About
SummerART Camps includes specific art activities such as SummerART: Teen Manga Session 2 and Studio Art Sampler: Watercolor Techniques. Participants may also take part in Joyful Art Exploration, Session 2 and Bookmaking: Japanese Sewn Binding. Additional listed activities connected with the program include From Soil To Surface, Woodcarving and Whittling, Visible Mending as an Artistic Process, Weaving, Wrapping, and Stitching: Making Fiber Art, Adult Art Camp Mixed Media Mash-Up, Wine and Wheel, and Naked Raku.
• Ages: 13–17 years old
The program is part of a museum that collects, exhibits, preserves, and interprets American and Native American art and honors the creative accomplishments of a diverse range of artists, past and present. The museum offers exhibitions, family, student, and public programs, and studio art classes for people of all ages and abilities. Its stated mission is: “Through art, we create experiences that inspire, challenge, and foster community to shape our shared future.” The museum notes that all its programs are supported, in part, by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, and Museum members.
The museum states it is on Lunáapeew/Lenape land, called Lūnaapeewáhkiing/Lenapehoking, and honors and affirms Lunáapeew/Lenape people and their ongoing ties to this place. It recognizes the painful history of genocide, erasure, and displacement of Indigenous people from this land and across the Americas and strives to build respectful relationships with Native artists and communities through sustained actions in a long-term process conducted with deliberate care. The museum emphasizes values of Respect, Collaboration, Engagement and Education, and Inclusion. Through partnerships with artists, scholars, community members, and institutions, it states that its collective work reflects diverse perspectives, input, and expertise.
Last updated July 7, 2026.
• Ages: 13–17 years old
The program is part of a museum that collects, exhibits, preserves, and interprets American and Native American art and honors the creative accomplishments of a diverse range of artists, past and present. The museum offers exhibitions, family, student, and public programs, and studio art classes for people of all ages and abilities. Its stated mission is: “Through art, we create experiences that inspire, challenge, and foster community to shape our shared future.” The museum notes that all its programs are supported, in part, by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, and Museum members.
The museum states it is on Lunáapeew/Lenape land, called Lūnaapeewáhkiing/Lenapehoking, and honors and affirms Lunáapeew/Lenape people and their ongoing ties to this place. It recognizes the painful history of genocide, erasure, and displacement of Indigenous people from this land and across the Americas and strives to build respectful relationships with Native artists and communities through sustained actions in a long-term process conducted with deliberate care. The museum emphasizes values of Respect, Collaboration, Engagement and Education, and Inclusion. Through partnerships with artists, scholars, community members, and institutions, it states that its collective work reflects diverse perspectives, input, and expertise.
Last updated July 7, 2026.
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