Student News

Material Boy

Reinterpreting Waste with Sawyer London '24

By Mary Brothers '22

Growing up, Sawyer London 鈥24 was always told to 鈥渏ust wait until college.鈥

鈥淚've always been driven and known exactly what I want to study. And it was so hard in high school and middle school to take all these Gen. Ed. classes that I didn鈥檛 care about,鈥 said London. 

In a lot of ways, Bennington seems to have sought out London. He first heard of the college when his mom showed him an admissions video of one of the house tours.

鈥淭he student [in the video] is showing the plants that she rescued from the dumpster and the mushroom she was growing,鈥 said London. 鈥淢y mom showed me that and was like, 鈥楾hat's you. You are that person to rescue a plant from the dumpster and have all your jars and things.鈥欌

After visiting a college fair in Washington, DC, London visited the Bennington table, where he met an admissions counselor.

鈥淪he looked at me and said, 鈥榊ou seem like someone who should visit鈥 I think you would get a lot out of it.鈥 So I did,鈥 said London.

When London first got to Bennington, he was more than ready to finally start pursuing his interests, and he has not looked back since.

鈥淚've transitioned my studies more to a ceramic sculpture textiles focus, still with wearables in mind," said London. 鈥淎nd I鈥檝e always had sustainability, environmental justice, and social justice at the core of the work and in all the materials and the processes,鈥 said London.

London recently finished the first draft of his Plan essay, entitled: 鈥淲aste as Motivation and Material: Exploration Through Art and Social Action.鈥  

鈥淚鈥檓 really excited for my first Plan meeting,鈥 said London 鈥淚 met with a peer writing tutor, and she told me, 鈥楾hey're pretty much going to pull it apart and ask you about every sentence,鈥 and I'm really excited to fight for what I want to be included and to also realize what I don鈥檛 need in it,鈥 said London.

Last year鈥檚 course with Judith Enck was particularly formative for London鈥檚 process of work at Bennington.

鈥淭hrough that class, I learned the value in writing a letter to your senator as an assignment,鈥 said London. 鈥淵ou're going to do research, and you're going to produce this letter, which is writing practice. Then you're going to mail it to your senator鈥攁nd who knows, maybe they're not going to read it, but there's the chance  they will.鈥

After getting an article on reducing published in a local magazine, London was inspired to keep making 鈥減urpose-driven artwork.鈥 

When you make something happen, it's so much more satisfying.

Sawyer London '24

鈥淣ow my work is exploring that combination of, 鈥楬ow do I use waste as material and reinterpret those materials?  How do I change preconceptions and show people why they produce this waste and how we can use it in a wearable, artistic, functional, and circular way?鈥" said London.

One of London鈥檚 favorite pieces of work from his time at Bennington so far was a large ceramic piece he constructed in the studio, a 20 inch 鈥済iant coil.鈥 London found the creation of the piece to be a practice in itself.

鈥淚 basically painted it all in green slip, and then I sat there and did thousands of little indentation marks with this tool that created a really cool surface design,'' said London. 鈥淭hat was a great piece because I wanted to work at a large scale that I hadn't really done before, and I wanted to commit to a really conceptual process.鈥

Image of green coil
By Sawyer London '24
Image of green coil
By Sawyer London '24

Last year, London deferred his first Field Work Term to the summer, completing online courses about urban sustainability while working as a server at a local restaurant. 

鈥淸The courses] were really hard to engage with,鈥 said London. 鈥淚t was all asynchronous lectures and videos that you just sat in front of and answered a couple questions, along  with a writing assignment, and that was it. But  at the same time, I was working at a restaurant that I'd worked at before COVID, and that was amazing. I'm an extroverted person, so I love serving.鈥

Going forward, London hopes to explore more of the sustainability and fashion world.

鈥淲hat was nice about my last experience was that I learned what I didn't want to do. This year,  I'm thinking about applying to the Endeavor Environmental Foundation Fellowship,鈥 said London. 鈥淚鈥檓 also looking at different companies doing cool things with sustainability and waste. I would love to work in an arts-focused fashion space.鈥

London鈥檚 after-college dreams largely pertain to the worlds of sustainability and fashion鈥攁nd, naturally, Fashion Week in Paris.

鈥淚 picked up French this term. I鈥檇 taken it in high school, and the reason I鈥檇 chosen it was because I wanted to go to Fashion Week鈥攁nd they speak French in Paris,鈥 said London.鈥淭he reason may sound silly, but it does connect to my studies, especially knowing how many cultural arts and fashion centers are in Francophone countries.鈥

While London may have come into Bennington with a clear path of studies in mind, he still 鈥渃annot imagine鈥 having to choose one major.

鈥淚 like the idea that all of the classes I鈥檓 taking support each other. For me, that鈥檚 creating purpose-driven artwork,鈥 said London.

Last year, London participated in the President鈥檚 Working Group on antiracism, further work on which is now being led by Dr. Alfredo Medina, the College鈥檚 new Vice President for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and Chief Diversity Officer.

鈥溾滾ast term, the group was trying to figure out how we can set out goals on an antiracist framework for the College,鈥 said London.. 鈥淭he biggest thing that I want to push going forward is getting every level of this institution grounded and focused on developing an antiracist framework.鈥

London sees Bennington鈥檚 size as an asset to work in activism.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e a big fish in a small pond. You can make a much bigger change at a smaller institution where you know more people,鈥 said London.

When reflecting on the lessons he has learned at Bennington so far, London can鈥檛 help but emphasize how the College has been a catalyst for his self-growth.

鈥淏eing here, I realized you really have to be a self advocate鈥攏ot just in terms of your Plan and the classes you want to take, but also if you want to get anything done, or if you want to make friends with someone, or want to develop anything,鈥 said London. 鈥淚 think it's a good lesson for life, and it鈥檚 something we intuitively learn here. When you make something happen, it's so much more satisfying.鈥