Showing posts with label art start. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art start. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2012

ART START changing the lives of homeless, at-risk youth

http://www.thegrio.com/local/new-york/art-program-changing-the-lives-of-homeless-youth.php

ART START changing the lives of homeless, at-risk youth


ART START changing the lives of homeless, at-risk youth
Students of One Mic, a workshop within the ART START non-profit organization. (Photo: ART START)

Amid the skyscrapers, the traffic, and the harsh realities of New York City lies ART START, a nationally recognized, award-winning non-profit organization that uses art to nurture, transform, and save lives. Described as an escape for at-risk and homeless youth, the organization encourages students to immerse themselves in art to find their purpose, and to persevere through obstacles.

Musician Miky Solano, also known as Miky Hustles, is just one of the 11,000 youth who say ART START has changed their lives. He has been involved with ART START for the past three years.

"I never really knew what art was," he told theGrio. "I always thought it was just drawing or painting. Yet once I met some people that started teaching me what art really is, it changed my whole perspective on art. They told me that music is also a form of art and how you could express yourself, so since then it changed my whole perspective about art. I see life in a different way than I thought I would ever see [it]."

Before his involvement in ART START, the 21-year-old Solano said he had been incarcerated and was headed in the wrong direction.

"I was always getting in trouble or doing things that weren't appropriate," Solano said. "I was also always close-minded and never trying to explore or expand my knowledge on different things that were out there."

Once Solano was out of prison, he decided to make a change in his life after talking with one of his friends. "One of my friends had been incarcerated, and after that he was introduced to this program," he continued, "I had also been in the same predicament as my friend, and he knew that I wanted to get involved in music. So he told me to go one day, and I did."

Yet, Solano admitted that he was nervous about creating music since he never really knew how to make a song. However, once he started getting comfortable, he made his first musical piece.

"My first song ever was called H.O.P.E.," he asserted. "[The ART START facilitators] helped me a lot and helped me opened up my mind. I started thinking and talking about things that I had never talked about before, like politics, nature, conspiracies, government, [the] economy, astronomy and more. Through ART START, I've learned that you can speak your mind. I've also learned that there is more stuff out there that you can discover. Knowledge is infinite!"

To Solano, ART START has helped him fulfill his dream of sharing his music with the world. "My art is music," he said, "I've realized that the microphone is a powerful tool, because when I speak it gets recorded and goes into millions of peoples' ears. Whatever I am saying, someone can catch onto it and hopefully they understand what I'm saying, where I'm coming from, and how I see the world or life."

Solano is not the only person who has realized the power of art.

Author and researcher Mariah Buchanan has also discovered its power. In her book Educating Black Youth Moral Principles through Black Art, Buchanan asserts that after conducting a research study, she found that black students develop better morals and life perspectives through critically interpreting works of art created by black artists. Through the study, she found that art helped students gain moral integrity and purpose.

"Art depicts historical facts, cultural differences, and aesthetic values each of us may have," she wrote in her research paper, "Art can also foster a sense of identity through the interaction between the viewer and the work. This study will allow teachers another avenue to direct moral principles, which is a form of character education, by using art as a tool to do so. This study should, I believe, be investigated further because it will contribute to the overwhelming need in America to enhance the lives of black youth, because many are considered at risk."

Indeed, ART START is one organization whose facilitators are teaching art to its at-risk youth to encourage them to create better lives for themselves.


Billy Martin, also known as Spiritchild, is the current director of ART START's music program, One Mic. After being in the position for a year, he said that this is his dream job, as it compliments his life experiences.

"ART START has been an evolution of my life's work," Martin said, "I've always done workshops internationally and throughout the United States. However, through ART START I'm able to not only introduce concepts, but also to develop and nourish our participants for a longer moment in time. I've witnessed students gain a deeper understanding of self, and a holistic approach to being an artist and an individual in this world, from nutrition, to endless forms of expression like voice, production, instruments, and graffiti, to combating stereotypes and misogyny in hip hop."

