Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Riverfest!

The Arnot Art Museum sponsored a Riverfest featuring the arts and crafts of regional artists. Students who had participated in the Chemung River School Project had work they created throughout the year on display at the Arnot Art Museum and the Chemung Valley History Museum for a wonderful culmination to an educational and exciting year both inside and outside the classroom. As always, the Chemung River was, and will continue to be, the pivot around which the program revolves and the inspiration for our teaching artists and naturalists. Preservation of the river and the waters of the world is part of the mission of CRSP.



We at the Arnot Art Museum remain as dedicated as ever to educating young people in all areas of the curriculum through the arts. Indeed, NY State standards in social studies, language arts, science, and the arts are satisfied through programs which have been carefully crafted through the input of museum educators, CRSP teaching artists and classroom teachers. CRSP has been nationally recognized by the NY State Council on the Arts, the Institute of Museum and Library Services and the National Endowment for the Arts. Our educators and presenters are HIGHLY educated and qualified to teach and are willing to work with your teachers to tailor the CRSP curriculum to meet the needs of regional schools. Many of our presenters, past and present, have received awards for their art and/or their teaching and we are fortunate and honored to have them working with us. Just this past year, one of our teaching artists - Damali Abrams - was granted a very prestigious fellowship with the A.I.R. Gallery in New York City. Annemarie Zwack and Diedra Krieger each continue to exhibit their work in national venues and receive awards for their work. Damali and Diedra will not be working with us this coming year, but we are happy to have Annemarie Zwack continue with us. Our writer, Sue Smith Heavenrich has been published in numerous venues and has had years of experience teaching children. Our museum educators at the Arnot Art Museum and the staff at Tanglewood Nature Center, Chemung Valley History Museum and the Cornell Cooperative Extension are, without exception, highly educated, experienced and passionate about their work. The cost of bringing these talented artists and educators into your classroom on an individual basis would be prohibitive, but is an excellent value through CRSP.

Below are examples of projects which were completed during Annemarie Zwack's January residency at Center Street School in Horseheads and Chemung Elementary School in Waverly, NY. Many teachers also included the haiku poetry created with Sue Smith Heavenrich during the winter session when she returned to the classroom to follow up their fall session during the riverwalks and to discuss, among other things, seasonal changes to the environment. Students also reflected on the journal writing they had done in the fall and practiced the art of paying attention with all their senses. Students' introduction to writing haiku poetry developed language arts skills as well as nurtured a love for literature and enhanced their appreciation for the natural environment. To read more about Sue's program, see the archive below dated and titled Monday, October 6, 2008 RIVERWALKS - SCIENCE AND LANGUAGE ARTS BY THE RIVER!





This mixed media drawing and fabric collage is called Jewels, like the accompanying haiku.


Jewels


Fishing swimming nicely


Big mountains with purple peaks


A bird flies around





Two more exemplary examples of fabric collages. Select student work was placed in frames and displayed in the front gallery at the Arnot Art Museum.





Chemung River School Spring Riverwalk!

The beautiful Chemung River as it appeared last spring.

In May, students returned to the Chemung River with the staff at Tanglewood as well as the writer, Sue Smith Heavenrich, to observe seasonal changes and their impact on the environment. Students had honed writing skills and learned what it means to be ‘adapted” to an area and/or certain environmental conditions. They gained an idea of what an introduced species is and the effect that such species can have on natives. Concepts of adaptability were addressed and students were asked to reflect on the implications of environmental change as it related to the life and health of organisms adapted to a given ecosystem.



Emily Hofelich-Jack, educator from Tanglewood, holds up a specimen captured from the waters of the Chemung River for all the students to examine before returning to its home.

To read more about the students' adventures during the Riverwalks, please look through the archives for the Thursday, October 9, 2008 TANGLEWOOD VISITS blog and the Monday, October 6, 2008 RIVERWALKS - SCIENCE AND LANGUAGE ARTS BY THE RIVER! entry.