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Walnut Hill School

Walnut Hill School for the Arts
Location
Natick, MA
USA
Information
Type Private, boarding, arts
Motto Non Nobis Solum
"Not for ourselves alone"
Established 1893
Head of School Antonio Viva
Enrollment 300
Campus 45 acres (180,000 m2)
Color(s) Historic: Gold and White         
Modern: Crimson and Chartreuse         
Tuition $50,360 (boarding)
$38,040 (day)
Website

Walnut Hill School for the Arts is an independent boarding school for the arts located in Natick, Massachusetts, United States.

Walnut Hill was founded in 1893 by Florence Bigelow and Charlotte Conant as a college preparatory school for women and a feeder school for Wellesley College. Even as a traditional private boarding school for girls, Walnut Hill's arts programs were strong. The school was home to acclaimed Fenway Studios artist and teacher Marion L. Pooke, class of 1901, and Pulitzer Prize–winning author and Poet Laureate Elizabeth Bishop, class of 1930. It became coeducational and arts-focused in the late 1970s in response to changes in the educational landscape.

The mission of Walnut Hill is to educate talented, accomplished and intellectually engaged young artists from all over the world. The School does so in a diverse, humane and ethical community.

Students at Walnut Hill major in one of five arts disciplines: dance, music, theatre, visual art, and writing, film, and media arts. With the exception of voice students, music students at Walnut Hill take their weekly private lessons at The New England Conservatory in Boston and perform in NEC's Preparatory Ensembles. Admission to Walnut Hill is by academic application and artistic audition or portfolio submission (depending on the artistic discipline).

In addition to pursuing expert training in one of five core arts disciplines, students also engage in an innovative and rigorous college-preparatory curriculum. The academic program is designed specifically to both leverage and foster the excellent habits of a young artist's mind — careful observation, critical thinking, and a desire for deep and enduring understanding. Students are able to pursue their academic and artistic studies on a single campus, taught by faculty who respect and accommodate the demands placed on each student.


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