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HomeMOREARTSCreative Horizons: K-12 Teachers Explore Art at ATU's Windgate Summer Launch

Creative Horizons: K-12 Teachers Explore Art at ATU’s Windgate Summer Launch


Participants in the 2025 Windgate Summer Art Launch at Arkansas Tech University gathered for a group photograph. Photo by Chandler Flenory.

RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. — Forty-eight educators from the elementary, middle school, junior high and high school levels attended the 2025 Windgate Summer Art Launch for Arkansas Educators June 9-13 at Arkansas Tech University in Russellville.

Teachers from the schools at Atkins, Bentonville, Bergman, Bigelow, Booneville, Caddo Hills, Clarksville, Conway, Cutter-Morning Star, Danville, Dardanelle, Dover, Fordyce, Heber Springs, Hector, Highland, Horatio, LISA Academy Springdale, Little Rock, Magazine, Morrilton, Mulberry-Pleasant View, Ozark, Pottsville, Pulaski County Special School District, Quitman, Russellville, Stuttgart, Subiaco Academy, Texarkana and Wonderview participated in the workshops.

The art teachers received instruction in creating repeating pattern designs for fabrics and wallpaper, mixed media perspective drawings, needle felting, artworks with a new synthetic polymer known as YUPO, image transfers, mixed media bookmaking, ceramics and personal sketchbooks made of recycled paper.

Dr. Lynnette Gilbert, ATU associate professor of art education, served as director for the 2025 Windgate Summer Art Launch for Arkansas Educators.

Instructors included Soyoon Ahn, visiting instructor of art at ATU; Jocelyn Alvey, art teacher at Dover Middle School; Ella Dover, art education student at ATU; Margo Duvall, visiting professor of art at the University of the Ozarks; Ashley Kinsey, adjunct instructor of art at ATU and the University of the Ozarks; Brent J. Rowley, an artist represented by Boswell Mourot Fine Art in Little Rock; and Kasten Searles, head of the ATU Department of Art and professor of art.

The final day of the program featured a virtual lecture by guest speaker Dr. Maria Knuckley Robinson, director of studio art and pre-art therapy at Salem College (N.C.).

Program participants submitted their original works of art for inclusion in a virtual exhibit.

The professional development program, which was founded in 2018, is made possible through a grant from the Windgate Foundation. Participants earn up to 30 hours of professional development from the Arkansas Department of Education.

Learn more about the ATU Department of Art at www.atu.edu/humanities/art.



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