Youth

‘Our View’ Teenage Project – Quaker Cottage

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Creative Paths Project – Youth

Quaker Cottage, North Belfast
Project: ‘Our View’ Teenage Project
Artist: Rita Duffy
Age Group: 14-19
Participants: x 21
Special Project over 6 months

Funding from BBC Children In Need enabled us to build on our partnership with the Quaker Cottage. It facilitated a 6 month arts project giving 21 teenagers from North and West Belfast, aged 14-19, the opportunity to explore and express their story. ‘Our View’ is the culmination this project.

“How often do we allow ourselves the time to reflect upon our lives? How often are young people given the opportunity to be heard? And how often do people really listen?”

Quaker Cottage provided a safe place where young people were given time, space and support for critical reflection. This art project has provided each teenager with an opportunity to delve into their past and put this experience into words and pictures. Through short interviews with artist Rita Duffy and youth worker Rory Doherty, each teenager was given the chance to capture and share their story.

Creative Paths gave these young people at Quaker Cottage the opportunity to use art as a tool to explore aspects of their own past. Through the artistic process, they produced a visual re-enactment of their experiences. It is not always easy to ‘tell your story’ especially if the story deals with the pain, loss, despair or trauma that these young people have experienced on a daily basis. The project became a means of communicating feelings of isolation and suffering, but also hopes for the future.

Artist, Rita Duffy worked closely with the young people to help them become the author of their own personal story expressed through text, drawings and photographs. Each person felt empowered and listened to by taking a central role in the storytelling, editing and publishing of the book illustrating their lives. At a time when they are often ignored, neglected and simply not heard, it has been a personal healing journey for each participant. It has allowed them to connect with their own inspirational courage.

What emerges from ‘Our View’ is a powerful sense that these young people feel left behind by the system there to support young people, but in reality it has allowed many of them to simply fall through the gaps. They often find themselves with no qualifications and limited opportunities. They live in a society divided with peace walls and locked gates keeping communities apart. For them Belfast has been experienced as a place where the emphasis is on divided lives, and happy lives seem to have been forgotten.

Their hope is that their stories will make a difference to other young people and serve to promote an understanding of young Belfast lives.

Ligoniel Community Centre – The Giant

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Creative Paths Project – Youth

Ligoniel Community Centre, North Belfast
Project: Kids Arts & Crafts Club
Artist: Shauna McCann
Age Group: 7-10
Participants: x15
12 hours, over 8 weeks

During the course of the year Creative Paths worked with 10 different Belfast City Council centres.  The programme supported their play work activities as well contributing to You Can Play 2 Day annual training event, and gave children and young people across Belfast access to experienced artists to develop a wide variety of arts projects.  This is the story of one of them…

The children from Ligoniel Community Centre came up with the idea of creating the Giant from the Jack & the Beanstalk fairytale to use as a height measure for the Sure Start infant group in their centre. After meeting with artist, Shauna McCann, it was agreed to create a 3D piece that would seem ‘giant’ in proportion to the children using it!

One of the children lay on a large piece of card and the rest of the group traced around him to get a rough outline of the Giant’s body.  Crushing up balls of newspaper they attached them using Papier Mache techniques to give shape to the Giant’s body.  Once dry, the body was covered in masking tape before the whole group took turns painting different parts, adding details like t-shirt, boots, hair and face.  Gradually he took on the appearance of a ‘real’ Giant.

The beanstalk was made using the same method.  The background was painted blue and clouds were added along the bottom, using cotton wool for texture.  This gave the impression of the beanstalk coming up into the sky from beneath the Giant’s feet. Finally the height measure was added. The children used a measuring tape to mark out different heights up the side of the beanstalk.

The project was a great success not only giving the children and opportunity to have fun, it had the added benefit of contributing to the nursery. The completed piece was exhibited at the Golden Thread Gallery, Belfast.  The children were proud of their entry to the No Limits Art Exhibition facilitated by AdaptNi, an organisation helping to Build Equality and Inclusion for all in culture, arts and leisure venues.

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