A Sense of Community
Keelie Verbeek
Class of 2022 • Southborough, Massachusetts
Stepping onto campus, even in the pouring rain, she knew immediately that Washington College was just that, “a community where everyone knows everyone, and for the most part, takes care of each other.” Now, as a transfer student, Verbeek has settled into life on the Eastern Shore, finding her home on the soccer 团队 and in the Department of Art + 艺术历史.
Throughout her life, Verbeek has used art and athletics as coping mechanisms to tackle mental health issues. Now as a Shorewoman, she is bringing those same passions to life, both on the soccer field and in the realm of art history. “The concept of creating art to serve a particular movement, purpose, or individual is universal,” she remarks, “But the ways in which those concepts present themselves in images varies drastically, and I find that incredibly interesting.”
Well on her way to pursuing a major concentration in art history, as well as a minor in Arts Management and Entrepreneurship, she has an innate ability to bring her passions to life in the classroom. As an animal rights activist and vegan, Verbeek strives to live an entirely cruelty-free life, but encounters a conflict when faced with the animal products used in many art supplies throughout art's history.
In her final project for Professor Tilghman’s Medieval 艺术历史 course, she plans to explore this conflict, particularly as it relates to animal ethics and the history of art in the Middle Ages and Renaissance.
Beyond the Department of Art + 艺术历史, Verbeek’s heart is with the women’s soccer 团队. “It is really hard to balance school and soccer sometimes,” she explains, “But in reality, I think I would be far worse off without this 团队.” With 25 women by your side, fighting the same fight, the support is both invaluable and unbounded.
Keelie's Four Year Plan