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Cool sneakers, blinged-out boots, sky-high heels. SVA students’ style starts on their feet.
of the school year we gathered some of SVA’s most stylish to don some of their best threads and accessories and strike a pose (or two) around the beautiful Gramercy neighborhood of our east side campus. All of our models were nominated by their peers for their sensational stand-out looks. From our faculty and chairs to our undergraduates and alumni, we had no trouble finding unique nominees. It makes sense that the creative minds that produce art and design would manifest into fabulous personal style. Some of us present classic lines and opt for a few well-made pieces to work our wardrobe around. Others scour thrift stores or the web for vintage finds. Some fall in love with a designer and form their style around him or her. One may disrupt an all-black urban outfit with a shock of color. Another may choose items that represent something personal about themselves. Whatever their approach, there’s inspiration there for the rest of us.
Describe my style in one word Futuristic
How I mix it up Throwing my pieces on and playing with proportions
Describe my style in a few words Ancestral—a lot of my clothes were handed down from family. I love pieces with history.
Latest trends, must-haves and where to get them
Art students are especially particular about the pens or pencils they use. Every detail matters: weight, circumference, finish, darkness, line weight—and how it just feels in your hand. We invited a group of students to test out colored and graphite pencils; magic markers; gel pens in white, gold, green and lavender glitter, and basic black; felt tips and roller balls. After an hour of serious doodling, some clear favorites emerged.
Zebra Sarasa
MARTIN NGO (BFA Interior Design): I’m comfortable with the retractable pen because I like to ease off the boredom. Clicking the button is good for the fidget factor!
Sakura Gelly Roll (color)
MILLINA SIERRA (BFA Interior Design): The best pens for me are the Gelly Rolls. They don’t skip as often. Something about the way it feels in my hand, the texture of the outside feels good.
Sakura Gelly Roll (white)
SONJA VON MARENSDORFF (BFA Animation): The white one goes on thick and when it dries, it’s really opaque.
ALEXANDRA BARSKY (MFA Visual Narrative): The Gelly Roll white pen has a better color than the Uni-Ball, more opaque and pure white.
Copic Marker
KARIS OH (BFA Computer Art): There’s just something really human about the Copic Marker but it’s hard to control when you’re drawing, it’s sensitive…if you press it a little harder, it gets too thick. But it adds instant style to my drawing and the thickness of your line is always natural and unique.
SHIRA NEISS (BFA Illustration): I’ve used these Copic Markers for a long time, I like the brush stroke that lays down even color. I like the flexibility.
Muji
DINA SAID (BFA Interior Design): I really like the Muji pens, so smooth and fine pointed, great for writing notes and drawing too.
NICOLETTE PISCITELLI (BFA Animation): The Muji pens are really nice and I want 20 of them, they’re really cool.
Sakura Micron
DINA: I use the Micron already, it’s kind of my standard but they wear out really quickly. They give up on me after 2 or 3 weeks.
Uni-Ball (gold)
KARIS: I love the gold Uni-Ball, it’s thick and feels like real gold, sparkly and clear too.
Uni-Ball (white)
SHIRA: This is great; very opaque and dense white. It totally covers black and it flows well.
Koh-I-Noor Progresso
ALEXANDRA: The Progresso all-red one is just amazing, it’s a nice weight that feels deluxe and the texture is good too.
Tombow Homo-Graph Mono
YANGKAI LIN (BFA Interior Design): The Tombow has a smooth line, and for drafting it’s easy to build up the gray values darker or lighter.
ALEXANDRA: This is my favorite pencil, it’s very textural.
Prismacolor
ALEXANDRA: I never tried the Prismacolor ebony before but the texture is nice, supersoft. I sketch in pencil with black ink on top, I never use color when I’m working.
Palomino Blackwing
SONJA: The Blackwings are kind of an animation industry staple.
JACQUELINE SNYDER (BFA Animation): These Blackwings are very nice, very posh, fun to use. They seem like they brokered a kind of pencil science—and there’s nothing wrong with that.
Staedtler Mars Lumograph
JACQUELINE: I always use Staedtler Mars, they’re great and cheap, and also good quality.
Derwent Procolour
SONJA: The Derwent Procolour is very smooth, I liked the feel of it a lot, and it is not too super bright.
Col-Erase
SHIRA: I like the Col-Erase red pencil for planning/sketching because you can erase it easily.
Because this is New York City, where you can find anything you need (if you can’t find it, you probably don’t need it), there is a store selling just pencils, and another offering just fountain pens. Both places are owned by individuals whose devotion to their wares borders on the fanatical, in the best way.
CW Pencil Enterprise is a meticulously arranged shop on the Lower East Side’s Orchard Street whose happily obsessed owner, Caroline Weaver, started her business online when she was just 23. “I’ve loved pencils my whole life,” she says. “Even as a university student in Lon-
don, I was always running around with one stuck in my ponytail.”
Weaver takes pains to offer products from small family-run companies, including peony-scented pencils from Portugal, flat carpenter’s pencils, and sturdy red Big Dippers (often a kid’s first writing implement) manufactured in Tennessee, displayed in glass beakers labeled neatly in graphite. A carefully chosen roster of erasers and writing journals rounds out the inventory.
The Fountain Pen Hospital in TriBeCa has been the Wiederlight family business
since 1946. They sell 40 brands of fountain pens (new as well as vintage models) plus a huge selection of inks, as well as journals and accessories. Terry Wiederlight, the third generation to oversee the vast inventory, says, “A good pen for a beginner is the Lamy cartridge model. They run about $30 or $40.” The store offers a Moscow Mule copper mug and pen set, in case you like to write and drink at the same time. A special edition Beatles pen, striped in colors lifted from Hans Edelmann’s hypnotic animation for Yellow Submarine, can be yours for $905.
The Converse sneakers (below, center) were Steven Davis’s father’s. “I found them in his closet.” The other colorful pair were bought at a fair in Brooklyn, “Only three pairs exist. They were hand-made in Thailand.”
Penny Sachdeva has a pretty serious shoe collection— and a pretty serious attraction to sparkly ones. She has 40 pairs with her here in New York, and another 70 back home in India. She buys many online and, as a rule: “Whenever I travel anywhere, my trip is incomplete until I buy a pair of shoes.”
Amina Cheng graciously shared her obsession with us—her collection of all things Supreme. “I’d say I have 30 – 40 items,” she says. Supreme is a skateboard shop and clothing brand that opened its first store in SoHo in the ’90s, and now has stores around the world. So, does that mean Amina is a skater? No. “I want to learn how to skate, but I just like the style.”
Over the years Supreme has become a cultural phenomenon. Each week they release a new product, “At 11:00am Eastern Time their site freezes,” explains Amina. That’s when the new items go on sale. “After one second, most of the things are sold out.” Others camp out in
front of stores. “People will resell the items to earn money,” she says, “but for me, it’s just a collection.”
Amina has some clothes, but her collection is mainly accessories. “Supreme’s getting a bit overpriced. And that’s losing the purpose for me. I don’t want to treat them as luxurious items. I just want to have them for fun.”
Supreme’s range of accessories, many of which are collaborations with other brands, include some things you might expect: hats, keychains, scarves, and many things you might not: shovels, exercise mats, sake sets— they even released a branded red brick!
Supreme Zippo Lighters
Amina’s first Supreme item was a lighter—a birthday gift from a friend.
274 Lafayette Street, Manhattan
152 Grand Street, Brooklyn
Amina’s first item: A Zippo lighter. “A birthday gift from a friend.”
Her last purchase: Incense matches. “I bought them in Japan this summer.”
The stickers are free with purchase or available for sale outright. Left, Amina holds a Supreme charger. Amina Cheng BFA Design Third-year studentTired of seeing the same stores here as you’d find in your hometown (the Gap, Michaels, Barnes & Noble: I’m looking at you) selling a predictable selection of things? We’ve put together a list of offbeat places that (a) only stock a single item or category of merchandise, and (b) exist ONLY in New York City. Such places give the city part of its charming urbane eccentricity because for the most part, they are run by individuals whose life’s work is to go narrow and very deep into a single subject. The stores, some of which are family businesses spanning three generations, reflect their owners’ personalities as well as their passion—even obsession—for their wares and provide an encyclopedic experience for shoppers.
Casey Rubber Stamps
322 EAST 11 TH STREET
DThe outsized personality of the genial owner, J.C. Casey, fills the few square inches of unoccupied space surrounding more than 1500 rubber stamp designs, ranging from flamingos to deep-sea divers to disarticulated skeletons to celestial symbols to the old Life magazine logo. Casey’s also carries over 30 colors of ink pads, regular and waterproof, to print on just about any surface.
Tender Buttons
p Abracadabra
19 WEST 21 ST STREET
HEver wonder where to buy a two-person horse costume?
Dying to dress up as a dreidel this Halloween? Not sure where to find a Bat Kigarumi Funsie, a zip-front fleece onesie with attached bat wing sleeves and furry ear hood? Wonder no more—Abracadabra has you covered. This cavernous Chelsea store can be overwhelming for its sheer variety of costumes in options from the elegant to the profane, alongside a fantastic range of makeup and applicators, and special FX helpfully categorized into: gore, tattoos, prosthetics and teeth.
p Ricky’s
MULTIPLE LOCATIONS
kRicky’s urgent, staccato New Yorkese slogan “Looking Good, Feeling Good” sets exactly the right tone for this beauty product wonderland. For over 25 years Ricky’s has been the city’s go-to place for haircare and beauty supplies, concentrating all the best stuff from your local drugstore minus the depressing antacids and cough drops. Ricky’s also carries fun clothing and accessories such as tights, temporary tattoos, wigs and double-stick tape to avoid those embarrassing wardrobe malfunctions.
Canal Plastics Center
345 CANAL STREET
QOver the last 50 years, Canal Plastics has supplied the city’s art students, designers, artists, filmmakers, photographers, architectural firms and sign makers with any and everything made of plastic. They carry acrylic sheets, rods and tubes, shapes (cubes, spheres, cabochons, and more) and decorative films. Sheets of acrylic in colors ranging from opaque black to green fluorescent, black with gold glitter, two-way mirror, and radiant iridescent, and your choice of frosted/ glossy/matte finish are available in sizes up to 48" x 96" as well as custom orders.
143 EAST 62 ND STREET
vThis is one of the only shops in the U.S. devoted exclusively to the sale of this one item. Seemingly all the buttons in the world, carefully organized by color and type, line the walls in neatly stacked cardboard boxes reaching almost to the ceiling, and framed collections of rare and antique buttons occupy the space above. There are 400 styles of brass replacement buttons for your favorite blue blazer, buttons shaped like penguins, fruit and flowers, along with French copper-rimmed glass buttons from the 1950s reverse-painted with scenes of childhood and 18th century buttons featuring delicately detailed vignettes in carved ivory.
p Mokuba
137 WEST 38 TH STREET
YThe showroom for world-renowned Japanese ribbon company Mokuba dazzles a visitor with 50,000 types of ribbons and trims in lace, double-sided stretch grosgrains, organza, leather and lush satin, to name just a few. This small tidy shop on a grimy block in the Garment District stocks miles of ribbons, all made in Japan.
Joanne Hendricks Cookbooks
488 GREENWICH STREET
XThis 1820s row house devoted to one of the greatest collections of rare and antiquarian cookbooks in the world is worth a visit. The space is peaceful and quiet if you like to browse solo but owner Joanne Hendricks is always happy to jump up and get involved, pulling out other volumes she thinks you’d like.
t Just Bulbs
222 EAST 58 TH STREET
jWhen you need a specific light bulb, don’t you want to get it from a place whose website proudly notes that “Most of our staff have over 20 years’ experience in light bulbs”?
Just Bulbs has a sweet backstory: during the World War II era, a peddler named Abraham Brooks replaced missing lights in the Empire State Building one at a time, and did well enough to start his own wholesale light-bulb business once the war ended. The store stocks about 36,000 different kinds of bulbs, for American and British sockets.
Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud
translated by John Ashbery
Find out for yourself why this 19th century French poet influenced artists such as Jim Morrison, Bob Dylan and Patti Smith.
Book recommendations from Visual & Critical Studies students
Students in the VCS program take their reading seriously—so we wanted to know what they’ve been reading lately. Check out some of their recommendations below.
JULIANNA TWINE, FIRST-YEAR Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
1984 by George Orwell
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
VIVIENNE TEWES, THIRD-YEAR
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
A Wild Sheep Chase by Haruki Murakami
The Argonauts by Maggie Nelson
The Secret History by Donna Tartt
Wolf in White Van by John Darnielle
JOEY GONNELLA, SECOND-YEAR Ariel by Sylvia Plath
Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud
The Last Gold of Expired Stars by Georg Trakl
The Rubaiyat by Omar Khayyam
KIMBERLY MORENO, THIRD-YEAR
Witches of America by Alex Mar
The Rebel by Albert Camus
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
A
of adolescence and the
The Last Gold of Expired Stars: Complete Poems by Georg Trakl
“From a life inflicted with drug addiction and mental torment, Trakl paints a vivid, musical portrait of his autumn soul.”
The Rubaiyat by Omar Khayyam
Mathematician, astronomer and poet Khayyam lived in Persia from 1048 to 1131. His poetry was translated into English in the 1800s to great success.
BFA Cartooning, third-year Kaelin’s sketchbooks include classwork (“Pepoh” was a character drawn for her finals) as well as exercises she does with friends on Instagram (follow her: @_nepetea). She has done “art trades” with other artists online: “I draw their characters and they draw mine.” She has also done live streams of her drawing. The possum and cat drawings on the right page were “requests” from a live sketch session she did on Instagram.
“I don’t actually do a lot of ‘sketches’ in my books. I like to always finish them so I can color them in. The coloring is my favorite part.” The left page includes a self-portrait and sketches of her boyfriend and cat. On the right is a class assignment and some more character sketches.
mark randall
Instructor, SVA’s Summer Residency Programs
How did you decide to make honey ice cream?
Every summer, my husband Andy and I host an ice cream social at our weekend home in Narrowsburg, in upstate New York. As a beekeeper with lots of honey at my disposal, it seemed natural to make honey ice cream.
What were you doing with all that extra honey before B-Line?
I sold some at a friend’s housewares shop in Pennsylvania and gave the rest away to friends and family. Now I hoard it to make ice cream.
For a day of eating just about anything delicious you can imagine, take a short hop on the L train from the east side of Manhattan to the East River State Park in Williamsburg, where the joys of one of the largest weekly open-air food markets in America await. Between 20,000 and 30,000 people head to Smorgasburg on the Brooklyn waterfront each Saturday and Sunday from April through October, trying to choose amongst a staggering array of edibles on offer from 100 small vendors. Hungry but can’t quite decide what you want? This is your place.
Parmesan Truffle Fries
Home Frite: homefrite.com
It seems that every other person at Smorgasburg is enjoying a cardboard cone of these aromatic fries, offered with a choice of sauces including avocado herb and lemon aioli.
↑ Mozzarella Sticks
Big Mozz: bigmozz.com
These logs of fresh mozzarella, breaded and fried to a perfect mahogany crunch, then sprinkled with Parmesan and fresh parsley, are completely irresistible. Get an extra side of the garlicky marinara for dipping; you won’t regret it.
You were on Martha Stewart’s show, Martha Bakes, in December. Congrats! What was that like?
We did a taste test of several of my honeys and I came up with recipes for different honey butters. The whole experience was somewhat surreal—I had never been on TV before, let alone with an American icon.
↑ Fried Chicken & Waffles
BeeHive Oven Biscuit Cafe: beehiveoven.com
Still not full? How about a pile of tender deep fried chicken strips served with half a waffle and some sweet pickle slices? Don’t forget to add some hot sauce on top.
Short Ribs
Carnal: carnal-bk.com
Sometimes a hefty short rib, slow cooked, charcoal grilled, then smothered in chimichurri, just hits the spot.
Spaghetti Donuts
Pop Pasta: poppasta.com
In case you ever wanted to eat spaghetti with your hands without making a huge mess, try a baked spaghetti donut in your choice of red sauce, carbonara, aioli or mac’n’cheese.
Banana Pudding
#Baonanas: baonanas.com
↑ Peking Duck Dumplings
Destination Dumplings: destinationdumplings.com
Delicate fried dumplings filled with shredded Peking duck, drizzled with a spicy red sauce, and dotted with black and white sesame seeds, come five to an order, served atop a vibrant green banana leaf. You may need a second order.
Lobster Rolls
Red Hook Lobster Pound: redhooklobster.com
The next best thing to being on the Maine waterfront is being on the Brooklyn waterfront eating a lobster roll that gets every detail right, from the lemony mayonnaise dressing to the gently poached lobster. The sweet potato fries are dreamy, too.
A little cup of delicate banana pudding, in flavors such as lychee-rose and matcha, is a guaranteed day-brightener.
Ice Cream Waffles
Wowfulls: wowfulls.com
Take a deep breath and try to make room for a freshly made Hong Kong-style egg waffle filled with ice cream and your choice of fruit, Nutella, gummy bears, Fruity Pebbles, and more.
Ice Cream Sandwiches
The Good Batch: thegoodbatch.com
Try vanilla ice cream cradled between oatmeal chocolate chunk cookies and finished off with a drizzle of chocolate and a sprinkling of sea salt. Other flavors available.
How did you develop the recipes?
What flavors do you make?
All my flavors start with a base made of milk, cream, and honey which I call “Pure & Simple.” Then I add different mix-ins: crunchy almond brittle, roasted cherries with vanilla beans, roasted peaches and ginger, roasted walnuts with maple syrup—lots of roasting to bring out the flavors. One of my favorites is stracciatella—it’s an Italian technique where you drizzle melted dark chocolate into the ice cream machine right at the end of the freezing process. It solidifies and breaks up into small shards, a fancier version of chocolate chip.
Apart from the farmer’s market in Narrowsburg, do you have a stand somewhere in NYC?
Not yet. I’m thinking of opening a seasonal pop-up shop in Callicoon, New York next summer. Our area is cultivating the artisanal food movement so it feels like a good next step. And, perhaps one day, an ice cream truck!
Mozzarella sticks from Big MozzNew York City is not all about skyscrapers and concrete. There are over 1700 parks, recreational facilities and playgrounds across the five boroughs (according to NYC Parks), so you have plenty of options to take a break, get some Zen and commune with nature. We highlight below some of the more popular parks nearby or worth a (quick) trip by subway.
Let’s just call this SVA’s quad. Halfway between our east and west-side campus buildings, this oasis of green space has the original Shake Shack, art installations, lovely fountains, a dog walk and amazing views of both the Flatiron Building and the Empire State Building. With plenty of tables and chairs, it’s a great place to gather with friends, people-watch, sketch and just take a break. If the line for Shake Shack is too long, head across the street to Eataly for a sandwich or some killer gelato to-go.
Not unknown and filled with tourists, but for a good reason—it’s awesome! A 6-mile path circles the park for cyclists, runners and walkers—in addition to spaces for every other type of sport: tennis courts, baseball diamonds, ice rinks. In the spring and summer, the park hosts numerous free and paid music events. There’s Shakespeare in the Park, a puppet theater, a zoo with a penguin room, a lake where you can rent boats, and much more. It’s filled with so many quiet and lovely nooks and crannies as well as wideopen lawns to lay down a blanket and relax.
Designed by the same duo who brought you Central Park (Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux), this Brooklyn park is just as great—with many of the same amenities and events as its Manhattan sibling, but smaller crowds! Pro-tip: Get a free boat rental on Saturdays from noon to 4pm. A skate facility hosts ice skating in the winter and roller blading in the summer. There’s even horseback riding available.
High Line
An abandoned elevated freight rail line was converted into one of the city’s coolest green spaces. Running from 34th Street to the Meatpacking District on the west side, its narrow paths can get crowded, but here’s a tip: take a stroll just before closing. It’s lit up and romantic, with gorgeous New York skyline views all around.
Washington Square Park
The quaint park in Greenwich Village is famous for its arch and central fountain. It’s a great place for people watching, attracting artists, college students, tourists, chess players, musicians, and more.
Central Park Prospect Park Madison Square Park High LineTwo SVA Students Talk Music
Pals Roxy Kulynych and Jasmine Espejo are both super passionate about music and were happy to tell us about their favorite artists, venues, websites, apps, and more. They have different tastes in music—Jasmine likes rap and R&B, while Roxy is into EDM, but they both love seeing music live, especially at summer festivals. Says Jasmine: “It’s not only the music—it’s the food, the fashion and everything art-related.”
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
“David Bowie is”
Mar 2 - July 15, 2018
Celebrate the iconic rock star’s life and work with over 400 objects including costumes, lyric sheets, photographs, and more.
Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street
“Grant Wood”
Mar 2 - June 10, 2018
You’ll know Grant Wood’s painting American Gothic—the portrait of a pitchfork-wielding farmer and (presumably) his wife. Check out that and more of his work.
New Museum of Contemporary Art
235 Bowery
2018 Triennial: “Songs for Sabotage”
Feb 13 - May 27, 2018
Keep up with the latest in contemporary art at the museum’s fourth Triennial.
Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street
“Stephen Shore”
Now through May 28, 2018
Contemporary American photographer Stephen Shore is perhaps most famous for
Roxy KulynychThe Knitting Factory
“It’s a small place with great speakers. A lot of underground people go there to play their music. The sound is important to get that full effect of the song.”
WFavorite Artists
Thriftworks “Super weird and bass-y.”
SVA student picks for tunes, apps, shows, and more
Julianna Ham (BFA Visual & Critical Studies): “I saw Laura Prepon from Orange is the New Black.”
Kaitlyn Danielson (BFA Photography and Video): “I see celebrities a lot at Joe’s Coffee by Washington Square Park: Amanda Seyfried, Edward Norton, Helen Mirren.”
Andrew McGuire (BFA Film): “I saw Tina Fey near Bryant Park.”
Yheti “This guy is really good. Amazing.”
Andreina Figueira (BFA Interior Design): “I saw Leonardo DiCaprio near the SVA Theatre.”
Shannon Baney (BFA Animation): “I saw Lil’ Kim by Penn Station.”
Dean Bost (BFA Film): “I saw David Beckham right outside of Schnippers. Got out of a van right in front of me.”
Irving Plaza
“It fits 100 to 200 people. There’s a lot of colored lighting and fog and it’s dark. It’s a place where you can meet and talk to people. It’s very casual.”
Frank Ocean
“He’s very strong lyrically— musically as well.”
Sabrina Claudia “She’s on the come-up. She’s really good.”
Big Randall’s Island
Barclay’s Center
Madison Square Garden
Medium
Radio City Music Hall
Beacon Theatre
Carnegie Hall
The Bowery Ballroom
Kimberly Moreno (BFA Visual & Critical Studies): “I saw Harry Styles near Rockefeller Center when he did SNL.”
Brittany Laureano (BFA Computer Art, Computer Animation and Visual Effects): “I saw Jessica Alba by the Flatiron Building.”
Joy Conway (BFA Visual & Critical Studies): “Shia Labeouf is always hanging around Union Square.”
SOUNDCLOUD
Soundcloud is great for up-and-coming artists. Artists can post their music for free and users can list and repost on their own feeds.
BANDCAMP
his color work from the 1970s. This retrospective spans the entirety of his work, up to today’s Instagram shots (he has over 100,000 followers). A must-see for any serious student of photography.
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum
2 East 91st Street
“Jewelry of Ideas: Gifts from the Susan Grant Lewin Collection”
Now through May 28, 2018
If you are a lover of jewelry—making or wearing it—you will want to check out this dazzling exhibition, which features nearly 150 objects made by over 100 modern and contemporary jewelry designers from the 1940s to the present.
Small Terminal 5
Irving Plaza
Highline Ballroom
The Knitting Factory
The Silent Barn
Birdland
Gramercy Theatre
Bandcamp is also free for artists and listeners, and you can also buy under a pay-whatyou-wish model.
ÁMcGuire picked up this inexpensive portable record player at Urban Outfitters for his collection of vinyl records. In frequent rotation is Carole King’s Tapestry, currently his favorite album. Pretty much every surface in McGuire’s room is pressed into service to display something, such as the collection of photos inside the record player’s lid.
Senior Andrew Mc -
Guire is concentrating in screenwriting. He’s filled his single room at the Ludlow Residence with still lives assembled from various objects he finds amusing or entertaining. “I’ve always done this, since I was a kid,” he says. “I have boxes at home organized from first grade through senior year of high school filled with knickknacks. Because they all contain memories, I’m afraid to throw anything out!”
Ryan is originally from Brooklyn, but spent most of her childhood in Virginia Beach. She’s happy to be back in New York City, now that she’s attending SVA and living at the 24th Street Residence. “It’s never boring here,” she says. “There are always events going on, hosted by the RAs (resident assistants), and there’s common space for hanging out.”
“Omniam fuga. Caborum rest, omnihicias doluptiat.
Oloriti quam ducienia vid maio quas.”
“These shoes are such a unique and sentimental piece of my heart! The bottoms are tires; they get great mileage!”
Julianna Twine,
“Out of all the shoes I own, these are my favorite. I’ll be wearing them until they literally fall apart.”
Oli Tangen, BFA Animation