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A school born

from a

dream of Paris

In 1965, American musician Richard Roy arrived in Paris with a vision: an institution where international students could pursue the arts in the city that had inspired generations of creators before them.

1965

FOUNDING YEAR

'70s

LATIN QUARTER ATELIERS

'90s

VAL-DE-GRÂCE CAMPUS

2024

A NEW CHAPTER BEGINS

In the heart of Quartier Latin

“2025 marks the 60th anniversary of this unique educational institution — a school that began with a dream, a walk-up apartment, and the Latin Quarter as its first campus.”

American musician Richard Roy, inspired by the cultural and artistic history of Europe, arrived in Paris with a vision: to establish a school where international students could pursue art, fashion, and design in the city that had shaped more creative careers than any other. What began as a fine arts and language school in 1965, with administrative offices in a seventh-floor walk-up on the Rue Saint-Didier, would grow over six decades into a fully independent institution with alumni across 50 countries and all continents.

Roy’s founding method was inseparable from the city itself. Rather than a single campus, he established a network of ateliers and teaching spaces across the Latin Quarter — each chosen for its historical resonance, each connecting students directly to the living tradition of Parisian craft and culture.

“Each of these historical ateliers was used for different disciplines, having students study with particular authorities as an apprentice would work with a successful master.”

A history told
in moments

1965, the beginning

The Academy is born on the Rue Saint-Didier

Richard Roy establishes the Paris American Academy as a fine arts and language school, with administrative offices in a seventh-floor walk-up apartment on the Rue Saint-Didier. The first students arrive from the United States, drawn by the promise of studying in the world’s creative capital.

Late 1960s, expansion

The atelier network takes shape

Roy travels the streets of the Latin Quarter, establishing teaching points at the Schola Cantorum — a former Benedictine monastery transformed into a music conservatory by Vincent d’Indy — as well as ateliers on the rue des Ursulines, rue Saint-Jacques, rue Louis Thuillier, and impasse Royer-Collard.

“Each atelier was used for a different discipline — students worked with master practitioners as apprentices, not as passive learners.”

1970s, growth

International reputation grows

PAA establishes itself as a destination for serious students of fashion, fine arts, and design. The school’s reputation for small classes, professional faculty, and direct access to the Parisian cultural scene attracts students from across North America, Europe, and beyond.

1989, a permanent home

The Val-de-Grâce pavilion

Shortly before PAA’s 25th anniversary, the Academy acquires the beautiful 17th-century pavilion of the Val-de-Grâce, creating a permanent home for classrooms and offices in one of the most historically significant corners of the Latin Quarter.

The Val-de-Grâce complex, originally a royal abbey and military hospital, provided PAA with a campus of extraordinary architectural and historical richness.

2000, new disciplines

Creative Writing joins the curriculum

The Creative Writing program is formally established, honouring Paris’s extraordinary literary heritage and its long relationship with anglophone writers — from Hemingway and Fitzgerald to James Baldwin and Gertrude Stein.

2015, half a century

50th anniversary

PAA celebrates five decades of international creative education. Alumni from more than 50 countries gather to mark the occasion, reflecting on careers in fashion, interior design, fine arts, and literature shaped by their time in Paris.

2023, resilience

Tragedy at the Val-de-Grâce

On June 21, 2023, a fire destroys the Val-de-Grâce pavilion that had housed PAA’s classrooms and offices for more than thirty years. A defining moment of loss — and the beginning of a response that would demonstrate the resilience of the institution and everyone who has ever been part of it.

2024, renewal

PAA returns — stronger than ever

Under the operational leadership of Gabriella Galastri de Polo and the presidency of Peter Carman, PAA returns to the atelier format that defined its founding spirit — teaching from studios near the Val-de-Grâce, with the main office now at 19, Rue Claude Bernard, Paris 75005.

A return to origins: the apprenticeship model, the Latin Quarter, and the conviction that Paris itself is the best classroom a student of the creative arts could have.

2025, today

Sixty years — and counting

2025 marks the 60th anniversary of Paris American Academy. A year to celebrate six decades of creative education, international community, and the enduring belief that the best education happens when the city becomes the classroom.

“After a challenging period, we are back — stronger, more committed, and more inspired than ever by the students who choose Paris as their creative home.”

The fire of June 2023 destroyed a building. It did not destroy the Academy. What PAA has always been — a community of students, teachers, and practitioners united by a love of Paris and a commitment to creative work — remained entirely intact.

The return to the atelier format is in many ways a return to the school’s origins: small, intimate, rooted in craft, and inseparable from the city. New alumni will find a network of PAA friends in over 50 countries and on all continents.

The Latin Quarter
as a campus

From the outset, PAA’s campus was the Latin Quarter itself. Richard Roy established teaching points at locations chosen for their history, their character, and their connection to the artistic traditions of Paris.

Schola Cantorum

Rue Saint-Jacques · Former Benedictine monastery · Music conservatory since 19th c.

Rue des Ursulines

Historic atelier · Fine arts & drawing

Rue Saint-Jacques

One of the oldest streets in Paris · Design & interior

Rue Louis Thuillier

Latin Quarter · Fashion & textiles

Impasse Royer-Collard

Quiet passage · Painting & mixed media

Val-de-Grâce Pavilion

17th c. royal abbey · PAA campus 1989–2023

19, Rue Claude Bernard — Today

Current main office & studios · Paris 75005

Where the story
continues

Today, Paris American Academy continues to welcome students from across the world to the Latin Quarter — to the same streets, the same city, and the same conviction that creative education is most powerful when it is rooted in place.

The programs have evolved. The address has changed. The apprenticeship spirit that Richard Roy brought to Paris in 1965 has not.

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