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Sculpture Faculty & Administrators within the Department of Three-Dimensional Arts (3D Arts).

MassArt Brings the Creative Process to Teens and Tweens at Public Libraries

A person in a brown dress stands on a platform, operating a large industrial machine in an outdoor setting surrounded by metal structures and bricks. The scene suggests a hands-on, mechanical activity.

A free Summer Art Workshop Series at three different libraries came about through a collaboration between MassArt and the state library board, and serves as a pilot for an expanding collaboration.

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Successful summer programs serve as a pilot for an expanding collaboration

Written by Jen Roy

All 50 slots for a MassArt-led workshop at the Woburn Public Library had been filled during pre-registration. But on the day of the event, when passers-by saw teens and tweens creating their own bas-reliefs with the help of 3D faculty member Marjee-Anne Levine, they wanted in. “As I got there and saw that the whole front lawn was filled with teens — that was amazing,” says Maureen Amyot, Director of the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners

It was all part of a free Summer Art Workshop Series at three different libraries that came about through a collaboration between MassArt and the state library board. The series was sponsored, in part, with funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Sciences.

At the Woburn Library, area youth spent the afternoon making carved designs that Levine and 14 MassArt students, all members of the College’s Iron Corps, then poured melted aluminum into so the participants could come away with their own one-of-a-kind creations once the metal hardened. MassArt Program Coordinator of Student Engagement John Intoppa was there, too, as was Holly Kelly (BFA ‘13), who teaches classes in Foundations. 

At the Salisbury Public library, Comic Arts instructor LJ Baptiste taught youth how to make four-panel comic strips. And at the Charlotte and William Bloomberg Medford Public Library, Fashion Design Chair and Professor Jennifer Varekamp led an interactive project where each participant contributed their own creative ideas while learning how to work toward a more sustainable future. With sewing machines supplied by MassArt, each participant also made their own tote bags out of used sails. The sewing machines were left behind for future use by the library’s teen program.

Fully 94 percent of participants responding to a questionnaire said they’d like to see more MassArt offerings at their library. “It gave kids an opportunity to ask questions about careers in the arts that they may not have had before,” says Woburn Library Director Hermayne Gordon.

Adds Amyot, “You know the impact the arts have on kids, especially around mental health. There’s been a lot of research since COVID about mental health issues kids are having and how the arts can help with that. This is a fantastic way to dovetail with that research and really help out teens.” She comments that she was glad to see teen boys show up as well as girls “because they are a very difficult group for libraries to reach.”

The Summer Art Workshops were so successful that the library board is thinking of them as a pilot program and hopes to collaborate with MassArt faculty and students to expand to more libraries next summer. “I’ve already heard from 20 libraries,” says the board’s Communications Director, Celeste Bruno. They want to know: “‘How do we get to do this?’ We’re at the beginning of something really exciting,” she comments.

Levine attests to the workshops’ value. The kids “weren’t running around and pretending to play sword fight,” she says. “They were really focused and engaged and said things like, ‘I didn’t think I liked art. This is so different.’” She isn’t surprised. When young people have any access to art, she relates, “it’s pretty limited and often not-three dimensional. But with this,” she notes, “you’re using a different part of your brain. It’s more gritty, and it’s magic. You’re melting metal. You never know who’s college bound and who might stumble on this. It can be a door that gets blown wide open for some kids.”

The advantages of the workshops weren’t limited to the attendees. Levine says it’s “equally important to get our students out engaging the community, to use the knowledge and skill base they’ve been developing at school. How cool if you’re a sophomore or junior — it’s a really empowering thing to help run this workshop. So from both sides, there’s so much benefit.”

Says Bruno, “A large part of the success is that MassArt is one of the best art schools in the country. People recognize that name. It really means something to them.”

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MassArt Collaborates with Public Libraries to Bring the Power and Possibilities of Creating Art to the Commonwealth’s Youth

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  • Sculpture
  • Visual Storytelling and Comic Arts

Summer program connects MassArt faculty and students with children and teens for free Summer Art Workshop Series


Where better for children to learn how to make four-panel comic strips than in a public library? MassArt Comic Arts Instructor
LJ Baptise will be making sure that happens at the Salisbury Public Library north of Boston on Monday, July 29, from 1:00  to 2:30 PM. It’s part of the Summer Workshop Series, a collaboration between the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners. The aim is to increase access to art education over the summer.