ART START was established in the spring of 1991 after a small group of artists joined with homeless kids to make art in New York City.

Now, more than twenty years later, ART START has been recognized by celebrities and world leaders for its educators, who use creative arts to support and transform the lives of youth who seem to be going down the wrong path.

In fact, according to the directors of ART START, youth involved in the organization usually live in city shelters, on the streets, are involved in court cases, or are in rough family situations. The organization offers these young people workshops designed with a student-centered approach to education.

"Our workshops instill in our youth the confidence to appreciate who they already are and what they innately have to offer the world; then, to think critically, ask important questions, and pursue meaningful opportunities in life -- against all odds," Martin said, "While encouraging personal development on many levels, by using art and music projects and focusing on their outlet for expression, kids are free to build trusting relationships with our teaching artists."

Even though Tyrone Richards, also known as T Rich, just joined ART START last year, its One Mic Program has already changed his perspective.

"Without my art, which is my music, I would not be me," Richards said, "I would be lost in my own skin. Making music takes my pain away. I believe that art is powerful. Whether it's drawing art or making music, art it something that all people can relate to. I would tell kids or young adults to sign up for ART START to get better at their craft and to learn about themselves more."

Torey Baker, also known as Mad Bangers, also added that being involved with ART START helped him to stay out of trouble and to make something of his life. The twenty-year-old got involved with ART START and its One Mic program two years ago.

"ART START changed my life by keeping me focused on music," Baker told theGrio, "I have realized that art saves lives. Just to come to the program every Tuesday and Wednesday is great, especially since I get to be in a studio."

For Baker, ART START has created a positive ripple effect on his life by bringing positive people into his life. He noted that the organization has allowed him to not only meet more people, but also to have a greater sense of well-being.

"It not only changed my life, but it changed the lives of the people in my life," he said, "I would tell other youth to get involved with ART START, because it expands your mind and helps you explore more about life. It also gives you great opportunities and guidance in whatever you want to pursue in your life. You can collaborate with other people around the same age group and help out, which helps when you start meeting new people outside of ART START, because you are confident in yourself."

To help build students' confidence even more, Martin said he and other facilitators often take the students on trips to help educate them on different artworks, cultures, and people.

"Some of our students have never left New York City," he said, "Yet, in the past year we've traveled to Philly, upstate New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts and other states to visit various higher learning institutions, participate in conferences, engage in workshops and performances, and have fun. A few of our participants are even currently learning some basic German to prepare them for their first international trip to Germany and the Czech Republic in the fall."

Leaders of ART START hope to encourage others to support their organization, so that more at-risk youth can use it to change their lives.

Indeed, as Solano looks back on his experiences at ART START, he said that he is motivated to help others realize that art can transform their circumstances.

"Art is powerful and magical, because through art anyone can take pieces and create a masterpiece," Solano, "I've always wondered why art is so big and important. However, I have realized that art is life. We live in it, and we are constantly surrounded by it."

Monday, November 28, 2011

Dec 3rd Sat Night 12:30am Mental Notes since 1999 celebration


Mental Notes since 1999

celebrating the sounds and vibrations of Mental Notes since 1999 and

featuring Movement In Motion Collective and celebrating our 9 years of international arts and community organizing

featuring Yuki Ishiba on keys,

Leon Boykins on Bass,

Sam Knight on Drums

spirit on vocals

and special special surprise guest belly dancer CASHEL CAMPBELL

xspiritmental jam session winter vibrations

serving the people since 1999
all ages
$10

featuring special surprise guest
MC K~Swift of New Rap Order
Evan Greer of Riot Folk performing the hits off the Back to the Roots
Miky Bless of One Mic Art Start
Carly DeLuca of Art Start
Stephanie Rooker from Stephanie Rooker & the Search Engine
Tiffany
and still more to come.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Mental Notes since 1999 DEC 3RD SAT NIGHT AT THE BLUE NOTE



celebrating the sounds and vibrations of Mental Notes since 1999 and

featuring Movement In Motion Collective and celebrating our 9 years of international arts and community organizing

