Several LM students recently won awards in the National Scholastic Art competition and the Lancaster County Young Artists competition. These pieces can be viewed between March 5 and April 3 at the following locations:

  • Scholastics – Demuth Museum
  • LCYA – Lancaster Museum of Art

The winners of Scholastic Gold Keys advance to national competition in New York.

Kudos also go to the art teachers who worked to have students enter this contest and win.

Students of Wendy Weinstein (Kraybill Campus)

  • Damian Allman, Collage, Scholastics Gold Key
  • Katie Funk, Coreen/Black Dish, LCYA Gold
  • Nathan Gerhart, Stamped Vessel
  • Kyrianna Frantz, Yellow black dish, LCYA Silver
  • Maddie Sehenuk,Leaf Bowl
  • Avery Ford, Glass Triptych, LCYA Honorable Mention
  • Isaac Kraenbring, Self Portrait, LCYA Honorable Mention

Students of Kathy Ciaccia

  • Shawn Leiby, sculpture/stone, Scholastics Gold Key
  • Jiaxin Wu, sculpture/stone, Scholastics Silver Key
  • Jiaxin Wu, drawing, Scholastics Silver Key
  • Chuyi Chen, LCYA Silver
  • Hannah Kraenbring, LCYA Silver
  • Breanna Buckner, LCYA Honorable Mention
  • Katherine Gish, LCYA Honorable Mention
  • Cheuklam Law, sculpture/stone, Scholastics Honorable Mention
  • Cheuklam Law, drawing, Scholastics Honorable Mention

Students of Paul Brubaker

  • Hannah Kraenbring, Photograph, Scholastics Honorable Mention
  • John Deslippe; Photograph, LCYA Honorable Mention
  • Hannah Kraenbring; Photograph, LCYA Honorable Mention

Since 1923, the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards have recognized the vision, ingenuity, and talent of our nation’s youth, and provided opportunities for creative teens to be celebrated. The Awards are presented by The Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, whose mission is to identify students with exceptional artistic and literary talent and present their remarkable work to the world through the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. Students receive opportunities for recognition, exhibition, publication, and scholarship.

Students’ art submissions are judged by leaders in the visual arts. Jurors look for works that exemplify the Awards’ core values: originality, technical skill, and the emergence of personal voice or vision.

The Scholastic Art Awards has grown to be the nation’s longest-running, most prestigious recognition initiative for creative teens, and the largest source of scholarships for young artists.

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