Academics

Scene at Abington: Sculpture students make over cars

Abington sculpture students made over cars, creating body kits from corrugated cardboard. Credit: Jaime AlvarezAll Rights Reserved.

Penn State Abington faculty place a premium on nurturing creative thinking or, as that dreaded cliche urges, thinking outside of the box. Art lecturer H. John Thompson assigned his introduction to sculpture class to think with the box and repurpose it. 

Abington art students show off their final sculpture project.  Credit: Jaime AlvarezAll Rights Reserved.

Students worked in teams, creating body kits for vehicles out of corrugated cardboard. For the final, they attached the pieces and paraded around the Woodland parking lot to the tune of the 1975 classic "Low Rider."

A parade of spruced up faculty rides moves through the Woodland Building parking lot. Credit: Jaime AlvarezAll Rights Reserved.

Thompson organized the parade with a little help from artist Jaime Alvarez, who was closing the installation "Farthest From Earth" in the campus art gallery that day. 

See you in January. Credit: Jaime AlvarezAll Rights Reserved.

Thompson manages many aspects of the art program at Abington including directing the new gallery and supervising the wood shop. His drawing and sculpture classes built a 10-foot replica of the historic warship La Gloire, and it set sail across the campus pond.

One student sculptor painstakingly cut out the Penn State athletics mark. Credit: Jaime AlvarezAll Rights Reserved.

Last Updated December 16, 2015

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