MassArt faculty and student ambassadors are leading the workshops, giving children and teens an opportunity to learn about the creative process and explore art as a possible career path.

“As a public college, making an art and design education accessible to all across the Commonwealth and beyond is at the heart of our mission,” says President Mary K. Grant. “We’re excited to see how this program may spark a new interest in art and design.”

Previous workshops this summer included a session led at the Charlotte and William Bloomberg Medford Public Library by our Fashion Design Chair and Professor Jennifer Varekamp, who gave youth insights into sustainable fashion and led an interactive project where each participant contributed their own creative ideas while learning how to work toward a more sustainable future.

At the Woburn Public Library, Fine Arts 3D faculty member Marjee-Anne Levine, along with MassArt student ambassadors, helped kids carve their own designs into scratch blocks –  pre-formed molds made of resin-bonded sand. From there they melted aluminum on site, poured it into the blocks, and watched it solidify. Each participant walked away with their own custom cast aluminum art.

The Summer Art Workshop series is sponsored, in part, with funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Sciences.

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Ruth is a thinker; Emily snores. Meet the longtime elephant ‘roommates’ at New Bedford zoo.

  • MassArt in the Media
  • 3D Arts
  • Sculpture

Leave it to MassArt students to bring a little environmental enrichment to two Asian elephants who live at New Bedford’s Buttonwood Park Zoo. In early May, a group of students from MassArt’s “Toys for Elephants” class made a toy with treats stuffed inside for the pachyderms and, by all accounts, says The Boston Globe, the gentle giants really enjoy playing with it.

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Marc Holland and the transformative power of a MassArt education

Marc Holland standing in front of an artwork.

Marc Holland (BFA ’99), director of MassArt’s Studio Foundation Program, says that as a result of a professor’s guidance, he switched gears — and uses that experience to keep front of mind that the best teaching lets students know they can impact the world in unexpected ways.

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Written by Jen Roy

When Marc Holland, sculptor and director of MassArt’s Studio Foundation Program, enrolled at MassArt in 1995, he thought he was embarking on a journey that would lead to teaching university-level photography. But he didn’t understand just how transformational his MassArt journey would be. 

“I knew when I got to MassArt that it was my place—everything felt right about it,” he said. “At 30 years old, I was married, I knew my direction in life. I knew I wanted to teach no matter what, and I thought photography was the thing.”

But that plan shifted when Marc took a woodworking class in honor of his late father. Three weeks into the course, his professor, Rick Brown said something that set his education on a new trajectory. 

“He asked me ‘You’ve been thinking with your hands before your head your whole life, haven’t you?’” Marc recalls. “He said ‘If you can put something in your hands first, instead of trying to think through it first, it makes a whole lot more sense, doesn’t it?’ And he was right. I declared a double major that afternoon. And I fell in love with all things 3D.” 

After finishing his MassArt education with dual degrees in sculpture and photography, Marc went on to complete graduate programs in sculpture and visual art. When he returned to MassArt to teach his first class as an adjunct in 2003, Rick Brown, the woodworking professor who changed the course of his education, offered Marc some teaching advice that’s stayed with him. 

“He told me the hardest thing is that we’re always teaching for 10 years from now—the things you really want students to know, in their heads and in their hearts, take 10 years to sink in,” Marc says. “There are things like cutting, sure, that stick in the moment—but the things you’re teaching them about themselves, you have to have faith that they will understand, in time.” Marc says that hearing from past students about those moments when everything clicks into place is one of the most rewarding aspects of his job.

Another thing he loves about teaching is helping students understand how the skills they gain at MassArt lead to limitless possibilities in terms of the impact they can have on the world—sometimes in the most unexpected ways.

From finding his path in life to helping his students flourish as they find their own, Marc credits MassArt as the institution and community that makes incredible things possible. “I’m very, very proud to teach at MassArt, very proud of our students and who we are as a school. I’m proud that we’re a public institution. MassArt is the best deal in the United States, by far. There’s no place like it.”

