2025 Kid's Summer Art Camp: Paper Mache! (Ages 7-10)

Crafts.jpeg
Crafts.jpeg

2025 Kid's Summer Art Camp: Paper Mache! (Ages 7-10)

$175.00

Date and Time: The week of Monday, June 16, 2025, to Friday, June 20, 2025, from 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM each day

Age: 7-10

Teaching Artist: Haya Cuzick

Cost: $175.00 per child for the entire week

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Paper Mache Camp is all about having fun and sculpting in paper! Projects will walk students through various sculptures and opportunities to design, build and paint their very own creation! Each day, teaching artist Haya Cuzick will guide students through explorative, hands-on play with paper mache.

This five-day camp will be taught Monday, June 16, 2025, to Friday, June 20, 2025, from 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM each day

This camp is appropriate for kids ages 7-10. The cost of camp is $175.00 per child for the entire week. All skill levels are welcome and all materials are provided. Preregistration is required and space is limited.

*Each day will have a dedicated break time where kids may eat snacks and drink water. Kids must bring their own snacks and water bottles. Water cups will be available. A parent/guardian is required to sign their child in and out every day.

Questions? Please call the Museum at (805) 525-5554 ext. 104 or email creativity@santapaulaartmuseum.org.


Youth Scholarships Available!

The Santa Paula Art Museum offers financial assistance to qualifying individuals. To qualify, students must be between the ages of 3 and 18, and their family must be enrolled in the state’s EBT or WIC program. Once verified, you will receive a discount code to use towards enrollment. Financial assistance is limited and not guaranteed.


About Our Teaching Artist:

Haya Cuzick is a Southern California based artist. She received an MFA from The School of the Institute of Art of Chicago in 2002. Working predominantly in clay and mixed media, she draws inspiration from her indigenous Mexican and Spanish heritage as well as from her belief that humans are a part of nature and not in control of it. Haya’s view of life and nature result in the creation of vignettes depicting scenes of a personal lore that highlights a playfulness and love of for all things in nature. The central character is a skeleton or”calaca” she thinks of as “the mother of all things”.