eARThshaking Art Teacher!

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Thanks Nancy!



Sometimes life takes an unexpected turn. Sometimes those turns are serious or difficult. Sometimes they are exhilarating and memorable. But, these unexpected turns are usually life altering. I had the distinct honor of crossing paths with Nancy Walkup several years ago in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It was an unexpected turn that means so much to me....in a great way! I attended the Folk Art Extravaganza Workshop she was leading as the editor of SchoolArts Magazine and partnering with Stevie Mack of Crizmac.  It's hard to explain it in concrete terms....but I know that professionally crossing paths with Nancy changed my career and my professional life entirely. I've helped her at New York, Ft. Worth, and San Diego NAEA. I've gone on her professional development workshops to New Mexico a couple of times! Rode back and forth with her to Ft. Worth a few times. Enjoyed some meals after long days at NAEA together. Called her a time or two when I needed advice. And.....thoroughly enjoyed having her come to KSU for Aprendiendo del Arte. Nancy is a gifted educator who does so much for others! She is a blessing to me! This is a short blog, but I just wanted to be sure to thank her for all she has done for me! We have so much in common that Facebook usually tags pictures of me, on my Facebook posts, as Nancy! (I'm not joking!) I guess it's the blonde hair and glasses! Anyway, she came walking across the lobby today at the convention and said hi! I don't know how she has time to do all she does! Looking forward to dinner with her tomorrow evening!

Aprendiendo del Arte-Learning from Art

Aprendiendo del Arte-Learning from Art!
And, that is exactly what we did!


Agustin, Nancy, Dr. Taylor, and Cilau with
Dr. Taylor's Foundations of Education Course Members

I don't really even know where to start. I could write for days and days about this wonderful event. February 17th & 18th the Art Education Program at Kansas State University hosted three guests for two days of workshops, lectures, demonstrations, and exhibitions. Our focus was Huichol Yarn Painting and tradition, Oaxacan wood carving and tradition, and Dr. Elliot Eisner's Ten Lessons the Arts Teach. Our guests were Cilau Valadez, a Huichol yarn painter from an area near Puerto Vallerta, Mexico; Agustin Prudencio Cruz, a Oaxacan wood carver, from Oaxaca, Mexico; and Nancy Walkup, a giant in art education and the editor of School Arts Magazine, as well as a national board member with NAEA for quite some time. She has many other titles, too! Since this isn't my official KSU blog, but a personal art blog I maintain, I'm going to write from more of a personal viewpoint.

Nancy Walkup speaking in the Foundations course.


Nancy flew into Manhattan, we unloaded her things at my house, and the two of us headed off to Kansas City to pick up the guys. I picked Cilau up at Kansas City, Missouri on a snowy February day. He's seen snow before, but we laughed with him because he was wearing no socks and it was pretty cold. We waited quite awhile for Agustin's flight to come in; it was late. That gave Cilau, Nancy, and I time to sit around and visit....and visit....and visit! His plane eventually arrived and we drove two hours back to Manhattan after getting Agustin, who was VERY excited to see the snow, a delicious Jack-in-the-Box meal about 10:00pm.  We got the guys settled at the hotel, Nancy and I headed back to my house, and the art adventure began.

Cilau with KSU College of Education faculty
at welcome reception.


On Tuesday, Feb. 17 we began the day by speaking in a colleagues class about teaching with diversity and teaching to diversity. Then, the college hosted a reception to welcome the guests with a Q & A session. After a quick bite of lunch we did two two-hour workshops, back to back, to a packed room of KSU students, area high school students, area art educators, and various residents of the area. the workshops gave attendees a chance to make up to 8 different projects and see Agustin and Cilau demonstrate their yarn painting and wood carving and painting. Attendees at the workshop made:
1) Retablos (or memory boxes)
2) Embossed Tin Ornaments
3) Yarn Paintings
4) Papel People
5) Papel Picado
6) Ojo de Dios (God's Eyes)
7) Dio de los Muertos Skulls
8) Oaxacan wood painting

Cilau welcoming workshop attendees and explaining
Huichol yarn painting.

Agustin, with a translator, tells Workshop attendees about
Oaxacan wood carving. 
Two art teachers from Kansas City
 watch a yarn painting demonstration.
Workshop attendees at Aprendiendo del Arte!

One reason I know the event was very successful was because of the Reflections my students wrote after the event. The learning and meaning that happened at this workshop was just what I was hoping for. I'll share some of the reflections in another post.

