BFA Graduate Finds Human Connection Through Aesthetic Chaos
For first-generation BFA graduate Ashley (Burrows) Banegas, art has long been a way to seek out connection with other people. Her passion for art was fostered early in life by a middle-school art teacher who behaved unlike any teacher she had ever known. “I had never experienced anyone who lived in such a free, openly communicative kind of way.” Despite this early inspiration, Banegas, who is originally from Greencastle, PA, started college in 2006 as a business major. On a trip to visit friends at another university, however, she again saw how art connected people. “There is really nothing like an art community to pull you in and let you be you,” she said. She changed majors and was quickly drawn to ceramics. For a number of years, life got in the way of completing her degree. After a divorce, a move across country in a conversion van and the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Banegas felt motivated to complete her undergraduate education at WNMU. She said of her early...