“We are not trying to build performers”, opera singer Jessye Norman says when speaking about her School of the Arts in Augusta, Georgia. “We are trying to help build people.”
The School provides a free comprehensive after-school arts program, serving mainly disadvantaged middle and high school students. “Any child that’s given the opportunity to explore the arts will perform better in all other subjects,” Norman states. “It has to do with the ability and the opportunity and the support of people in the arts teaching these children to enjoy the arts and to enjoy writing or enjoy studying the piano or enjoy singing … These things are character building.”
Over the years the quick response by local artists and crafts-folks to set up displays at our Bethlehem Market events has been most heartening. They are especially mindful to involve children and youth as they try to help their community bring the spiritual meaning of Christmas to life.
Artist, naturalist, botanist, historian and writer Annora Brown was particularly mindful of sharing her creative talents with the children and youth of Fort Macleod. My notes are full of appreciative responses as I ask others to help me name her legacy two generations later.
“On Wednesday night at half-past seven”, an eleven-year-old student wrote in the 50s, “a dozen people, sometimes eleven / Go to the school to meet Miss Brown / to draw and sketch a little town …” Sometimes the subject matter was “a little black dog or a pussy cat”, or “maybe a pansy bright” … “a bird in flight”. She helped their eyes look for “a lonely pine tree”, or “a tiny deer at dawn”. How to draw “the willows along the stream” or appreciate a meadow lark in song… Our young poet concluded “with Miss Brown we have a spree!”
Another of her students, now retired from a career in commercial art, wrote “she was a dedicated artist and instilled that virtue in many of us.”
An ardent conservationist remembers what a highlight it was when Miss Brown visited our Granny. She took time to talk with we children about the wildflowers, and what happens if we pick them so “they are not able to seed”. She “was very patient with us, though we were always in motion, not inclined to stop long enough to listen.” Our writer concludes “as I got older I read her books and developed an even greater appreciation for this remarkable woman. I still adore her art and I share her passion for the natural world.”
The touch of the artist on the life of any one of us, younger or older, can be a life-enhancing experience.
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