdul-Latif Jameel
- Nader Shenouda
Contact
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch
- Institute of Traditional Islamic Art and Architecture in Amman, Jordan, the Jordanian equivalent organization - chairman, Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad