New York Institute of Art and Design New York Ny

Public schoolhouse in Manhattan, New York, United States

High School of Art and Design
High School of Art and Design building
Address

245 E 56th St, New York, NY 10022


Manhattan

,

New York

10022


Us

Coordinates forty°45′32″Due north 73°57′58″W  /  xl.759025°Northward 73.966082°Westward  / 40.759025; -73.966082 Coordinates: 40°45′32″North 73°57′58″W  /  xl.759025°N 73.966082°W  / 40.759025; -73.966082
Information
Blazon Public
Established November 2, 1936
Oversight New York City Department of Education
Main Maximillian Re-Sugiura[ane] [two]
Grades 9–12
Campus blazon Urban
Color(s) ruby-red xanthous and blue
Athletics conference Public Schools Athletic League
Website artanddesignhs.org

The High School of Art and Blueprint is a Career and Technical Education loftier school in Manhattan, New York Metropolis, New York State, United states. Founded in 1936 as the School of Industrial Art, the school moved to 1075 2nd Avenue in 1960 and more recently, its Midtown Manhattan location on 56th Street, between 2d and Third Avenues,[three] in September 2012. High Schoolhouse of Art and Design is operated by the New York City Department of Didactics.

History [edit]

On November 2, 1936,[4] four art teachers began what was to become the High School of Art and Blueprint, the School of Industrial Art,[5] in a sometime Manhattan elementary school at 257 West 40th Street,[6] which for a fourth dimension had housed a WPA Federal Theatre Project locale.[7] [8] Initially, they used orange crates and plywood to make storage and desks.[viii] 1 of the co-founders, John B. Kenny, became chief in 1941.[nine] The school shortly moved to 211 East 79th Street on the Upper E Side, the site of the onetime annex to Benjamin Franklin Loftier School.[ten] In September 1960, the School of Industrial Art inverse its name to the High School of Art and Design and moved to 1075 Second Avenue in east Midtown.[8]

The 1936 school was first envisioned as a continuation school, that is, a school where children who had left school and gotten jobs attended for half days to continue their education, usually including vocational classes relevant to their current or possible hereafter jobs. Yet, it opened equally a vocational high school,

On November 8, 2004, a rally was scheduled on the occasion of the school's 68th ceremony. This was to include a press conference at which increased support of the schoolhouse would exist urged.[11] On November 8, 2006 the schoolhouse celebrated its 70th ceremony. The office of the Mayor of New York Urban center issued a annunciation making Nov 8 "High School of Art and Design Day".[11]

Academics and events [edit]

Applicants must have an entrance examination and present a portfolio to be accepted. Freshmen sample all fine art and design subjects before selecting a major for their sophomore, junior and senior years. Students at Art and Blueprint receive ii periods of art teaching per day, choosing from among viii art majors: cartooning, animation, compages, graphic blueprint, illustration, manner, photography, and pic/video.

Art and Design's Kenny Gallery, named for the school'southward founding principal John B. Kenny, hosts monthly fine art exhibits of student work. The gallery is open to the public. The Blackness Box Theatre was donated by the Friends of Art and Design (FAD).[12]

Notable people [edit]

Kinesthesia [edit]

Some members of the school'southward faculty became notable for their creative work outside didactics. These include:

  • Daisy Aldan, poet, extra, editor and translator[thirteen]
  • Irv Docktor, fine creative person and volume illustrator[14]
  • Frank Eliscu, designer and sculptor of the Heisman Memorial Trophy and other works of art[fifteen] [16]
  • Alvin Hollingsworth, comic book illustrator and fine artist[17]
  • Bel Kaufman, author of "Up the Down Staircase"
  • Bernard Krigstein, painter, illustrator, cartoonist[18]
  • Tom Wesselmann, pop artist, famous for his "Great American Nude" series[nineteen]

Alumni [edit]