featuring Yuki Ishiba on keys,

Leon Boykins on Bass,

Sam Knight on Drums

spirit on vocals

and special special surprise guest belly dancer CASHEL CAMPBELL

xspiritmental jam session winter vibrations

serving the people since 1999
all ages
$10

featuring special surprise guest
MC K~Swift of New Rap Order
Evan Greer of Riot Folk performing the hits off the Back to the Roots
Miky Bless of One Mic Art Start
Carly DeLuca of Art Start
Stephanie Rooker from Stephanie Rooker & the Search Engine
and still more to come.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Art Start One Mic interview on Fox 5 featuing Miky & spiritchild

Check out one of our rising stars, Miky Hustles Miguel “Miky” Solano on Fox 5. Take a walk inside his mind, mind, mind, mind, mind…
get involved and volunteer with One Mic email spirit@art-start.org
more than the music, the movement, we doing it…

Click on the 3rd and 4th video segments under the viewer to skip straight to the ART Start Johanna De Los Santos segment.

http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/about_us/street_talk/street-talk-nov-12-2011

Art Start program helped Miky Solano leave behind life of crime, find voice via music and rapping



Art Start program helped Miky Solano leave behind life of crime, find voice via music and rapping

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/10/24/2011-10-24_art_start_program_helped_miky_solano_leave_behind_life_of_crime_find_voice_via_m.html?r=entertainment

Art Start program helped Miky Solano leave behind life of crime, find voice via music and rapping

BY Jacob E. Osterhout
DAILY NEWS FEATURE REPORTER


Monday, October 24th 2011, 4:00 AM
Miky Solano, 20, an ex-youth offender from Gowanus, finds his voice as a rapper.
Jacob E. Osterhout for News
Miky Solano, 20, an ex-youth offender from Gowanus, finds his voice as a rapper.

Until recently, self-expression was never Miguel (Miky) Solano’s strong point.

In fact, for much of his two decades, the only thing the Brooklyn native (who bears a striking resemblance to the rapper Big Pun) was good at was getting in trouble.

To be fair, growing up in a hard-scrabble part of Gowanus, trouble was easy to find.

Then Solano grabbed a microphone in an Art Start recording studio and suddenly he was Miky, a master freestyle artist who could put into verse the day-to-day challenges of a young man struggling to rise from the streets of Brooklyn.

“My high school wasn’t teaching me anything, so I dropped out and got in trouble with the police,” says Miky, describing his experience as a 15-year-old Mexican-American being arrested for possessing 90 bags of crack cocaine.

“I was looking at seven to 15 years in prison, but I was young and lucky, and only got probation.”

That’s when Miky discovered the One Mic recording workshop run by Art Start, a 20-year-old organization that offers art programs in homeless shelters and as part of alternative-to-incarceration programs throughout New York City.

With the motto “Art saves lives,” Art Start believes that the creative process, be it musical or visual, has the capability to transform the lives of at-risk youth.

“This is a place for all of us to come and express ourselves,” says Billy (Spiritchild) Martin, a spoken-word artist from the Bronx and One Mic program director. “Self-esteem and discipline is what we are aiming for. To have this communication through hip hop is very important, so that the students can share their life experiences.”

By his own admission, the One Mic program, which has a rotating group of 15 students, has changed Miky’s life, instilling in the 20-year-old a sense of confidence.

“The first time I came to the One Mic studio, I was real quiet because I didn’t know anyone and I didn’t really know what I was doing,” says Miky. “I was interested in music and liked to create beats by banging on tables, but I didn’t have the right equipment or anything. Then I slowly started to learn what I was doing.”

Miky teamed with teaching artists like Spiritchild to learn how to expand his vocabulary and properly put together a song.
“I didn’t know about song structure initially,” recalls Miky. “I would just write a lot of words, sentences and rhymes. I didn’t even know what a bar was. He pushed me to use more vocabulary, write in 16 bars and to actually have a logical flow to my lyrics.”

