When Amanda Jarvis was a child and her school in rural Oklahoma lost its arts funding, it was an immediate disappointment, she said. But it also had ripple consequences.
鈥淭here was no guidance or programs in our schools to make me realize that [various career paths] could be a possibility,鈥 Jarvis said. 鈥淚 really want to be able to give back and help kids in those situations.鈥
Whether the 亚洲AV senior is creating a聽聽to encourage students to upcycle and learn about the impact of the fashion industry, making upcycled sculptures, or working on a project that stitches together art and engineering at聽, Jarvis said she hopes her unconventional creativity can make an impact.
Her side projects, which she said may inspire her upcoming capstone project for the聽聽program, could be the first step in doing that.
Jarvis, who learned to sew from her grandmother as a child and has been making her own clothes for years, is now being commissioned to create wearable electronics for her friends who are circus performers. When a motion or light sensor is activated, the circus costume is programmed to play different music notes, she explained.
Jarvis hopes the project will morph into an interactive 鈥渟cience fair meets circus鈥 collaboration, where 鈥渨e could travel around to areas where kids don鈥檛 have access to arts and engineering. And they would be able to be exposed to it and hopefully be inspired.鈥
That鈥檚 important because inspiration has the potential to impact society, Jarvis said.
鈥淲hat鈥檚 fun [is] when you do something artistic and creative, you get to play and experiment and discover techniques that can be applied to more serious applications, like medical and assistive technology and special education,鈥 Jarvis said.
Jarvis encountered wearable electronics when she spent time working at a technology company after earning her associate鈥檚 degree in business from Northern Virginia Community College. She enrolled at Mason because she wanted to be in a more creative space and study to make costumes for film.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been really cool to be in this environment within Mason, because if The MIX wasn鈥檛 here, I don鈥檛 think I would鈥檝e come across this stuff in the way that I did, where it all comes together,鈥 said Jarvis, who works part time as The MIX鈥檚 maker manager and coordinates聽聽for the Mason community on everything from sewing to 3D printing.
At Mason, Jarvis has had additional opportunities to grow professionally, including a costume and textile internship at the Hillwood Museum in 2017 with her mentor and now-retired Mason professor Howard Kurtz.
鈥淎mong many other great qualities, [Jarvis] is collaborative and insightful,鈥 said Karen Livingston, associate director for entrepreneurship programs at Mason. 鈥淭hese qualities allow Amanda to act as a leader, bringing multidisciplinary teams together to create meaningful impact, while also providing the much-needed flair of creativity, technical know-how, and out-of-the box thinking to the table.鈥
鈥淲herever life takes her, I imagine that those around her will continue to be empowered and inspired by these outstanding qualities and positive energy,鈥 Livingston said.