School for the Arts Baltimore School for the Arts Baltimore Art Program

School in Baltimore, Maryland, United States

Baltimore School for the Arts
BCPSSBaltoSchArts.png
Baltimore School for the Arts, 712 Cathedral Street Baltimore, MD 21201 (35065310210).jpg
Address

712 Cathedral Street


Baltimore

,

Maryland

21201

U.s.a.

Information
School type Public, Magnet, Art, High schoolhouse, Secondary schoolhouse
Motto "Where the Arts Change Kids' Lives"
Founded 1979 (1979)
School commune Baltimore City Public Schools
Superintendent Dr. Sonja Brookins Santelises[1]
School number 415
Managing director Chris Ford[2]
Grades 9–12
Enrollment 440[2] (2018)
Area Urban
Website www.bsfa.org
1Baltimore School for the Arts.jpg

The Baltimore School for the Arts (BSA) is a public arts high school located in Mountain Vernon, Baltimore, Maryland, The states and is part of the Baltimore Urban center Public Schools system. Established in 1979, The Baltimore School for the Arts offers art concentrations in song music, instrumental music, theater acting, theater product, dance, visual arts and film. The high school has produced numerous "Presidential Scholars" [iii] in the Arts and its students have gone on to attend major conservatories and Ivy League Schools.

In 2020, BSA was named a Silver Medal Schoolhouse by the U.South. News and World Written report magazine and was ranked 1,173th nationally and 29th in the country of Maryland (beginning overall in Baltimore City).[iv]

History [edit]

In 1979, the President of the Board of School Commissioners authored a Charter creating the Baltimore School for the Arts. In the form of a resolution of the School Board, this Charter followed many years of endeavor to create an arts high school, including a 1978 recommendation of a special Task Force appointed and given strong support by and then Mayor William Donald Schaefer, (1921–2011), [served 1971–1986]; [subsequently Governor of Maryland, 1987–1995, Comptroller of Maryland, 1999–2007]. The BSA was created every bit part of the Baltimore Metropolis Public Schools system, however the lease provided the BSA with the structure and the authority to blueprint and implement policies and programs necessary to exist successful in its mission as a pre-professional arts high schoolhouse. The charter stated "that it differ from other Baltimore city high schools by training students with potential for careers in the performing and visual arts."

Mission [edit]

The Baltimore School for the Arts is a school that intends to gear up its students for careers in the arts. The school provides qualified students with grooming in one of five arts disciplines: music (vocal/instrumental), visual arts, theatre (acting/stage design and production), dance, or motion picture[five] in combination with a comprehensive, college preparatory academic program. The theater and music majors are split into two groups each: for the theater section, there is both interim and Stage Design and Product, and the music department is dissever into vocal and instrumental.

A further mission of the school is to serve as an arts resource for the Baltimore community by offering performances, educational workshops and extensive later-school training in the arts to Baltimore children. This is offered through a program called TWIGS, which is open to 2nd–eighth graders.[5]

Arts [edit]

The Baltimore School for the Arts is a four-year public high school that provides young people with intensive, pre-professional grooming in the arts within the context of a comprehensive, college preparatory academic curriculum. Working with a distinguished faculty, students pursue any ane of 4 disciplines—the visual arts, music (vocal or instrumental), theater (acting or theater production), dance and film—in an surroundings that emphasizes professionalism and scholarship. In addition, the school maintains artistic relationships with local organizations such every bit the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Center Phase, the Hippodrome Foundation, and the Walters Museum.

Academics [edit]

Students larn a rigorous higher-preparatory curriculum built on the core values of a liberal arts education. Despite admissions existence based entirely on creative review, BSA has a graduation and higher credence rate close to 100 percent. Alumni proceed to attend the nation's nigh distinguished colleges, universities, fine art schools, liberal arts colleges, and conservatories.[half dozen]

Admission [edit]

About 400 students attend the school, coming from public and individual schools in and effectually Baltimore. Students are accustomed by an audition or portfolio review simply– without regard to grades or academic performance. Ascent ninth and 10th graders may utilise to attend. Of the 1,000 or so students that audition each year, about 115 are accepted for enrollment.[7]

Campus and facilities [edit]

Situated in Mount Vernon, a historic cultural district immediately due north of downtown Baltimore, BSA is located in 2 buildings on the corner of Madison Artery and Cathedral Street. It occupies the former Alcazar Hotel and a historic brownstone, specially designed to educate students for future careers in the arts. Workspaces consist of music practise rooms, fine art and dance studios, a moving picture editing lab, a costume/scene shop, and a state-of-the-art Center for Collaborative Arts and Technology (CCAT) located in the 3rd floor library. Performance spaces include a black box theater, a recital hall, an art gallery and a theater for larger performances and galas.[viii]

In media [edit]

  • The school in the film 2006 film Stride Up was a fictionalized version of BSA, called The Maryland School for the Arts. In that location are some significant differences betwixt the institution portrayed in the film and the real schoolhouse, and some parts of the movie were filmed in the schoolhouse.
  • The Maryland School for the Arts also provided the setting for the 2008 film sequel to Step Up, Step Up ii the Streets although most of the actual filming of the pic did not have place inside BSA.

Notable alumni [edit]

  • Tupac Shakur, Hip hop artist, actor
  • Jada Pinkett Smith, actress
  • Mia Brownell, creative person
  • Christian Siriano, Fashion designer and Project Runway winner
  • Tracie Thoms, actress
  • Makeba Riddick, songwriter
  • Josh Charles – Actor
  • Antonio Hart, Jazz saxophonist
  • Katherine Needleman, classical oboist
  • Larry Gilliard Jr., role player
  • Stefania Dovhan, Soprano
  • Sara VanDerBeek, photographer
  • Shinique Smith, Painter, sculptor, Installation and Video Artist
  • Jacqueline Dark-green, American ballet dancer
  • Bresha Webb, actress
  • Moses Ingram, actress
  • Rachel Hilson, actress

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Meet CEO Sonja Brookins Santelises". Baltimore City Public Schools. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Baltimore School for the Arts". Baltimore City Public Schools. Retrieved Feb 19, 2019.
  3. ^ "Presidential Scholars". Presidential Scholars Foundations. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  4. ^ "Baltimore School for the Arts in Baltimore, Physician". U.S. News and World Study . Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Domicile | Baltimore Schoolhouse for the Arts". Baltimore School for the Arts . Retrieved Nov 10, 2017.
  6. ^ "Academics". Baltimore Schoolhouse for the Arts . Retrieved October 25, 2020.
  7. ^ "Admissions". Baltimore Schoolhouse for the Arts . Retrieved October 25, 2020.
  8. ^ "About". Baltimore Schoolhouse for the Arts . Retrieved Oct 25, 2020.

External links [edit]

Media related to Baltimore Schoolhouse for the Arts at Wikimedia Eatables

  • Official website
  • Maryland Report Card – Baltimore School for the Arts
  • Baltimore School for the Arts at Baltimore City Schools

Coordinates: 39°17′54″North 76°37′03″W  /  39.298205°N 76.617368°W  / 39.298205; -76.617368

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