Tue. Apr 1st, 2025

The Marion community supports youth arts through various programs

By Anna Ohashi Mar 25, 2025

The Marion community supports youth in their various artistic journeys through organizations such as the Community School of the Arts and the Marion Art Commission.

Dawn Conwell, president of the board for the Marion Art Commission, said, “We are partnering with the city of Marion to establish the arts and cultural district for Marion.”

Conwell said that she has always loved art, but she stepped away from her passion due to life circumstances. When she was homeschooling her son, she attended a painting class that rekindled her love for art. 

Her son turned his artistic passion into a career as a published author and illustrator.

“People don’t look at (art) as a career, and we want kids to know that you can have a career in art. There are a lot of different avenues in creative careers…I wish could’ve done that at some point, but my journey took a different turn. I want people to know that they can do it full-time,” Conwell said.

The Community School of the Arts partners with Marion High School to create a program called CSA Arts Academy, which provides young students the opportunity to further their art education. 

Shelly Inskeep, executive director at CSA, said Academy students have nontraditional schedules where they fulfill their academic requirements at the high school, but receive art credit from CSA. Many students who participate in the Academy attend art schools afterward. 

Inskeep said one student went to Julliard for dance. Inskeep’s daughter is currently attending the University of North Carolina School of the Arts. 

“Experiencing the arts teaches you about collaboration and being in community in a really unique way, which makes you a fuller person,” Inskeep said. “It is building a lot of skills that they are going to use in life no matter what they end up doing.”

Isaiah Alexander, a student at CSA, said, “(Art) has helped me see myself almost outside of myself, so I feel a little bit more aware of the things that I say or even how I act around people.”

Alexander said that sometimes people view art as invaluable, or they stereotype the people who do.

 “But I would argue back that everybody enjoys entertainment and partially art serves as entertainment for people. So, even if you’re not an artist, you can enjoy the art that other people have put out there.” Alexander said, “But I also would like to tell those people that for the artists themselves, it means a whole lot more than just doing something for fun, and it actually has connections to real-life situations that we go through every day.”