Creative Art Works remains committed to providing Public Art Youth Employment programs even in the midst of the current crisis. We partnered with Catholic Charities Alianza to develop a remote graphic design apprenticeship for more than 40 of their Learning to Work Interns from Liberty High School Academy for Newcomers, a small learning community that serves students of diverse cultural and academic backgrounds as they make the transition to the American educational system. Youth Apprentices were given an opportunity to explore their feelings about the current crisis by creating digital posters that answer the question, "What do we want to hold on to from our lives before the pandemic?" The answer had to be in the form of a single word in both English and the native language of each designer. YA’s were tasked with taking a self-portrait and combining it with other images that expressed and amplified their chosen word, either literally or symbolically. The results express the full range of emotions all of us have experienced while living through the PAUSE, from longing and nostalgia to hope and inspiration.
Read more about this program on the CAW blog.
This Public Art Youth Employment program was made possible in part by public funds from the Manhattan Borough President’s Manhattan Community Award Program, and by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
Additional funding was provided by the Crowell & Moring Foundation, The RBC Foundation, The Sills Family Foundation.
Alinna Diaz-Porro, CAW Teaching Artist
Christine Beckhusen, Catholic Charities Alianza Liberty High School Internship Coordinator