Miky (c.) hangs out with his friends at the Art Start recordin studio in Manhattan. (Jacob E. Osterhout for News)

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/10/24/2011-10-24_art_start_program_helped_miky_solano_leave_behind_life_of_crime_find_voice_via_m.html#ixzz1biSG7oQS


(Page 2 of 2)

Two years later, Miky, who earned his GED and has a day job at a funeral home in Brooklyn, attends the One Mic workshop twice a week for four hours and has recorded more than 20 songs.

“I don’t know anywhere else where I can go and use a free studio,” he says, noting that an equivalent studio would cost at least $60 an hour.

“It’s a good studio, too. All the equipment is top of the line. I try to pass that appreciation along to the new people who come in.”

It’s not the product, however, but the process that Miky enjoys.

“I come not only for the studio, but the people, too,” he says. “It’s all about the music and exchanging ideas.
Everybody has a different talent. There’s the producer who is good at making beats, the singer and the rapper, and it’s important to work with them all.”

Spiritchild nods in agreement, emphasizing that One Mic is not a talent contest.

“This is not an artist-development program,” he says. “Not everybody here is trying to be a professional MC. Many just want to socialize and hang out and write. This is simply an opportunity to be heard.”

In fact, Miky’s big dream isn’t even to become a rap star, although if it happened, he says, “I wouldn’t complain.”

Instead, he’d like to be a politician and help shape America’s immigration policy, a very important issue for both of his parents, who immigrated from Mexico.

He believes participating in the One Mic program will help him accomplish those dreams by improving his focus and communication skills.

“Before One Mic, I wasn’t committed to anything, really,” he says. “Now I know I’ve got to get serious. Once I open up my mind, the songs just pour out of me. I have a clearer vision of what I want to be. This growing-up process can really help everybody.”

YOU SHOULD KNOW

To hear Miky rap, visit www.reverbnation.com/mikybless. For more information on Art Start, visit art-start.org.

josterhout@nydailynews.com

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/10/24/2011-10-24_art_start_program_helped_miky_solano_leave_behind_life_of_crime_find_voice_via_m.html#ixzz1bijRToeF

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Join me, my students, Bill Cosby, Chita Rivera and Mark Nadler on Oct. 13th - A benefit concert for ART START!


revolutionary greetings

as we assist in the OWS movement, rallies, and struggles throughout new york city and the world. we continue our necessary work with the youth who are formally incarnated and in the shelter systems of new york city.

as some of you may know, since March i've been directing a hip hop program entitled one mic (with Art Start). 6 of the students will perform this night and share the stage with living legends for a huge fundraiser. please join us if you are able to. i know the ticket sales are pricey but if you are unable to attend maybe you could pass the info to some groups or people you may know.

every cent goes directly to our programs throughout new york city as we continue to provide art to places that the state and government overlook to fund or even care for.
it is the 20th anniversary of Art Start and we intend to make 20 more years of service through our efforts and your support.
thank you

freedom
spirit

freedom singer
One Mic program director

www.xspiritmental.com
www.onemicartists.com
www.facebook.com/spiritchildmentalnotes
www.movementinmotion.com

NY 646 319 6523
Berlin mobile 011 49 01 639 24 51 95

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

http://myemail.constantcontact.com/LitWorld-in-the-Field--Mothers-University--Magic-Birds---Live-Orange.html?soid=1102557664683&aid=Y6kfE28iqHI


http://myemail.constantcontact.com/LitWorld-in-the-Field--Mothers-University--Magic-Birds---Live-Orange.html?soid=1102557664683&aid=Y6kfE28iqHI
Share:



LitWorld Writer in Kenya



All over the world, people seek out stories and words to comfort, inspire, inform and protect. In New York, tomorrow July 13, 2011, LitWorld hosts our second Live Orange Webcast to celebrate the superpowers of literacy to bind us, honor our inner selves and find each other across time zones.



