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For Immediate Release: June 19, 2006
Contact: Asali DeVan
YA/YA, Inc.
PO Box 52617
New Orleans, LA 70152-2617
tel 504-529-3306
interimdirector@yayainc.com
Nikelodeon’s
Nick News with Linda Ellerbee
features YA/YA on “Children of the Storm”
Broadcast on National Television July 2, 2006
YA/YA
(Young Aspirations/Young Artists), Inc., a New Orleans non-profit youth
arts organization, will be featured on Nick
News with Linda Ellerbee: Children of the Storm, which
will air Sunday, July 2, 2006,
7:30 p.m. CST, on Nickelodeon.
“
Katrina has shown these kids that it can all be gone in a moment,
but through their hardship the children of New Orleans have learned what
they’re made of,” said Ellerbee. “We must not forget
these kids, or ignore them, or neglect them. We must, in
fact, honor them.”
In Children of the Storm, kids share their reasons for returning
to our city, known for its music, food and history and why
it’s worth
it to them to rebuild, even in the face of destruction, poverty and mountainous
piles of trash. As we learn from them what it’s like to be back,
we hear about YA/YA and the work the organization does to give
kids a voice through art, music and poetry. YA/YA artists help students
to tell their
stories, to translate their hopes and fears, pains and joys
into something tangible and though, not generally happy, beautiful.
Founded in 1988, YA/YA studio and gallery provides young
artists, ages 8-24, with the chance to apprentice with professional
artists in media
that range from furniture design to painting, screen-printing,
fashion design, and computer graphics. Modeled on the artist guild
system, the
program moves participants in calibrated steps from apprentice
to guild master, with senior students mentoring the newcomers.
In January 2006, YA/YA launched new studio arts programs,
reviving programs since their suspension in the months after Hurricane
Katrina.
YA/YA now reaches more than 80 youth weekly who need meaningful
activities in safe and supportive environments. Through on-going partnerships
with
the University of New Orleans and New Orleans Outreach, which
works to improve the quality of public education through programs that
respond to
the particular needs of schools, YA/YA now offers after-school
and summer arts programs to three open-enrollment charter schools.
Integrated into
the curriculum of these projects is the belief that New Orleans
youth need the cathartic power of art-making to mourn their losses,
celebrate their
cultural heritage, and express their own vision for the rebirth
of New Orleans. To learn more about YA/YA, visit the website www.yayainc.com
YA/YA is supported in part by awards from the State Arts
Council through the Louisiana Division of the Arts and
the National
Endowment for the Arts; and a Community Arts Grant made possible
by the City of New Orleans, and a grant from the Louisiana
Division of the Arts, Office of Culture, Recreation and Tourism,
in cooperation with the Louisiana State Arts Council – both
grants administered by the Arts Council of New Orleans; the
Lupin Foundation; Americans for the Arts, The Estelle Friedman
Gervis Family Foundation, and contributions from Michael’s:
The Arts and Crafts Store; the Horne Family, the Napoli Family,
University of New Orleans through the 21st Century Learning
Community Center program, Oprah’s Angel Network’s “Use
Your Life Award”; and the Friends of YA/YA.
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