Students enjoying ‘Coming Home’ for art
Published 12:07 am Friday, March 4, 2016
Students from Cathedral School’s Art 2 class, taught by art instructor Andree Gamberi, took a field trip to see the Tricentennial art exhibit “Coming Home: A Tribute to Renowned Natchez Artists” Thursday afternoon at the Historic Natchez Foundation. Gamberi talks to her students in the gallery filled with art by Dale Campbell Fairbanks. (Ben Hillyer / The Natchez Democrat)
NATCHEZ — Students from Cathedral School’s Art 2 class, taught by art instructor Andree Gamberi, took a field trip to see the Tricentennial art exhibit “Coming Home: A Tribute to Renowned Natchez Artists” Thursday afternoon at the Historic Natchez Foundation. The exhibit will remain open to the public and to interested school groups through the end of March.
Students from Cathedral School’s Art 2 class, taught by art instructor Andree Gamberi, took a field trip to see the Tricentennial art exhibit “Coming Home: A Tribute to Renowned Natchez Artists” Thursday afternoon at the Historic Natchez Foundation. The class looks at a Noah Saterstrom’s painting of the Natchez bluff. The exhibit which features five former Natchez residents who have received acclaim on the global arts scene. The exhibit will remain open to the public and to interested school groups through the end of March. (Ben Hillyer / The Natchez Democrat)
Students from Cathedral School’s Art 2 class, taught by art instructor Andree Gamberi, took a field trip to see the Tricentennial art exhibit “Coming Home: A Tribute to Renowned Natchez Artists” Thursday afternoon at the Historic Natchez Foundation. Deja Harris, left, and Mary Kathryn Mascagni look at a painting created by Dale Campbell Fairbanks. (Ben Hillyer / The Natchez Democrat)
(Ben Hillyer / The Natchez Democrat)