Wednesday, April 30, 2014

A different angle of the Maine coast

THROUGH THE TREES
Taryn Plumb

POWERS GALLERY
144 GREAT ROAD (ROUTE 2A)
ACTON, MASSACHUSETTS
MAY 10 THROUGH JUNE 8

JANE DAHMEN TAKES A PEEK

It’s been 10 years since Jane Dahmen moved to her home in the small seaside town of Newcastle, Maine — but she has yet to tire of the ocean, river and woods that serve as her daily backdrop.
In fact, just the opposite: Her surroundings have inspired and enriched her work for the past decade. “Everywhere I walk, I see paintings,” said Dahmen. “It’s a very beautiful part of the world here.”
It’s a part of the world she’ll share in her upcoming solo exhibition, “Through the Trees,” at Powers Gallery in Acton, Mass. The show will feature more than two dozen of her paintings, including multi-panel works, that reflect her wanderings around the seashore, Damariscotta River and vast conservation lands near her home.
For example, the two-panel, 72” x 60” “Clear View” presents an unconventional view of the Maine coast — instead of frothy waves roiling against craggy rocks or dabbing the shoreline, we see the distant sea through a stand of pines and birches on a muted day.
Similarly, in the colorful, three-panel 60” x 72” “Sunny Day,” islands and opposite land outcroppings straining to meet each other can be glimpsed through bright yellow birch leaves growing out of skinny white trunks.
Although not abstract, the pieces are not wholly realistic — they feel somewhat wispy and fantasy-like, a projection of the artist’s inner view of the outer world. “What I’m trying to convey is more of a feeling of a place than an actual place,” Dahmen explained.
She’s always been drawn to the world immediately around her, rather than far-off lands — she began years ago with silkscreens in her garden, then branched out to mono-prints.
When she was living in Massachusetts, Dahmen and her husband frequently sailed along Maine’s mid-coast; while doing so, she would paint from the perspective of the open sea. One of her seascapes — depicting a lobster boat returning to its home port — even hung in the White House during George H.W. Bush’s presidency (and when he left office, his family purchased it).


