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Education

Most of Irvine is located in the Irvine Unified School District (IUSD). The five high schools in IUSD are University High School, Irvine High School, Northwood High School, Woodbridge High School, and Portola High School. Arnold O. Beckman High School is located in Irvine but is administered by Tustin Unified School District. The five high schools in IUSD, as well as Beckman High School, have consistently placed in the upper range of Newsweek's list of the Top 1,300 U.S. Public High Schools.

Irvine is also home to elementary and middle schools, including two alternative, year round, open enrollment K-8 schools, Plaza Vista and Vista Verde.Parts of the north and west of the city are within the Tustin Unified School District.

Irvine is home to the University of California, Irvine, which is the second-newest campus (established 1965) in the UC system after University of California, Merced. Other higher education institutions in Irvine include California Southern University, Concordia University, Westcliff University, Paramount California University a distance learning university, Irvine Valley College, Fuller Theological Seminary, FIDM, The Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising, Orange County Campus, Stanbridge University, and a satellite campus of California State University, Fullerton. Chapman University and Soka University of America are in adjacent cities.

“I always loved nature and my interests were connected with it. I believe that people who love nature also must love art.”

Serbian artist prodigy Dušan Krtolica, now 19, shared this to The Epoch Times, speaking of his lifelong passion—one that has made him world-famous since childhood: drawing his amazingly realistic animals.

Dušan began drawing when he was just 2 years old, as he shared: “At first, I was drawing some unrecognizable shapes; later, those shapes started to resemble animals.” The young artist, from Belgrade, doesn’t remember the first animal he drew; his parents say it was a whale. As his works increased in detail, so did his fame increase, with some hailing him as the next Albrecht Dürer.

“When I was younger, I spent my whole days drawing because it was a game for me,” Dušan said. “I would often draw just a few lines and then start working on something else. I would use up whole packages of paper—around 400 pieces of paper—that my parents were buying me, weekly.”

Epoch Times Photo
Serbian artist prodigy Dušan Krtolica as a child. (Courtesy of Dušan Krtolica)
Epoch Times Photo
Dušan Krtolica’s animals began to grow larger when he was 7 or 8 years old. (Courtesy of Dušan Krtolica)

Not only are Dušan’s creatures incredibly detailed, but they’re remarkably correct anatomically for such a young artist. “I have read a lot of encyclopedias so I learned their anatomy through those books,” he shared. Amazingly, he retained the images that he saw and transferred them onto paper. “I always drew fast and I created works just how I imagined them in my head,” he shared. “I often incorporated a lot of detail into them, so it was never a problem for me.”