  • 1937: Paul Winchell, ventriloquist, inventor, actor[xx]
  • 1940: Violet Barclay, a pioneering female comic book artist[21]
  • 1940: Al Plastino, comic volume illustrator, writer and editor[22]
  • 1940: Chichi Rock, comic book illustrator[23]
  • 1941: Allen Bellman, comic book artist[24] [25]
  • 1943: Red Infantino, comic book creative person, editor, member Comic Book Hall of Fame[26] [27]
  • 1943: Helmut Krone, fine art director[28]
  • 1943: Henry Wolf, graphic designer, art director and lensman[29] [xxx]
  • 1944: Joe Orlando, comic book illustrator, Mad magazine Associate Publisher[27]
  • 1945: Tony Bennett, singer and painter[31]
  • 1945: Joe Giella, comic volume illustrator[32] [33]
  • 1945: Everett Raymond Kinstler, portrait artist
  • 1946: Sy Barry, comic book illustrator[33]
  • 1946: Vladimir Kagan, furniture designer[34]
  • 1946: Al Scaduto, syndicated cartoonist[33]
  • 1947: Alex Toth, comic book illustrator, animator for Hanna-Barbera[27]
  • 1947: John Romita, Sr., comic book illustrator[27]
  • 1949: Howard Beckerman, animator and author
  • 1950: Dick Giordano, comic book illustrator[27]
  • 1950: Jules Maidoff, artist and founder of SACI (Studio Arts College International) in Florence, Italy
  • 1951: Leo Dillon, adult and children's book illustrator[35]
  • 1951: Bill Kresse, syndicated cartoonist[36]
  • 1952: Eva Hesse, minimalist painter and sculptor[37]
  • 1952: Sam Scali, advert-agency possessor[38]
  • 1953: Peter Hujar, photographer[39]
  • 1953: Ronald Wayne, Apple Computer co-founder[40]
  • 1955: I. C. Rapoport, photojournalist[41]
  • 1956: Ralph Bakshi, animator, filmmaker[42]
  • 1956: John Johnson, Boob tube news anchor, author and painter[43]
  • 1956: Barbara Nessim, illustrator and educator[44]
  • 1956: Regina Porter, fashion designer[45]
  • 1957: Bobby Weinstein, songwriter, fellow member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame[46]
  • 1957: Phoebe Gilman, children's book author and illustrator
  • 1959: Neal Adams, comic book illustrator[27]
  • 1959: Paul J. Pugliese, TIME Mag cartographer
  • 1960: Calvin Klein, way designer[31]
  • 1960: George Kuchar, cult filmmaker and managing director[47]
  • 1960: Antonio Lopez, fashion illustrator[48]
  • 1960: Gerard Malanga, poet, photographer and filmmaker[49]
  • 1960: William T. Williams, abstruse painter[50]
  • 1961: Robert Volpe, painter and NYPD detective, the "Art Cop"[51]
  • 1962: Roscoe Orman, thespian, author and artist, best known every bit "Gordon" on Sesame Street
  • 1962: Simon Gaon, painter
  • 1963: Ronnie Landfield, abstract painter
  • 1963: Joey Skaggs, media prankster, operation artist
  • 1963: Jim Simon, animator and creative person[52]
  • 1963: Michael Steiner, abstruse creative person and sculptor [53] [54]
  • 1965: Jackie Curtis, Warhol pic star, poet, playwright[55]
  • 1965: Art Spiegelman, Pulitzer Prize winning author and cartoonist[56]
  • 1967: Bert Monroy, digital art pioneer, author of books on Photoshop, Illustrator
