art archives

Sunsets

by Emma Su, ’22. Digital illustration.

Transition to Representation

A drawing by Julie Jameson-Clausen, Class of 2024 The word transition for me means transition to representation, specifically in government being able to see the representation amongst women especially women of color is really important to me. Right now there are 48 Women of color serving in Congress right now out of the 126 women…

ametrine

a drawing by fall contest winner Starly Li, ’23

rest

a photo by Grace Bida, ’21

layers

a photo by Grace Bida, ’21

rose

a photo by Grace Bida,’21

Untitled

a metals piece by Michelle Lee, ’20

unnamed

a photo by Winter Contest winner Mia Moore, ’20

portrait of ben

an oil pastel illustration by Chloe Xie, ’19 Artist’s Statement I drew this portrait of my older brother recently in Drawing and Painting Intensive during studio time. I was inspired by his pensive look! As an artist, stepping outside of your comfort zone through innovation is important. I didn’t want to create something that was…

fall

a series of photos taken by Henry Binder, ’19

spaceman

a watercolor illustration by Chloe Xie, ’19

Little Inkwells

A series of ceramics pieces by honorable mention recipient Serelle Carr, ’19.

winter hat

a knitted hat by winter contest winner Inara Pirani, ’19

posterboy

a watercolor painting by Chloe Xie, ’19

col mare

photos by Adriana Voci, ’18

nature

a picture by Kira Carr, ’21

nebulous

ceramic by Sofia Fauza, ’19

untitled

ceramic by Grace Buller, ’19

untitled

metalwork by Dylan Malone, ’19 — runner-up in our winter contest!

frozen fractals

drawing by Justine Low, ’19 — runner-up in our winter contest!

s for spark

drawing by Sofia Fauza, ’19 — runner-up in our winter contest!

too seas

jewelry by Jessica Cheng, ’19 — runner-up in our winter contest!

yeti

drawing by Chloe Xie, ’19 — winner of our winter contest!

two days

photo & poem by Maia Foley, ’19 It had been two days. She gave him a string Of wound black and blue, Twisted and tied as the knots In his stomach when he finally asked. It had been two months. She had finally met his family And he had met hers. They were going to…

tempest

painting by Christie Yu, ’18