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Thursday, April 3, 2014

Civics for the next generation

Students help solve civics issues through Generation Citizen

By Taryn Plumb | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT

APRIL 03, 2014





MELROSE — Just a little after 2 p.m., at the area known locally as The Knoll across from Melrose High School, the daily bedlam ensues.
Cars speeding, swerving, cutting each other off, double-parking or blocking passage; pedestrians in peril; gridlock; honking horns and hand gestures; the long, strained wait for a break in the constant stream of cars trying to turn onto Lynn Fells Parkway.
“It’s just a mess,” said junior Andy Griscom, 17, who is analyzing potential solutions to the problem in a Generation Citizen class at Melrose High. “We’ve taken to just staying in the school for an extra 15 or 20 minutes to avoid the massive traffic jam that develops every day without fail.”
This is just one of thousands of parking lots at thousands of high schools across the country.
But that’s precisely the point. The nonprofit Generation Citizen strives to prompt the youngest generation into civic service by getting them involved and interested in issues that personally affect them and their communities.
Each semester, the Boston-based organization — founded in 2008 and also operating out of New York, Providence, and San Francisco — sends its cadre of volunteers to teach dedicated classes, which are offered as electives. The volunteers, called democracy coaches, are students from local college chapters of Generation Citizen.
This semester, they’re working in 17 local schools, including Melrose, Roxbury, and Jamaica Plain, according to Gillian Pressman, Greater Boston site director. Previously, classes have been held in Medford, Malden, and Lynn.
Projects have included curbing teen smoking; expanding access to career education; hosting mock elections to increase voter awareness; and even tackling gang violence.
“This makes it really hands-on, really concrete,” said history teacher Michael Noone, who technically teaches the Melrose Generation Citizen class but cedes most of the leadership duties to a democracy coach. “The more they do it, the more they understand how they can impact change.”
The process serves a dual purpose: College students who serve as coaches get classroom experience and the opportunity to hone their leadership, critical thinking, and public speaking skills.
“You’re learning the advocacy process and teaching it to students,” said Billy Rutherford, a member of the Generation Citizen chapter at Tufts University, where he’s majoring in history and Africana studies.
“I learned a lot of things about education, civic engagement,” said junior Ben Berman, 21, executive director of the Tufts chapter, which has about 20 members. “Being a leader has been a tremendous opportunity for me personally.”
The Melrose class, taught by democracy coach Erin Goodyear of Emerson College, started at the end of January, and students will be participating in the Greater Boston Civics Day at the State House on May 5.
When each new class begins, students brainstorm a topic personal to them. As Noone explained, some ideas included fixing local roads, examining health care in the community, and improving school lunches.
They ultimately settled on the Knoll because it “directly impacts the students, but it also impacts the community at large.”
The Knoll — named as such because of the large outcropping of land at its center — is a one-way, circular parking area for both students and the public (who use the adjacent dog park and athletic fields). There’s only one entrance and exit, and it’s wedged between two stoplights off the Lynn Fells Parkway.
It’s such a source of frustration that students get vitriolic when discussing it.
Parking at the Knoll is a nightmare,” student Elisa Lemack wrote in the school’s publication, The Imprint, in January. She noted the “daily traffic jam”; overall dangerous driving by her fellow students, littering, idling middle school parents blocking passage as they wait for their kids, and locals double-parking as they use the adjacent dog park.
“I have on many occasions feared for the safety of myself and my car while parking and driving in the Knoll,” Lemack wrote, calling it “altogether a horrifying place.”
So how can it be fixed?
A recent early-morning class — about a dozen students in hoodies, headphones, and backwards baseball caps, a few filtering in with late slips — considered the options.
Some suggestions: Post signs to close entry at the heaviest traffic times in the morning and afternoon; change the timing of the nearby traffic lights; add a dedicated traffic light; create a separate entrance and separate exit; install trash barrels to cut back on littering.
Griscom opted for simplicity.
“Simply bar entry in the afternoon from 2 to 2:30 and much of the jam would go away,” he said. Putting up a sign saying as much “would reduce the jam massively, making it so others can’t try to enter when everyone else is leaving, reducing the number of cars around the exit. It’s simple, effective, and, most importantly, cheap and easy to do, making it well within our reach.”
If he and his fellow students choose that option or another, the next step, Noone said, is to figure out how to put it into action: Who in city government are they going to speak with?
What will be their strategy in doing so?
“What specifically are we going to tackle to improve it?” Noone asked.
Overall, the class “focuses on how things can be done in an orderly, efficient way, and gives students a chance to demonstrate those skills through the community project, which is a huge difference from many other high school classes,” said Griscom, who has an interest in science and said he will likely pursue a career in engineering. “We learn about the steps one would need to take to get something changed or improved in their community — call it the ABCs of activism.”'

Anti-bullying in Malden, allowing backpacks in Medford

APRIL 03, 2014

Other local students in action through Generation Citizen:

Spring 2010, Malden High School:
Prompted by the death of Phoebe Prince, students tackled the issue of bullying. After doing a survey of ninth-graders, they held an assembly on the new Massachusetts antibullying legislation that included a PowerPoint presentation summarizing their survey results. They also designed and printed antibullying posters to be hung around the school, and helped revise guidelines for bullying prevention.

Spring 2010, Malden public schools:
Students created a podcast in five languages, a ConnectED phone call in eight languages, and a brochure to stress the benefits of participating in the US Census.

Fall 2012, Medford High School:
Students met with school administrators to try to amend the school's no backpack policy, which they pinpointed as a root cause of academic challenges. Because they're not allowed backpacks, students often have to go to lockers between classes and miss valuable time between periods to connect with or get extra help from teachers.

This school year:

Malden High School:
A class of ninth-graders at Malden High School is working on improving car safety among infant and youth passengers.

Salemwood Middle School, Malden:
Eighth-graders are lobbying to increase peer support through setting up a council and advocating for a resource room where information is available on issues common to young teens.

Melrose Middle School:
Sixth-grade students have met with parents, teachers, and school administration to establish the school’s first student government.

SOURCE: Generation Citizen

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