
May 12, 2016
Arms to Arts

Poetter Hall at the Savannah College of Art and Design
This week Design Observer has the pleasure of posting three excerpts from the memoir of Savannah College of Art and Design President and Founder Paula Wallace.
The Bee and the Acorn weaves together personal memoir, institutional evolution, and the urban history of Savannah. Wallace recalls the challenges and the discoveries made, the luck and good will rendered, and the reward in perseverance.Established in 1978, the Savannah College of Art and Design is a private, nonprofit, accredited university, offering more than 100 academic degree programs in forty-two majors in Atlanta and Savannah, Hong Kong, and Lacoste, France. The university s innovative curriculum is enhanced by professional-level technology, equipment, and learning resources, as well as opportunities for internships, professional certifications, and collaborative projects with corporate partners.
The Bee and the Acorn traces the journey of Wallace and her family to the historic Georgia coastal town of Savannah, where they set about creating a new university for the arts. The tiny college would be a radically different kind of institution, buzzing with progressive ideas about what education could be and what it should do for students. Nearly forty years later, SCAD has become one of the largest and most highly regarded arts universities in the world.
“They won’t get mugged.”
“How do you know?”
I wasn’t sure. Faith, maybe. By the time we actually moved, faith was about all we had left.
In fact, Savannah was a curious, lovely place, a city on the margins, at the edge of a continent, in between the New World and the Old, a safe place on a bluff on a river in the wilderness.
They called it the Armory. It was silent, cold, damp, dusty, gargantuan. Many years later, students would nickname it “Hogwarts.” But in 1978, the building had no heat, no air. It was a 36,000-square-foot fortress, with peeling paint, every surface coated in a greasy, lurid dust. Many windows had been boarded. In one window, in lieu of boards, hung a Schlitz beer sign. “Go for the Gusto,” it read. The Gusto, it appeared, had gone too.
Observed
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Observed
By Paula Wallace
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