Kelly Berwager, Ph.D.
                     
                     Director, Inmate Art
                     
                     Dr. Kelly Berwager is a Lecturer in the Art and Design Department at 快猫成版视频.
                        With 29 years of teaching experience, primarily with P-5 students, her expertise spans
                        from elementary to college-level art education. Additionally, her 12 years teaching
                        Visual Arts and Art Education courses at 快猫成版视频 further demonstrates her
                        depth of knowledge and commitment to developing future art educators.
                     
                     Dr. Berwager is also a practicing artist whose works have been shown in local, regional,
                        and international exhibitions. Her works range from large photorealistic acrylic paintings
                        of confident women in luxurious clothing and elegant high heels to small collage works
                        using vintage dress patterns, jewelry, and paper dolls. Both art media explore her
                        pursuit of identity through the genealogy of material objects.
                     
                     She joined the TROY-Tutwiler gardening program in 2021 and established an art curriculum,
                        Inmate Art, to accompany the gardening aspects of the program. In addition to her
                        contributions to the university's art and art education disciplines, she launched
                        Inmate Art to partner with the gardening program, aimed at promoting sustainable gardening
                        practices and fostering creativity through art and nature. Her work integrates art
                        education with hands-on art projects, reflecting her commitment to both artistic development
                        and social engagement.
                     
                     Inmate Art, along with other prison art programs, offer numerous benefits, both for
                        individual inmates and the broader correctional environment. It provides a constructive
                        outlet for self-expression, allowing prisoners to process emotions, reflect on their
                        experiences, and develop healthier coping mechanisms. Inmate Art also encourages critical
                        thinking and problem-solving skills, helping the women at Tutwiler develop a sense
                        of accomplishment and purpose.
                     
                     The program has offered painting and drawing classes, along with multiple projects
                        including printmaking, collage, embroidery stitching on photographs, Kintsgui ceramics,
                        multi-media artworks. The women's artwork has been featured in two exhibits, including
                        The Garden of Perseverance at 快猫成版视频's International Arts Center in 2022
                        and Roots of Hope at The Kelly Fitzpatrick Center for the Arts in Wetumpka, Alabama.
                        The artwork has also been featured at the Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles Changing
                        the Course exhibition for the past three years.
                     
                     Inmate Art received a grant from the Alabama State Council on the Arts in 2024 to
                        further explore art-making by visiting artists in the prison. Plans are for local
                        artists who use wood, ceramics, colored pencils, etc., to visit the women and work
                        with them using media they might never have the opportunity to use.