• 81°

Newquist’s murals brighten building, encourage students at Heritage

For the lobby mural, art teacher Noel Newquist painted the Heritage Ram mascot with geometric lines. (CONTRIBUTED)
For the lobby mural, art teacher Noel Newquist painted the Heritage Ram mascot with geometric lines. (CONTRIBUTED)
This section of Noel Newquist's stairway mural depicts a boy with a beaker and first-place ribbon and a girl with a chess piece. (CONTRIBUTED)
This section of Noel Newquist’s stairway mural depicts a boy with a beaker and first-place ribbon and a girl with a chess piece. (CONTRIBUTED)

MADISON – Noel Newquist hopes each student returning to Heritage Elementary School will react positively and feel connected when they see two murals that he has painted.

Heritage Principal Dr. Georgina Nelson “requested something bright, inviting and exciting” for the lobby. His “abstract image juxtaposes several organic (curved) elements against geometric (straight-line) wall shapes,” Newquist said.

This school year, Newquist will teach visual art at Heritage, Mill Creek and Rainbow elementary schools.

Newquist painted Heritage’s mascot, the ram, with geometric lines. He incorporated variants of school colors, blue and yellow, as the scheme’s backbone.

For the main stairway, Nelson wanted an encouragement for learning. “The overall design is cartoonish … with two children, two fluffy rams and two songbirds,” Newquist said.

Flowers on a hill create a “learning garden” with math symbols, letters and numbers. A boy holds a bubbling beaker and first-place ribbon. A girl has a chess piece.

The stairway mural quotes auto racer Bobby Unser: “Success is where preparation and opportunity meet.” Newquist said schooling prepares students for lifelong opportunities, while he seized the challenge to paint the murals.

The first topcoat is an acrylic, soft-gel isolation coat, topped with a polymer varnish that protects against UV light. Newquist transferred to-scale sketches by grid-enlarging. He drew most details freehand.

Every individual sees works of art differently, he said. Newquist said some students will see the mural as “a pretty picture”; others will find meaning in individual elements.

A commissioned artist and teacher, Newquist is interested in working for schools and churches because of their impact on the community’s future. “Success of any community is directly related to its children’s intellectual and spiritual growth.”

He and wife Laura co-own Newquii Studios. She specializes in watercolor renderings of family portraits and cloth-covered baby photo albums. His specialties are murals and graphic design. For information, call 256-542-1243 or email to ncnstudio@gmail.com.

The Newquists sons are three-year-old Scott and four-month-old John.

An anonymous donor funded both murals. To discuss donations for additional murals, call Nelson at 256-772-2075.

Harvest

AUSA sponsors ‘Operation Eagle Claw’ about freeing hostages in Iran

Madison

MVP’s plant giveaway to celebrate Monarch mural outside Honest Coffee

Harvest

The Madison Village celebrates its 25th anniversary

Bob Jones High School

Optimist Club grants boost service options to youth

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones sweeps Sparkman to advance in playoffs

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 24, 2024

Madison

I-565 nighttime detours planned for Exit 10 work in Madison

Madison

Liberty Middle School student passes away after medical emergency on campus

Huntsville

Lexi Regensburger promotes HEALS for Girl Scout Gold

Harvest

Rocket City Novas, a new dance krewe, sashay into town

Harvest

Asbury Car & Bike Show to feature vehicles in pristine condition

Liberty Middle School

Liberty takes first-place finish in State MathCounts

Harvest

Fantasy Playhouse to launch ‘Space Monkeys!’ on May 9-12

Harvest

Defense Innovation Summit to explore tech in national security

Madison

‘Sounds of Summer’ concerts return to Home Place Park

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mustang Mud Run- “Mud Head To Toe”

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mattress Sale To Aid James Clemens Football Program

Bob Jones High School

Madison Visionary Partners awards 5 Community Impact Grants

James Clemens High School

Students Neyan Sezhian, Erik Wu originate James Clemens Math Tournament

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones bests rival James Clemens in Game 1 of weekend series

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 17, 2024

Events

Check out the 2024-25 edition of “Explore Huntsville-Madison”

Bob Jones High School

Business, Army groups offer scholarships

Bob Jones High School

Optimists award teacher grants, essay winners

x