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recreate art studio: building young lives through artrecreate art studio: building young lives through artrecreate art studio: building young lives through art
by:MX machinery
2019-08-24
Art is a very valuable therapeutic tool for young people.
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
3331 | @ RockatTheSpecArt can be a valuable therapeutic tool, especially for young people.
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
3331 | @ RockatTheSpecArt can be a valuable therapeutic tool, especially for young people.
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
3331 | @ RockatTheSpecArt can be a valuable therapeutic tool, especially for young people.
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
3331 | @ RockatTheSpecArt can be a valuable therapeutic tool, especially for young people.
It guides creativity and provides a way out for depressed people
Improve emotions, teach organizational skills, build selfesteem.
You can see it at work --
Located in the center north of James Street, cross a doorway sandwiched between the Hawk & Sparrow costume and the I Fiori flower shop.
It is called \"reproduction outreach Art Studio \".
Open three days a week, its art program is designed to \"street-
Young people involved, \"aged between 16 and 25, but anyone with the urge to pick up brushes, pencils or scissors and glue is welcome to attend.
Fell 234 last year.
A dozen people were there early Monday afternoon.
Many people were waiting when the door opened at 12: 30. m.
Emily Goyetche, 19, went to work on Friday night and cut pictures from magazines, decoration artists wear the ID button in the second annual brush fundraising battle at the spice factory near Hughson Street
With the help of the button-
She would stack the cut on metal.
\"Art is very, very therapeutic,\" says Goyetche, a graduate of Sherwood Middle School, who is also interested in photography and film production.
\"It really opened a lot of doors to help me explore. I love art.
Gordon Taber, 18, is drawing on canvas.
This is a photo of a skeleton brother, two characters in his favorite video game Underground story.
\"He prefers painting. he admits that he doesn\'t always have the patience to draw.
But this is going well.
He has signed his name in bold.
\"I have been painting since I was three or four years old,\" Taber said . \" He has not finished Grade 12 at Sir John. Macdonald.
He came back to the clinic.
Create for the past year and a half.
Taber learned about the studio from the leaflet handed over to him by the outreach staff, who found him in the library --
\"Two people come to me almost every day.
\"Now, I try to come whenever they open the door,\" added Taber, who lives within walking distance.
Taber also made a complete set of armor in ReCreate with cardboard.
On Friday night, he was thinking about putting it on, standing up at the entrance and attending a brush fundraiser.
But he can\'t decide what kind of weapon he should make to complete the armor.
\"It should be a huge brush,\" said Megan Shulman, partner at the studio.
Coordinator, only full-time employee.
\"After all, this is the battle of brushes.
\"The success of the brush fundraising campaign is essential to keep the re-creation open.
About 16 local artists took part in the competition, and each artist tried to create an artwork in 30 minutes.
The audience voted on their favorite work, and then only eight artists left in the battle entered the second round.
Last year\'s brush battle in the back room of the studio raised about $3,000 and tickets were sold for just $5.
This year, they will move to a more spacious spice factory for $10.
A lucky draw will also be held, and the finished artwork will be auctioned.
Schuurman, who studied planning and artistic criticism at the Ontario School of Art and Design, said that more than ever, successful fundraising activities are needed.
With the support of the Christian advisory body Shalem Mental Health Network, ReCreate is thriving with the help of three institutions
Annual grant from World Vision Canada.
The grant, however, ended in October.
\"As an organization, we are entering an unknown period,\" Schuurman said . \" She is also working hard for her Master of Social Work at Wilfried Laurier University.
Shalem will let us move on, but we are looking for a long-term --term funding.
We\'re looking for donors.
\"Shulman, who has worked in ReCreate for nearly five years, has no doubt about the value of art treatment.
\"An important part of people is being able to express themselves,\" she said . \".
\"Art is an amazing way, it\'s an important way to deal with emotions, feeling released, making a sound . . . . . . Creating what others think is good is an extreme improvement of self. esteem.
\"Grockingham @ thespec. com 905-526-
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