The Mountain School of Arts

The Mountain School of Arts, or MSA^, is an alternative pedagogical model based in Los Angeles that provides a tuition-free, community-based education. Founded in 2005 by artists Piero Golia and Eric Wesley, it is the oldest continuous artist-run school in California.

MSA^ is often cited as one of the most successful examples of an art school that exists outside of the Educational Industrial Complex, along with the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program (ISP). The development of the school and its program have been written about as "follow[ing] a poetic of the gesture, of the instant, and of actions recalling Fluxus, Gino de Dominicis’ or Paul McCarthy’s works." The school has been featured as one of the most prominent alternative art education models in several exhibitions, notably in the 2010 festival No Soul For Sale – A Festival of Independents organized by the Tate Modern, UK as well as the 2006 edition of Art Basel in Miami Beach, USA.

History
The Mountain School of Arts was named after the original meeting place of the school: the upper floor of The Mountain Bar (founded by Jorge Pardo and gallery owner Steve Hanson in 2003) in Chinatown, Los Angeles. The idea of "a free, bare-bones, yet ambitious graduate school— no tuition, no degree, but a vigorous curriculum— centered on talks and seminars led by visiting artists and curators" was the result of a conversation between Golia and Wesley. The program began in 2005 and initially took place over three months a year (from mid-January to mid-April), with participants convening at the Mountain Bar in addition to several off-site field trips across the city. The Mountain Bar officially closed in 2012, ending the artistic activity centered around the locale. Afterwards, the Mountain School of Art adopted a new format, with classes over an intensive two-and-a-half week period instead of the original three months.

Structure and curriculum
The school curriculum extends beyond fine arts, offering classes in a wide range of subjects including science, law, philosophy, culinary arts, and others. The program is open to students from different backgrounds, whether local or international. Housing is provided for the duration of the program. There are no course requirements or grades; the students are not expected to produce anything while taking part in the program.

Every year the MSA^ accepts around 12 students. Due to the intensity of the two-and-a-half week program, the students are asked to clear their schedule of other obligations for the duration of the course. The relationships developed by the students while living and spending most of their time together makes up an important part of the MSA^ experience, as knowledge and friendship overlap.

Over the years, artists and curators who have served as guest faculty for students at the Mountain School of Arts include Myriam Ben Salah, Tacita Dean, Thomas Demand, Simone Forti, Dan Graham, Pierre Huyghe, Richard Jackson, Martin Kersels, Paul McCarthy, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Catherine Opie, Henry Taylor, Jeff Wall, and Andrea Zittel.

Legacy
Over the course of the program, three books have been published between 2010-2020 that celebrate the legacy of the program, featuring photographs, documents, applications, and various ephemera from MSA^.

Alumni of the program have gone on to pursue myriad career paths, both inside and outside of the art world. Notable students include Ida Ekblad and Jordan Wolfson, who have developed successful careers as artists. Other notable alumni include Wendy Yao, founder of Ooga Booga artist shop and bookstore, as well as Noah Davis, who founded the Underground Museum—a cultural institution based in the Arlington Heights/West Adams neighborhood of Los Angeles that serves not only as an "art destination but a community lifeline."