  • 1967: Eric Carr (Paul Charles Caravello), drummer in the rock band Osculation
  • 1967: Frank Brunner, comic volume illustrator[xviii]
  • 1967: Larry Hama, writer and comic book illustrator[18] [27]
  • 1967: Ralph Reese, comic book illustrator[18]
  • 1967: Lenny White, jazz-funk drummer, member of Return to Forever
  • 1967: Terry Winters, abstract painter and printmaker[57]
  • 1968: Candida Royalle, producer and director of couples-oriented erotic films[58]
  • 1968: John Steptoe, writer and illustrator of children's books
  • 1968: Robin Tewes, artist and painter
  • 1968: Frank Verlizzo ("Fraver"), Drama Desk Award-winning designer of theater art[59]
  • 1969: Pat Cleveland, way model
  • 1969: Harvey Fierstein, role player, playwright, gay activist[31]
  • 1970: Amy Heckerling, picture director, writer, extra[60]
  • 1971: Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, actor and vocalizer
  • 1971: Alan Kupperberg, cartoonist and illustrator[61]
  • 1971: Steven Meisel, fashion photographer[62]
  • 1971: Lynette Washington, jazz singer
  • 1973: Lisa Jane Persky, actress.[63]
  • 1973: Tom Sito, animator, filmmaker, educator
  • 1974: Manny Vega, painter, muralist, mosaicist
  • 1976: Marcelino Sanchez, film and tv actor
  • 1976: Tracy 168 (Michael Tracey), graffiti creative person
  • 1976: Mike Carlin, comic book writer and editor[64]
  • 1977: Joe Jusko, comic book illustrator[27]
  • 1977: Gladys Portugues, champion body architect
  • 1978: Lasana M. Sekou, poet, journalist, author, publisher
  • 1978: Lorna Simpson, artist and photographer
  • 1978: Lee Quiñones, role player and graffiti artist
  • 1978: Margaret Matz, architect and illustrator
  • 1978: Malcolm Jones III, comic book illustrator[65]
  • 1979: Denys Cowan, comic book illustrator
  • 1979: Jimmy Palmiotti, inker and writer of comic books, games and motion-picture show[66]
  • 1979: Mark Texeira, comic book illustrator[67]
  • 1980: Chris 'Daze' Ellis, graffiti writer and artist[68] [69]
  • 1980: Nicole Willis, musician, artist
  • 1981: Marc Jacobs, fashion designer[lxx]
  • 1982: Lady Pink (Sandra Fabara), graffiti author, artist and muralist.[71] [72]
  • 1983: Mare139 (Carlos Rodriguez), graffiti artist and designer[72]
  • 1985: Roger Sanchez, Grammy Accolade-winning DJ, producer, recording artist[73]
  • 1985: Christopher Martin rapper/Kid&Play
  • 1986: Pharoahe Monch (Troy Donald Jamerson), hip hop artist[74]
  • 1987: Ivan de Prume, sometime drummer in the groove metal band White Zombie[75]
  • 1990: Jamal Igle, comic book and blitheness storyboard creative person[76] [77]
  • 1992: Joe Madureira, comic book illustrator[78] [79]
  • 1992: Mobb Deep, hip-hop duo[80]
  • 1995: Cool Calm Pete (Peter Chung), hip hop artist equally a member of Babbletron and then as a Solo creative person
  • 1998: Fabolous, rapper[81]
  • 2006: ASAP Ferg (Darold D. Dark-brown Ferguson, Jr.), rapper and fashion designer[82]
  • 2007: LaQuan Smith, fashion designer
  • 2014: Devon Rodriguez artist and painter

