NEWS
RELEASE 10TH & OAK STREETS For additional information: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Can the experience of learning and creating art together strengthen a family? Benefit a community? One hundred families in Oakland now believe that it can. "100 Families: Art & Social Change," a program launched by the Center for Art and Public Life at the California College of the Arts (CCA) in 2005, gave families in East Oakland, Chinatown, Fruitvale, and West Oakland the opportunity to be creative together in a series of 10 weekend workshops. An exhibition of the artwork that was created in the workshops, 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change, opens at the Oakland Museum of California Saturday, January 20, 2007 (through April 22). Mildred Howard, mixed media and installation artist, is the guest curator. “When the 100 Oakland families worked with our project artists, the young people found a way to channel some of the negative things they are surrounded by in their lives into something positive,” Howard said. “These kids are so vulnerable—they have quicker access to guns than to books. We need to intervene, one family at a time, if need be.” It was the powerful installation Howard created for the museum’s 2003 Days of the Dead exhibition—a map showing the names and locations of the 114 homicides in Oakland the year before—that inspired social entrepreneur and philanthropist F. Noel Perry to found the "100 Families Oakland" program. “If we can strengthen the family,” said Perry, “maybe we can strengthen the neighborhood, then maybe the city, and reduce the violence. Just the act of picking up a paint brush can alter a person’s self-esteem and change their outlook.” Perry’s vision of bringing together families through the transformative process of making art included honoring their artwork with an exhibition at a major arts institution. Smaller shows at the Oakland Asian Cultural Center, Fruitvale’s Unity Council Senior Center, the African American Library, and Gallery 555 downtown have displayed each community’s projects. The museum’s 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change presents nearly 250 artworks, including ceramics, collage, sculpture, and murals, from all four neighborhoods. The workshops were led by community artists and CCA students, who found that the families’ initial hesitation about making art gradually turned into creative expression. Parents began by helping their children and ended by participating fully themselves. The Oakland Museum of California has three related programs planned during the exhibition; all are
Sunday, January
28, 2007 1–4:30 p.m. Sunday, February 18, 2007 1–5 p.m. Sunday, March 18, 2007 1–4:30 p.m. The 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change exhibition is among the events planned by the CCA for its centennial, in 2007. The museum will also host California College of the Arts: 100 Years in the Making, a retrospective by alumni and faculty representing Bay Area art and its movements throughout the twentieth century, as seen through the lens of the CCA. The retrospective, October 13, 2007–January 27, 2008, builds on the museum’s commitment to California history by showcasing the Bay Area’s artistic legacy. For more information on the 100 Families Oakland exhibition and programs, visit www.museumca.org. # # # The Oakland Museum of California, 10th & Oak Streets in Oakland, is one block from the Lake Merritt BART. Open Wednesday to Saturday, 10 to 5; Sunday, noon to 5; first Friday of the month open until 9. Admission is $8 for adults, $5 seniors and students with ID, free for kids five and under, Oakland City employees, and members. Admission is free the second Sunday of the month. The Center for Art and Public Life was founded in 1998 to create and facilitate programs that provide and enhance arts education in underserved communities within and beyond the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information about the Center’s programs, visit www.cca.edu/center. 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change received support from F. Noel Perry, the Oakland Museum Women’s Board, the Walter and Elise Haas Fund, OneCalifornia Foundation & OneCalifornia Bank (in formation), and Working Assets. Media sponsors include KPIX TV5, and La Preciosa 92.3 FM Area De La Bahia.
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