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The Toronto Sun
January 29, 1995
Choices, Choices: Fun 101
Art School Magical Place for Creativity
BY SANDY NAIMAN
Entering the Avenue Rd. Art School is
like crossing the threshold of a child's imagination: You're choosing
to learn "art" in its broadest sense, as a child learns art
for fun.
Framed primary-colored paintings hang
on dark wood-panelled walls. Carefree wishes "When I grow
up I want to be everything, every day" are taped around
classrooms. Ribbons of twisted green crepe paper transform bathrooms
into subterranean seascapes.
"It's a place of creativity," remarks
retired business journalist Grace McKenzie, 71, now in her fourth
drawing course. "The architecture, itself, encourages creativity."
Vibrancy and fun bubble out of every
nook and cranny. And, of course, there's music in the air. That's
what founder and director Lola Rasminsky wants.
"I believe we all have a spark
of creativity," she says. "And what I want this school to
do is ignite that spark.
"It's extremely important that adults
walking into a children's environment feel their spontaneity,
their freedom, their honesty and their directness."
One of the school's original adult courses
What A Glorious Feeling ... Singing Broadway Showtunes
is also one of its most wildly popular, even with Rasminsky.
She created the course out of a secret hankering to sing Broadway
songs and can't resist popping into the class occasionally for
the entertaining emotional elixir it tends to dispense or just
for the pure fun of it.
"It's better than going to a therapist.
And cheaper," trills freelance photographer Rosemary Goldhar,
53. She and her husband are Showtunes stalwarts, currently
enrolled for the fourth time.
Rasminsky started her Fine Arts Kindergarten
in her basement in 1979, which she expanded to include a trio
of adult classes in 1990 to satisfy the pleadings of parents picking
up their offspring. When she bought the homey, old, Victorian
Conservatory of Music building on Avenue Rd. in 1993, the school's
scope and size blossomed enrolment has swelled from 150
to 800.
"You're sitting in a kindergarten classroom,
learning to write legal-crime fiction, listening to Broadway showtunes
down the hall," confesses criminal defence lawyer Steven Skurka,
38. "Now, that's a unique experience." He's started a crime novel
since taking Crime Writing.
During four, 10-week terms a year, Rasminsky
offers about 40 inventive adult courses in art, drama, music and
writing from Cartooning, Paint'n'Wear and Papier
Maché to Stand-up Comedy, Journal Writing
and Magic. There are even one-day and weekend workshops
for people too busy to attend during the week. All this, besides
her Fine Arts Nursery and Kindergarten and her After School Arts
Club for children 6 to 18.
"My class (in drawing and sketching)
gives me two hours of solitude so I can concentrate on something
I love," says stay-at-home dad Peter Goodman, 35, who attends
concurrently with his son, Robert, 3.
"I don't worry because I know he's having
such a good time right above my head. He comes out happy, full
of paint and goo, and smiling. It's very comforting."
Rasminksy hand-picks her 36 teachers.
"Their personalities are as important as their credentials," she
says. "They have to be warm, encouraging and fun."
In September 1993, Plum Johnson, 48,
chose Singing Broadway Showtunes and Inner Ink,
a women's creative writing course. This group is still meeting,
though outside the umbrella of the school. And she's sold her
parenting magazine Kid's Toronto, so she can write full-time.
"It's not the courses, it's the atmosphere,"
Johnson explains. "I've never been in a place so non-judgmental
and nurturing. And that has everything to do with Lola." Rasminsky
believes in feeding the mind, soul and body. The school has two
compact, well-stocked kitchens, with mountains of cookies and
other healthy goodies galore which she serves to students of all
ages.
Each week, she cooks her teachers lunch,
turning informal, delicious repasts into easy-to-digest staff
meetings.
A gentle, thoughtful, sprite of a woman
at 50, divorced with two grown sons, Ottawa-bom Rasminsky (her
father, Louis, was Governor of the Bank of Canada from 1961 to
1973) brings a lifelong love of music, a passion for the arts,
a master's in philosophy and an inspired belief-system to her
post as the school's visionary, teacher, den mother and resident
Pied Piper.
"My mother was very involved in arts
for children. She started the Ottawa Children's Concerts and wanted
to start a children's art centre at the National Arts Centre,
before she died. I'm doing what she wanted to do."
Nothing ever seems static at her school,
where freeing the child's imagination in everyone drives every
activity on a fuel of fun.
"Lola acts as a catalyst to people's
creative expression," muses Johnson. '"That impacts on the kinds
of teachers she hires and the atmosphere. It's a magical place."
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