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Principal'southward Message"
  2. ^ "Staff Directory - High School of Fine art and Design"
  3. ^ Google (May v, 2015). "High School of Art and Blueprint, 245 E 56th St, New York, NY 10022" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May five, 2015.
  4. ^ "NEW DESIGN SCHOOL OPENS".
  5. ^ "Art and Design High School > Did You Know?". New York City Department of Educational activity. Retrieved 2013-eleven-26 .
  6. ^ "S.I.A — 257 W 40th Street". SIA Fresco '60. (Yearbook) The Board of Teaching of the City of New York. p. 16. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  7. ^ "History of S.I.A". SIA Fresco '60. p. 13. Retrieved 7 Jan 2014.
  8. ^ a b c Mira Tweti (December v, 2001), "School's Alumni and Staff Feel Its Art Emphasis Is Neglected", The New York Times, p. D8, retrieved January half dozen, 2014
  9. ^ "John Kenny, 88, Dies; Founded High Schoolhouse". The New York Times. March 2, 1988. Retrieved half-dozen Jan 2014.
  10. ^ "History of S.I.A", p. 14
  11. ^ a b [ commendation needed ]
  12. ^ Anemona Hartocollis (13 December 2000), "From a Rude Bump, a Lift for a School", New York Times (published December 13, 2000), p. B11, retrieved Jan 6, 2014
  13. ^ "On Daisy Aldan, 'A New Folder' | Jacket2 "After taking degrees at Hunter College and Brooklyn College, she spent thirty-5 years teaching at New York's School of Industrial Art, where her students included Art Spiegelman, Tony Bennett, Calvin Klein and Harvey Fierstein, equally well every bit Warhol assembly Gerard Malanga and Jackie Curtis."
  14. ^ Irv Docktor website
  15. ^ NY Times Frank Eliscu, 83, Who Sculptured Heisman Trophy
  16. ^ Yahoo News Who really posed for the Heisman Bays Retrieved September 22, 2010
  17. ^ Stripper's Guide: Ink-Slinger Profiles: A.C. Hollingsworth
  18. ^ a b c d Arrant, Chris (June 7, 2010). "Looking Dorsum With Larry Hama - Beyond Chiliad.I. Joe". Newsarama.com.
  19. ^ "Biography of Tom Wesselmann | Widewalls", October 10, 2016. "Afterwards he successfully established himself as one of the leading artists in NYC, Tom began to teach art at a public schoolhouse in Brooklyn and later at the High School of Art and Design."
  20. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Michaud, John. "Paul Winchell Smurfs Gargamel & Tigger Cartoon Voices Interview 2004". YouTube . Retrieved 1 December 2012. I went out to California in 1938. I was a child going to school in NY city and I was studying commercial art. I went to a school chosen the School of Industrial Art in Manhattan.
  21. ^ Vassallo, Michael J. (2005). "A Timely Talk with Allen Bellman". Comicartville.com. p. 2. Archived from the original on January 17, 2010.
  22. ^ Bubbeo, Daniel (August 16, 2012). "Long Islanders behind Batman comics". Newsday. New York/Long Island. pp. B4–B5. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved August 18, 2012. (subscription required)
  23. ^ Rock in Cassar, James (February 1997). "Excerpts from Chic Stone interview". Jack Kirby Collector. No. 14. Archived from the original on December 23, 2010.
  24. ^ Lambiek Comiclopedia, Comic Creators
  25. ^ Violet Barclay "Barclay attended the School of Industrial Fine art high schoolhouse, where her classmates included future comic-book professional Allen Bellman."
  26. ^ Gary Groth. "Ruddy Infantino". The Comics Journal. Archived from the original on 2007-02-07. Retrieved 2007-06-24 .
  27. ^ a b c d e f thou h Kimball, Kirk. "Gaspar Saladino — The Natural" Archived 2016-04-18 at the Wayback Machine. Dial B for Web log Retrieved February 11, 2012.
  28. ^ Helmut Krone, Period.
  29. ^ Howard Greenberg Gallery
  30. ^ Henry Wolf, Graphic Designer and Photographer, Dies at 80
  31. ^ a b c Tweti, Mira. "School's Alumni and Staff Feel Its Fine art Emphasis Is Neglected", The New York Times, December 5, 2001. Accessed Oct 29, 2007. "Graduates include the designer Calvin Klein, the singer Tony Bennett, the playwright Harvey Fierstein and the filmmaker Ralph Bakshi."
  32. ^ "Joe Giella". Kees Kousemaker's Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved Feb 11, 2012.
  33. ^ a b c Fischler, Marcelle S. "LONG ISLAND Journal; Cartoonists Gather to Celebrate Real Life", The New York Times, June 10, 2001. Accessed January 22, 2017. "Mr. Scaduto, Mr. Giella, Mr. Barry and Mr. Squelio attended the School of Industrial Art, at present the School of Fine art and Design, together in the 1940s."
