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The Toronto Star
August 1, 1998
Kids Create Fantasy Land
Imagination is the key to time
travel
to the past and to the future for young arts school students
BY JANICE MAWHINNEY
LIFE WRITER
A sparkling 2-metre turquoise dinosaur
was the hit of the show.
The amazing creature, made of chicken
wire covered by painted paper fabric, was surrounded by clay fossils,
plaster dinosaur bones, painted dino footprints on the floor and
paper-towel-roll prehistoric bugs on the ceiling, much bedecked
with buttons, spools and film reels.
It was the creation of Avenue Road Arts
School's small students, who recently mounted an exhibit on the
theme of time travel.
While the wildly colourful displays all
over the three-storey building were imaginative and appealing,
some kids could hardly tear themselves away from the basement
dinosaur expedition.
But others were drawn to the upstairs
wishing tree with its bright green paper leaves and strange creatures
made of painted paper and cardboard perched here and there on
its branches.
There's a hole in the tree trunk for
wishes dozens of them.
"I wish this tooth would come out," one
child wrote plaintively.
"I wish it was my birthday," penned another.
One wish wasn't enough for a third child. "I wish for no homework
and a yellow rat snake," the note reads.
One child shared a longing felt throughout
history: "I wish I could fly. "
The two most common wishes? For a dog.
And for world peace.
And then there were the materialists
those who want their own colour television, a computer,
the Lego needed to build a police station, and a Sailor Neptune
action figure.
A kid whose parent may have been right
at hand wrote: "I wish I could help a poor person."
One child wished it would rain, another
wished for a rainbow, and someone wished to be a star.
And one rueful scrawl: "I wech I an smart."
One little girl, obviously dissatisfied
with her own life, wrote: "I wish I was Catherine." Longing for
even closer friendship, another set down: "I wish I was a twin
with my friend Dana."
One child so happy with the surroundings
that wishes weren't paramount wrote simply: "I love the tree.
It's beautiful."
The time travel displays from
cave paintings and ancient civilizations all the way to futuristic
worlds were created by about 500 children between the ages
of 3 and 12, working since April in their programs at the five-year-old
arts school.
"I did lots of future things upstairs,"
says Ben, 6. "I wanted to do something I hadn't done before. I
made future people with different kinds of bodies and different
arms and legs, in green and red and orange, lots of colours like
that."
Olivia, 4, says she had a good time working
on her project.
"I painted a star every colour I know,"
she explains. "It looked like a tie-dye shirt. I feel happy about
it."
Conor, 6, says he made a dinosaur picture.
"I used markers to do it," he announces. "My dinosaur is blue
and small. Dinosaurs are my favourite thing."
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