Acknowledging the revisit to a known theme: the arts are completely decentralized at this school. There's no Arts Center, because visual arts are in Slocumb Hall, photography is in Shirley; chorus is in the chapel; jewelry and metalshop are below the boatshop; woodshop is above. There's beauty in geometry.
New Hampshire Friends of the Arts annual high school competition receives hundreds of entries, and it a great honor to be "accepted". CoCo Loehr, pictured building a canoe in the boathouse, was accepted in photography.
Caroline Deans has been painting and drawing forever, and the acceptance of her work was triumphant, but not surprising. More than 200 students entered, and 90 were accepted. Here she stands in front of her drawing, entitled "Lace."
Another example of the ubiquity of art: Spanish 3 visited the greatest single piece of Latin-American art in the United States, José Clemente Orozco's The Epic of American Civilization at Dartmouth's Baker Library this afternoon. Tyler takes notes.
In weaving, real men, like Pete, can fashion a belt out of warp that he has dyed, himself.
Thanks to contributing photographers Lee Carvalho, Robin Asbury and Chris Kontoes.
Oh, there's pond hockey!