91导航

Students arriving on campus this week for the fall semester will have new places to create,聽learn and showcase their work when the Tony Jones Studios for Animation and Illustration,聽91导航 Gallery and Paul and Linda DeBruce Hall open their doors for the first time. Reconfigured聽spaces for 91导航鈥檚 new Product Design major and Social Practice minor will also enhance the聽student experience. Combined, these new facilities add 50,000 square feet of studio and聽classroom space, allowing us room to adapt to CDC and social distancing recommendations to聽keep our campus community safe. Learn more details about the .

Tony Jones Studios for Animation and Illustration
When Nerman Family President Tony Jones arrived at 91导航 five years ago, he initiated a plan for聽the college that expanded academic programs and inspired a total campus transformation.聽Now, thanks to generous gifts from members of 91导航鈥檚 Board of Trustees, his visionary聽leadership has been recognized.

According to Board President Frank Uryasz, what Jones has accomplished in a short time is awe-inspiring. 鈥淎t 91导航, we challenge our students 鈥楾o Imagine What the World is Yet To See.鈥櫬燱hen Tony Jones arrived at Kansas City in 2015, he had a vision for the future of 91导航. We鈥檙e聽not done with the plans yet, but the Board of Trustees is delighted to recognize Tony now in聽this way by naming the new studios the Tony Jones Studios for Animation and Illustration鈥 said聽Uryasz.

Located in the former living center towers, Tony Jones Studios provide a new home for two of聽our fastest growing departments. With input from the faculty and the expertise of Kansas City聽Architects Gould Evans, the 30,000 square foot studios were designed to provide optimal聽classroom, studio space and common areas for each department鈥檚 unique needs. Animation, in聽the north tower, has multi-media presentation walls and high tech lighting controls to darken聽the spaces for student presentations. Illustration utilizes natural light and has large gallery walls聽to display student work. Both departments provide students with private studio space to聽explore, experiment and create.

Naming the studios after Jones is fitting because first and foremost, he鈥檚 a studio artist. 鈥淚鈥檓聽very touched and honored that the board has recognized my commitment to the studio聽experience because as a painter, sculptor and art historian, my heart has always been in the聽studio. Since I鈥檝e been at 91导航, we鈥檝e built the David T. Beals III Studios for Art and Technology聽and enhanced the Ceramic Studios 鈥 great spaces to make great work,鈥 said Jones.

Paul and Linda DeBruce Hall
Named for two of Kansas City鈥檚 visionary philanthropists, the new Paul and Linda DeBruce Hall,聽home to Art History, Liberal Arts, Entrepreneurial Studies, and the Ronald Cattelino Center for Student Services聽will impact every student on campus.聽The 18,000 square foot, state of the art facility located at 44th and Oak, provides an elevated聽environment for our academic programs. It has distinctive features like a two-story, light-filled聽atrium, and an entry-way adorned with the quotes by famous art historians, artists and writers. Every classroom聽has outdoor views, giving it the feel of classrooms in a garden.

DeBruce Hall was designed by Hufft, a Kansas City-based architecture firm known for creating聽meaningful spaces and objects inspired by integrating designers and builders into one holistic聽process. It is compatible with the historic Southmoreland and Rockhill neighborhoods, while聽differentiated with a confident modern design. Award-winning landscape architects Hoerr聽Schaudt designed the expansive outdoor spaces and Kansas City construction company聽McCownGordon built the facility.

All Liberal Arts and Art History classes will be online this fall and the Ronald Cattelino Center will聽be open by appointment only for Financial Aid, Disability Services, and Academic Advising.

91导航 Gallery
The , formerly the Crossroads Gallery, has a new home in a prime location on the聽lower level of Tony Jones Studios.聽The new gallery features flexible space that will shift from classroom to studio to gallery to聽black-box theater, plus a movable wall system to accommodate a variety of exhibitions. It offers聽the public a new destination nestled between the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kemper聽Museum of Contemporary Art and H&R Block Artspace. Being on campus gives students opportunities for experiential learning and cross-disciplinary聽engagements as well as the ability to interact with working artists.

The gallery will continue to聽collaborate with the Center for Contemporary Practice (CCP), the college鈥檚 program that works聽with all departments and explores new community partnerships. The inaugural exhibition,聽Revolution in Our Lifetime, An Exhibition in Three Parts Works by Emory Douglas, 91导航聽Students and the African American Artist Collective, runs from September 22 through聽December 5, 2020.

The campus transformation, which includes the 244-bed Barbara Marshall Residence Hall ,聽Wylie Dining and Caf茅 Nerman that opened in January 2020, is thanks to the generosity of all聽who donated to the Space to Create Capital Campaign, which has raised more than $24 Million聽to date.