Peace Clubs at Booker T. Washington

Two Peace Clubs take place at Booker T. Washington. One is led by both Mario Padilla and Ricardo Barba, and the other by the Black Forest Fancies.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

It's all about perspective

It’s ten minutes into Mario and Ricardo’s class and students have settled down and started their drawings. The group of all boys has grown since last week. Now there are over twenty teenagers.

Mario and Ricardo hope to paint an outside mural with their class, and want to fill it with anti-violence themed renderings created by the students. Last week they brought in several art books to feed concepts some students had in the previous session, while trying to ignite ideas in others.

It was a challenging task for the students at first, but one that resulted in very creative and compelling compositions. One student drew a gun that was crossed out, while another student - who was more comfortable with writing- drew 'Violence is not the answer' in big bubble letters.

For right now they are staying indoors teaching students how to draw, and getting ideas for the mural onto paper.

As class continues students become more and more engaged in their work. Some even relocate to different desks to have more room.

Towards the end of the session Mario shows a couple of the drawings students are making to the class, and talks about what is working and what could use some additional work. The pieces that are described as successful - something that could eventually go on the mural -seems to get other students more involved in their own drawings. It almost becomes a contest to them.

At the 45-minute-mark, the end of class, all the drawings are handed in. Mario and Ricardo linger in the front of the room, sifting through the pieces of paper. It is incredible what some of the students came up with. Some of the quietist have the most interesting designs. One student who sat away from others in the way front, completely fixated on his work, keeps coming back to ask more questions and requests a book on how to draw action figures for next class.

They also illustrated how the drawings capture the students’ unique personalities. Mario and Ricardo line up two pieces of paper with two distinct houses drawn on them. One is squarer with almost a perfect triangle for the roof while the other is tall and narrow with a very slanting roof. They energetically discuss how these varying lines and angles show how each person thinks differently, how they experience things differently, and see things differently.