"The fine arts are powerful at CC because the Block Plan enables a class to reach the impossible; dancers can travel as a group to a dance festival to see the outside, real world. It pushes you to use your creativity – that creativity which is most important in the arts – to maximize your time." – YunYu Wang-Chen, associate professor of dance
Profile: Marty Sertich '06
All-America center Marty Sertich, who finished the 2004-05 season with a nation-leading 64 points, is the second Colorado College player in three years to win the prestigious Hobey Baker Memorial Award. Sertich was announced as the 2005 recipient during a ceremony in conjunction with the NCAA Frozen Four. For Sertich, it seems to run in the family. His father, Steve, played for Colorado College in the early 1970s and skated for the United States at the 1976 Winter Olympic Games. The municipal rink in Colorado Springs is named after his paternal grandfather, Mark "Pa" Sertich. If that wasn't enough, his other grandfather – Tony Frasca – was an All-American at CC in the early 1950s. Marty's younger brother, Mike, also plays for the Tigers. One of four First-Team All-Americans on last season's Colorado College roster, Sertich joins former teammate Peter Sejna (2003) as the only two CC players ever to win the Hobey Baker Memorial Award. Junior left wing Brett Sterling, the nation's top goal scorer with 34, also was a Top 3 finalist last spring.
– Marty Sertich '06, history major, Roseville, Minn.
Profile: Katlin Okamoto '07
A three-year captain at Taos High School who earned First-Team All-State honors in both her junior and senior years, Okamoto knows her way down a soccer field. She served as captain of her Albuquerque United club and Olympic Development teams, led both to state and tournament championships, and was voted team MVP of her high school team in 1999. Luckily for CC, Okamoto came to campus to interview for a merit scholarship and decided that she was interested in playing here. Luckily for everyone, she received the CC Scholar award and when she came to campus, she walked onto the soccer field only to be voted rookie of the year. An honors student who loves sushi and skiing, Okamoto knows that it will be difficult to balance all her commitments, but says, "The CC professors have been very supportive of my athletic schedule. They often ask about how the team is doing and even try to attend games!"
Katlin Okamoto '07, biology major, Taos, N.M.
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At CC, we believe in the power of art to transform and transcend; we believe in the potential of art to educate; and we believe in the ability of art to speak beyond boundaries of language and social restrictions. Perhaps the drama and dance department mission statement says it best: "Creativity comes from a broadened mind, and we suggest that a more educated and enlightened student makes a better artist. We believe that creativity is a noble enterprise."

For this reason, Colorado College offers an enormously diverse range of opportunities in the fine arts, from Cuban music classes on campus to theater programs in London. More than 80 percent of students engage in the arts at some point during their four years here, and we invite students from all majors to enroll in fine arts courses – drama, dance, music, and art.

Music

Attend master classes, learn about African drumming, or simply take a piano lesson – you can do all these things and more in the music department. Music education at CC combines performance taught by first-rate musicians and compelling, topic-driven classes that mix music with subjects like religion and history. Computers and state-of-the-art composition software are also integrated into daily music instruction, and the department also offers opportunities for recital blocks and performance.

Great Performers and Ideas

The Great Performers and Ideas Committee, organized and led by students, promotes a greater awareness of classical, contemporary, and cross-cultural concerts by selecting and sponsoring a wide variety of renowned artists. The committee presents musicians, dance companies, lectures, and theatrical groups and plays an important role in providing students with a diverse and varied cultural experience. Guest artists in the last season included the Los Angeles Baritones; George Crumb, a modern composer and musician; Arlo Guthrie; and the Brazilian Classical Guitar Quartet.

Great Performers and Ideas also gives students the opportunity to learn production and planning skills. Liz Stanton '88, a theater producer in New York City, says that what prepared her most for her career was working with the campus’s Great Performers and Ideas Committee. "I really learned how to take an idea and make it happen," she says, "how to find the money, find the space, print the program, organize the calendar — all of those things that are skills I use everyday in my life, in my career."

Click to see what associate dance professor YunYu Wang-Chen has to say

Drama and Dance

"Drama and dance are inherently connected by their dependence upon the live theatrical event, and we encourage all our classes — technical, literary, studio, and performance — not to lose sight of this imperative." That’s the foundational theory of this cross-disciplinary major. Performing everything from "The Threepenny Opera" to a tableau vivant version of Beckett, theater and dance productions are staged across campus — from a dining hall to a 300-seat performance hall. Each year, the department puts on four major theatrical productions, a faculty-choreographed dance concert, and various collaborative productions, and brings in guest artists from across the country to entertain and enlighten CC audiences.

Art

Offering a joint art history/art studio program, the art department is a very modern yet intellectual combination of the practical and the theoretical. Offering classes such as "Word and Image in East Asian Art" and "Spain and the Southwest," the department enhances its courses with visiting artists and scholars, field trips, and study-abroad courses. In recent years, visiting professors have taught courses in the native arts of North America, metal/jewelry art, and advanced photography. During their senior seminar, all art majors spend a week in New York with faculty to visit museums and galleries, and meet with alumni.