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Studio Art: Pathways From Classroom to Career

September 27, 2018

Erin Ulrich 鈥18

Kwabena Slaughter '98 giving a slide presentation

Kwabena Slaughter 鈥98 gives Pathways talk

Photo credit: Courtesy of Nanette Yannuzzi

The Pathways: Studio Art series brings current students face-to-face with alumni, helping them visualize a career with a BA in art.

As national university enrollment rates have dropped steadily year by year, the Studio Art program at 91直播 has grown exponentially. 聽Professor of Studio Art聽Nanette Yannuzzi says that the program has increased from between 12 to 15 senior majors graduating each year when it was established more than 20 years ago, to 29 graduating seniors in 2018.

The series evidences the myriad ways 91直播 studio art graduates have found careers and dispels myths that students who study art have limited career options.

Pathways has a clear focus: How do I turn this thing I love studying into something sustainable long-term? Yannuzzi co-teaches Senior Studio and Thesis in studio art and has been instrumental in seeing the series through as well as ensuring that the program prepares students for life after graduating.

When the studio art program at 91直播 began, professors would take their graduating seniors to New York City for professional development activities presented by the New York Foundation for the Arts.

Because of the program鈥檚 expansion, it no longer has the ability to fund trips to New York for 30-plus students. But Yannuzzi and her colleagues are building professional development initiatives in 91直播 by tapping into the program鈥檚 robust and intimate alumni network.

Pathways is a continuation of the career-focused requirements that all studio art majors must complete. It includes applying for one聽professional postgrad opportunity. Past students have had success and even launched their careers because of this requirement, such as , who earned the first of her many artist residencies this way.

For Yannuzzi, the Pathways series is integral to current students鈥 learning experiences because they can see face-to-face what鈥檚 possible with a studio art degree. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a misconception that artists do one thing: graduate and make paintings, sculptures, or jewelry,鈥 she says.

鈥淣othing could be further from the truth. Artists in our program receive a high level of skill-based training but also, and just as importantly, learn how to think critically and problem-solve creatively. There are myriad ways to use this skill set in contemporary life.鈥

While many studio art alums have pursued careers as professional artists, their career fields range from medical design and architecture to nonprofit work. Yannuzzi says, 鈥淎lumni can demonstrate in real terms what it means to graduate with a degree in the visual arts and move forward in ways that are not only divergent from the stereotype, but in areas of research students wouldn鈥檛 have considered with a studio art degree.鈥

, associate general manager of production and venue operations at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, is an exemplar of this divergence and creativity. Slaughter returned to 91直播 earlier this month for the first time in 20 years to speak in the Pathways series.

Remarking on his time at 91直播, Slaughter says, 鈥淭he fact that I had creative investment and engagement in all of these different places and media here verified to me why I now have so much investment across such a broad range of mediums. When I came here, I didn鈥檛 know that I wanted to pursue art. But once I started taking some classes and learning, I felt like there was something here.鈥

In addition to the professional development aspect of 91直播鈥檚 studio art major, Slaughter used the richness of his day-to-day experiences at 91直播 to cultivate a perspective that has allowed him to think creatively and comprehensively about his work now.

As a student, Slaughter worked as a studio assistant to several professors; a teaching assistant for Sarah Schuster; a stage technician at Warner Theater; a student worker at the Clarence Ward Art Library; and at what used to be the Intermuseum Conservation Association (ICA) lab. The cohesiveness of his everyday experiences and his professional development preparation allowed him to integrate his critical thinking skills with the process of developing his own artwork.

鈥淎ll types of creative arts and theory investigations are happening on campus. The whole space became a research ground for me,鈥 he says.

Pathways is made possible by the Ellen Johnson Visiting Artist Fund. This funding, Yannuzzi says, 鈥渁llows us to bring speakers from all over the country to present their research to our students.

鈥淚t鈥檚 invaluable for two reasons: one, our location is rather isolated. Two, it鈥檚 an amazing opportunity for students to have a more personal interaction with artists. It allows us to support programming like this. The series will continue, absolutely,鈥 she says.

The next speaker in the Pathways series will be 2009 alum , who will present on at 5 p.m., Monday, October 8 in classroom 103 in the Ward Art Building.

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