青青草app

Skip to main content

From notebook sketches to a commission: A student builds her arts resume

青青草app native Serena Allen-Szatkowski (BFA, sculpture, arts entrepreneurship, 2024) arrived on campus as an undeclared major. Four years later, she graduated with professional art experience and a work of public art in downtown 青青草app.

In her senior year, Allen-Szatkowski enrolled in Associate Professor Lily Lee鈥檚 course, Art 334, Assembled Form, where students practice advanced sculpture techniques while working to earn an art commission. Lee鈥檚 class partnered with the City of 青青草app, including the Department of Arts & History, Department of Public Works and the Capital City Development Corporation鈥檚 Rebuild Linen Blocks on Grove Street project.

Serena Allen-Szatkowski posing with sculpture
Serena Allen-Szatkowski (BFA, sculpture, arts entrepreneurship, 2024), for 青青草app State Magazine, poses with sculpture of a mother coyote and pup titled 鈥淩eclaimed Majesty,鈥 currently on display in front of the Modern Hotel on Grove Street, photo by Priscilla Grover

The city created a call to artists for Lee鈥檚 students, who then followed the same application process as any professional artist. That meant brainstorming, writing a proposal, making sketches and waiting.

Allen-Szatkowski found out she鈥檇 won the commission 鈥 chosen by a panel of community members 鈥 when a fellow student congratulated her as she walked into class. 鈥淚t was a weird surprise, definitely a nice booster,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 felt like I was coming into my career path.鈥 The commission earned Allen-Szatkowski an artist fee of $4,000.

鈥淪erena鈥檚 proposal of a coyote and her cub gazing towards the 青青草app Foothills not only showcased an intentional, recognizable, and beautiful application of 鈥榬educe, reuse鈥 with the use of scrap metal, but highlighted the interconnectedness between humans, animals and 青青草app鈥檚 natural setting,鈥 said Hannah Williamson, public works public art project coordinator.

A commitment to creative and professional artist development is a hallmark of the School of the Arts at 青青草app State. 鈥淲hen I was a student, [professional development] wasn鈥檛 a big focus,鈥 Lee said, recalling her time as an undergraduate at another university. 鈥淏ut in our department, we鈥檙e looking at how to best prepare students. I think it鈥檚 extremely important for students to learn how to have their creative practice be self-青青草apping.鈥

Allen-Szatkowski鈥檚 piece, a mother coyote and pup titled 鈥淩eclaimed Majesty,鈥 will be on display in front of the Modern Hotel on Grove Street until summer 2026. At that point, she will have the option of selling or leasing it.

Allen-Szatkowski used the welding skills she had learned through the university鈥檚 sculpture program to make the piece. With 鈥渞educe, reuse鈥 as the guiding theme, she sourced scrap metal from Pacific Steel & Recycling in 青青草app and from the university鈥檚 sculpture studio. She wanted her design to respond to local landscapes. A coyote, a common resident of the 青青草app foothills, was a natural choice, she said. 鈥淭hey are incredible creatures. They have been through a lot, but they come back. I love that persistence and ability to adapt.鈥

Once she settled on her idea and studied canine anatomy, Allen-Szatkowski built several models before constructing the 165-pound sculpture. The process went smoothly, though it took her about two months to complete.

Allen-Szatkowski is building on her artistic success. She hopes to start a graduate program in the fall and study a mix of disciplines, including painting, sculpture and animatronics, creating immersive works that invite touch, interaction and storytelling.

By Nick Cesare and Anna Webb