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The Toronto Star
October 22, 2003
Painting a Portrait of
Hope
by Martin Knelman
Camila Wong is a 14-year-old student from
Peru who excels at painting and drawing. Her parents endured hardships
upon moving to Toronto last year, but a priority was made to find
a rewarding, creative outlet for their daughter.
Complicating matters was Camila's hearing
disability.
The magic answer for Camila and her parents
was the Arts for Children outreach program at Lola Rasminsky's
Avenue Road Arts School. Camila now attends regular art classes
on a full scholarship.
"Arts for Children provides a way to
spread the benefits of this marvelous school to people who don't
live in Rosedale or Forest Hill, and can't afford to pay for extras,"
says Andy Barrie, the CBC radio host who was the master of ceremonies
at the school's 10th anniversary fundraising bash on Sunday.
Rasminsky's school has turned into one
of the few happy stories to be found over the past decade in the
increasingly troubled and deconstructed education world in this
city.
After starting an arts course for six
pre-schoolers in the basement of her Forest Hill home in 1979,
Rasminsky discovered there was a huge appetite for what she was
offering. She wound up buying a building and opening the Avenue
Road Arts School in 1993.
The demand for courses to teach people
how to satisfy their need for creative expression through painting,
sculpture, pottery, film and drama, even magic and singing Broadway
showtunes, has been overwhelming.
The school currently has 1,200 students
(including about 400 adults) and 40 teachers offering well over
100 classes in a ramshackle Victorian house (next door to Brown
School) that has a warm, eccentric and decidedly non-institutional
personality all its own.
"The reason I started the Arts for Children
program is that I didn't want high-quality creative experiences
to be available exclusively to the kind of people who could afford
to come to my school," explains Rasminsky, 59.
Her upbringing in Ottawa was definitely
privileged. Her father was a distinguished economist who became
governor of the Bank of Canada. And her mother insisted she stick
with piano lessons even though her piano teacher was a bit of
a tyrant.
For Torontonians with a special interest
in arts education, the birth and expansion of Rasminksy's school
arrived in an era when it was needed. This school has been a special
consolation for many who were shortchanged when the Mike Harris
government slashed budgets, forcing schools to reduce or eliminate
the kind of programs Rasminsky showcases.
In fact, one of her supporters, former
premier Bob Rae (a childhood friend) used the occasion of the
school's birthday bash to deliver a passionate speech about the
need for restoring arts programming to the public schools under
the province's new Liberal government.
"Diminishing the arts in our schools
is one of the saddest things that has happened in Ontario," said
Rae. "What Lola understands is that arts education is not a frill.
It's central to what it means to be a human being."
Right from the start, though, Rasminsky
resisted orthodox notions of how creative expression should be
taught. Instead of hiring people with [formal] teaching [degrees],
she was more inclined to hire artists with [...] teaching experience
[and] great instincts for reaching children.*
The key, according to Rasminsky, is allowing
children to discover and define their own creativity, rather than
impose expectations from on high.
"The idea is that people have a positive
experience creating something that makes them feel positive and
innovative," says Rasminsky. "There has been a tremendous increase
in the need people feel for that kind of experience, which is
really what Richard Florida, with his theories about the rise
of the creative class, is talking about. I am constantly excited
when I see what a dramatic difference creative expression makes
to the people who come here."
Her push to extend her reach beyond the
kind of privileged families who can afford courses at her school
started about eight years ago. At first, to accommodate gifted
people who could clearly benefit from the school, she started
waiving the fees for certain people. Then she raised scholarship
money through some of her generous and enthusiastic supporters.
Finally, Rasminsky wound up sending some
of her teaching artists into under-privileged schools with the
help of major funding.
At first the principals of those schools
seemed indifferent. Now the positive response has become so overwhelming
it will be hard for Rasminsky to meet the demand.
"Last year we reached 1,000 kids outside
our school. This year we would like to reach 2,000."
There is little doubt she will reach
that goal, because it seems that, as the song says, "whatever
Lola wants, Lola gets."
The limits are set by Rasminksy's reluctance
to expand beyond her ability to control the quality of what is
being offered.
Which, in a way, is a pity, because it
would be wonderful if the entire Ontario school system could tap
into what Lola Rasminsky has delivered to a lucky minority.
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* Corrections made for clarity
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