Wednesday, 22 January 2014

RAPT - Rural Art Project Trust





I. LOVE. YOU.
A Process of Creative Intervention for Youth

Background

In the late 1990s I tested a series of creative writing workshops based on the words I LOVE YOU.  I worked with awaiting-trial juveniles and youth at risk in various institutions and communities throughout the Western Cape.

My premise is that if young people are afforded the opportunity to develop a better understanding of these three words, they will in turn develop a better understanding and respect for themselves, their peers and the communities in which they live.

Through the process of reflection and expression (facilitated by myself and a number of other creatives), young people gain the confidence and insights that enable them to make decisions that impact positively in their own lives as well as in their communities.

Motivation

The arts provide an invaluable and vital tool for working with children.  Various forms of artistic expression develop creative and alternate thinking skills that are required to interpret the contemporary world and more fully participate in it.

Young people in the 21st century are faced with a host of social issues caused by a disparate global economy, environmental degradation, limited access to opportunities and a political system that serves corporate interests and lacks the determination to address inequality and socio-economic disparities that continue to define the stunted aspirations of most of South Africa’s children.

In communities throughout the country, youth are for the most part not involved in civic structures or youth movements and are not actively engaging in the many, complex social issues that affect communities and our society.  Artistic endeavours engage an apathetic youth in ways that allow active participation in processes that subtly teach compassion, co-operation and problem-solving.  Further it has been demonstrated that young people improve their verbal, visual and written communication skills through art.

Proposal

This proposal outlines an initial 3-year, self-funded pilot project that will be implemented with groups of learners who are currently in grade 5 at the primary schools in the larger St. Helena Bay area. Each of these groups of learners will participate in the project over the full three year pilot phase.

The project will use the arts to engage with and inspire participants while affording them an opportunity to gain self confidence and to develop a more constructive cooperative identity through a process of individual and collective creative expression. 

The project will initially be implemented once every week at each of the schools from the beginning of the second school term in April, 2014. The weekly workshop session will take place at the end of the school day and will run for between 60 and 90 minutes in a classroom or similar space at each of the participating schools.

Consultation and communication will be maintained with the Principals and Grade 5 teachers and – in as far as possible – with parents.  These interactions will ensure that all caregivers are informed of the processes and that a suitably conducive and supportive environment is fostered and maintained for the participating learners.

Guest facilitators may also be invited to conduct specific creative workshops as resources and time allow.

2014 Project Outline

The workshops will begin at the start of the 2nd term in April. For this first phase until the end of June, the participants will engage with a series of exercises aimed at developing a more meaningful insight into the complexities of individual identity. These exercises will make use of visual art and writing with a view to launching a project blog on June the 16th.

The second phase will take place during the 3rd school term between July and October. The focus will shift from developing an understanding of individual identity to include how tradition, history and culture further influence our personal development.  We will unpack how our understanding of these constructs can have a positive impact on our lives. This phase of the project will result in compositions and poems that deal with Heritage. The best of these stories and poems will be published on the project blog on Heritage Day with possible presentations at the schools.

The final phase of the first year of the project will commence at the start of the 4th school term in October. The focus of this last phase will be geared towards producing a newsletter publication of the participants’ writing, drawings, paintings and photographs. This newsletter will be comprised of separate segments compiled with the different school’s learners and will be launched on December 10th which is International Human Rights Day.

2015 & 2016

For the second and third years of the pilot phase, the annual process will commence at the start of the first school term. A similar process will be followed with the specific view of developing material that will fit into the overall annual outcome as specified below.

 3-year Pilot Project Outcomes

The project will have one primary annual outcome at each of the schools:
·         2014 – A newsletter containing artwork, photographs and text developed with the learners
·         2015 – A play written and performed by the learners.
·         2016 – A film written, starring and produced by the learners.

Partners

There are various individuals and creative practitioners who have expressed a keen interest in getting involved in this initiative either through direct support or through providing resources within their respective institutions. I will endeavour to gain the support of local NGO’s, CBO’s, individuals and businesses that see the value of this type of creative intervention.

