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The Toronto Star
March 17, 2002
The dreams of children
and seniors
by Aparita Bhandari
Entertainment Reporter
Nine-year-old Jennifer McPherson giggles,
her hair spilling down her face, as she explains her dream of
flying into a dog place where everything is made of biscuits.
She would like to own a golden retriever, but it won't be till
she leaves home for university because her father is allergic
to dogs.
McPherson, her brother Matthew McPherson,
11, Kai Broomfield, 7, and Rebecca Di Pucchio, 8, have made eyes
with dreams written in them. About a foot long, the eyes are of
clay and glazed shiny. Some are open, others half closed.
Broomfield's eye tells of her dream to
fly on a pony. But in her dream, she crashes. Matthew McPherson
dreams of flying and falling, and Di Puccio dreams of becoming
a better swimmer.
The dreaming eyes are one of the exhibits
of A Celebration Of Lives Lived And Lives Dreamt Of, an
exhibition being held by the Avenue Road Arts School in partnership
with Dennis Avenue Public School, the Symes 55+ Centre and Ottawa-based
artist Jerry Gray.
Several of the Avenue Road Arts School's
classes have contributed to the exhibition, which will start tomorrow
and run through April 5 in the corridor of BCE Place.
The children are sitting around a table
in the attic of the Avenue Road Arts School. "You have to see
this," says Lola Rasminsky, the founder and director of the school,
leading the way into a washroom that's been converted into a magical
fairy town. "We change the theme regularly."
The arts school started out in Rasminsky's
Toronto house in 1979. Then it had six students. Now it holds
classes for 1,000 students, ranging from preschoolers to seniors.
A short while ago Rasminsky worked on
an outreach program teaching art to seniors and children. "That
made me think about bringing (the two groups) together," she says.
Rasminsky's first thought was an inter-generational
choir.
But then, she delved into organizing
an exhibition of paintings, pottery and other crafts to "celebrate
lives lived and lives dreamt of." Besides the dreaming eyes, classes
have made dream beds, dream boxes and dream pillows. Some children
made artwork about nightmares.
"We don't try and patronize them," says
curator Irene Luxbacher. "It's not about being perfect. We let
them explore what they feel."
Additional work created by children from
Dennis Avenue Public School is included in the children's section
called What Children Dream Of. The seniors' work was created
as a joint project between the Avenue Road Arts School and the
Symes 55+ Centre and is titled Cloak Of Memories.
Gray's portrait series, Rare Spirits:
A Personal Tribute to Vintage Elders, will also be on display.
Rasminsky was familiar with the series, which started with Gray's
painting portraits of her father.
Gray's paintings depict the pain, vulnerability,
spirit and determination of the people she painted. The artwork
of the students of Rasminsky's school shows unfettered creativity.
Both are examples of the ability to step
outside a comfort zone.
"I think we can learn a lot from both
seniors and children, these groups that are normally marginalized,"
she says. "My own father lived till he was 90 and taught me a
lot. And children. They are willing to try everything."
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