Thursday, June 24, 2010

A little tap-tap takes a long trip

A Tap-Tap on the streets of Haiti

A papier mache tap-tap created by the students at Art Creation Foundation for Children

Not too long ago, I came home to find a package on my front step. It was big and light, and I hoped right away that it was from Jacmel. One of the biggest thrills and also most humbling experiences I have these days is when a box of art work arrives on my doorstep unexpectedly, like a holiday surprise!

In this particular box was a papier mache tap-tap! I had long admired them on the Art Creation Foundation for Children website, and here was one of my very own, generously gifted to me by these phenomenally talented children still working together to survive and rebuild after the January earthquake.

Personally, I have always been fascinated with the ways in which private cab or bus drivers in many different areas of the world turn their vehicles into veritable works of art. You'll see it in Pakistan, India, various areas in South America, of course Haiti, and many other places too!

And who doesn't love to decorate their car? This goes beyond mere decoration. These are Art Cars, to be sure. They serve as a much needed source of income for the driver and transportation for anyone with fare who will shout ale (
say "ah-lay") to hop on. I have read that the name tap-tap comes from the sound made when rapping one's fist on the metal panel to let the driver know you want off.

Jacmel is still in severe crisis after the earthquake. Life isn't anywhere near back to "normal", and even most days before the disaster, "normal" was awful for many, many people to begin with. The students at the school in Jacmel are making art every single day. Art can heal. It can help people deal with unfathomable situations. It can be a source of solace and income. It has been the way I have made sense of my own life and has given me a vocation. It opens the doors of imagination, which can be an oasis amid difficulty.

My beautiful handmade tap-tap hangs just above my kitchen window. The inside is filled with people who, in my imagination, are talking or even singing together. The top rack is loaded with good things from the market, and the whole of it is painted with beautiful colors and patterns. It is signed by Fan Fan, the young artist who created it.

When I look at it each day, I feel encouragement and hope and an ache in my heart that these talented and tenacious children are creating beauty in the face of adversity. This little tap-tap made a very long journey from Jacmel to Baltimore, and I couldn't be happier that it made the trip!


Mesi Anpil Fan Fan!
Haiti Cherie!


PS--Would you like to have your very own Tap-Tap from Jacmel? Visit The Sideshow museum store inside The American Visionary Arts Museum for a huge variety of gorgeous paper-mache sculptures, bowls and lovely birds!!


Friday, June 11, 2010

Our School Year is Ending...


Glazed hearts, created by students at Patapsco Middle School, waiting to be fired in the kiln

As the school year comes to a close, I am busy firing as many hearts as I possibly can to sell at The Sideshow in Baltimore in support of Art Creation Foundation for Children in Jacmel, Haiti.

We have had a very productive year! We raised over $1,200 through the sale of the hearts, every penny of which went entirely to the kids in Jacmel. At one dollar per heart, that means well over one thousand hearts were sold in Baltimore! That also means that hundreds and hundreds of individuals who visited the American Visionary Arts Museum saw the hearts at the register, learned about the school in Jacmel and made the decision to be a part of this "family of hope". Because that's what it comes down to, doesn't it? We all have to take care of each other.

Conditions are still absolutely deplorable in much of Haiti, and there is an astonishing amount of work yet to be done. But each individual who makes the decision to share what they have to help these vulnerable children are literally helping to build a better future for Haiti. In this case, a little really does mean a lot. My heartfelt gratitude to EVERYONE who helped us this year by buying a heart at the museum, whoever you are, wherever you are.

Don't forget Haiti--there is still so much to be done. Please consider visiting Art Creation Foundation for Children online. Click on the yellow JUST GIVE banner on the left, and make a tax deductible donation.

And to my students: you are the heroes of this grassroots project. I am so proud to be your teacher.
A thousand times: thank you!

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Beautiful Mosaic Wall in Jacmel created by students!


Detail of Mosaic by Laurel True, Nancy Josephson, Erin Rogers, and the phenomenally tenacious and creative teachers and students at Art Creation Foundation for Children. Source: Mosaic Art Now Blog (get there here or in the link below!)

Do yourself a FAVOR. There is no way you can read this and look at these pictures and not feel your spirit lift! GO to
this blog and be amazed with me at the phenomenal artistry of the children, teachers, artists and community of Jacmel, Haiti coming out of the earthquake. Be sure to scroll ALL THE WAY UP to the top of the page once you've gotten there. You don't want to miss ANY of it!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

A Baby Girl Gets a New Life in Jacmel

Three month old Seinthia (adoptive name Marie Judy) was abandoned at Hopital St. Michele in Jacmel. She received life saving surgery for her hydrocephalus this week from Project Medishare's pediatric neurosurgery team. Photo by Jennifer Browning.
Source: http://projectmedishare.wordpress.com

This past weekend marked the Mother's Day celebration for mothers in Haiti. I can think of no more fitting a story than this incredible miracle of microsurgery that came out of sheer persistence in post-earthquake Haiti.

About a month ago, I started receiving emails from Judy Hoffman, founder of Art Creation Foundation for Children with updates about an abandoned baby girl who had water on the brain. On the Project Medishare website, Jennifer Browning had this to say about it:

"At the end of April, Judy Hoffman, President of Art Creation Foundation for Children (ACFFC) visited Hopital St Michele in Jacmel to see the sister of one of the kids at the foundation who was ill. A doctor approached Judy to ask if ACFFC could help with a baby who had been abandoned there.

“ 'There was this beautiful tiny little girl lying in a crib, clean and cared for, but alone. They showed us where her head was bulging [due to hydrocephalus].'

"A Haitian doctor told Judy that he hoped ACFFC would take her because the baby was going to die and there was nothing the doctors at St. Michele could do."

Usually, the type of surgery required to relieve Marie's condition (a shunt) isn't performed in Haiti, and most children who need such a surgery can't get help and often die. Project Medishare was able to perform MICROSURGERY, no need for a shunt, and confirm with tests that so far, Marie is showing NO SIGNS of neurological damage usually created by her condition.

Judy later wrote to me that on top of this amazing event and all the incredible people who pulled together and overcame obstacles to make it happen, the students at ACFFC saw, first hand, that sometimes, when you don't take no for an answer, and you absolutely refuse to give up, miracles happen!

Please visit the Project Medishare blog to read the FULL STORY and learn about what this phenomenal group of people are doing to improve health in Haiti!

http://www.projectmedishare.wordpress.com