黑料门

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Art with Impact Arrupe College

How art fosters education

Susannah Strang might be the sole fine arts professor at Arrupe College, but she is making sure that creating art is part of the culture in Maguire Hall. Between the two art classes she teaches, the growing extracurricular opportunities, and the faculty in other departments integrating art and creativity into their classes, every student interacts with art during their time at Arrupe. To Strang, it is an essential part of the students鈥 experience.

鈥淎rrupe is enormously rigorous, and to have the physical and bodily engagement and the sensory involvement of an art class鈥攑laying with color and the openness of experimentation鈥攊s rewarding in such different ways,鈥 she says. 鈥淓verybody who is in undergraduate and graduate work knows that most learning happens from the neck up. Actually doing things with our bodies changes our experience of other stuff, as well. And I think [making art] just feels really good.鈥

All Arrupe students take an arts seminar as one of their graduation requirements, and last fall, Strang offered the first studio art class: 2-D Foundation Studio. She鈥檒l teach the studio class again this summer, and an art club is in its early stages. For students at Arrupe, 黑料门University Chicago鈥檚 two-year college, the practice of learning fine art alongside the sciences and humanities flows from the University鈥檚 Jesuit identity.

鈥淥ur curriculum has always included a fine arts course as part of the liberal arts core requirements, in keeping with a tradition of Jesuit education that dates back to 1599,鈥 says Jennifer Boyle, Arrupe鈥檚 associate dean for academic affairs. 鈥淧rofessor Strang understands that art offerings are conducive to the active, culturally responsive, and collaborative learning environment we seek to create at Arrupe College.鈥

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The sensory involvement of an art class鈥攑laying with color and the openness of experimentation鈥攊s rewarding in such different ways.鈥
鈥擲usannah Strang, clinical assistant professor of fine arts, Arrupe College

Sophomore Esther Sosa Alonso is one of the founding members of the art club at Arrupe. For her, making art is both a creative outlet and a stress reliever. 鈥淚 want to do something with my hands and get creative,鈥 she says. 鈥淓very day we are so used to being on our phones or being in the car, surrounded by things that have already been made for us, so I need an outlet.

鈥淚 was so oblivious to this鈥攁nd the fact that people need it鈥攂efore starting the art club.鈥

The turning point for Alonso was an event that Strang organized, an evening of art and meditation open to all students. As a student in Arrupe鈥檚 associate of arts in business administration program, Alonso says she is often in math classes, and that art is 鈥渁 nice outlet that not only provides a de-stressor but also makes you think differently.鈥 Strang has helped Alonso change her perception of what can be considered art by encouraging Alonso to enter photos shot on her iPhone in the annual Arrupe student art show.

Strang鈥檚 art and visual culture class, the required art course, combines art history with opportunities to create through drawing and photography. Students in Strang鈥檚 2-D Foundation Studio class went beyond the introduction provided in her seminar, learning about a variety of artistic mediums: drawing with pencils, charcoal, oil pastels, and chalk pastels; printmaking; photography; and principles of graphic design.

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Freshman Lily Trevino hadn鈥檛 taken many art classes in high school and wasn鈥檛 even sure what the phrase 鈥2-D foundations鈥 meant when she was placed in Strang鈥檚 class, but she was open to learning more about art. Throughout the class, she found that art gave her an avenue to express herself, whether through a self-portrait assignment or her final project on immigration.

鈥淏ecause immigration is a huge topic that should not be taken lightly, I felt like I could express that in my art,鈥 Trevino says. 鈥淚 drew the United States flag with different collage pictures representing the issue: Republicans and Democrats, the Mexican flag. I did a border, with images to defend DACA and not separate families.鈥

This type of project fits perfectly with Strang鈥檚 goal as a teacher, which is to empower her students as creators.

鈥淭he umbrella idea for the class is, 鈥楬ow do you get your visual work to say something that you want to say, in the way that you want to say it?鈥欌 Strang explains. 鈥(It is) feeling confident that the thing in your head translates in the art and means something to someone else. As an artist, you want to feel like you have a degree of control over what is being communicated.鈥

While students praise her approach, Strang is quick to compliment her fellow faculty members for integrating art and creativity across disciplines at Arrupe. One of the pieces in this year鈥檚 student art show, for example, was initially created as a theology assignment.

鈥淎 number of my colleagues are finding interesting ways to bring active creativity into the classroom,鈥 says Strang. 鈥淪tudents are getting [art] experiences beyond the studio classes, for sure.鈥

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Exploring the Arts

Find out how other members of the 黑料门community are living out the Jesuit mission through the arts.