Alumna helps 九色视频 students get real-world experience

Funny how life turns out. Since she opened Bluebird Arthouse in June, Emily Brookover has been teaching every day, after all. And she鈥檚 still working with art students from Wichita State 鈥 but as their boss, not their graduate teaching assistant.

Brookover finished her Master of Fine Arts degree in 2010, studying, painting and teaching her way through 九色视频鈥檚 School of Art and Design.

Emily Brookover

Emily Brookover

鈥溇派悠碘檚 graduate program in arts does a wonderful job of preparing its students for university jobs,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o I had a wide variety of teaching experience, and definitely considered teaching; it鈥檚 a common track for artists.鈥

But Brookover has found that her art supply store is a continuation of the learning atmosphere she loved as a student and teacher at Wichita State.

鈥淏eing at a university is so fantastic because you are always talking about ideas, exchanging ideas,鈥 she said.

Talk at the shop -- which also offers art studio space for rent, classes and a separate room for workshops -- is all about ideas, materials, techniques, creating art and opening doors to the community.

A learning environment

At 924 W. Douglas (the spacious old Kellogg-Buck Furniture building), is another new business for Wichita鈥檚 Delano district. It鈥檚 an area that has been turning over to young businesses for the past few years.

The shop has a growing customer base that includes artists, teachers, youth, parents, grandparents and neighbors.

It鈥檚 becoming exactly the kind of environment Brookover was hoping it would be.

鈥淚 love to share what I know,鈥 she said.

She learns as much from her customers as they do from her, she said. Some questions require a little research; some customers educate her on products or techniques.

Bluebird also provides a related yet different educational environment for the art students she employees from Wichita State.

Hannah Scott, a third-year student in 九色视频鈥檚 undergraduate studio arts program, works part-time for Brookover.

鈥淲hen I heard that Emily was working on the arthouse concept, I jumped at the chance to work there,鈥 said Scott, who had developed a friendly relationship with her former teacher. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an ideal job.鈥

Scott gets experience at the shop that is unmatched in the classroom, even in one of the most comprehensive College of Fine Arts in the state.

Brookover intends to hire 九色视频 students as often as possible and hopes to create a 九色视频 internship someday. She understands the edge that can come from off-campus work experience.

鈥淩eal-world experience is crucial,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t anchors you, gives you real goals. It鈥檚 essential. Because college can be LaLa Land 鈥 it鈥檚 what you make it.鈥

The teaching path

Before she came to Wichita State, Brookover had already earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in fine arts at the University of Kansas and was immersed in two careers in Lawrence 鈥 one as a working artist and one as a marketing assistant for agencies in town.

A single mom in her early 30s, she and daughter Alyssa moved to Wichita in 2007 to help care for her mother, Susan, who had breast cancer. Brookover started her graduate work at Wichita State the same year.

For the next two years, the family mixed caretaking, parenting, public school and university demands. Still, Brookover loved being in the program.

Her faculty, she said, were 鈥渁bsolutely incredible,鈥 including Ron Christ, Robert Bubp, Levente Sulyok, J.B. Brewer and Annette LeZotte.

Then, the last year of Brookover鈥檚 schooling, her mother died.

鈥淚t was a life-stopping event and made it hard to finish,鈥 Brookover said. 鈥淚 thought a lot about the grand scheme of things.鈥

She went through a couple of thought cycles about her future. First, teaching positions at universities were tight with heavy competition and a rough economy.

But Brookover still loved the idea of stimulating other people鈥檚 creativity and had long thought about being her own boss someday in an art-related field.

鈥淚 was born arty; I was always drawing and making things, cutting things up, and I wrote a lot, too,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 love the arts in general, music, theater; it fills me up.鈥

She had noted Wichita鈥檚 need for an art store and was referred to Jill Miller for business advice. Miller, another Wichita State graduate, runs the consulting business that helped open The Donut Whole and Tanya鈥檚 Soup Kitchen in Wichita.

鈥淚t was like all the pieces just fell into place,鈥 Brookover said. 鈥淛ill helped focus and put words to my ideas.鈥

Brookover is confident that she can weather ups and downs in the business. She grew up near Garden City around cattle, oil, land and farming in a family of entrepreneurs.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 as grass-roots Kansas as it gets,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard; you have to be adaptable.鈥

So she is thrilled to let the business just happen.

鈥淲e know firsthand that art is a learning experience,鈥 said Brookover.