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Guess and Win

19 Toronto students snag $1.5M in international scholarships

06/30/2011  | Marcia Chen, CityNews.ca

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Andrea Chartrand Student Andrea Chartrand stands in front of her painting on May 18, 2011.
Visual art exhibit A student work is displayed at ESA on May 18, 2011.
Jean-Luc Lindsay self-portrait A work by student Jean-Luc Lindsay is displayed at ESA on May 18, 2011.
Visual art exhibit A work by Andrea Chartrand is displayed at ESA on May 18, 2011.
Visual art exhibit Student works are displayed at ESA on May 18, 2011.
Visual art teacher Matthew Varey Matthew Varey stands in front of a painting by Andrea Chartrand on May 18, 2011.
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Hearing visual arts teacher Matthew Varey boast about his kids skipping grades, getting solo shows in Europe, and using doctorate-level language, you’d think he was talking about his own children.

No, these are students at Etobicoke School of the Arts (ESA), an academy on Royal York Road also known for music, theatre and film. It’s the alma mater of indie darlings Amy Millan and Emily Haines and ‘90s “it” boy Keanu Reeves.

With high school now done, many of Varey’s students will head south to the world’s best art schools. Tuition is high, but not for these graduates, who netted more than $1.5 million in scholarships to colleges in both Canada and the United States, including Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art (PAFA), Parsons in New York City and the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

How they made it there was part skill, part marketing.

Varey, 43, had organized a portfolio showing last fall, personally contacting all the art institutes he could find. He thought a dozen would come and offer his students at most $600,000 in grants.

To his surprise, 21 schools from Pasadena to Paris turned up at the non-descript, 1950s brick building and, after seeing the art, courted the Grade 12s with hand-written letters and cash.

“We had reps here last November [who said], ‘I’ve done this my whole career. I’ve been to portfolio-day events for 18 years, and this is by far the strongest I’ve ever been to,'” Varey told CityNews.ca.

“I caught someone on the phone saying, ‘You gotta get down here. You wouldn’t believe these kids.’”

One of those kids – painter and photographer Andrea Chartrand – credits Varey and ESA with helping her land $350,000 in scholarship offers and her dream of going to the U.S. for art school.

“I spend three hours a day total on [public transit], but the school is really worth coming to,” Chartrand said.

“The teachers here really push you and encourage you to achieve your goal whatever that may be. We have a really great support system here.”

Chartrand starts at PAFA in September – something she couldn’t have done without the $64,000 the school is giving her – and hopes to be a working artist when she graduates in four years.

Varey, a painter and sculptor himself, hopes students like Chartrand will eventually have a school in Canada equal to the ones in the U.S. and abroad.

“I think the kids that come out of here, if they get the right program and they stay in the city, we could really turn Toronto into the next major art centre in the world,” Varey said.

“We have the potential here in Canada, in Toronto, to be known as second to New York – equivalent to Berlin at least. I don’t think it would take long.”

Until then, he’ll keep up his role as cheerleader for his students at ESA.
 
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