  34. ^ Staff. "Long Island Periodical", The New York Times, October 9, 1983. Accessed Jan 22, 2017. "'A very special class,' it was called in 1946, the twelvemonth that 279 art students graduated from the School of Industrial Art in New York City.... Amid those scheduled to attend from the original class were Vladimir Kagan of New York Metropolis, the interior designer; Al Scaduto of Jericho, a cartoonist for the syndicated comic strip They'll Do It Every Time; Alex Toth of Los Angeles, as well a cartoonist; Sal Tortora of Mattituck, a watercolorist, and Serafin Soto of Huntington, an builder and painter."
  35. ^ "The Horn Book"
  36. ^ "Bill Kresse, Longtime O'Dwyer'south Illustrator, Dies", O'Dwyer's, Jan 27, 2014. Accessed January 22, 2017. "Kresse was born June 17, 1933 in Brooklyn. His art career began immediately later graduating Brooklyn's High School of Industrial Arts, when he got a job illustrating for famed blitheness studio Terrytoons, which created many popular cartoons of the post-war era, including Mighty Mouse, Heckle and Jeckle, Deputy Dawg, and The Mighty Heroes."
  37. ^ Eva Hesse, Brooklyn Museum. Accessed January 22, 2017. "Eva Hesse was born 1936, in Hamburg, Germany. Her family fled the Nazis and arrived in New York in 1939 where she attended the Schoolhouse of Industrial Art, then Pratt Plant in Brooklyn in 1952, and Cooper Wedlock from 1954 to 1957."
  38. ^ "Sam Scali : ADC • Global Awards & Club"
  39. ^ Peter Hujar, Blouin Artinfo. Accessed Jan 22, 2017. "In the tardily 1940s, Hujar enrolled at the School of Industrial Fine art and found a mentor in poet Daisy Aldan."
  40. ^ The Cult of Mac, December 2014. "He trained equally a technical draftsman at the School of Industrial Art in New York."
  41. ^ The Early Years – Part 1, I. C. Rapoport, April i, 2016. Accessed Jan 22, 2017. "I had, a yr earlier, entered the High School of Industrial Art in Manhattan, and having no desire to join the photography plan offered there, studied what my brother Mel had studied, advertizing design."
  42. ^ Culhane, John. "Ralph Bakshi - Iconoclast of Blitheness", The New York Times, March 22, 1981. Accessed January 22, 2017. "From being a poor educatee at Thomas Jefferson Loftier School, he was inspired to compete for 1 of 10 openings at the School of Industrial Art (now the High School of Fine art and Design), a vocational schoolhouse for commercial artists. When he graduated in June of 1956, he won the school'south cartooning medal - and he has been transmuting the gritty reality of the streets in drawings ever since."
  43. ^ "Ex-newsman John Johnson's art portrays his life – as well every bit Angelina Jolie and Lady Gaga", "New York Daily News", May x, 2013.
  44. ^ Barbara Nessim: An Aesthetic Life, Bard Higher. Accessed Jan 22, 2017. "Born in the Bronx, Barbara Nessim studied at New York'southward School of Industrial Art (now the High School of Art and Pattern) and attended Pratt Institute from 1956 to 1960."
  45. ^ "'Natural' Sportswear From Porter" February 13, 1992. Accessed January 22, 2017. "Born and raised in New York City, Porter studied at the Loftier School of Art and Design and the Way Institute of Technology."
  46. ^ Bobby Weinstein, Songwriters Hall of Fame. Accessed January 22, 2017. "Bobby Weinstein, was a production of a musical family, attended the Loftier School of Art and Design in Manhattan, but his allegiance to the arts presently took a unlike plough when he became swept up past the Doo Wop music phenomenon which had swung into loftier gear at the time."
  47. ^ "George Kuchar, Underground Filmmaker, Dies at 69" The New York Times September 8, 2011
  48. ^ Antonio Lopez & Juan Ramos, Smithsonian Establishment, retrieved 2009-12-04
  49. ^ "Gerard Malanga - David R. Godine, Publisher"
  50. ^ Afrikanah.org
  51. ^ "Robert Volpe, Art-Theft Good, Dies at 63", The New York Times, Dec five, 2006.
  52. ^ "James A. Simon". (photo entry) 1963 High School of Art and Design Yearbook (Art & Design Alumni Association). 1963. p. 23. Archived from the original on November 15, 2011. Retrieved October 24, 2016.
  53. ^ "Archived re-create". Archived from the original on 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2019-09-fifteen . {{cite spider web}}: CS1 maint: archived re-create equally title (link)
  54. ^ "Old Friends - Class of 1963 - High Schoolhouse of Fine art and Design - $3 Lifetime subscription".
  55. ^ Superstar in a Housedress: The Life and Legend of Jackie Curtis
  56. ^ D'Arcy, David (July 13, 2011). "Art goes dorsum to school". The Art Newspaper.
  57. ^ Kastner, Jeffrey. "ART/Compages; An Energetic Imagist Who Dances With Adventure". The New York Times. August nineteen, 2001. Accessed Nov nineteen, 2007.
  58. ^ "Candida Royalle, 64, Dies; Filmed Erotica for Women" The New York Times, September 10, 2015.
