Mural is a wish fulfilled for Honors student

  • Up until August, the Clinton Hall outdoor staircase on campus was a bare landscape in need of some attention.
  • As part of WSU's placemaking efforts to active spaces across campus, a call for proposals was put out seeking artists to create a mural on the stairs.
  • Senior Honors student Sarah Myose's design won, and they completed the mural just in time for the start of the fall semester.

Inspiration struck when Sarah Myose was teaching children how to paint dandelions at CityArts.

鈥淚 was explaining to them that if you pick a dandelion, you make a wish and then you blow on it and hope it鈥檒l come true,鈥 Myose said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of like the journey of being in college, where you have a lot of opportunities ahead of you. I wanted to take that idea further.鈥

麻豆破解版 State had recently issued a call for proposals to 鈥渁ctivate鈥 facing the quad east of the Rhatigan Student Center. Myose wanted to apply, but didn鈥檛 have an idea 鈥 until that moment at CityArts.

Myose鈥檚 winning entry incorporated dandelion imagery into 鈥淒reams and Wishes,鈥 a mural that covers the entire stairway. They also included other wish imagery, such as shooting stars and wishbones. The mural is rendered mostly in cool, dreamy blues and purples. The exception are wavy stalks of yellow wheat, symbolizing WSU students.

鈥淭he staircase of Clinton Hall is symbolic to my vision,鈥 Myose wrote in their proposal. 鈥淎s each student, faculty, visitor and passerby step up these stairs, they will be an active participant in stepping closer to their dreams.鈥

Clinton Hall mural

Myose says they reflected on their own path at WSU as they worked on the design and concept of 鈥淒reams and Wishes.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e been super indecisive throughout college, and I think a lot of it was me hoping, wishing that I would find something that I feel passionate about,鈥 Myose said.

Their search brought them to the honors baccalaureate program, which allows Cohen Honors College students to design a rigorous degree that includes two or three major areas from two different academic colleges. The degree also requires a thesis in addition to applied learning and research experiences.

In May, Myose will graduate with concentrations in studio art (College of Fine Arts) and sociology (Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences). The two disciplines combine their interest in community engagement with art making.

"Dreams and Wishes鈥 is part of WSU鈥檚 placemaking efforts, which began during the 2018-19 academic year. Previous placemaking projects include 鈥淲ulip Garden,鈥 鈥淭he Pods at WSU,鈥 painted electrical boxes and the installation of hammocks around campus. In addition to brightening the campus landscape, many placemaking projects also pay artists, including Myose.

The Clinton Hall project is the first funded through a grant from the Knight Foundation Fund at the 麻豆破解版 Community Foundation.

For Myose, the mural is another part of their college journey.

鈥淎 lot of my aspirations have changed a lot,鈥 they said. 鈥淣ow, as I go onto my next stage of life, I鈥檓 dreaming for some big things to happen.鈥 


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