Our beloved friend and inspiration spiritchild and his amazing band of hip hop leaders extraordinaire will call us together to teach this time. Be with LitWorld for this special event. RSVP, see more details, and tune in LIVE tomorrow at 2pm EST at facebook.com/litworld.



I am far away right now, in Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya with our LitWorld Delegation working with the Children of Kibera Foundation to strengthen local teachers and community members as literacy leaders so that all children and all people can partake in the wildly miraculous world that is the world of words. I am thinking of you. I am thinking of how the world is in need of justice and fairness. I think this can only happen if we fortify the world for the world's children. Like vitamins in milk and fresh air itself, literacy pumps power into minds and bodies.



Today, we meet in a dark room on a busy dirt road in the hum and din of the complex, deeply challenging, profound life that is Kibera, Kenya, a community living in extreme poverty in Nairobi. The women who gather with us are all HIV/AIDS positive mothers. They have created a sanctuary for themselves here, teaching themselves how to bead to stay alive, to pay for their own care. Their microbusiness sustains them. They very carefully set one part aside for savings so they can grow the enterprise. They keep a special fund for when one of them dies, so they can give her a proper funeral.



They meet every week to talk about the catastrophic isolation this disease has brought to them, pushing them out of their own homes, out of work, away from families. There are hundreds of thousands, no, millions of women just like them around the world, but these women have found something special, something that is replenishing them, giving them hope. They have found each other's stories. And in those stories, comes the hope and joy of friendship, of trust, of becoming known again.



Here, we have the first meeting of the Moms for LitWorld Initiative. It begins here today in this dark but bright place today on July 12, 2011.



None of these twenty women finished sixth grade. Several never went to school at all. When they share their hopes and dreams, they are all, every single one, for their children. It is mothers who will change the world, we all agree, and stand and cheer, and we gather hands and commit to this: We WILL be together. We will not forsake one another.



The first session of "Bead and Read" will happen via video chat in four weeks time. Mothers in New York will learn to bead and will teach these earnest beautiful courageous women in Kibera how to read. For they long to do it. "We want to create brochures for our business," one tells me. Another beautiful woman says with a smile: "I want to write you an email." I say there is no shame in HIV/AIDS and there is no shame that they did not finish school. None of this is cause for shame. Together right here, right now, with an online call, we can create our own Mothers University. We can give each other a degree.



Just down the road, we journey back to the Red Rose School to meet with the Girls LitClub for another session this week, with the radiant Mercy and Diana and Sharon and Quinter and all the amazing girls. They say: "I never knew what a friend was until the Girls Club started." They say: "When can we read again? Let's read all day and all night until you leave." They say: "Sometimes I daydream at school that I am a mermaid."



They are just so young, these extraordinary young women, ages ten, eleven and twelve. Their whole selves are set and ready to leap off from childhood into adulthood. They write without wanting ever to stop in their writing journals. They soak up the read aloud, their eyes turned to it like we turn our faces to the sun on the first warm day of spring. They are hungry, so hungry, hungry for it all. Their mothers did not go to school. They share about how hard it is to stay in school, that the pressure all around them is all about leaving school. The LitClub is a life raft.



In one of the classrooms here at Red Rose School where LitWorld is working alongside teachers and students, the child, age six, is asked to start a story for us. We will all add a line and finish it with her. She is the first. She loves stories. She says: "There is a small village with no food. There is a big village with lots of food. A magic bird arrives to the villages. He is going to solve this problem." She sees a story as a route to solving a problem, and how right she is.



Stories belong to all of us, and stories are the key to building a literate life. Every human being has them. It is simply a fluke of chance we do not live in Kibera, but we could easily be Kiberans. I would be proud to be Kiberan. Resourceful in an underresourced environment, joyful in a painfully deprivational circumstance, hopeful and optimistic in a catastrophic set of circumstances, stories are what make people sing, dance, laugh and love each other. It's what makes everyone happy. There is a lot of that right here. So it makes me so hopeful too, but also with this sense of extreme urgency: We must do this work now. We cannot wait. Learning to read and write is the fundamental human right that is going to catapult the girls club girls away from the danger and perilousness of their mother's hard lives. They are growing up right now. Before our eyes. Let's all join together and be with them all.



