Monday, September 29, 2014

Wanted Posters make an appearance at Supercrawl

Student participants of the NuSteel program completed their first prints just in time to make an appearance at Supercrawl.

These posters represent students' first forage into the world of print-making.  Over the course of the semester, students will learn how to create one and two-colour prints, posters, t-shirts, and a variety of saleable merchandise.

Students at the NuSteel program have a unique opportunity to experience the life of an artist-entrepreneur as they work to create and sell handmade art products at Hamilton's monthly art crawls on James St. North.

The program, a partnership between Centre3 for Print and Media Arts, and the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, is aimed at engaging students in Alter-Ed who enjoy art-based learning.  Students undertake several secondary school subjects over the course of the semester, including English, History, Civics and Careers, and Art.  All major student projects are art-based.  The program, in its infancy last year, proved to be quite successful, and we are now off to a wonderful start in year two.

Here's to the start of a great semester!

Matt McInnes demonstrates the art of mounting posters with water and glue.

Halfway there...

The wall: Wanted Posters successfully mounted.



Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Food = Community

Here at NuDeal we've been the lucky recipients of an Ontario Ministry of Education grant to provide healthy, nutritious food for our students.  We are in close proximity to the Hamilton Farmer's Market, so Tuesdays have become our market day.

Together as a group, students discuss what they'd like to include in their purchases for the week.  They divide the budget into three categories: meat and cheese, fruit and veggies, and bread.  We walk to the market as a group and then split up into teams to purchase the items on our list.  This week, students decided on french baguette with spicy salami and aged cheddar, cherry tomatoes, cucumber, carrots, bell peppers, raspberries, and grapes.

Because we are able to shop at the Farmer's Market, students are learning about shopping locally, supporting small businesses, the importance of organic farming, and the moral responsibility of buying fair-trade, ecologically sound foods.  Students are also exposed to a variety of cultures and peoples at the market, thereby gaining a stronger sense of Hamilton's diverse population.

The most exceptional aspect of taking part in this nutrition program is the sense of community we develop as a school when we prepare and eat meals together.  Students who may otherwise have nothing in common come together to discuss the food we are eating and the foods they like to make at home.  Students linger over lunch and experience the pleasure of enjoying a proper, balanced meal with friends.

We are very happy to be the recipients of this grant, and strongly recommend that schools across Hamilton look at their lunch practices and prioritize the opportunity for students and teachers to come together and break bread.  As schools get larger and student lives become more hectic, it is perhaps one of the best things school planners can do to maintain, or increase, students' sense of community and belonging.

photo from warrenleecohen.com

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Community Support for Arts Education

I am very lucky to be teaching Art in downtown Hamilton on James St. North, host to the monthly James St. North Art Crawl.  The community of artists and entrepreneurs on this street are known for their collaboration in promoting the arts in the wider Hamilton community.

The program that I teach, called NuDeal, is a pilot project partnership between the Hamilton board of education and a small Gallery for print and media arts called Centre3.  This partnership is the first of its kind, placing students in an artist-run gallery environment, and developing curriculum that is community focused and locally relevant to kids.  

Through our partnership with Centre3, students who come to our program become connected to a variety of community-based services and opportunities, including the Notre Dame youth housing and support centre, and Art Forums, a creative after-school space for youth to extend their art practice.  Further to these relationships, each semester students make connections with the artist-members who work and produce art at Centre3, often gaining access to future co-op and employment opportunities.

One great thing about our program is that it an alternative education program, so students from all over the city are referred to the program, and provided with bus tickets or taxis, so that even students who live further out in Wentworth can access the downtown arts community.

Another area of support for the arts that I am now learning about, from working with artists at Centre3, is the access to grants for local art initiatives.  One of the artist-members I work with was able to obtain a grant from the Laidlaw foundation so that NuDeal students and community youth could create and publish a youth-led Zine, called the Outsider Zine.  The grant from the Laidlaw foundation is one of several grants that Centre3 members have obtained in order to keep the gallery and studio space running with up-to-date equipment and resources, and to pay staff and students a fair wage for their work.

