A Hunger After a Thousand Year Nap by Jacek Yerka |
This time I will not complain. I am not
angry. I’ve actually found something to swoon over: a group of writers using
modern and contemporary art to inspire children to write.
Now, this probably isn’t a new idea, but
the impact it had on children was completely different from anything they would
experience in their classrooms, smothered as they are with objectives, tests,
and data. No, this was about thinking and responding, creating a piece of
writing using a spark of inspiration from paintings, sculptures, drawings and
photographs.
Here’s how it works: Schools contact the
museum and set up a day to visit. The
museum can handle up to five classes, usually from second grade through high
school. Schools don’t pay anything to tour the galleries, but they must arrange
for buses. Once they arrive, children are put into small groups, assigned a
writer, and off they go. The writer’s job is not to teach about the art. The writer’s
job is to teach children to look at art and help them create poems, stories,
observations, descriptions, characters, and memories.
Picture this:
An emerald green lawn with a stainless
steel sculpture by land artist Michael Heizer carved into the ground. Fifteen
second graders walk slowly down its three sections, shouting out what the
shapes looks like. “Can we do it again?” And back they go along the curves, the
loops, and the pointed turns. They sit on the sidewalk in the shade and begin
to draw and write.
Emily writes:
It
looks like a roller coaster doing a loop to loop.
Next… this reminds me of flashing fire.
This
reminds me of slippery slides.
And then Zarya:
Looks like a snake going around looking
for food and starving to death.
It feels
like I am in a tunnel trying to get out, but I am trapped.
I
am going down and down the stairs trying to find beautiful art.
After they finish reading their pieces,
one little boy says, “That was fun. I think we need a group hug.” And that’s
exactly what they did, the teacher, the children, and the writer, all of them
in a tight circle, laughing. It sure
beats a classroom with a chart on the about similes and metaphors.
I watch third graders as they look at Magritte’s
Dominion of Light, that mysterious
painting that’s both day and night at the same time. The shadows speak of deep
quiet, and the children place themselves inside the painting in the dark of
night, to imagine the sounds they might hear. Zulek writes:
I hear leaves crumbling.
I hear birds chirping.
I hear ripples of water.
I hear bats flapping their wings trying
to get home.
I hear bears yawning to go to sleep.
I hear a tree falling in the water
calling for help.
I hear the sun fall down and go to sleep
so the moon can awake.
As
the class leaves this gallery to visit another, they pass a group of their
classmates. With thumbs up, they say, “You guys are going to love this.”
The seventh graders sit in front of Cy
Twombly’s huge 1994 work, Say Goodbye
Catullus to the Shores of Asia Minor. This work tells a story through
color, shapes, and words. It is a story of great love and the desolation that
comes with great loss. The writer has the group copy these words lifted from
the painting: shining white air trembling.
Students can respond in any way they choose. Here’s Giselle’s:
White air, I’d like to breathe when I
step out to the real me. White to me is peace and warmth and all the good stuff
that you want to be. I find myself in the opposite direction, not knowing who
or where I want to be. My life has never been real clear for me. The sky has
disappeared from my dreams. I lie in fear hoping one day to see the white air
in me, but so far all I see are my dreams breaking apart. One day I’ll find my
way to the free where I can breathe without any fear.
This
is magical, like nothing they are getting in school because the arts are gone, cut,
slashed away in favor of high stakes testing. But this is here, and it changes
and enriches how children put words on the page.
I
follow a group of hearing impaired fifth graders, watching to see how this
impacts them. All can use sign language, two can speak, but two are silent, and
all of them struggle to make sense of words. The writer helps Raphael by
showing him what specific words look like, so he can describe who he is and what’s
important to him. She encourages him with smiles, asks to look at what he’s
doing. Pretty soon the vacant stare drops away, is replaced with a smiling boy,
a boy who wants to be a part of something, a boy who holds the door open as the
group moves through the museum. His teacher said, “I’ve never seen him like
this before. I’m amazed. We can’t get him to respond like this. He’s totally
different here.”
Yes, it’s a hunger satisfied, nourishment
absorbed into every cell. These moments don’t show up on the principal’s desk
or make into the newspapers. But the interactions here, in this space, make a
difference forever in the lives of children.
That means everything.
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