Encouraging Students to Reach for their Dreams

“What you guys did this summer was inspirational, and I think inspiration is sometimes lost in this society. Our students will walk by this mural every day and be inspired. And you inspired us, the teachers and administrators, as well. I must tell you how valuable and how important that is to our school community.”

— Principal Charles Reilly, P.S. 368 / The William Lynch School

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Echoes of Inwood

“Inwood has changed all throughout its existence. I feel like it is a very nuanced conversation to have, because on the one hand, you do see the good of it. There are nicer amenities being built, like the new library. You have a lot of chain businesses coming into the area and all that is poised to spur economic growth. On the other hand, is this economic growth going to necessarily mean that the culture is going to change? Is what makes Inwood unique going to go away within the next ten years?” — CAW Youth Apprentice Omar Martinez.

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Why CAW Summer Youth Apprentices Keep Coming Back

We’ve often said that working for Creative Art Works is the best summer job in NYC, and it turns out that a lot of young New Yorkers agree. Of the 115 Youth Apprentices who joined Creative Art Works for our Public Art Youth Employment program this summer, 15 have worked with us at least once before and several of them have worked with us 2 to 5 times! We collected some of their thoughts on why they keep coming back. 

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Community Art-Making: Where Kids (and their Parents) learn through the power of creativity

Throughout this spring, Creative Art Works Teaching Artists have been engaging young people and their families and friends in robust and event-specific artmaking activities with a number of community partners. While these drop-in activities are fun and require no prior art-making experience, all projects are designed around rigorous lesson plans that align with the goals of the larger community event.

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Feeling Things Out

Students at MS 328 in Washington Heights created collagraphs, a kind of print that uses textured materials to create patterns, that tells a story brimming with ridges and grooves. When the work was printed students were often surprised to see a completely different image than what they had expected. This left them with a different understanding of how making art works in real time — the end product doesn’t always come out as expected. Sometimes it’s better.

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Art Around the World Captivates at PS 155

This fall, CAW is offering Art Around the World as an in-school program to students in grades K – 3 at our partner school, PS 155, the William Paca School. We dropped in on CAW Teaching Artist Carlita Field-Hernandez as she was beginning a unit based on the family portraits of Chicana artist and illustrator Carmen Lomaz Garza. Garza is a good choice for this age group, as her art focuses on family scenes that even small children find relatable, like preparing a family meal or eating watermelon on a hot summer night. The goal for this project is for students to create their own family portrait using pencil and paper.

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Space, Time, and Opportunity

As teachers, friends and family arrived to a pop-up gallery celebrating work created by students in a Creative Art Works after-school mixed media program, some students took it upon themselves to act as docents, not just of their own art, but works by other students as well. They were ecstatic to point out the techniques they had learned. It was inspiring to see the pride the students had in their work, and impressive to hear them talk so knowledgeably about each project.

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The Continuing Adventures of Clair Vogel

“At Creative Art Works, we're teaching artistic skills, which are important on their own, but we're also teaching life skills. We’re creating a foundation of skills, expertise, and understanding of the workforce to prepare young people to create a path for their own lives. We tell donors that when they support CAW, they are supporting future leaders, future artists, future professionals, future community members, and that's very inspirational and aspirational, so people want to be part of our mission.” — CAW Development Manager Clair Vogel

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Dive in and Try It

Creative Art Works has returned to PS 153 in Hamilton Heights with an in-school literacy-based art curriculum. Each project invites first-grade students to respond to a classic children’s book. Students are then given the chance to explore materials and create art directly related to the illustration style of the book and informed by the themes of the text. Integrating art-making into the language arts curriculum creates educational synergy. The process of manipulating safety scissors, paint brushes, and glue sticks builds fine motor skills, engages executive functions such as time management, and exercise problem-solving skills. The act of responding to literature through art improves comprehension and long-term retention, builds vocabulary, and engages different learning modalities.

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