Alumni
Living Your Life in Art
PCA&D Alumni are living their lives in art as thinkers, makers, and communicators.
Find resources here to keep in touch and connect with your PCA&D family.
Alumni: We Need You!
As alumni, you are vital and important members of the College community. As PCA&D prepares to celebrate its 40th anniversary and beyond, we are committed to enhancing relationships with our alumni. We invite you to participate in this electronic survey so that we may better get to know you and identify ways in which you would like to stay connected to the College. If you have any additional questions on how to get involved with PCA&D, please contact Todd Snovel.
Ways to Stay Involved
PCA&D is home to an extensive creative community of students, faculty, staff, artists and designers. There are many ways for you to be a part of this innovative community:
- Join our growing community of donors
- Visit the College’s main gallery to see museum-quality exhibitions throughout the year
- Learn more about the work of exhibiting artists by attending an artist lecture
- Enroll in a continuing education class
- Attend one of our special events
- Hire a PCA&D intern
Of course, you can always be involved by visiting us on Facebook’s Alumni Page or following us on Twitter.
Connect
Stay in touch, share your current work and projects and let us know what you are up to. Visit us on Facebook and share your news. Contact Director of Development Todd Snovel at (717) 396-7833 ext. 1010 for more information on how you can get involved.
Spotlights
Nick Fasnacht
Class of 2003
PCA&D offers personalized instruction and a great atmosphere in a city that recognizes and cherishes the arts. I learned how to juggle many projects at the same time and still complete them on time. It's a real world aspect of the industry that PCA&D engraved into me.
Katherine Horst
Class of 2009
I learned how to handle a variety of different mediums to achieve the style that I wanted my finished art piece to have. The experience of being critiqued and questioned about why I was making my work showed me how to narrow my focus early in my process so that I would have a more cohesive body of work in the end.