Get your kids engaged in art!

After my first student-teacher interviews in the United Kingdom, I had a lot of guardians ask me, “How can I support my student outside of school in the arts?” Great question. I am thankful my parents took me to local art events and galleries as a child, and nerd-ily enough, I genuinely enjoyed going to them. My high school art teacher also created an “Art Passport” program to encourage us to see theatre shows, indie films, local music and galleries in exchange for an art-themed prize. There is so much beyond the classroom to see and experience. Since I am relatively new to London, I don’t have a great idea of how accessible the art scene is for youth. I decided to do some research and compile a list of ways youth can be more involved in the arts:

Submit your work to contests

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Contests are a great way to have a guide or theme to start an outside-of-school art project. They have a theme, a due date, and a prize! Here are some I’ve found for UK residents (click on the underlined words to be directed to the site):

Theme – A BETTER WORLD, NATURE or ‘SCAPES’ (land, sea etc.)  – Submissions close March 29th (Applicants must have a diveresability)

Theme – Life After Conflict – Submissions close May 18th

Theme – Climate Change – Submissions close June 13th 

Theme – Write about an art piece on their website – Submissions close June 30th

Theme – Endangered Wildlife – Submissions close June 30th

Attend an Art Club or Event

National Saturday Club – Here is a free art club hosted in different parts of the city! You need to apply for a spot, and the applications for 2022/23 year are open.

Oxo Gallery, Plein Air workshop – From the website: Artist, teacher and writer Jeanette Barnes will give tips and ideas about working on location and a number of insights and exercises to build confidence in a range of approaches to drawing, all with views of the Thames and the City of London as the background. Derwent Pencils will be providing material although artists will need to bring their own sketchbooks. Booking is essential. The two hour workshop will start at 11am at the Oxo Gallery, London.

2016: A year at Camden Arts Centre | by Camden Arts Centre | Medium

Free Artist-Led Workshops for people ages 15-25 – From the website:

This year’s onsite workshops will be hosted in the Camden Art Centre’s Drawing Studio by artists Adam Moore and Madeleine Pledge.

The artists will unpack different themes and provocations each week to enable participants to build awareness around different types of art, concepts and techniques. Each session is designed to allow you to develop new skills, learn about various ways of working in the arts and using your passions and interests to create exciting artwork.

  • Onsite sessions take place weekly every Saturday from 2:00 to 4:00 pm and give the opportunity to use the centre as a resource, see our current exhibitions, get behind the scenes of a gallery and meet new people.
  • No previous art-making experience is necessary and all materials are provided with free food and drinks.
  • Sessions can be attended as a one-off event or a series as a whole. Each session is open enough to continue making work from previous weeks attended.
  • We have 15 places each week and booking via Eventbrite is required.

    That’s all I have for now! I will post more contests and events as I find them. 🙂

Presently: Being an art educator today

Objects are being knocked down.
My elementary school for a glass and concrete institution,
The local restaurants in my neighborhood for big condos,
A standard work week,
My silence and compliance.

Photos I took of neighbourhood favourites.

The world is always testing us. This year, it took a world-wide pandemic for people to break their nine-to-five work cycle, fast forward the future of education to a hybrid learning model and shake the city up to the point where they actually needed to care for the homeless. Black lives were and are at the disposal of systematic racism, brought to light by major protests across the world. Education has an increasingly important role to play amidst chaotic realities that lie just a few feet from the playground. As an art educator, I know that the arts are vital in guiding students through moments of fear, anger and doubt, as well as a force for change and growth.

Art education is a critical practice of how society communicates, produces and revisits media. I will help students read the visual signs and develop their own. Drawing from contemporary art practices, I’ve come to see that art is political and created from experience. And thus, the final product of an art project can represent some form of activism. Ultimately, it is the internal change that occurs within my students that signifies learning (Biesta, 2012).

I am excited and scared to be an art educator during this time, but most of all, I feel hope. Art can teach students how to actively reflect on historical and current issues. Now is also the time for me to not exercise my authority as the expert (Britzman, 2003). I ask myself; What can I bring to arts education that technology can’t? Britzman says that education is a dialogical process involving an exchange between locations and people. As an artist and art educator I take on the role of the listener. As Desai & Chalmers (2007) suggest, I will open myself up to being honest and open to learning along with students, because these complex times necessitate collaboration and community more than ever.

