| Creativity, Networking, and Revitalization in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara March 25, 2008 – Eleven San Francisco Bay Area Arts teachers – four at Alameda County schools, one in San Mateo, and two each from Marin, Santa Clara and San Francisco County schools – are recipients of the “Fund for Artists Arts Teacher Fellowship” sponsored by the four community foundations in the region. The Fund for Artists is sponsored by the East Bay Community Foundation, the Marin Community Foundation, The San Francisco Foundation and Silicon Valley Community Foundation. With financial support from the Surdna Foundation, the Fund’s fellowship program strengthens the artistic revitalization of outstanding arts teachers in Bay Area middle and high schools by allowing recipients to foster their own creative work and to interact with other professional artists in their field. 2008-2009 Fellows: Estelle Akamine (Westmoor High School, San Mateo County, $5,000) will take 12 courses from Mendocino Art Center/Skyline College and the Institute of Mosaic Art in order to acquire skills to create permanent outdoor sculpture and wall mounted architectural work. She will also create a public art mosaic. Kimberley Noel D’Adamo-Muanga (Berkeley High School, International Baccalaureate Program, Alameda County, $5,000) will attend three workshops at the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology in Oregon, study the encaustic method, and create three large canvases to complete a series she's been working on this past year. She will also create a digitalized portfolio to show professionally. Heidi Guibord (Leadership High School, San Francisco, $4,700) will travel to Accra, Ghana and study fiber design and beading techniques as a participant in a two-week workshop with The Cross Cultural Collaborative. She will work in tandem with her school’s Humanities Department, incorporating new material into their unit on Africa. Anne Lerner-Wright (San Rafael High School, Marin County, $4,767) will study opera with the internationally renowned faculty at the Bay Area Summer Opera Theater Institute (BASOTI) in San Francisco. She will also stage an opera, utilizing student singers and instrumentalists Sam Mulberry (Oasis High School, Alameda County, $5,000) will spend July of 2008 traveling the Medicine Roots district of the Pine Ridge Reservation to study traditional paint making and create community murals with Lakota elders (Ray Takes War Bonnet and Ed Young Man Afraid of His Horse). Elizabeth Pedinotti (Freestyle Academy, Santa Clara County, $5,000) will attend a two-week workshop in Ireland with photographer Jo Ann Walters in June 2008 to further develop a body of work exploring the role of memory in building identity, and purchase a negative scanner for future bodies of work. Elahe Shahideh (John O'Connell High School, San Francisco, $5,000) will travel to Florence, Italy to attend a three-week landscape painting course at the Florence Academy of Arts and study the Macchiaioli collection of landscape painting at the Pitti Palace Modern Art Gallery. Richard Silberg (MLK Middle School, Alameda County, $5,000) will attend a workshop in Los Angeles with SITI company members (world renowned theater group based in New York City and Saratoga, NY at Skidmore College), focusing on Viewpoints, Suzuki and composition. He will also take an advanced storytelling workshop with Ben Haggarty. Rachel E. Somerville (Tomales High School, Marin County, $3,965) will attend two Mexican Folk Art workshops at the Sachmo Center for the Arts in Oaxaca, Mexico and at the Idyllwild School of Music & Arts summer art program in California. She will gain knowledge of techniques, tools and sustainable materials used for wood sculpture, and produce a multi-cultural art resource book for teachers and students which will document the experience. Sylvia Thomas (East Oakland Leadership Academy, Alameda County, $5,000) will study four types of welding at The Crucible with Don Carlson and Gian Bongiorno. She will focus on large scale work, and create the first public sculpture for the opening of the new East Oakland Leadership Academy in the fall of 2008. Margo Wixsom (Palo Alto High School, Santa Clara County, $5,000) will travel to Santa Fe, NM, Rochester, NY, Jordan and Syria to attend technical and conceptual workshops in photography and do visual research while touring galleries. She will create a series of visual narratives of life, culture, and the arts in Middle Eastern Culture.In addition to their individual fellowship funds, awardees receive a $1,500 stipend earmarked for follow-up activities with their students in their classrooms. With only 22 percent of California schools meeting the-state mandated standards for art instruction and 29 percent offering no arts instruction at all, these fellowships, while small in scale, are a means to inspire arts teachers and their effectiveness in the schools in which they work. These teachers, who are artists themselves, continue to impact the lives of students in their classes by representing the movement to put the arts back into education. |
| Eleven Art Teachers Win Fellowships From Bay Area Community Foundations |
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