Course Description

Contemporary Art & Creative Problem Solving invites students to explore how artists respond to the world around them—social issues, emotions, systems, and everyday challenges—using imagination and experimentation. Students will learn about contemporary artists working today across painting, sculpture, and installation, while building skills in visual thinking, risk-taking, and creative confidence. Rather than focusing on “right answers,” this class emphasizes curiosity, questions, and multiple solutions.

Learning will be implemented through a dynamic mix of short lectures, hands-on studio projects, group discussions, and collaborative sculpture. Students will experiment with materials, brainstorm ideas, respond to creative prompts, and reflect on their process through sketchbooks and group critiques. The class will include a local field trip to the Henry Art Gallery, where students will practice looking closely at contemporary art, discussing ideas, and connecting what they see to their own creative work.

The course culminates in a final project and group conversation where each student develops an original artwork that addresses a problem, question, or theme they care about—such as identity, environment, routines, or imagination. Students will present their work to the class, explaining their concept, materials, and creative choices, which will build confidence in creative problem solving and idea sharing. The final presentation celebrates both the finished artwork and the thinking, experimentation, and growth along the way. Some examples of final projects are a detailed self-portrait (identity) or a spreadsheet of each state’s amount of plastic bags used in a year (environment). We celebrate creative freedom.

Essential Questions

  • What does my art look like and mean?
  • What social issues, emotions, systems, and everyday challenges do I care about?
  • How can I solve creative problems to complete this project?
  • How does creative problem solving apply to life? 
  • How can I communicate my idea in the visual language to my viewer successfully? 
  • What is contemporary art? 

Other Information

  • Students will be required to bring a laptop or similar device. The Robinson Center can provide a device if your student does not have access.
  • This course includes field trips on the UW Campus and we will walk.

Who Should Apply

  • Students currently in 5th or 6th grade.
  • Please note: it is helpful to have prior knowledge in an art making practice such as drawing, but it is not required.

Week Overview

Date Theme/Topic 
Week 1 Welcome, Artists, and Identity

Students are introduced to contemporary art in addition to shared class agreements and discussions about visual language, focusing on how artists communicate ideas today. Through a field trip to The Henry Art Gallery for inspiration and study of artists such as Kehinde Wiley, Amy Sherald, and Julie Mehretu, students learn the steps of artmaking by completing their first project exploring identity as a central theme.

Week 2 Teamwork and Mediums

Students work in groups to develop a collaborative sculpture using found objects, strengthening problem-solving, communication, and shared decision-making skills. Through critique and examples from artists and collectives such as Meow Wolf, Guerrilla Girls, and Lunch Break, students explore how art can be created collectively to express powerful ideas. Additional art making and creative exercises. 

Week 3                                                       Concept Development, Making, and Presentation

Students move from concept and research to creating examples or maquettes, refining their work through making and editing. The week concludes with a final critique, celebration of student work, and a field trip to the Burke Museum that emphasizes reflection and real-world connections to contemporary art.

Instructors

Details

Cost

  • $1450
    • $1400 (tuition)
    • $50 (registration fee)

Time

9am - 2:30pm

Location

  • University of Washington Seattle Campus
  • Building and Room TBD

Date

  • July 6th-24th, 2026
  • Monday - Friday

Refund and Transfer Deadlines

  • Full tuition refund: April 10th
  • 50% tuition refund: April 11th-May 8th
  • No refund: after May 8th