References

Biesta, G. (2012). Giving Teaching Back to Education: Responding to the Disappearance of the Teacher. Phenomenology & Practice, 6(2), 35-49. [Online public access]

Britzman, D. (2003). Practice makes practice. A critical study of learning to teach. Revised edition. State University of New York Press.

Desai, D., & Chalmers, G. (2007). Notes for a dialogue in art education in critical times.
Art Education60(5), 6-11.

Engaging with Discomfort in the Classroom

Student Work

I wrote this reflection during my practicum after my first lesson on Redacted Poetry with my senior art class:

Talk back
I don’t know what to saypauseIamnotquickenoughtorespond
A shakey/ing finger (don’t – don’t
Do that)
I avoid conflict yet I bring up topics of conflict in my classroom every day?
Do I even know enough?
This belongs in the classroom
This belongs in the art classroom
Why this matters/Why I am doing
Mold space in such a little amount of time
Of opposition and brace.

I intertwined English and Social Justice into an art unit to encourage a critical art practice amongst a younger demographic. I found that art continued to be a subject of personal expression and individuality. In high schools, there is often is a lack of recognition as to how critical visual imagery can be in shaping political and societal structures. In order to address discomforting situations through the arts, I needed to be empathetic and communicative with my students.

Student Work

Poetry is a blend between art and text, a bridge that invites others to collaborate and engage verbally and visually.  It exists and is realized in an in-between space where the text starts with one author and ends with two (Irwin, 2003). Redacted poetry, also known as erasure poems, allow students to create new works from existing material. The poem originates from an existing body of text. Redacting originally means to “bring together” or “unite,” but it acquired a negative connotation later in English history to mean “take away”, “reduce” and “edit.” However, this very deletion and unwriting is a process that can help students grapple with difficult subjects of violence, poverty, and racism.

Student Work

I provided newspapers from decades ago to the present. Newspapers are meant to alert and inform the public. As I was deciding what current events to discuss into the classroom, I found myself researching and learning along with the students to gain understanding of the Wet’suwet’en protests.

We tried to explore all perspectives, and I found it especially difficult as the adult in the classroom in providing the most accurate answers. Through my redacted poetry unit, both students and myself “surrendered” ourselves to exploration, artistic responsiveness to social injustice, rather than defending a singular aesthetic or answer.

References

Irwin, R.L. (2003). Toward an Aesthetic of Unfolding In/Sights through Curriculum.

 

Suggested Readings on Discomfort & Pedagogy

Grenfell Tower

Connelly, L., & Joseph-Salisbury, R. (2019). Teaching Grenfell: The Role of Emotions in Teaching and Learning for Social Change. Sociology53(6), 1026–1042. https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038519841826 

The article describes the experience of 24 students of Sociology classes on the Grenfell Tower fire. Contrary to the Western education system that popularizes rationality and managing ‘appropriate’ emotions, Connelly and Joseph-Salisbury describe how exploring discomforting emotions can instigate action.

GoMa Interior

Bruce, K. (n.d.). Playing with Discomfort: How GoMA promotes its human rights responsibility.

The Gallery of Moden Art (GoMA) in Glasgow, Scotland is actively enacting a policy for ‘Art and Social Inclusion Exhibitions.’ Through a diverse range of exhibitions and projects, GoMA exemplifies how they work with communities, challenge power structures and kickstart art interventions to create a more inclusive public program.

A work from the Public Pedagogy Exhibition curated by Vidisha Saini in New Delhi

Hochtritt, L., Ahlschwede, W., Halsey‐Dutton, B., Fiesel, L., Chevalier, L., Miller, T., & Farrar, C. (2018). Public pedagogy and social justice in arts education. International Journal of Art & Design Education, 37(2), 287-299.

Public pedagogy is defined as being a space of learning outside of school. The article connects public pedagogy to social justice education, in that both depend on lived experience, necessitate a process of reflection and action, and critique power structures.