Be with us in this journey any way you can.



Pam





Follow our stories by blog: litworld.org/litcorpsblog



Share our links with friends and family to spread the word: litworld.org



Make a contribution to support this urgent need: litworld.org/donate



- $100 will support video chat trainings with Moms for LitWorld Kibera



- $300 will fund books and bookshelves for a classroom library at Red Rose School



- $1,000 will launch a new Girls LitClub in Kibera with a LitKit and training sessions





With special thanks to our awesome partners the Children of Kibera Foundation.





litworld.org - facebook - twitter

Saturday, July 9, 2011

International Hip Hop Youth Tour NYC-Germany


One Mic / Art Start & Movement In Motion presents
an International Opening Minds

all artist who come and sign up entry is free...
we mean artist very loosely ;).
all ages...

join us at the Brecht forum July 9th 7pm to celebrate our first ever
international movement in motion youth hip hop exchange
featuring
K-Swift
Carly Delight
Marine Futin (France)
Woodvalley Movement (Germany)
spirit
Mental Notes
Movement In Motion (international)
Cashel Sapphire (belly dancing)

please join us in welcoming our youth group from Marburg Germany with their stateside debut along with our youth group from one mic NYC in a series of hip hop, r&b and xspiritmental performances.
$5-10 donation

bar will be available (taleigh holding it down)

www.onemicartists.com
www.xspiritmental.com
www.movementinmotion.com

--------------------------​------------------------
July 8th
Washington Square Park
5pm
featuring Woodvalley Movement (Germany), One Mic (NYC), spiritchild, K-Swift, Marine Futin (France), Movement In Motion (International) free
--------------------------​--------------------------

July 6th 7pm-8pm
CAFE 5C
5th street Avenue C, NYC
meet and greet and performances
featuring Woodvalley Movement (Germany)
One Mic (NYC)

--------------------------​-------------------------

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

One Mic Volunteer Position April - August


One Mic Volunteer Position April 1st- August 31st (please fwd)


Art Saves Lives

ART START



YOUTH OFFENDER OUTREACH PROGRAM

ONE MIC VOLUNTEER POSITION



ART START seeks undergraduate and graduate students in the education,

non-profit management, arts, arts education, and related fields to serve as a

programming intern for the Spring and Summer of 2011.

(if you are not a student and or are not in the fields listed above still inquire)



The purpose of ART START is to nurture the voices, hearts and minds of at-risk

New York City youth, providing the resources and outlet for them to change their

own lives through the creative process. ONE MIC is a year-round recording workshop created to guide teens in finding their own unique voice, recording original music in the ART START Recording Studio, and sharing it with the world for the purpose of growth, creative expression and enlightenment.



The Programming Intern for ART START will take part in the One Mic music

recording program, working with teenage court-involved youth in alternative to

incarceration programs in Lower Manhattan as part of our Youth Offender

Outreach Programming.

In collaboration with ART START staff teaching artists, interns’ duties will include:

●Project Planning

●Workshop Planning

●Supply organization and procurement

●Assistant teaching arts-based workshops

●Weekly workshop assessment

●Small, focused fundraising objectives for respective workshops

SCHEDULE: April 1- August 31, 2011 / Tuesday Noon-8pm Wednesday 4pm-8pm

LOCATION: ART START works from various locations to make our workshops

most accessible to the at-risk youth that we serve. Workshops take place in

Lower Manhattan at our partnering organization near the Court House.

COMPENSATION: This is an unpaid internship. Interns will receive course credit

through their school.

NOTES: ART START does not provide oversight or management that is clinical

in nature. This internship is not suitable for art therapy or social work students.



Contact

spiritchild

Program Director of One Mic

ninoespiritu@gmail.com

please send resumes/cover letters & inquires with subject Art Start One Mic

www.art-start.org