Conclusion

I believe that young people are capable of achieving great things and I am committed to their personal and social development.  It is thus my sincerest hope that the Principals, teachers, parents and learners will be receptive to the implementation of this initiative at their respective schools.

Monday, 13 January 2014

I. LOVE. YOU. - A Process of Creative Intervention for Youth


"...The premise is that if young people are afforded the opportunity to develop a better understanding of these three words, they would in turn develop a better understanding and respect for themselves, their peers and the communities in which they live.


Through this process of reflection and expression, young people gain the confidence and insights that enable them to make decisions that impact positively in their own lives as well as in their communities."

Wednesday, 25 December 2013

HOCUS-POCUS


The tooth fairy and the Easter bunny
Sat drinking one night in a bar
When Santa Claus walked in with a swagger
Already drunk and disorderly and itching for a fight
After Snow White had given him shit again
Because she felt guilty that she had been with Mowgli
And Casper the barman had to raise his voice
To calm things down as Jesus walked in with Goldilocks on his arm.

Outside the dwarves were on their knees
And the giants with their swords held high
Were mowing them down left and right
While the sun and the moon were having high tea
And the king was fucking the queen’s daughter
Behind the farmer’s barn while the cows looked on disapprovingly
Asking each other what had become of the world
When even the raindrops were falling skyward.

When I grow up in a million years
I’d want to be an ophthalmologist at night
And during the day I am going to be a conjuror
I’ll charge all the near-sighted followers exorbitant sums
To open their eyes so that they can see
That all the hocus-pocus that they claim to believe
Is what keeps us blind and dumb like the animals on a farm
Each in its own pen in seeming harmony.

Monday, 23 December 2013

City Bowl Blues



The sharp edges are brushed by polluted shades
As the day expires flirting graciously with the dusk
The angry hard drive buzz is reduced to a calmer hum
The island, the ships, the further shore.

A neighbour lingering at his door
Chatting to some girls with his boy in his arms
But mommy’s not happy and comes out to get her son
Sometimes sitting here on the balcony can be such fun.

Evening descends with a touch more fuss
A teenager gets scolded for missing the bus
The professional makes way for tired and casual
The smog and sun’s afterglow creates something special.

Birdsong drifts fragile as the cacophony subsides
To be shattered by a roar as a traffic light changes
Moving in unison despite their strangeness
And the general mindlessness besides.

Hues of grey and crimson mingle with a far truer blue
As the moon and sun share the blossoming sky
Carrying the smell of a thousand suppers
At home and with friends or simply alone.

Night heralds its arrival with a base beat thumping deep below
The city is transformed beneath its neon halo
The island, the ships, the far shore, the twinkle and flash
Indistinct shapes roam dark shadows in search of cash.

The ocean spills up into the infinitely black firmament
Yet more pointless loss and destruction are imminent
When the passion lies denied, festering, waiting to die
And the look in your eyes fails to hide your lies while the city cries.

Thursday, 19 December 2013

Saturday, 14 December 2013

ORDER NOW!


...Because poets also need to eat! And drink...
Order direct or purchase your copy at Bolo'bolo Anarchist info shop & vegan cafe in Observatory!

R100 per copy or R80 per copy for orders of 5 or more... (Incl. postage!)

NON-POOR ONLY

Download and spray this stencil in places where residents are being evicted, victimized, discriminated against or being denied access to services and amenities based on their socio-economic status.

Thursday, 12 December 2013

I DO STILL FEEL


I do not feel like indulging foolishness
In any guise or disguise
The masks of mindless metaphor
Without any rhythm
Cut and bleeding, pasted rhymes – just lines.

I often don't feel like indulging fools
Who continue to subscribe
To the debilitating proscription of culture
And the dogma that thrives unchecked or challenged
While we insulate ourselves from the other!

I no longer feel like indulging the folly
Of unconscious rhetoric, making excuses
And justifying our indifference
As our impotent submission
Allows atrocity to become normality.

And yet I do still feel that we can make the difference
I do still feel that there is hope
I do still feel that we have a chance
I do still feel the soul pervading beauty
I do still feel such overwhelming love.

Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Sunday, 8 December 2013

Mal-Adjusted


Poetry by Mikey DW with Glen Arendse...