After the workshops we had a bit of time to get refreshed for dinner and we met a wonderful group of friends and colleagues at a nice restaurant in town for dinner. Aside from me slipping on a small wet spot on the concrete tile floor and flying thru the air, feet up high, landing on the ground like I was making a snow angel, the evening was wonderful. It was good to sit around the table, visit, share a culinary experience, and socialize in a way that I sometimes think is being forgotten in this day and age. It was a great evening.

Huichol Yarn Painting and also Huichol Beading

Agustin's Oaxacan Wood Carving and Painting
The following day was very busy, too. We began with a lecture in Bluemont Hall, where I work. Then we did two lectures at the Beach Museum of Art on KSU campus. The Beach Museum told us they had never had a lecture with that high of attendance, and twice! Students and faculty came from all over the University. After the lectures, we rushed to the Strecker-Nelson Art Gallery for a reception and exhibition. And, then we headed across the street to end two wonderful days, which had been immersed in art and culture, with a relaxing meal with a couple of my good friends on our faculty. We laughed, we smiled, we were all so happy with how the two days had gone. They could not have gone better. It was as if all of us did not want it to end. I know this to be a normal phenomenon when art people gather. I think that many of us are social creatures, who enjoy the human connection, and we know innately that the world can never have enough beauty....I guess that's why we work so hard to create it.

Above and below: Cilau at the first lecture. 



Agustin speaking at the first lecture with Cilau translating.

Nancy speaking at the first lecture.


The lecture at KSU Beach Museum of Art.

Next four images:
 Jay and Barbara Nelson
of the Strecker-Nelson Gallery
with Cilau and Agustin. Also, Nancy
and myself with Cilau and Agustin. 






We estimated about 650 people or even a bit more attended the events in two days. When you are planning events such as this one you fret and worry a bit about attendance....but every room we hosted an event in was packed. It was such a good feeling! It was an even greater feeling to bring a quality, art education event to Kansas State University's College of Education. I was really blessed when I got this job. Generally, if I am awake I am thinking about it.....about how to build a quality program.....about how to best teach so that I am growing outstanding teachers.....about how to convey my love of art to others.





Joseph Addison said, "What sunshine is to flowers, smiles are to humanity. These are but trifles, to be sure; but scattered along life's pathway, the good they do is inconceivable." I think this quote best sums it up.....when we plan professional enrichment type of events our goal is to provide a quality cognitive experience for those who attend....but always in the back of my mind.....is let's smile and have a little fun, too.......life is made for that. Aprendiendo del Arte was something I will never forget and something I was honored to get to experience myself. Cilau, Agustin, and Nancy are amazing artists and educators. Gosh, I'm thankful for this experience!

Presenting at NAEA on Fund For Teachers Fellowship to Istanbul last summer.



My goodness, the last 10 months have been busy! Last June I saw on a beach in Florida writing my first college syllabus for the first ever college course I would teach.  10 months later I sit here in New Orleans at the NAEA Convention thinking about how much I have been stretched, how much I have been able to dream, and how much I have been able to make an impact on future generations of teachers. In just barely two semesters I think we are well on our way to building a wonderful art education program at Kansas State University. I'm so proud of my students....of the journey we have gone on....over hills.....down valleys....around curves.....and here I sit with four of my seniors with me, running around the NAEA Convention so excited to be teachers! Hopefully they will have their own classroom in just a few short months. Tomorrow morning, here at NAEA, at 8am I'm presenting on my Fund For Teachers Fellowship to Istanbul last summer. Here's a link to their website.  It is a wonderful organization! I should know! They gave me $5000 last summer to go to Istanbul! If you are a teacher or if you know anyone who is a teacher......tell them about this wonderful organization! I'm looking forward to sharing about this organization with those who attend!

FUND FOR TEACHERS:  http://www.fundforteachers.org
Hello everyone! Ok, I must admit that I am a social media crazy person....but this blog is one of the ways I communicate on the Web that has just been sitting on the back burner. The Worldwide Color Wheel Project, however, is not. Schools all over the world have been doing the project. I took a new job this past fall as a university professor and this project had to go on hold for awhile. I am presenting at NAEA in New Orleans again on the project and am hopeful we will start getting some more wonderful images from art teachers all over to share with you here! In the meantime......if you are interested in joining the project email trinaharlow@yahoo.com and I will send you a Drop Box link to all the project forms, videos, lesson plans, slide shows, etc.  Let's keep coloring our world! We all surely know this world needs some more beauty right now!