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Estes Park Wool Festival where I saw alpacas, llamas, angora
goats and bunnies, cashmere goats, and
sheep. Everybody at Schacht has been very kind and
helpful. I’ve learned a great amount in the first couple weeks of my
six-week internship.
My art training began when I was about
ten years old and I took my first formal lessons. When I was 13, my
mother and I moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where I continued
my art education, primarily in drawing and painting through middle
and high school. Later, I took a fiber class and immediately felt a
connection with the processes and materials. I knew I wanted to
major in fiber and textiles in college. After attending Portfolio
Day and touring the campus, I decided to attend the Kansas City Art
Institute (KCAI). I was particularly drawn
to the freshman foundation program that all students are required to
complete before entering their chosen departments. Foundations
ensures that all students start from the same point by giving them
an overview of the basics of art training, such as drawing, 3-D
work, composition, and conceptual thinking.

During our sophomore year, we learn the
basics of dyeing and weaving, and attend workshops with visiting
artists. Our junior year consists of workshops that deal with issues
such as installations and clothing construction. During our senior
year, we are pushed to work on our individual projects, using much
of class time for teacher guidance and class critiques. All seniors
are required to give a workshop and a slide presentation of their
work, and to have a solo show.
Besides the main studio classes,
students are required to take liberal arts classes to fulfill art
history, history, philosophy, science, sociology, and literature
credits. Studio electives allow students to learn more or expand on
specific techniques and can be taken in any department. During our
junior and senior years, we begin a series of weekly seminars
in
professional practice. All the aspects of the art world outside of
school are covered, including gallery art, commissions, and taxes.
Students can also attend optional weekly seminars by visiting
artists. Another plus of attending KCAI is its location between the
Kemper Contemporary Art Museum and the Nelson Atkins Art Museum.
Another art perk offered by Kansas City is art gallery openings the
first Friday of every month.
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Heading into my senior year at KCAI, my
mind is racing about what my senior thesis will be, where I will
have my show, and what I’m going to do when I graduate. Currently I
am working with woven felt and structures woven in wool and then
fulled in the washer. I like to push one structure as far as I can
to see how many variations I can come up with. My most recent
discoveries are weave structures with long floats that can be
manipulated into dimensional surfaces.
About the faculty
at Kansas City Art Institute
The KCAI Fiber and
Textiles Department, headed by Jason Pollen, has three full-time
staff members. Jason received his BFA and MA from the City College
of New York. Before he began teaching at KCAI in 1993, he taught at
the Royal College of Art, London, Parsons School of Design, and the
Pratt Institute, NY. Jason is currently the president of the Surface
Design Association that brings the biannual conference to our
campus. This conference provides students an opportunity to
participate and meet artists from around the globe. Professor Pollen
works with dyes on silk to create vibrant, abstract designs that
have sold to such designers as Yves St. Laurent, Oscar de la Renta,
and Perry Ellis.
Pauline Verbeek-Cowart
is the weaving instructor at KCAI. Though native to the Netherlands,
she pursued her education here in the U.S. Pauline received her BFA
from the Maryland Institute and her MFA from the University of
Kansas. Pauline has been teaching at KCAI since 1997; previously she
taught at the University of Kansas. Pauline was named one of the six
top innovative emerging artists in the textile field by the American
Textile History Museum of Massachusetts. She is interested in
jacquard weaving, and when she has the chance, she works on
industrial looms in the U.S., the Netherlands, and Canada. Through
structure, material, image and surface treatments, Pauline’s work is
concerned with the woven surface.
The third
member of our fiber-instructor team is Carolyn Kallenborn. Carolyn
received her BS in textile and apparel design and also her MFA in
textile art from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Before coming
to KCAI in 2001, Carolyn taught at the University of Wisconsin.
Carolyn works with fabric and metal, creating flowing garments and
sculptural pieces. This year she organized the Surface Design
Association Conference at our school. All three instructors have won
numerous awards and have shown their work both nationally and
internationally. |