Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Preparing Students for Cyberspace!

Digital Art and Lego Starship by: Jim DeCesare

Is it possible to grow both towards technology and away from it simultaneously? This is the conundrum I find myself in. The paradigm is no longer shifting in education…it has shifted to all-things-digital, especially the lens through which we view primary, secondary (and post-secondary) education. Our students are not merely incorporating technology. They are now considered digital citizens.

I gave a presentation entitled, Creativity in the Digital Age at technology conference recently. During the question and answer portion, a professor in the audience told me that he sees the world through the lens of Venn diagrams (labeled, intersecting circles to explain complex content simply). At the end he handed me a business card with a Venn diagram sketch of my talk with two merging circles…one labeled “art,” the other labeled “digital,” and the intersection of the two was labeled “creativity.” The professor was well intended, but I asked myself, ‘Can creativity really be summed-up in a simple Venn diagram, so easily explained?’ I felt that the professor either missed the essence of my presentation, or I fell-short making my case…probably a bit of both.

Of course, it is the natural inclination for educators to seek clear and simple understanding of complex subject matter, and just as natural for this overly-sensitive-artist-type to yell to the heavens about the value of creativity! But this whole digital-thing in education needs a plan of action. I get it. Policy and creativity must play-well together so that we may best prepare our educational systems for the 21st Century.  

I recently led a brief meeting with colleagues to start the formal conversation in our school on digital responsibility. I asked a friend, a PhD in science (and Master's candidate in Curriculum Development) to share his presentation with the faculty based on a curriculum entitled, “Digital Citizenship,” by Mike Ribble. The key points of the curriculum are valid: teaching students digital law, etiquette, rights, responsibilities and so on. The presentation described a “Digital Citizen” as one who is in good standing as a resident, sharing common space with others and abiding by impartial laws.

To earn citizenship usually requires that one is a member by birthright or has taken an oath of loyalty. There are certainly grey areas of citizenship, but the concept is easily understood. Cyberspace is not so easily understood. It is nebulous, not linear. Cyberspace is our new frontier...wild and untamed. As educators, we are in a time like no other. My three year old daughter Annie Rose can now navigate an iPad gaining instant access to the world via internet!

No ceiling can limit the height of student achievement, and no floor can limit the depth of failure. Cyberspace is exponentially expanding, and unpredictable. We may call it digital citizenship (or whatever buzz-term we wish) to give it understandable form. The truth is we are asking students to stake-their-claim in a land where there is no actual fixed position.

Let us prepare students to explore this foreboding digital-realm by treating cyberspace more like outer space. Help each not to fear cyberspace, but to respect it's elusive, erratic, unconstrained, unpredictable and volatile nature. By all means, analyze data and form school policies that address key concerns!

Just as importantly, arm students with the ability to cultivate CREATIVITY, to tell their unique STORY, to find PURPOSE, to discover unique GIFTING, to build EMPATHY...to SEEK TRUTHEncourage students in these ways to be well-prepared space travelers...to be Cybernauts! 

I believe we can move toward technology and away from it simultaneously; by reinvesting our energy on the character development of our students…along with…curriculum development and policy.

To infinity and beyond!!!!...Oh yeah, that's Buzz Light Year. Oops. 

Monday, November 3, 2014

Paying Homage to Robert Henri


 "If anything can be done to bring the public to a greater consciousness 
of the relation between art and life, of the part each person plays by 
exercising and developing his own personal tastes and judgment 
and not depending on outside “authority,” it would be well." 
                                                                        -Robert Henri


 
James DeCesare, Robert Henri
2010, oil on canvas, 24"x24" 
Collection of the Artist

A Brief History:
Robert Henri (1865-1929) was born in Cincinnati, Ohio.  In 1886, he studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.  In 1888, Henri moved to Paris and studied under the great Academic painter, Adolphe-William Bouguereau (1825-1905). In 1891, Henri was accepted into the prestigious Ecole des Beaux-Arts.1

Henri’s early work was heavily influenced by art of the French Impressionists. Similar to the Impressionists of the day, Henri’s artwork was readily rejected by French and American art circles.2 Henri began organizing art exhibitions promoting work rejected by the art establishment. Henri’s circle of friends included young illustrators John Sloan (1871-1951), William Glackens (1870-1938), George Luks (1867-1933), and Everett Shinn (1876-1953). The Eight, as the group would come to be known, lead The New York City Armory Show of 1913. The Armory Show introduced audiences to avante-garde European and American artists including Gustave Klimpt (1862-1918) and Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968).3