Lisa Le Feuvre, author of Failure

Feuvre, L. L. (2010). Failure. London: Whitechapel Gallery.

This is a fantastic compilation of articles, poems, and writings about failure in the arts. What particularly stood out for me is:
“The most extreme form of failure occurs when standards are so high, and their satisfaction so unlikely, that the likelihood of success becomes almost fictional.” -Joel Fisher, p. 118, 1987

“Failure when recognized is never so serious as when it isn’t recognized. A balance is restored. We could even say that an acknowledged failure does not exist.” -Joel Fisher, p. 121, 1987

Failure also details the work of Annika Ström, who represents failure through shaky videos and sad song lyrics. She plays with the aesthetics of failure and imperfection as being individual and shared experience.

How can I embrace discomfort as a part of my pedagogy?

As a teacher candidate, I encountered discomfort many times. Discomfort left me questioning my identity, my teaching expertise and the education system. As Deborah Britzman states, experience does not promise clarity or confidence (year). I wrote weekly reflections during my practicum and noticed a thread of negativity. Presently, I ask myself “How can I embrace discomfort as a part of my pedagogy?” Revisiting the topics that cause me discomfort are opportunities to recognize my growth and increase my awareness of the classroom community.

I am exploring two parts to my inquiry:

  1. What causes personal discomfort for educators?
  2. How do I incorporate a social justice framework to navigate discomforting topics within the arts?

Teachers face the pressures of needing to know all the answers yet not knowing what to anticipate (Tanaka et. al., 2007). As an educator, this discomfort lies within not having full control of the situation. We owe it to ourselves that we, too, are going through a process of “becoming” and deepen our understanding of how to learn, instead of how to teach (Tanaka et. al., 2007).

I have always had a will to change the world and believing that art can do exactly that. Socially-responsive contemporary art has the ability to open-up the minds of the students and extend art beyond the classroom (Garber, 2004). Students need to look for “what is absent” as well as “what is present (Garber, p. 6, 2004)

References:

Britzman, D. (2003). Practice makes practice. A critical study of learning to teach. Revised edition. State University of New York Press.

Garber, E. (2004) Social Justice and Art Education. Visual Arts Research. Vol. 30, No. 2, pp 4-22.

Tanaka, M., Williams, L., Benoit, Y.J., Duggan, R.K., Moir, L., & Scarrow, J. (2007). Transforming pedagogies: pre‐service reflections on learning and teaching in an Indigenous world. Teacher Development, 11, 109 – 99.

To be Grown-Up

Inspired by Shobu Tsuchiya

You are not separate from Art

Reposition and see yourself from a Google-Maps view

“Existential Orientation”

You have to be at home

Feel within the world

Art is not an instrument to increase performance

Or produce objects and evidence of self-expression

“A person who has received education is…a human being with an altered outlook, a human being who exists differently in the world”

What if… We were teaching our students to be ego-centric and racist

If we let them simply “self-express”

The middle ground is between the world destructing and self destruction

A place of dialogue: to exist in the world is how we subject ourselves to the space, and what we encounter

Grown-ups learn how to work through, meet, select and reject desires

And Art can help interrupt, suspend and sustain the dialogue

(Free Verse written in response to: Gert Biesta’s Trying to be at home in the world: New parameters for art education)

 

Discomfort as Pedagogy: Art is Political

Why is it necessary that Art Education be a discomforting pedagogical practice?

As Desai and Chalmers quite simply state, art is a political activity (2007). Since the arts has been pushed into the corner as a decorative and self-expressive activity, Desai and Chalmers still argue that this systemic upholding of traditional belief is reflecting a social and political position (2007).

As art educators, we have to mobilize our students to be active and literate visual learners. The article cites performance artist Guillermo Gómez-Peña, who also asks students “Why do artists do what they do?” Art occurs admits war, censorship, “cultural paranoia” and despair (Desai and Chalmers, p. 7, 2007.) The artist is not just the reproducer, in fact artists are producing “new ways of knowing” (Desai and Chalmers, p. 8, 2007). Artists and our students have a huge responsibility in considering what they choose to produce and bring into the world. Teachers are not the sole influencers or facilitators of their artistic productions; society is outwardly educated at what Henry Giroux states as sites of “public pedagogy” in the form of TV, print media, photography and films (2006.)

