Join the Chatham Hall community and step boldly beyond your comfort zone to discover your passions, embrace your potential, and become the most authentic version of yourself. Learn more
Browse Our Curriculum
Fine & Performing Arts
Our fine arts program features a curriculum targeted to help you reach your artistic potential in drama, music, or the visual arts. At Chatham Hall, you can gain the skills of creative expression, as well as self-knowledge. Formal training, practical experience, and an academic approach will help you set high standards for your art and enable you to take risks in a supportive environment.
This advanced course is designed for the student who wishes to strengthen her skills in art and design through focused exploration of a theme or topic of her choice. Research of professional artists and designers is used as a springboard to explore concepts and techniques.
Fall and Spring Semesters - ½ Credit
Prerequisite: completed application, approval of instructor
The Chatham Hall dance program offers classes in ballet, pointe, jazz, and contemporary dance techniques. Ballet is the basis from which solid dance technique is built. It builds strength, poise, and discipline, along with developing beautiful lines and musicality. Therefore, all dancers will be taught ballet, primarily using the Vaganova Method, and expected to learn the steps, terminology, and dance history. Pointe is an advanced form of ballet technique and is offered to girls with the necessary prior training and experience in ballet. Jazz dance is a high energy dance technique that emphasizes musicality, rhythm and style. Contemporary dance incorporates aspects of ballet, jazz, and modern. This style incorporates floor work with standing work, and develops the student’s fluidity of movement, creativity and self-expression. Students study techniques and theories behind choreography, music selection for dance, and participate in the creation of costumes for performances. All of this allows students to experience the performing arts, while encouraging creativity. The students will participate in a performance at the end of each trimester and experience the joy, freedom, and sense of accomplishment that comes with being on stage.
One to Three Trimesters- .33 Physical Education and Art Credit each Trimester
Offered during the athletics period as an Afternoon Athletic Activity.
The Chatham Hall dance program offers classes in ballet, pointe, jazz, and contemporary dance techniques. Ballet is the basis from which solid dance technique is built. It builds strength, poise, and discipline, along with developing beautiful lines and musicality. Therefore, all dancers will be taught ballet, primarily using the Vaganova Method, and expected to learn the steps, terminology, and dance history. Pointe is an advanced form of ballet technique and is offered to girls with the necessary prior training and experience in ballet. Jazz dance is a high energy dance technique that emphasizes musicality, rhythm and style. Contemporary dance incorporates aspects of ballet, jazz, and modern. This style incorporates floor work with standing work, and develops the student’s fluidity of movement, creativity and self-expression. Students study techniques and theories behind choreography, music selection for dance, and participate in the creation of costumes for performances. All of this allows students to experience the performing arts, while encouraging creativity. The students will participate in a performance at the end of each trimester and experience the joy, freedom, and sense of accomplishment that comes with being on stage.
One to Three Trimesters- .33 Physical Education and Art Credit each Trimester
Offered during the athletics period as an Afternoon Athletic Activity.
Songwriting will teach and reinforce the skills students need to write their own music and lyrics. Students will learn common chord progressions, listen for basic song forms, and will navigate the challenges of marrying words and music together. Students will write melodies to an existing text, write words to existing melodies, and the course will culminate with an original song or songs written by the student. Throughout the course, students will analyze songs and discover common techniques in order to aid them in writing their own music.
Music Fundamentals is a prerequisite for this course. A student may also opt to take a placement test. This course will be given in the Spring semester.
Each unit of the course will teach a specific songwriting technique. A writing project focusing on each technique will be assigned. The final project will be an original song written by the student.
Music Fundamentals will teach the basic building blocks of music: pitch, notation, meter, rhythm, major and minor keys, and chords. Students will apply these concepts with contextual listening exercises (listening for the concepts in songs, writing down short dictations of rhythm and melody, and identifying standard chord progressions). Students will also learn how to create simple harmonies for melodies and will be introduced to how music is structured and created. Those students interested in writing their own music will be equipped with the materials and knowledge they need to begin writing.
This course will be offered every Fall semester and is open to all students.
Students will be assigned worksheets that accompany each chapter of the text. Tests will be given at the end of each unit. The course will end with a final project in which students will write a simple song with clear parameters and guidelines.
Enhances Chapel worship services with well-prepared, high-quality choral music, teaches the students the skills to produce beautiful, healthy singing technique and excellent choral blend; and to cultivate an understanding and appreciation for a range of choral genres. The repertoire appropriately challenges the students’ singing ability. During the early part of the year, the choir concentrates on proper body alignment, breathing technique, free vocal production, choral intonation, and tuning. Through group work during rehearsals, students also learn to improve the transition between their registers and their resonance.
The fall play, staged in the Black Box, is an intimate theatrical experience for actors and audience members. Nuanced scripts and complex characters challenge the actors in meaningful ways. Opportunities for stage management, lighting design, sound production, properties management, etc. are also available. Previous productions include: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, The Children’s Hour, Blithe Spirit, Wait Until Dark, and Crimes of the Heart.
Audition only. Offered during the athletics period as an Afternoon Athletic Activity.
The winter musical, set on the stage in Dutch or in the Black Box, is an entirely different experience with unique opportunities for performance. Students pull together skills in music, theatre, and dance to produce entertaining, engaging works of performance art. Students also participate in all aspects of behind-the-scenes production work: stage management, choreography, lighting design, sound, properties management, costume design, etc. Previous productions include: Next to Normal, A…My Name Will Always Be Alice, Dani Girl, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and Ruthless!.
Audition only. Offered during the athletics period as an Afternoon Athletic Activity.
A piano and harpsichord player, Dr. Francis Yun came to Chatham Hall in 2021 as the director of music and became the Art Department chair in 2023. He has studied piano, harpsichord, and historical performance at a variety of schools, including the Manhattan School of Music, University of Michigan, and The Juilliard School, respectively. Francis went on to perform throughout the U.S. in both solo and chamber recitals and has served as a continuo player for many orchestras, including the New York Strings Orchestra, Apollo’s Fire, and Juilliard415. An educator at heart, he has taught at Montclair State University, Friends Music Camp, and La Lumiere School. Passionate about the music of the 17th and 18th centuries, Francis also enjoys cooking, eating, and reading fiction novels.
CameronAyres
English, Creative Writing, & Photography Teacher; Theatre Department Director
Prior to coming to Chatham Hall in 2016, Cameron Ayres received a B.A. in both theatre and French from the College of William & Mary and a M.F.A in studio art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Having attended an independent school as a student, Cameron is familiar with the boarding school environment, with his favorite Chatham Hall tradition being the Lantern Ceremony.
Elsabé Dixon came to Chatham Hall in 2023 as a member of the Arts Department. In addition to a rich teaching career in higher education and independent schools such as the Madeira School, Elsabé most recently served as the executive director of the Danville Museum of Fine Arts & History. She has exhibited her own work in numerous shows throughout the northeast, and also holds a B.A. from Averett University as well as an M.A. from George Mason University.
Dan Waters P'14 came to Chatham Hall in 2017 after years teaching in Danville Public Schools. He currently teaches math, computer science, and art electives, as well as mentors the School's robotics team, the Tutu Turtles. Dan attended North Carolina State University where he earned a B.S. in technology education. His favorite School tradition is the Lantern Ceremony, and his hobbies include pickleball, woodworking, and driving his golf cart.