When you graduate from MassArt as a sculptor, you’re not just a sculptor. You’re a welder, a woodworker, you can do mold-making and casting. Our graduates work as cabinet makers, as framers. They build houses and start companies. You have all these amazing skills, and you can do anything you want to make a living. Marc Holland Department Chair, Studio Foundation & ’00 BFA
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Artist, MassArt trustee, and innovation consultant Kelly Sherman wields her creativity and curiosity to find the next big idea in organizational strategy.

Kelly Sherman (’02 BFA), says MassArt schooled her not just in creativity but also in problem solving, discipline, and strategy.

The Organized Artist

Written by Tony Pham

People who wind up at art school often feel they want to make something that doesn’t yet exist. That’s how it was for me. Sometimes I feel like a kind of seer. The challenge is to understand what I’m seeing. The art studio is especially designed for this, as is art school. It’s full of others who are similar and educators who understand and nurture us. It’s a place to learn skills and techniques but that’s not really the point. Art school helps you explore your inner itch and challenge yourself to broaden your view. Ultimately it helps you make sense of what to do with the talent or trait that seems to set you apart from others.

I chose to major in sculpture for the freedom it offered. The opportunity to experiment with different materials led me to blow glass, weld metal, carve wood, spin yarn, and make films. Time outside of class was just as rich. I joined my English teacher’s neighborhood poetry group. I worked with professional artists and curators in the galleries. I swapped books with my physics teacher. I actually enjoyed physics! Every day felt exciting and fun. My time at MassArt was full of play, expansion, and creative growth. I felt empowered and surrounded by people who had faith in me.

My time at MassArt was full of play, expansion, and creative growth. I felt empowered and surrounded by people who had faith in me. Kelly Sherman

An Avenue For Innovation

Determined to pursue a fine art career, I had a gallery job lined up after I graduated. I was devoted to my artwork in my off hours. It served as a tool to indulge my curiosity. I used it to learn about myself as well as others, who I often interviewed. I would tell their stories and mine in unconventional ways, using graphs or architectural drawings. 

After winning the Foster Prize from the Institute of Contemporary Art, I was invited to speak at the design and innovation consultancy EPAM Continuum. Their strategists insisted their process was similar to mine but for business purposes. It led to a three-month internship and then five years as a strategist. I learned about consumer research, business, and design. My team included engineers, designers, and MBAs and we worked for Fortune 500 companies like Penske and American Express. I interviewed people everywhere, as far as India and China. We came up with ideas for new products and services and business models. It was a second education in a place that valued my identity as an artist. 

Eventually, I left to work with nonprofit organizations and taught the innovation skills I had learned. Over time I developed my own consulting practice delivering organizational strategy. I see strategic planning as a form of innovation. I work with others to imagine something that doesn’t yet exist, like a blank canvas for a different and better future.

Does my current work use the skills I honed at MassArt? Absolutely. It’s grounded in creativity, problem-solving, discipline, and curiosity. Ultimately curiosity is my greatest strength. I’m open to what others may find uncomfortable or weird. There’s little I can’t handle—I went to art school. MassArt celebrated this intrinsic need to explore and gave me the confidence to trust wherever that might lead me.

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Lindsay and Alex Small-Butera dressed in formal clothing on the red carpet at the 2024 Emmy Awards.

Sculpture

Iron Corps

MassArt’s Iron Corps is a student-run group dedicated to the art and practice of casting iron.

Bringing the tradition of iron casting to the MassArt community, our Iron Corps also has a rich history of art-making techniques. Learning under a world-renowned metal caster, we carry on historic traditions and teach any interested person the step-by-step of casting iron. As a self-sustaining collective, Iron Corps students attend the biennial National Conference on Contemporary Cast Iron Art at Sloss Furnace in Birmingham, Alabama, and are linked to the wider national and international community of iron casters.

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Sculpture

Minor

Obtain a minor in Fine Arts 3D with a Sculpture concentration by completing 18 credits in this area of study.

The 3D Minor allows for concentrations in Ceramics, Fibers, Glass, Jewelry & Metalsmithing, or Sculpture through the completion of 6 courses/18 credits.

