Amellia Hausmann ’21 Wins National Recognition for Art
The outlook for Amellia Hausmann ’21 is bright and sunny these days. She is one of only eight people in the country to earn the Gold Medal Portfolio Award in Art, the highest honor given by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. The prestigious award comes with a $10,000 scholarship. Her work was selected from nearly 2,000 works that received National Medals, and among the 15,000 works that were awarded regionally with Gold Keys.
Her winning portfolio, entitled “Sun Dried,” transports the eye to imagery that captures how sunlight plays with fabric, says Amellia. “I worked to accentuate the warm colors in the faces and to keep the highlights on the fabric crisp to really give the sense of a bright, warm, summer day.
“My overall goal was to utilize the interesting colors and shapes that bright, direct sunlight creates against fabric to create beautiful, nostalgic scenes so that even if the viewer has never experienced the scene, the piece transports them to a warm, familiar environment," says Amellia.
“All of my art is a mixture of inspiration I find from artists I love. I try to always have one realistic element and then the rest I try to experiment,” she says.
In addition to the Gold Medal Portfolio Award, Amellia won a Gold Medal and the American Visions Award for her piece “Colorful Breeze.” She will be recognized during a virtual ceremony in June, and her work will hang in an exhibition in New York City. Now in its 98th year, the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards are the nation's longest-running and most prestigious scholarship and recognition program for young artists and writers in grades 7–12.
Winning this award, Amellia is in the company of Stephen King, Sylvia Plath, Truman Capote, Andy Warhol, and Amanda Gorman, all notable alumni of the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards.
Amellia has been at Hutchison since junior kindergarten, with a two-year break in middle school, and says she became serious about art when she entered upper school.
“I’ve always enjoyed art, but I started taking it more seriously once I was in high school. I always liked crafts and creative things growing up, but once I began taking more structured, serious classes like advanced honors drawing during my sophomore year, I began to realize how much I loved it.”
Amellia’s passion for art and creating extends past the classroom. She has her own business outside of school called Art by Amellia where she sells original paintings and takes commissions, which she says includes a lot of custom pet portraits. She will attend Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) next year where she plans to major in User Experience (UX Design), which includes a mixture of technology, marketing, and design. She also wants to minor or double major in painting.
Eleanor Merchant '23 wanted to find a way to help fight the national ongoing blood shortage, so she organized a blood drive at Hutchison. With her efforts over the past two years, blood donations at the Hutchison blood drive could have saved as many as 192 lives.
Allison Blankenship ’12 has committed her 10 years since graduating from Hutchison to working in the political arena, spending the last five years working in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Becca Coopwood ’27 serves as a student ambassador for The Social Institute, an organization that works to empower students to use social media and technology in a positive way. In her role, she helps produce blog posts from the perspective of students.
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