SA国际传媒 art history students collaborate with local artist and SA国际传媒 Arts to create dynamic murals on upper campus.
This winter, the road in front of Remsen Bird Hillside Theater was transformed with a vibrant 5,000-square-foot mural, created with generous support from and inspired by her work on Bloomberg Philanthropies鈥 Asphalt Art Initiative. This initiative is a community-led, arts-driven street design program that supports projects designed to improve street safety, enhance public space, and foster community engagement.
Led by artist Andrew Armstrong in collaboration with students from the Art History 295: Curatorial Studies course, the mural highlights the creative use of public space and brings new energy to the entrance of Remsen Bird Hillside Theater.
The mural鈥檚 design, Armstrong says, is 鈥渋nspired by the ideas, subject matter, and forms explored in the SA国际传媒 Arts exhibition, and the corresponding Black Ecologies course taught by the curator of the exhibition, Tiffany Barber. The design depicts both a lush forest floor environment and a murky marshland scape along with their respective flora and fauna.鈥
Students were invited to participate in executing the mural. 鈥淸Painting] the mushrooms felt especially meaningful because I had been surrounded by the 鈥 exhibition at SA国际传媒 Arts. Being able to go from experiencing that theme in the gallery to physically contributing to a mural connected to similar ideas was really powerful,鈥 says La Quay Jerkins 鈥28. 鈥淚t showed me how art at SA国际传媒 can move beyond indoor spaces and become part of everyday campus life.鈥
The College鈥檚 new mural builds upon the success of Boesche Way, a street redesign and public safety project completed in 2024 in memory of the late Arthur G. Coons Professor in the History of Ideas Roger Boesche.