For more details on specific minor concentration requirements, please contact the Fine Arts 3D Department.

3D Arts Minor Learning Outcomes

Students who complete the 3D minor program are expected to be able to demonstrate the following learning outcomes.

Learning outcomes for the 3D minor, under the scope of the FA3D department mission, are as follows:

  • Develop skill and understanding of working with materials and processes in 3D studio classes.
  • Cross-disciplinary awareness, expanding to / from their primary area of study.
  • Working knowledge of art, craft, and design principles.
  • Introduction to contemporary topics, cross-cultural issues, and artists working in the field.
  • Implement healthy working habits, self-discipline, and best practices.
  • Cooperative classroom/studio experience, fostering collaboration among peers.

Sculpture

BFA

As a Sculpture BFA student, you’ll hone your creative practice in whatever medium – or mediums – you choose.

Sculpture students have the opportunity to work with a wide range of materials, including wood, different types of metals, clay, plaster, mixed media, glass, fiber, stone, and video. In foundational classes and advanced seminars, students learn a wide variety of sculptural processes, including bronze and aluminum casting, mold making, chasing, cold fabrication, and wood carving. Emphasis is on personal expression and technical proficiency.

Courses cover topics such as anatomy, figure modeling, foundry, mold making, carving, woodworking, welding, kinetic art, digital 2D to 3D processes, portraiture, and installation. Students learn sculptural technique as well as conceptual concerns related to sculpture. Classes also explore the role of art in community, the history of sculpture, presentation and site possibilities, and idea development.

 

Junior and Senior major studios offer individual mentor time with faculty, as well as group critiques with a team of faculty and guest critics. Sculpture faculty are working artists who bring a diverse array of approaches to making sculpture. By graduation, students are expected to have developed a coherent body of work based on sophisticated techniques and a maturing sense of aesthetic direction. 

 

Alumni Success

Hands-on experience with tools and processes prepare our students to be valuable employees in a host of industries: high-end architectural metalworking; museum exhibition construction; fine artists and craftspeople; and cabinetry and furniture making, to name just a few. Overall, MassArt’s Sculpture program offers a rigorous and enriching education in sculpture, providing students with the knowledge, skills, and creative vision to pursue their artistic aspirations.

BFA Learning Outcomes

Students who complete the Sculpture BFA program are expected to be able to demonstrate the following learning outcomes.

  • Communication Skills (written & verbal)
  • Studio Practice (material safety, craftsmanship, studio habits, personal research, design principles, community & collaboration)
  • History of the Field (traditional, historical, contemporary)
  • Connection of the field and art to the world and society Agency (risk-taking, personal vocabulary)
  • Analyze and “Read” works of art (able to read and analyze objects in the world, including their own art)
  • Cultural Humility (not privileging and one culture or POV)

Sculpture

Sculpture

Sculpture students experiment with three-dimensional artistic expressions through a variety of materials and techniques.

At MassArt, Sculpture students have limitless opportunities to explore the wide-ranging world of sculptural practice. Students engage with a vast array of materials and processes available across the Fine Arts Department: from fiber to iron, clay to bronze, wood to mold making, figure modeling to performance, and more. We have a deep commitment to craft, hands-on material engagement, and open ended exploration.

MassArt also offers an MFA in Studio Arts, in which students can choose to concentrate in Sculpture. Our full-time, two-year (60-credit) MFA Studio Arts program encourages students to experiment and explore, while refining the technical and conceptual strategies in their work.

There are no limits to what a student can investigate in Sculpture. Our students engage in object-making practices that transcend the boundaries of fine art, craft, and design
Studios & Iron Corps Meeting space
Sculpture Shops & Resources

Students in our Sculpture and Fine Arts programs have access to MassArt’s metal shop, clay figure studio, plaster studio, and woodshop.

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A person wearing protective gear operates a tall furnace with bright flames shooting upwards. The scene is set outdoors in an urban area, with buildings visible in the background.
Iron Corps

MassArt’s Iron Corps is a student-run group dedicated to the art and practice of casting iron, a unique and rigorous process.

Learn More
18 UNIQUE UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS. A WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY.
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