Monday, July 15, 2013

Holding my world together with a bit of Mod Podge

Rebekah Barnes | MDAA Intern

  We’re in the final stretch. Less than two months until the big move to Ohio University, and for some of my friends, a month until they move off to colleges as far as Georgia and Alabama.
   We are all moving apart. All going our separate ways. And in the last moments we have together one phrase seems to dominate the conversation: “Let’s craft.”
   As “Pinterest-ing” has become more popular throughout the past year, it’s in style to Do-it-Yourself dorm decorate. We sit down at a table covered in plastic, as our mom’s are not too confident in our abilities to keep paint off the table. We pour out our supplies ranging from blank canvases, mason jars, fabrics, Mod Podge and paints of all colors. Country music on the radio, we begin. We make calendars, custom corkboards, pencil holders, and cute decals to hang on our plain white dorm walls.
    We may not be the most creative. We may need two tries to get it right. But it’s these moments where we make art, art that will hang in our dorms, where we know we will never forget one another.
    When I’m sitting in my room at OU, I’ll look at my crafts and see each one of my friends. While technology can bridge the gap in these 21st century relationships, making art has showed me that coming together, and creating something new, something beautiful can keep bonds tighter than Elmer’s glue. The final stretch can seem scary. But it’s these moments that make it easier. Building a community based on art can make this world we live in, the town we live in, just a bit smaller. And one of those ways can be simply logging on to masonarts.org, and getting involved in things coming up. Summer camps. The FallFair Arts Festival. Just being inspired.
   My world’s about to change. Maybe yours has. But putting art into the picture can bring a little bit of clarity.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Passion for art starts early on

Rebekah Barnes | MDAA Intern

   It's a time for change.
   Changes from my recent graduation from William Mason High School, moving on to Ohio University, ready to become a bobcat. Changes in the weather, with the hot summer sun peaking in from the blue-cloud skies, as I peer through my shades. And now a change in my employment.
   I'm so absolutely honored to be the Mason Deerfield Arts Alliance Intern. And now helping out with summer camp registration, I know these small crafts and cute creations with these kids will bring change in ways they won't know.
   I was a very quiet child, who found comfort in crayons and markers and my imagination. Art was my safe zone. My art teachers knew me the best and always knew what was on my mind.
   And now, as an almost freshman in college, art is still my passion. My art with words as a journalism major. My art with painting canvas shoes as a side job. My doodles in notebooks, my drawings for gifts, seeing beauty in nature, in people.
   Without art as a kid, I wouldn't be where I am.
   These Mason - Deerfield Arts Alliance Summer Art camps are a great opportunity to show children that the world is a beautiful place and it's time to explore it with their imagination.