Showing posts with label youth art in the gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youth art in the gallery. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2026

Youth art and April's bustin out all over

Cleaners day today meant I stayed out of their way, at the local library. There was a new puzzle tipped out of the box, so I organized it and started the edges.


A while later, another person came and continued that bottom section.

The gallery is packed with youth art from the school district, a dazzling three walls full of energy and some talent.







And I fell for a couple of pieces, one high school painting, one first grader's foam block printing a la Warhol.

This is an annual event, and I always look forward to it. We have a great art faculty in our school system, as you see. Their ideas are great. Everything from image transfer to portraiture to drawing to paperweaving to printmaking to abstract expression, realism, many approaches.

At home nature's on a roll. The cotton seeds are germinating. Yesterday a tiny shoot, today a leaf opening, amazing speed. 

The friend who gave me the bolls told me they germinate like an earthquake, and she wasn't kidding. You can almost watch it. Between breakfast and lunch, two more shoots appeared. 

When the weather's warmer, I'll plant them outside because they'll quickly outgrow the starter pot.

Outside the spicebush is in full bloom, and the bees are at work.



We still have daffodils and the tulips are now blooming 


Speaking of earthquakes, this year is a bumper year for honesty. Aside from what I know I planted from last year's seeds, there's the volunteer Mary and Steve identified and another is growing in the pot of sage.



I'll have a good harvest of everlasting seedpods for my collection this year after several lean years.

Happy day everyone. Here's tonight's entertainment. DVD from the library. 

Most of what used to be on YouTube has now evidently gone to subscription streaming services, but I did find this. One of Alec Guinness and cast's funniest movies. It's an all star cast. This will be good. I've seen it several times but it never fails.












Friday, April 11, 2025

Textiles and Tea, youth art

Friday is a rich day this week. First I caught up with Textiles and Tea, with Veronica Perez, which I missed on Tuesday, what with one thing and another.

She's a sculptor working in the medium of braided hair, nowadays plant based, from abaca fiber, eco-friendly. She's of the Puerto Rican diaspora, interested in the significance of hair in marginalized communities including her own LatinX (I'm using her term here).

Her pieces are huge, dealing with big ideas of time, oppression, at the same time of comfort and acceptance. 

In her large wall pieces she incorporates audio of the teams helping braid the hair used in the piece. They talk about their own experience of acceptance and rejection based on hair type and styles, and the viewer has to get close to the piece to experience the sound. It's personal and inclusive.

She's been a social worker too and all her experience there folds into how she works with the braiding workshop people and respects their stories. They're compensated for their time, though some decline payment.

Anyway here's a few of these amazing works 




This one is silk tubes stuffed with hair, to make a kind of close-up effect 




Here's a braiding workshop in session 


She loves to use her hands as the main tools 


This is about the hidden past flowing into present and future, emphasis on future.


Here's a large piece, the detail showing the opening to hear the sound 



 
This, sugar arms, is about the historic connection of Puerto Rico and Portland Maine, where she works.  It's ephemeral, the sugar being dissolved in minutes with the incoming tide, leaving only the hair core behind. They're not gone, only transformed.



This is another sugar piece about being trapped, dissolved and gone.

She's fine with months of work lasting so briefly, with only a video to see now.  It's a wonderful piece, saying so much about the sugar trade and what it did, and does, to people.  And how their stories live on when their bodies are gone.

Hair is a big thought, so much emotion and judgment around it, particularly around the dark hair of indigenous and Black and Brown people.

I may write more about this, but today's so full already.

Then, the cleaners being here this morning, great, a clean house to come home to, particularly after Bionic Helen, I am officially in the library where there's this 











There's a section for younger students, too, like these terrific entries, above.

Happy day everyone. Home to crunchy tofu sticks and a roughy for lunch. Coda to the tofu story: I'm home and reheated tofu sticks by toasting them, worked fine, lovely and crunchy. 

Today's sand in the gears: I entered a comment at Homeland Security docket objecting to the proposed Alien Registration regulation, clearly  designed to trap.  

Either the immigrant registers, putting their identity there, high risk to them and family, or they don't, now risking additional charges in support of deportation if they're picked up. 

This is the last day to comment. DHS docket USCIS-2025-0004. Include 1615 NEW in the body of the comment or it won't be valid.

I hope your day's as rich as mine.