People of all ages visited the Hill School campus on Monday afternoon for the school's annual Glow Gallery. This year's theme was "Space, Exploration, and Robotics," and the classrooms were transformed into bright blacklight displays featuring neon planets, rockets, robots from the future, and student art lighting up the room from every angle.
Students created imaginative projects that combined art, science, and STEM subjects using UV-reactive paints, neon paper, oil pastels, and other materials. Students and visitors stepped into another world during the art show, with everything glowing under the black lights.
The gallery also included displays about NASA's recent Artemis II mission, a historic 10-day crewed flyby of the moon that launched April 1 and returned safely to Earth on April 10. Students studied space travel, with the moon and robotics as subjects for their projects.
These projects brought real science and innovation into the classroom in a fun and engaging manner. Families and staff were amazed at the hard work and creativity of the students.
The art teachers did an impressive job creating the gallery with their students. From brightly lit constellations to vibrantly colored robots, the event was a memorable celebration of art, science, and student creativity.
See more photos HERE!