For this reason, Art Educators have an important role to encourage a social justice art education to promote empathy and criticality to the types of media society routinely engages with. Desai and Chalmers (2007) recommend that the inclusion of contemporary art practices and social justice pedagogy can offer…

  1. An understanding of political images and how they circulate and construct meanings.
  2. Aesthetics need to be examined as relational/dialogic.

Grant Kester (2005) describes “dialogical aesthetics” to be the artist as open to intervention, listening to how the artwork is received, and willing to be vulnerable and dependent. This offers an opportunity for artists and artwork to be seen by the public from a different perspective. Art is a collaborative exchange and not an independent crusade to inject oneself being into the world. Artists can ask for help! Artists can make mistakes and acknowledge them (they MUST acknowledge them!)

Another helpful resource that Desai and Chalmers include is a Table of Possible Resources. The authors don’t simply categorize typically discomforting topics into simplified versions. They are expanded upon and offer artists that make work on these topics as well.

References:

Dipti D., & Chalmers G. (2007). Notes for a Dialogue on Art Education in Critical Times, Art Education, 60:5, 6-12, DOI: 10.1080/00043125.2007.11651118.

Giroux, H. (2006). America on the edge. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Kester, G. H. (2005). Conversation pieces: The role of dialogue in socially engaged art. In Z. Kocur & S. Leung (Eds.), Theory in contemporary art since 1985 (pp. 7688). Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing.

BC’s Virtual Townhall Meeting on Anti-Racism

After seeing a Facebook post, I made sure that I attended a Virtual Townhall Meeting on Anti-Racism with Minister Anne Kang, Parliamentary Secretary Ravi Kahlon, and Multicultural Advisory Council members Patricia Barkaskas and Dr. Ismaël Traoré. I found Dr. Traoré’s words to be particularly powerful and well-articulated.

Do the Anti-Racist Work

Dr. Traoré referenced a great analogy on racism. Everyone’s on this conveyor belt. A passive racist is a non-racist, just standing on the belt. However, an anti-racist is walking faster than the speed of the conveyor belt, in the other direction, and it’s exhausting because the anti-racist is exerting a lot of force against the flow. Dr. Traoré encourages us to do the anti-racist work.

Black History in BC’s School Curriculum

The public was invited to submit questions prior to the townhall. One of the questions that stood out to me was: “When will we introduce Black history in the BC curriculum?” Kahlon responded by saying, “Not soon enough.” Dr. Traoréfollowed by explaining that the Board of Education in Richmond voted to advocate to Rob Fleming, BC’s Minister of Education, for Black history instruction to be mandatory in schools and to create a working group to develop strategies across the district. Dr. Traoré also encouraged a push to include SOGI (Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity) instruction across BC schools.

Another question that was asked was: “How do we get more indigenous and black teachers in the districts?” Dr. Traoréwas quick to answer by saying: “You hire them.” He stressed that Black and Indigenous teacher candidates are applying, but that the government and society need to help them get there. He also said Black and Indigenous students need to have the same opportunities.

Defunding the Police

The panel was also asked about their position on defunding the police. All panelists agreed that it was necessary. Dr. Traoré mentioned that a police-person only needs 30-credits of post-secondary education to enter the force. He demanded that they need more. In addition, he suggested that the divested funds should go towards existing community-based organizations, education, or free public transit. He posed a powerful question: “What kind of society do we want for the future?”

BC’s Steps Towards Anti-Racism

Kang mentioned a provincial resilience program. I found some news releases and information about the program’s aims, but I could not find an official site.

Vancouver Art Gallery’s Art at Home Series

The VAG is sharing “a new series of digital family programs designed to inspire you and your family to get creative at home! Every Sunday, the Gallery will share a different art-making activity, taking inspiration from the exhibitions or an artwork from the permanent collection, on our website and across our social media channels. Every other Wednesday at 1:30 PM, Family Programs Coordinator, Christina Jones, will share stories about the incredible lives of artists and their approaches to art-making in a LIVE Art At Home session on Zoom.” -From their webpage

A post came up on my social media so I decided to participate in the live Zoom lesson on   Takao Tanabe, a Japanese painter, printmaker, designer and teacher. The lesson was led by Christina Jones, the VAG’s Family programs coordinator.

