City Faces

Posted by Daniela on November 9, 2011
Nov 092011

Stella McGregor’s lecture on Monday reminded me of a similar program in St. Louis called City Faces. I had the pleasure of having Bob as a professor.

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City Faces works with children, teenagers, and young adults living in public housing in inner St. Louis. Since the 1993, the program has been run by Bob Hansman, a professor in the architecture school at Washington University in St. Louis, whose goal is “to change the course of the children’s lives by offering art as one alternative to selling drugs and becoming involved in gangs, and to teach kids employable skills to better their situation and get them out of the projects. Most importantly, City Faces strives to become a stable component in their lives, supporting them emotionally and professionally.”

City Faces is now in its 17th year and continues to expand. City Faces began essentially as a drawing program with an open studio format, and provided an opportunity for local kids to escape street violence and grow through creativity.

Hansman is an incredible role model for the kids. He gives constructive attention and validates their good decisions. He is someone they trust, so much so that he testifies for them at court and goes to their parole hearings.

A relatively recent offshoot of the City Faces program is Faces in the Loop, a storefront on a main retail street in St. Louis called “The Loop”. In addition to selling their portraits of city faces, the storefront gives them the opportunity to learn the skills they need to successfully run a business.

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I’m sure there are countless more examples of similar programs all over the country. It is inspiring and encouraging to realize that this can be done and can be done with great success through the persistence and dedication of one person.

 

Violence Transformed

Posted by Lily Tran on November 7, 2011
Nov 072011
Violence Transformed

  On April 12th of this year, various members of the Urbano Project exhibited their works at Violence Transformed at the Massachusetts State House. Violence Transformed this year included performances from Urbano’s spoken word teen curators,  Pedro Reyes’s Palas Por Pistolas, and many pieces from Urbano’s young artists. The event embodies the idea of using art as a form of empowerment and a way to address issues in the world around us. Here, the pieces of the Urbano Project focused on violence and how it permeates the lives of teens living in the Boston urban environment.   Art Voice Empowerment CONTINUE…

Art and Voice

Posted by Lily Tran on November 6, 2011
Nov 062011

“The physical voice is an expression of our social voice and through its use, we either reinforce or shift our sense of power” -Heather Chetwynd, “Releasing Voices, Reclaiming Power: The Personal and Collective Power of Voice” Chetwynd, in her article, discusses the role of liberating one’s physical voice to galvanize people to act and to express their thoughts. Her connection between the vocal and the ability for activism raises the general question: how can any form of voice prompt action, provoke people to release their thoughts and opinions to the public? We use the term voice to describe an author, CONTINUE…