Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Residential Public

Director
  
Douglas Woods

Enrollment
  
about 200

Founded
  
1973

Established
  
1973

Grades
  
11th and 12th

Campus
  
Mercyhurst College

Motto
  
Latin: Carpe diem; (Seize the Day)

Ez gon b smoove pennsylvania governor s school for the arts big band 2007


The Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts (PGSA) was one of the Pennsylvania Governor's Schools of Excellence, a group of five-week summer academies for gifted high school students in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The school was hosted each summer by Mercyhurst College. PGSA was defunded by Pennsylvania's 2009–2010 state budget.

Contents

Overview

Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts was established earliest among eight such Governor's schools. Like other Pennsylvania Governor's Schools of Excellence, PGSA operated on a state-funded, scholarship basis. Upon its inception in 1973, PGSA was hosted at Bucknell University in Lewisburg under the direction of Arthur Gatty, who led the program until 1988. In 1990, the program was relocated to Mercyhurst College in Erie. The most recent program director was Douglas Woods, an English teacher in the Butler Area school district. Only residents of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania were permitted to participate in the program. Additionally, only applicants rising to 11th or 12th grades of high school were considered. Students were required to live in dormitories for the full five weeks of the program. Admission into the program was extremely competitive—annually, approximately 2000 students competed through a rigorous three-step process, for 200 spots in the program. Similar to a college experience, students took various classes associated with a "major" in one of five art areas: creative writing, dance, music, theater, or visual arts. In addition to these classes, students selected an elective class in an art area other than their primary. Collaboration and multifaceted projects were encouraged and common. Alongside classes, nightly performances and gallery shows combined with a broad range of social activities and special events to create a unique experience similar to that of an artists' colony.

Mr. Woods often emphasized that the goals of PGSA were to create an environment where gifted students could learn and grow as artists, audience members, and advocates for the Arts. He adopted Mercyhurst's motto, Carpe diem, or Seize the Day, as a motto for the summer program.

Creative Writing

  • Fiction taught by Dave Griffith
  • Poetry taught by Brandon Som
  • Dance

  • Ballet
  • Jazz
  • Modern
  • Music

  • Composition
  • Instrumental Performance
  • Woodwinds (Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Saxophone)
  • Piano
  • Strings (Violin, Viola, Cello, Double Bass)
  • Percussion
  • Brass (Horn, Trumpet, Trombone, Tuba)
  • Guitar
  • Vocal Performance
  • Theater

  • Performance Theater
  • Technical Theater
  • Visual Arts

  • Architectural Design
  • Ceramics
  • Graphic Design Taught by Dennis Childers
  • Painting
  • Photography Taught by Terry Wild
  • Sculpture
  • Electives

  • Creative Writing
  • Dance
  • Film Criticism
  • Music
  • Musical Theater
  • Theater
  • Visual Arts
  • Yoga
  • Defunding

    Governor Ed Rendell's 2009–2010 budget proposed cutting funding for all the schools in the PGSE program, including PGSA. The program was discontinued in 2009, after 36 years of operation.

    Notable Alumni

  • Kevin Bacon ('74)
  • Melinda Wagner (Composer) ('74)
  • Richard O'Donnell (playwright) ('74)
  • Camillia Sanes (Monet) ('75)
  • Aaron Jay Kernis ('75)
  • Megan Gallagher ('76)
  • Gary Schocker ('76)
  • Boris Bally ('77)
  • Daniel Roebuck ('79)
  • Alice Sebold ('79)
  • Ari Hoenig ('90)
  • Steven Burns ('91)
  • Chris Ovdiyenko ('91)
  • Meagan Miller ('91)
  • Gillian Jacobs ('99)
  • Jessica Dickey ('96)
  • Andy Mientus ('04)
  • Zachary Quinto ('94)
  • Neal Dodson ('94)
  • Stephen Karam ('97)
  • References

    Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts Wikipedia