Robert Henri taught at the Art Students League of New York from 1915-1927. Henri's students included George Bellows (1882-1925), Leon Kroll (1884-1974), Edward Hopper (1882-1967), and Rockwell Kent (1882-1971). Henri’s prophetic teachings were published in book form as The Art Spirit in 1923.3

Today, countless artists view The Art Spirit as their primary guide for life as an artist. Henri’s artwork speaks to his views on life. His paintings are sensitive, humanistic, authentic accounts of interpersonal experiences.  His words are transcendent, usually speaking more to the art of living than art making.  Robert Henri writes:

The question of development of the art spirit in all walks of life interests me. I mean by this, the development of individual judgment and tastes, the love of work for the sake of doing things well, tendency toward simplicity and order. If anything can be done to bring the public to a greater consciousness of the relation between art and life, of the part each person plays by exercising and developing his own personal tastes and judgment and not depending on outside “authority,” it would be well. 3
                           
On Painting Robert Henri:
Robert Henri is part of series I created called, Artists of Influence. The reoccurring theme connecting each of the six paintings of this series is the artist in the act of creating. Robert Henri was a champion of the creative process. Henri’s connection to the people he painted is evident in his work. His brushstrokes were minimal, yet each possessed purpose and feeling. In the midst of rigid, academic portraiture created at the turn of the twentieth century, Henri created painterly expressions honoring the humanity of his common sitters.

Among my favorite of these paintings is Spanish Girl of Segovia, painted in 1912 and part of the permanent collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art.  As a frequent visitor to the museum, I often observe the painting closely.  There is an intimacy I wanted to convey in my painting of Henri.

When viewing the painting of Robert Henri, you are faced with intentional ambiguities. Is Henri standing in front of his model or a painting of his model?  Each painting created for Artists of Influence is a fictional narrative designed to engage the viewer’s imagination. Viewers are encouraged to make their own conclusions.

In this narrative, Henri prepares to place a loaded brush onto an unforeseen surface. Emphasis is placed on the gesture of his face and his paint palette. There is an undeniable connection between the two figures. Both figures overlap and blend, forming one pyramidal shape. I created the painting from the perspective of a student stumbling upon a painting demonstration by Robert Henri. I envisioned the viewer in eager anticipation of the wisdom Henri will speak (as I would be!)

I created this painting of Robert Henri as a tribute to his humanity,
dignity, and passion for the creative process. 
In 
this 
digital 
age, 
his words speak louder than ever!


                                                                                                       
1.  National Gallery of Art. “American Impressionism and Realism,”
     http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/horo_henri.shtm#biblio.

2.  Artcyclopedia, “Robert Henri,”
     http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/henri_robert.html.

3.  Henri, Robert. The Art Spirit. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1923.

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Faith Like a Child




My wife Kelly and I were awakened at 3am by our crying almost three-year-old, Annie Rose. Annie is newly potty-trained, and still has the occasional nigh-time accident. On this early weekday morning she had completely wet her bed.

I stumbled into her room, still half-asleep myself. Annie’s window and ceiling-fan were circulating comfortable summer-air. But she was cold, curled in the fetal position and crying…soaked in her soiled nightclothes and sheets. Observing her in this sad state reminded me of how very needy my smart, “independent” little girl is of her father.

I gently scooped up Annie from her wet bed. Her skin was cold and sticky to the touch and her body was rigid. Her long wavy hair was stuck to her round cheeks from tears and pee. She resisted my help, squirming and crying for mommy. We made our way in the dark to the bathroom.

Annie Rose’s cry was sad and fearful. Like any parent, my heart was flooded with compassion, love, and patience. I offered her my assurance that daddy was going to make everything okay. I gently wiped Annie’s shivering body with a warm facecloth and wrapped her in a dry towel. Only then did she stop crying (and resisting).

I put her into clean cloths and sat her on a chair while I changed her sheets. Annie wanted to know if Mr. Moon was out. I looked through her window skyward, then turned back to tell her that Mr. Moon was behind the clouds but she was already asleep. I placed her back into bed and headed downstairs.

Unlike Annie Rose, I was unable to fall back asleep. Each time I closed my eyes I saw myself in that frightened child: curled-up and soiled from sin…resistant to my Father’s help. I thought of how Christ attends to His children in much the same way; with compassion, love, patience and offering an assurance…that by trusting in the Father, He will not forsake me in my times of need…that the cost of my filth...my sins...were paid by Christ’s blood on the cross…and that in Him I am clean.

I am amazed by the things I am learning from my children!

"And calling to him a child, he put him in the midst of them and said, "Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven."

Matthew 18:2-4 (ESV)