Jones led us through Tanabe’s career, showing us slides of his work, video examples of art techniques such as silkscreening, powerful quotes and fun mini-activities. The lesson can inspire you to create a similar lesson on landscapes. Here is another Art At-Home Activity on landscapes provided on the VAG website.

Here are some notes I took from the lesson:

Warm up:
-Which places make you feel calm? Landscapes: What are they?
-Being with and reflecting with nature

Artist Bio
-Tanabe was uprooted, and had to stop going to high school in Grade 10 because his family was sent to live at a Japanese interment camp in Lemon Creek

Resources:
Hastings Park
Tashme
Nikkei Place: Taiken Video Resources
Nikkei Place: Learning at Home

-Tanabe studied at the Winnipeg School of Art
-Tanabe studied in New York under abstract expressionist Hans Hoffman
-Tanabe taught at Emily Carr (previously the Vancouver School of Art)
-Learned typography and printmaking
-Example of screen printing video: https://www.malaspinaprintmakers.com/

Questions for Students:
-What does Abstract mean? (nonrepresentational, you decide what it looks like)
-What is Abstract Expressionism? (artist’s emotions represented)
-How do artists use their body when making abstract expressionist art?

Mini Activities:
Speed sketch challenge:
-30 seconds, sketch what you see. Try to observe Tanabe’s work and don’t look at your paper.

Fragment 35 (1953) by Takao Tanabe
My Response

Using your body:
Go into 3 poses that act out the lines this print

Comparing 2 artworks: How are they the same, how are they different? (Materials, shapes, technique, colour, line, space).

Part II: Reflecting on my Teaching Philosophy through Lil’wat Principles

A Haiku I wrote on Education

I seek to open up a third space in my classroom, a dimension that emerges in a place of uncertainty and perhaps resistance (Sanford et. al. 24). Uncertainty occurs in many areas of my teaching experience, especially in trying new approaches in the classroom.

In my senior studio art class, I introduced a project on redacted poetry. Students were instructed to choose texts of “difficult knowledge,” information that people often resist because they encounter “some moral conflict in their own reality” (Cohen-Evron 2005). News articles are an example of difficult knowledge, often telling stories of violence, money, race, class, and gender. I was uncertain as to how the students would engage with the texts and my confidence in the emotional endeavour of unpacking them. However, I trusted and had established a community with the class. To delve into discomforting topics, I had to prove myself as an empathetic and communicative instructor. I got to know the students previously through an identity-based project, and scaffolded the redacted poetry lesson that they understood that everyone was supported and encouraged to share their ideas.

The Lil’wat Principle, Cwélelep, describes this space of uncertainty like being caught in a dust storm. You can’t quite see anything clearly or anticipate what might be ahead. Just like art, you might go into a project with a vision or particular approach, and come out of this ‘storm’/artistic process with a different result. Or, much like the current pandemic and Black Lives Matter Movement, there is a ton of uncertainty around the reformation of social, economic and political systems. How might the future look?

I am not a teacher to tell students how to think, but to question and inquire further into predisposed facts and truths. Visual culture is art, and we are all being bombarded with messages. I intend on providing them with the tools of shared respect and bravery to remain in the third space, the location of imbalance. It is in this very space that growth happens, when students and teachers constantly challenge comfortable ways of knowing (Sanford et. al 25).


Sources:

Nurit Cohen-Evron (2005) Students Living within Violent Conflict: Should Art Educators “Play it Safe” or Face “Difficult Knowledge”?, Studies in Art Education, 46:4, 309-322, DOI: 10.1080/00393541.2005.11651793

Sanford, K., Williams, L., Hopper, T., & McGregor, C. (2012). Indigenous principles informing teacher education: What we have learned. In Education, 18(2). Retrieved from: http://ineducation.ca/article/indigenous-principles-informingteacher-education-what-we-have-learned

 

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