No Limits

Why kids need art

(Dec. 10, 2009)  Ask people and most will agree adolescence is an especially intense time. Feelings overwhelm; desire consumes; fear paralyzes; triumph burns pure and sweet. Even through the most slothful of teens, a mysterious energy triggers the transformation from child to adult. This metamorphosis demands so much. The world looms, full of complexity, danger and dreams, yet the time to prepare to enter it is short. Perhaps at no other time is art so important. Art, after all, teaches so much. Elliot Eisner, emeritus professor of Art and Education at Stanford University, listed some of art’s grander lessons in his book The Arts and the Creation of Mind.

My favorite: “The arts make vivid the fact that neither words in their literal form nor number exhaust what we can know. The limits of our language do not define the limits of our cognition.”

Painting by Shawn Griggs.
GALLERY >

Art increases our ability to respond effectively to shifting conditions, to explore beyond what is easily seen, to find ways to express what words cannot. Are those not desirable talents, ones especially important to hone during a time when who we are might be reconstructed almost daily? When we’re learning the historical depths and necessary future highs of humankind? When our own emotions leave us inarticulate, yet desperate to say what needs to be said?

Yet, historically, when budget troubles loom, the first school programs cut include art, music and theater. Any high school student can tell you the purpose of education: “To get good grades so you can go to a good college so you can get a good job so you can make money.” In a time of vast unemployment, to dismiss the importance of securing “a good job” would be irresponsible, but yet, isn’t education supposed to be something more? Isn’t it also supposed to be about enlightening the next generation to the wonders of ourselves and our world? Teaching not just job skills, but proficiency in what it means to be human?

Why do we take away these outlets at a time when kids need them the most? Just when they might most be struggling to find a voice, their constructive options are removed. Just when a teen is floundering to figure out who he really is, we deny him ways in which to safely explore. Even to those already sketching, painting, playing, acting, designing, composing or engaged in any of the myriad creative acts, without an arts program in school, lacking such classes as part of a regular education, we are saying, “Art does not matter.”

But art, whether through paintings, sculptures, words or simply a pleasing sense of design, is the way in which we humans transcend simple biology and inform the world with our own sense of beauty and importance.

Thankfully we live in a community that celebrates this, one in which high school programs cement art into the daily lives of students, one in which hordes of teenagers turn out for Arts Alive! — not that they’re necessarily going around perusing the art, but they are absorbing the fact that art is a cause for celebration. Yay!

Arcata Arts Institute is a school-within-a-school at Arcata High. Students attend the regular high school, but have advanced arts and English classes at the end of the day, plus take a variety of workshops taught by accomplished local artists including Joyce Jonté and Donovan Clark. Last week, AAI offered Open Studios. Students and a few instructors presented photos, sculptures and other forms of creative expression that together served as a solid presentation of talent. Who’d have ever thought wandering high school halls would feel so joyful? But it did. I purchased note cards from Treyce Meredith, vegan cookies from Naomi McNeil, a detailed drawing of an armadillo from Ruby Rudnick and also a zillion magnets from Alex Torquemada in support of the Humboldt Bay Rowing Association’s junior crew. Tio Escarda, Erick Jackson and Julio Lopez jammed outside the classroom, mixing guitars, violin and some fine singing to provide a soundtrack for my first foray into 2009 Christmas shopping — an event marked not by fighting crowds at the mall, but by supporting an effort to provide multiple paths to our children as they figure out who they are, who they want to become and how to bring the world they’ve created into the one waiting for them.

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ONE Comments

Comment / By Anne Bown-Crawford / Dec. 13, 2009, 10:03 a.m.

Jennifer,

Thanks so much for publicly acknowledging our program and the sweet evening we had last week. Our kids are thriving, I’m glad to have our community know about it.

Anne

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