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    First American Art Magazine
    Home»Web Content»Blog»Idyllwild Arts to Increase American Indian Enrollment

    Idyllwild Arts to Increase American Indian Enrollment

    0
    By FAAM Staff on October 30, 2019 Blog, Web Content

    Renowned Arts School to Increase Enrollment of American Indian Students

    Idyllwild Arts Academy and Summer Program to Offer Full Scholarships for Native Students

    Tatiana Deschenie
    Tatiana Deschenie (Diné), Idyllwild class of 2009

    Idyllwild, CA – Southern California’s world-class arts high school and celebrated summer program is offering grant-funded full scholarships to American Indians eager to excel in the arts.

    Idyllwild Arts Academy and Summer Program sits on a forested mountain campus two hours inland from Los Angeles, on land of historical—and current—importance to the Qawishpa Cahuillangnah (Cahuilla Band of Indians) and all nine sovereign bands of Cahuilla people who have stewarded the land throughout the generations and continue to steward it for future generations.

    Greg Ballenger
    Greg Ballenger (Diné), at right, Idyllwild class of 2014

    The Academy and Summer Program intends to express its dedication to American Indian art by increasing its American Indian enrollment. Full scholarships are available to artistically talented and ambitious American Indians, who will enjoy not only outstanding teachers and a beautiful natural environment, but what the Cahuilla mother of a current Academy student calls “the freedom to be themselves and not just follow pop-culture norms learned from the media.”

    The Cahuilla mother is Terria Smith, editor of the print magazine, News from Native California, who adds, “At Idyllwild, you don’t see the cliques that you see in public high schools, and Idyllwild students are so much more self-assured and comfortable with themselves than students in public high schools are.”

    Randy Plummer
    Randy Plummer (Sisseton-Wahpeton), jazz saxophonist

    Because the self-confidence encouraged by the Idyllwild Arts community enables students to focus on education, an Academy graduate like Greg Ballenger (Class of 2014), Diné of the Navajo Nation, has been able to shine at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, as well as in an internship with Walt Disney Imagineering, a group exhibit in England, and additional studies in Italy.

    Besides Visual Arts, which Greg Ballenger studied, the Idyllwild Arts faculty of working professional artists teaches students in the specializations of Music, Theatre, Dance, Fashion Design, Film & Digital Media, Creative Writing, and Interdisciplinary Arts.

    And although the Summer Program is arts-only, the high school, Idyllwild Arts Academy, also teaches a challenging academics curriculum, making it a true college-preparatory school.

    Please contact Tara Sechrest, email or (951) 659-2171 x2345, about scholarships for Idyllwild Arts Academy or Sharon Sabenorio (email or (951) 659-2171 x2367) about scholarships for the Idyllwild Arts Summer Program.

    About Idyllwild Arts Academy and Summer Program

    The forested 205-acre Idyllwild Arts campus sits two hours inland from Los Angeles and an hour and one refreshing mile above Palm Springs. The campus hosts Idyllwild Arts Academy, where talented high school students from around the world specialize in their chosen arts disciplines while studying challenging college-prep academics, and the Idyllwild Arts Summer Program, offering immersive workshops in every arts discipline to people of all ages and skill levels. Both the Academy and the Summer Program accomplish the Idyllwild Arts mission of changing lives through the transformative power of art.

    • Idyllwild Arts
    • Idyllwild Summer Program

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