  59. ^ "The Man Behind The Image", July 7, 2015
  60. ^ Donadoni, Serena. "Hormonal pyrotechnics 101: Amy Heckerling on life, love and other high-schoolhouse explosives." Metro Times. July 26, 2000. Accessed February 10, 2008. "Few filmmakers are every bit in bear on with their inner teenager as Amy Heckerling, fifty-fifty if her own experience is diametrically opposed to those of the California teens in her best films. The Bronx native attended the High School of Art and Design in nearby Manhattan, where she focused on photography, and eventually moved on to New York University to study film."
  61. ^ Alan Kupperberg at the Lambiek Comiclopedia. Accessed Apr. iv, 2009.
  62. ^ Biography of Steven Meisel | Widewalls
  63. ^ Contributor's Notes, Eclectica magazine, October / Nov 2005. Accessed August 6, 2008. "Eljay Persky grew up in New York City'due south Greenwich Hamlet, attending the High School of Art and Design."
  64. ^ Talon, Durwin S. Panel Discussions: Design in Sequential Art Storytelling. TwoMorrows Publishing. November ane, 2007. Google Books. Retrieved Feb 11, 2012.
  65. ^ Davis, Michael (August 8, 2008). "Milestone: If Yous're Not There, You Just Won't Get It: Straight No Chaser". ComicMix. Quote: "I knew (we all knew) that Malcolm was a troubled soul and I'k sad to say that when he committed suicide a few years ago I was not that surprised. Denys and I would often talk about how to deal with Malcolm and reached out to him many times. That does little to erase the feeling that we somehow let our friend downward."
  66. ^ Evans, Chris (Apr three, 2010). "WC10: Comic Writers Unite!". Comic Book Resources.
  67. ^ "Mark Texeria". WizardWorld. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
  68. ^ Meet the legendary graffiti artists who inspired 'The Go Downwardly'
  69. ^ "Street Creative person Christopher "Daze" Ellis Reveals Solo Testify at The Museum of the City of New York" Untapped Cities, Nov eighteen, 2015.
  70. ^ Le Marie, Nicole. "Hot on Prada's heels, the divine Marc Jacobs". The Independent. February 25, 2007. Accessed April xviii, 2008. "Since graduating from the New York High Schoolhouse of Art and Design in 1981 and moving on to the Parsons Schoolhouse of Blueprint, the New Yorker has gathered accolades galore and is at present artistic manager for Louis Vuitton."
  71. ^ "Femmes Fatales: An Installation by Lady Pink Archived 2008-06-04 at the Wayback Auto. The Galleries at Moore. Accessed July 24, 2008.
  72. ^ a b Graffiti School – Art & Design High School (NYC) "Mare 139 & Lady Pinkish in an Fine art & Pattern Bathroom (From Hip Hop Files)"
  73. ^ "Roger Sanchez Tickets, Tour Dates 2018 & Concerts – Songkick" "A graduate of New York Metropolis's High Schoolhouse of Art and Pattern, Sanchez later on enrolled at the Pratt Institute studying architecture."
  74. ^ "Pharoahe Monch - Hip Hop Aureate Age"
  75. ^ Pinterest "Ivan de Prume, NYC High School of Art and Design class of 1987, is a heavy metal drummer whose music became famous in the groove metal ring White Zombie."
  76. ^ Pepose, David (March 16, 2011). "Creative person's Aisle 12: Jamal Igle From Art School to ZATANNA". Newsarama.
  77. ^ "MULTIVERSO DC: Sectional interview with Jamal Igle" Archived 2010-10-xiii at the Wayback Machine. Titans Tower. March 2008
  78. ^ "Iconic X-Men Creative person Coming to a Urban center Almost You!" WizardWorld. Retrieved Feb 11, 2012.
  79. ^ "Joe Madureira". Kees Kousemaker's Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved Feb 11, 2012.
  80. ^ "Mobb Deep'southward Prodigy was hip-hop'south greatest poet of fear." "For starters, Prodigy and Havoc themselves weren't exactly central-casting gangsters: Both attended New York'southward prestigious Loftier School of Art and Design, a school whose alumni include Calvin Klein, Amy Heckerling, Fab Five Freddy, and Marc Jacobs."
  81. ^ "Fabolous Talks About Attending Art School & Connection To Basquiat" "Earlier I was a musician, I drew," said Fabolous. "The housing projects in Brooklyn weren't much of a canvas, people didn't know that I had it in me – but I really went to an art and blueprint loftier school."
  82. ^ "A$AP Ferg On Breaking Downward Boundaries As Tiffany & Co's Make Ambassador", Vogue.co.united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, June 15, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • NYC Department of Education: Art and Design High Schoolhouse
  • High Schoolhouse of Art and Pattern Alumni Association
  • Friends of Art and Design High School

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_School_of_Art_and_Design

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