Arts & Culture

UC Santa Cruz foundry marks 50 years with bronze pour and celebration of legacy

UC Santa Cruz celebrated the 50th anniversary of its foundry—the last of its kind in the UC system to teach classes—with a festive bronze pour, alumni and student collaboration, and heartfelt tributes honoring its legacy, mentors, and community impact.

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  • The UC Santa Cruz foundry, a unique and historic facility within the UC system, marked its 50th anniversary with a celebratory bronze pour that showcased student and alumni work and honored its enduring legacy in arts education.
  • The event highlighted the deep sense of community and mentorship in the foundry, with moving speeches, notable guests, and recognition of its founder, Doyle Foreman, and longtime supporters who have helped sustain its mission.

To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the UC Santa Cruz foundry—the last in the UC system still offering classes—the campus hosted a celebratory bronze pour on May 15. The event, a highlight of the foundry’s biannual tradition, brought together students, alumni, faculty, and supporters for a lively and heartfelt celebration of artistic excellence and community.

This year’s pour was especially meaningful, as it combined student-made casts with those submitted by alumni, underscoring the foundry’s intergenerational impact.

Run by Sean Monaghan (Kresge ’83), a former student of the foundry’s founder Doyle Foreman, the event was a showcase of both technical mastery and deep mentorship. With help from trained staff—including two of Monaghan’s former students, Lucas Gasperik (Kresge ’11) and Courtney Scruggs (Kresge ’13)—the team poured molten bronze heated to nearly 2,000 degrees into sand molds. After cooling, sculptures were broken free using sledgehammers and airguns to reveal their final forms.

Foreman, a professor emeritus and the Arts Division’s first Black faculty member, was present for the event and honored with heartfelt tributes. Beth Stephens, professor of art, film and digital media, and performance, spoke movingly about Foreman’s generosity and influence.

The anniversary celebration also included notable guests such as Beverly Grova, a retired philanthropy officer, and Khalida Sarwari, policy analyst at the California State Senate, who presented a commemorative plaque on behalf of State Senator John Laird. “The foundry stands as a testament to creative resilience, sustainability, and the enduring power of mentorship in the arts,” Sarwari said.

The event marked an emotional milestone for several attendees. It was the final campus event for Ginny Hargrave, senior director of development, who will retire in June, and one of the final appearances by Dean Celine Parreñas Shimizu, who shared her appreciation for the foundry and expressed her lasting pride as a UC Santa Cruz Banana Slug.

Art Department Chair Elliot Anderson summed up the spirit of the day, calling the foundry “one of the most ancient of art practices” and “the fundamental essence of art.” The celebration honored not only five decades of creative work but also the enduring relationships, generosity, and vision that continue to shape the foundry’s future.

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Last modified: Jun 04, 2025