GRADUATE SEASON: Clinton Stringer – From Dancer to Graphic Designer
August 9th, 2010Author of this post: Kate Andrews | About Blog Authors »

When it came to deciding what he wanted to be when he grew up, Clinton Stringer had two choices in mind: Contemporary Dancer or Graphic Designer. The dice were cast and he was accepted to study dance at P.A.R.T.S. (Belgium) under the director Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker – also the choreographer of the internationally-acclaimed company Rosas. After school, Clinton worked as a dancer for Rosas for 9 years and then decided to find out what the other path had in store for him. He has spent the last three years studying Graphic Design at Kunsthogeschool Sint-Lukas Brussel, in Belgium and is about to start a 3 month internship with De Designpolitie in Amsterdam. His work is strongly concept-based with a passion for the handmade. We caught up with Clinton this week to find out more about his academic experiences.
Notes on Design: Can you tell us a little about yourself, and your academic and professional journey to date?
Clinton: After a Bachelor of Arts (majoring in English Literature, Theatre Studies and Journalism) in South Africa, I was a little lost as to which direction I wanted to take. I had enjoyed both my contemporary dance classes in Theatre Studies and the layout course as part of my Journalism course, but neither qualified me to start as a professional. A few months later I was given an amazing opportunity: a scholarship to study in Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker’s newly established contemporary dance school in Brussels – P.A.R.T.S. I packed everything into an enormous suitcase and left for my big career… as a dancer! Ten years later, after joining Rosas, de Keermaeker’s company, and performing all over the world, my creative needs longed for new challenges and other outlets. I quit the company to begin my second big career… as a graphic designer!

When deciding where to study, I looked to Britain and Belgium. In Britain I would be able to speak my mother-tongue and get a good education. In Belgium, I would have to study in Dutch (my second language is Afrikaans – the baby sister of Dutch), but I could earn money using my dance contacts and still get a good education. The clincher was that the Belgian education was exactly 10% of the cost of its British counterpart – €500 as opposed to €5000 per year. A no-brainer. Read the rest of this entry »














