Thursday, December 24, 2009

KUHF NPR, Writers in the Schools, "Young Students Get Inspired by Art" by Wendy Siegle




Elementary students from a few Houston area schools have been given a unique opportunity to connect with art. From the KUHF NewsLab, Wendy Siegle reports on a new project aimed at inspiring students to get creative and start writing.

"What kind of art did he make? What kind of materials did he use? Well, we’re going into the galleries and we’re going to find out."

Houston-based art critic Susie Kalil is touring an art exhibition at The Menil Collection with second and third graders from Edgewood Elementary.

"Now what kind of mask would this be? Look there’s—he drilled a hole again, what would that hole be?"
Kids: "A door? An eye?"
Kalil: "An eye, it would be a single eye."

Kalil and the students are part of a project launched by non-profit organization, Writers in the Schools. For this, the organization teamed up with the Menil Collection to give students a hands-on approach to thinking about art and how it relates to them. The goal is to actively engage young students with the artwork in order to stimulate their creative imaginations. Jack McBride is the organization’s program manager.

"Most of these kids probably never have the opportunity to go to an art museum. The Menil collection is a free museum, open to the public, but these kids don’t necessarily have access to it. And so, this is a great chance to bring lots and lots of kids to a space they’ve never seen before and to be among these wonderful pieces of art."

As Kalil guides the students through the Joaquin Torres-Garcia exhibition titled, Constructing Abstraction with Wood, she explains each piece and asks the students questions. She says she’s enthusiastic to be a part of the project.

"Rather than spend more time preaching to the converted through high end art magazines, I really wanted to help children learn how to enter a work of art."

She says the Torres-Garcia exhibition, which is full of shapes, symbols and wooden figures, is perfect for sparking interest in young students.

"All the children immediately lock into the symbols. And all of them are raising their hands to name the symbols and also just, it becomes like a domino effect about what each symbol means to them."

After the tour, the students take about ten minutes to write a story based on symbols they connected with from the exhibition. Cassidy Sapon chooses the heart. She’s the first to read her story to the rest of the group.

"Two people loved each other they talked to each other. They got married, they bought a house…"

For phase two of the project, Houston artist Nicola Parente will visit the schools to help the students create abstract wood pieces using inspiration from their own writing. The Writers in the Schools program has been around for twenty-six years and provides creative writing workshops for students throughout the. Robin Reagler is the Executive Director of Writers in the School. She’s been with the organization for twelve years and says the program is invaluable asset to the community.

"I can remember when I was a child. I didn’t have ways to express myself, and I think the joy of being a part of this organization is that thousands of kids get to sit down and write and draw and paint and tell their story."

After visiting the Menil Collection, the students at Edgewood Elementary will have even more to add to their story.

From the KUHF NewsLab, I’m Wendy Siegle.

To Listen click HERE.

Monday, December 14, 2009

“Will Work For Trash, Local Artists Bring Attention to Houston’s Trashy Ways”, by Mona Metzger, Houston Green Scene, December 2009

Will Work For Trash
Local Artists Bring Attention to Houston's Trashy Ways

By Mona Metzger
December 2009

Inspired by a 2008 New York Times article that ranked Houston as the worst recycler among the nation's 30 largest cities, two Houston artists, Nicola Parente and Divya Murthy are on a mission to increase awareness about Houston's trash so they created art from it. Wasted Resolved and Natural Recyclers were created with the intent to make the viewer more aware of our city's waste consumption and to create a dialogue with the audience that focuses attention on the importance of reducing waste.

Natural Recyclers consists of three giant mushrooms, whose bases are fabricated from rebar, soil and moss. The mushroom caps and stems are planted with Texas native and non-native, edible and herb plants. The use of the mushroom reflects the important role the fungi play in the ecosystem through its use of decomposing materials as its source of nourishment. Parente and Murthy feel the mushroom and its symbiotic relationship with the root structures of plants is the ideal symbolic gesture to promote environmental consciousness within our community.

Wasted Resolve demonstrates the need for increased efforts to recycle synthetic and non-biodegradable material and reduce levels of local waste production and is a visual categorized summary of un-recycled waste created from debris collected during a week long period from an eight-block area surrounding Art League Houston. The numbers on the wall compare Houston's recycling efforts to other major US cities and the "trash graph" is composed of discarded items collected in just one week from the neighborhood surrounding Art League Houston. Both serve as a small reminder that the responsibility to clean up lies with the individual and our individual communities.

When: Wasted Resolve: through December, 2009
Wasted resolve
Location: Art League of Houston
Cost: Free
For more about Abstract / Contemporary Artist: Nicola Parente
Web: http://www.nicolaparente.com
Blog: http://www.nparente.blogspot.com/
Studio: 713.922.6327
email: nicola@nicolaparente.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nic

Monday, December 7, 2009

Meghan Hendley, KUHF, National Public Radio, Front Row (audio interview with Artists Nicola Parente and Divya Murthy), December 7, 2009



KUHF's Meghan Hendley speaks to artists Nicola Parente and Divya Murphy about their outdoor and indoor installations Natural Recyclers and Wasted Resolve currently on display at Art League Houston.

Click Here to listen.