Arts Educator, Administrator, and Artist
Welcome! I’m Chelsea Herzig, an arts educator, administrator, and ceramic artist based in the Hudson Valley. My work centers youth empowerment through arts education, program leadership, and community engagement. I bring experience in strategic planning, creative program design, and hands-on teaching to connect people with meaningful artistic experiences.
About Me
I’m Chelsea Herzig, an arts educator, administrator, and ceramic artist based in New York’s Hudson Valley. My work lives at the intersection of creativity, education, and community engagement, where I strive to empower young people and make the arts more accessible to all.
I earned dual undergraduate degrees from SUNY New Paltz: a B.S. in Visual Arts Education (Pre-K–12) with a concentration in ceramics, and a B.F.A. in Ceramics. My studio training in functional and sculptural ceramics continues to shape the way I approach art as both a personal practice and a tool for community connection. I am currently pursuing an M.S. in Arts Administration and Museum Leadership at Drexel University (expected 2026), deepening my knowledge of nonprofit leadership, strategic planning, and cultural policy.
Professionally, I have served as the Director of Summer Arts Programming at The Art Effect, where I led multi-site youth arts camps, overseeing staff, programming, and culminating exhibitions. I also worked as Education & Outreach Coordinator at the Mid-Hudson Discovery Museum, designing STEAM-based programming and managing school and community partnerships.
In addition to my administrative work, I’ve taught visual arts across grade levels, from elementary through high school, and continue to explore the role of art in education and community building. Whether teaching a classroom of young artists, developing a large-scale program, or curating a youth-led exhibition, I see my work as part of a larger commitment to equity, creativity, and social change.
Residual Bodies
This work serves as a memorial to the physical spaces and belongings left in the wake of the inevitable losses we face during life. As children, we cling to physical objects for comfort to ease the anxieties of separation. As adults, these objects may change form but often remain present in our spaces long after the person has left. I am recreating these objects by hand, shown out of context and weathered by simulated age. This project questions how we deal with grief in ways that are deeply personal and unique. Memorializing objects left behind in this way can help us accept losses that are not only physical or literal, but also the intangible aspects of life we grieve, such as relationships, innocence, spaces, and our sense of self. We often lack the appropriate time to grieve completely, and transitional objects can help us hold space for this process, even if for a short moment in our day or lives.
Samuel L. Dorsky Museum of Art
2022
Ceramic Work
Updates Coming Soon…
2D Work
Updates Coming Soon…
Student Achievements
A limited selection of student achievements under my instruction and administration, including individual works and gallery shows.