Finally, many students who come through the NuDeal program become connected with the wider arts community and thus grow their support network and network of friends.  Youth who may very likely have ‘fallen through the cracks’ of our social and education systems have instead become connected with craftsmen and women, artists, entrepreneurs, and administrators, who are more than willing to mentor students and help them to explore potential career paths.  Accessing caring adult mentors is the most significant factor that influences students to become re-engaged with education and the idea of having a career, and is also the most significant factor in the development of positive self-esteem.


In sum, I am very very fortunate to be part of a community that supports education through the arts, and I hope that this partnership becomes an exemplary format for future school-community initiatives.



Thursday, January 9, 2014

Student Art Exhibit: Deal or Nu Deal?

Student Art Exhibit: Deal or Nu Deal?


The Nu Deal program is putting together a final exhibit of student work at the upcoming Art Crawl on Friday, January 10th.  Come and support our students and check out their fabulous variety of silk-screened products.  Works you can admire and purchase include t-shirts, postcards, fine-art prints, and other hand-made products.  Please come out to Centre 3 and support our talented Nu Deal artists!






Tuesday, December 3, 2013

NuDealers Field Trip to Toronto

This week NuDealers took a field trip to the big(ger) city of Toronto, where we saw some exhibits at the AGO, explored Kensington Market, and put our Wanted posters up in Rush Lane.

We took the Go Bus from Hamilton to Toronto Union Station.  Fellow passengers were impressed with our (respectful) enthusiasm and asked interested questions about the NuDeal program.  Someone even asked about volunteer opportunities.


We took the subway from Toronto Union to St. Patrick Station, where we walked up Dundas Street to the AGO.  Victoria took charge as our fearless leader, navigating the subway system and city streets like a true veteran Torontonian.
NuDealers pay homage to the gorgeous sculpture out front of the AGO.
As professional print makers, NuDealers showed a great deal of respect for, and interest in, the art on display at the AGO.
Jesse and Savvy take notes and photos to use for later inspiration.
As a class we were lucky to gain knowledge through Matt McInnes and Victoria Alstein's expertise.  
After the AGO we went for lunch at Big Fat Burrito, and explored Kensington Market.  Maddi loved the kitschy religious paraphernalia at the Green Egg.
Our field trip culminated in Rush Lane, Toronto's legal graffiti alley, where students posted their screen-printed Wanted posters.







The field trip was a great success - Nu Dealers had fun and staff did too.  Looking forward to seeing what kind of creativity the trip inspired in our students!!

Friday, November 15, 2013

ART CRAWL NOVEMBER 2013

This November's Art Crawl was a huge success for our NuDeal team.

Students worked tirelessly to get their products in saleable condition before the crowds arrived at Centre 3.  
The NuDeal table display of student wares.
Cody, Jazz, Savvy, Terry, Jesse and Maddi were an awesome sales team.
Patrons of the arts were impressed by the quality and creative concepts behind Nu Dealers' products.
Our top seller of the night was Savvy's Bad Bitch brand of t-shirts, tote bags, and posters.  Patrons were impressed by the layered meanings produced by the image of Mother Theresa in contrast with the street slang compliment.  Bad Bitch is street slang for a woman who is formidable or awe-inspiring.
Randy and Malcolm decided to branch out on their own and set up a booth of wares in an abandoned store front on James St. North.  Sales were adequate, despite the cold.
Jesse, with proceeds from the sale of his In $$$ We Trust t-shirts.
Maddi and Victoria celebrate the success of the evening.  (Victoria worked tirelessly from 9 am to midnight - what would we do without our leader?)
Proof that there's hope for nerdy English teachers everywhere: Savvy decrees that Michelle is worthy of the Bad Bitch brand.