VISUAL ART

Art education at SPCPA is divided into three interrelated categories: skill acquisition, content development, and critique.

Beginning courses focus primarily on skill development in Drawing, Painting, and Sculpture. 9th and 10th grade students learn pencil, pen and ink, watercolor, acrylic paint, wire sculpture, paper mache, collage, mixed media, color theory, drawing from life, abstraction, assemblage, ‘zines, installation, and curation.

Advanced courses inspire a deeper dive into content development through projects drawing on themes central to contemporary art. In 11th and 12th grade, students spend about half of their time building an individual body of work around a central theme of their creation. This is modeled after a college thesis and is an essential activity for professional and scholastic artistic development.

At all levels, critique becomes the central aspect of a course. It begins in questions: How does the work before us affect our senses? What does it say about a subject? What does it say about human nature? Is the work physical, philosophical, psychological? What does the work ask of us? What do we ask of it? Every artwork is a meaning-machine, generating content as we question. Through this discursive process, each student learns how to build for themselves an aesthetic compass pointing towards their own, individually created definition of art.

Above all we strive to create a community of visual artists that celebrate and support each other. This happens in the classroom as well as through J-term projects, visiting artists, student exhibitions, and more.

 

Visual Art Faculty

Brooks Turner
Visual Art Department Chair
turnerb@spcpa.org
Brandon Chambers
Visual Art
chambersb@spcpa.org
Mike Curren
Visual Art
currenm@spcpa.org
Zamara Cuyun Grimm
Visual Art
cuyunz@spcpa.org
Maiya Lee Hartman
Visual Art
hartmanm@spcpa.org
Kay Heino
Visual Art
heinok@spcpa.org

Visual Art Department Handbook

View the PDF

Visual Art Department Curriculum

View the PDF

 

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