Art time work pays off for students
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Earning $500 for a work of art isn’t bad for someone whose
entire resume consists of once washing the family car for $10.
That’s what 9-year-old Bryan Bergmann did through Creating Pride, a Costa
Mesa program that links corporations with children to help promote
self-esteem through art.
Along with 156 other students, Bryan, who participated in the program at
Whittier Elementary, was invited to “On The Wall” -- a retrospective of
all the artwork created by students during the past year. The one-night
showing Friday evening reunited the young artists with their corporate
sponsors, who together raised $27,000 for art supplies for the children’s
schools.
“It’s a wonderful program that has somehow touched most of the school,”
said Whittier teacher Mary Becker.
Students from Whittier and Paularino schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District are handpicked for the program. Corporate sponsors are
recruited to sponsor the artworks at anywhere from $200 to more than
$1,500 per piece. The money is used to purchase art supplies for the
school.
Ryan Shannon, a second-grader at Paularino, said he doesn’t mind being
able to do something nice for his school.
“I don’t like being spoiled and keeping all the money for myself,” Ryan
said. “It’s nice doing it for my teacher. We bought extra school
supplies, pencils, oil pastels, paper, paintbrushes and crayons.”
Those resources have been extra valuable on the West Side, where
attention is typically focused on teaching English, said Trina Rosen, the
program’s executive director.
“It gives kids the opportunity for something where there is no pass and
fail,” Rosen said.
Rosen brought the program to California after working for a similar one
in Chicago.
After the children are selected for the program, they are “hired” by the
corporation. They spend one day a week working on their work of art. Once
they complete it, they must formally present it to their employers.
After they receive the commission, a “milkshake meeting” is held where
students vote on how to spend the money for the school.
Pat Insley, principal of Paularino School, said the real-life lessons
learned by students can be just as important as creating the art itself.
Insley accompanied a group of students to a law firm in downtown Los
Angeles last year. For Ryan, it was a thrill taking the elevator up to
the 16th floor.
“All the lawyers were there to greet the children,” Insley said. “I just
saw eyes open up. It was like they saw the possibilities.”
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