This spring, five Scripps students were awarded a Student Creativity Grant from the The Rick and Susan Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity, also known as the Hive. The Hive is a 5C resource housed at Pomona College that provides learning experiences focused on a collaborative approach to solving real-world problems, using the liberal arts as a jumping-off point. During remote learning, the grant program was designed to support students who no longer have access to 5C resources or have significant barriers to curricular work or important creative endeavors.
鈥淭he聽Hive聽Student Creativity Grants were initiated early fall semester as a way to provide students who would normally use the physical聽Hive聽space to create to continue their creative growth away from the聽Hive,鈥 says Linda Shimoda, operations empress and Hive historian (the official title bestowed on Shimoda by Rick Sontag himself). 鈥淲e also wanted to help facilitate collaboration at a distance by encouraging students to join as teams and across disciplines and passions to develop and remotely work on creative projects together.鈥
Sarah Meadows 鈥22 and Coraya Danu-Asmara 鈥21 are using their grant to experiment with the creation of silicone molds to construct resin figures. Tsion Mamo 鈥23, Sophia Frye 鈥23, and Ruth Alemu Mekonnen (HMC) are recreating popular trends from social media with knitting and crocheting. And Ishta Nabakka 鈥23 and Wren Cilimburg (CMC) will create block print stamps that depict themes of social activism, collectiveness, harmony, and mindfulness to use on T-shirts.
On May 5, 2021, the Hive will celebrate creativity grant awardees at a Student Creativity Grant Expo. Students will virtually share, show, and wear what they鈥檝e created, describing their creative process and the project鈥檚 highlights and challenges. 鈥淭he spring-awarded projects are incredibly inspiring and creative, and we鈥檙e excited to have the students share their creations with us and others,鈥 Shimoda says.