Art camp physically does graffiti
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Jimmy Stroup
As art teachers for the Garden Grove Unified School District, Gloria
Wargo and Carla Hubbart are used to teaching kids the finer points of
the finer arts. Their teen art camp at the Huntington Beach Art
Center, however, has them instructing kids in some alternative art
forms mixed in with some old standards.
“Graffiti is a form of art, it’s only that the artists who do it
are often breaking the law,” Wargo said. “Here, it’s an artistic
expression on the wall.”
The Art at the Beach Teen Camp is composed of several different
artistic elements that Wargo said are meant to bring out the
creativity in the students, all based on the theme, “Pieces.” The
summer camp taught kids of all ages the ins and outs of the art
world, ending last week with the final class devoted to showing
teenagers that art isn’t all about paintings in frames.
The teens created pieces of art in collage form and out of
repousse -- a form of relief art where thin metal pieces are etched
with designs. These two forms are then combined in the gallery where
the artists display their work on the walls and paint and draw around
them, graffiti-style, bringing the different pieces together to
create one complete work.
“They’re allowed to use whatever concepts they wanted,” Wargo
said. “We’re trying to teach them to think individually as an
artist.”
Individual style isn’t the only thing the teens learn over the
course of the week-long camp. Museum curator and the originator of
the teen program Darlene DeAngelo said that the class also teaches
them how to work together as artists in a studio-style setting.
DeAngelo said that one of the principles in the course is to teach
them “to be able to work together as a group.”
“Some of the kids said it was difficult last year [working
together], but they’re back this year,” she said.
Course assistant Cindy Hammond of Huntington Beach volunteered to
help with the course after signing up her niece Jennifer and nephew
David to be in the week-long camp. A student at the Huntington Beach
Art Center herself, Hammond heard about the camp in her Friday
afternoon watercolor class.
“I asked if they needed any help washing brushes or anything and,
of course, you know how it is,” Hammond said. “They said, ‘Of
course.’”
With pieces as varied as castles, treasure chests and Buddhist
representations, Wargo said that the students are free to do as they
please, artistically, so long as their work is honest and from
themselves.
“We’re trying to teach them a lot here -- respect for other
people, respect for the area, respect for themselves,” she said.
“Morals, creativity and expression, and trying to get them to be good
human beings at the same time.”
The Huntington Beach Art Center will exhibit the art created by
the teen camp -- along with all the work from other summer art camps
for younger children -- starting today through Saturday, Aug. 28.
Viewing hours are from noon to 6 p.m. today and Friday and noon to 3
p.m. Saturday at 538 Main St., Huntington Beach. Information: (714)
374-1650.
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