|
Town Crier Online
November 11, 2003
Arts school reaches 10-year
milestone
by Paul Hutchings
Lola Rasminsky is feeling very proud these
days.
This year the Avenue Road School for
the Arts, which she founded in her basement in 1979, reached its
10-year anniversary in its present form. Holding classes in such
subjects as painting, sculpture, pottery, and drama, the three-storey
house doesn't look like a place where classes could be held
especially for 1,200 students.
"The fact that it's not a large building
is both our strength and weakness," said Rasminsky.
"The advantage of having a smaller building
is that it's an intimate atmosphere, and the class sizes are small
by design, but also by necessity."
She said she would like to hold more
classes, with more students, but it's not possible just yet. When
the school was first started, attracting students was a challenge,
but by 1993 when they were ready to move into their current facility,
they had 200 pupils.
The facility depends heavily on word
of mouth these days to spread the word about what they have to
offer. When kids and adults like what they see, they tell others.
This is the reason Rasminsky says enrollment steadily increases
each year. Students enjoy what they do within the walls of that
old house, and the word has spread.
The word is getting around through the
school's new site on the Internet as well. Rasminsky says since
going online, they've managed to attract students from as far
away as Turkey, the United Kingdom and Japan.
The school's charitable arm is expanding
as well. The Arts for Children in Toronto program recently won
an award from the Trillium Foundation for its community service.
Rasminsky points out that the program is affiliated with the school,
but remains separate. They bring students to the school on a scholarship
who wouldn't ordinarily have access to arts education. They currently
have 65 scholarship children.
Camila Wong is one of those children.
She is a 14-year-old student with a hearing disability who moved
to Toronto from Peru with her parents. Although her family endured
hardships, they made it a priority to find a creative outlet for
their daughter. Through Arts for Children she now attends regular
classes on a full scholarship.
The program also sends artists out into
inner city schools, as well as social services organizations too,
like an aboriginal head start, and a children's mental health
group, also an organization for immigrant mothers and kids.
"When children create something, they're
exercising choice, and when we exercise choice we feel better
about ourselves, and feel more in control and find out who we
are through the choices we make," Rasminsky said.
"When children create work that they
can look at they feel good about themselves. They don't need other
people to tell them they're good, they can look at it and they
know how terrific they are. I think it's a way of children and
adults discovering their own uniqueness, and discovering who they
are."
The art school has also seen success
in the publishing front. Kidscan press released The Jumbo Book
of Art, which was a book written and illustrated by some of
the teachers in the school. It sold 5,000 copies within two months,
and has won a Gold Award in the United States from the National
Association of Parenting Publications of America.
"I feel very proud of what we've accomplished,
but there's always more to do. We all like working at the school
because we see how happy it makes people. We all have a need for
personal self expression, and I think people are realizing that."
top
|