The ºÙºÙÊÓƵ Chicana/o Studies Program will host a community kickoff Wednesday, Dec. 8, in Woodland to announce a new art program for local junior and senior high school students called Taller Arte Del Nuevo Amanecer (TANA -- Workshop of the New Dawn).
The event will take place 5-7 p.m. in the Atrium of the Yolo County Administration Building, 625 Court St., Woodland, with the formal introductions beginning at 5:45 p.m.
TANA will be a silk-screen and print workshop for junior high and high school artists in the Woodland community and vicinity. Plans call for the workshop facility to include a gallery that will feature the work of young, emerging artists in the community.
"As part of our outreach mission at the university, the wants to give back to the community," says , a ºÙºÙÊÓƵ professor and founder of the new program. "We want to reach kids who may not believe that art can play an important part in their lives."
He is working closely with community agencies to find a site for TANA's workshop and gallery and expects to announce a site in the near future. In addition, to draw talented students to the project, Montoya is planning to develop relationships with the art teachers at the junior highs and high schools.
Assisted by ºÙºÙÊÓƵ students and a workshop director, Montoya will bring silkscreen printing courses, an exhibition/gallery space, an artist-in-residence program, and community-oriented graphic arts services to Woodland and the greater Yolo County community. Carlos Francisco Jackson, who worked with Montoya on previous art collaborations in the Woodland area schools, is slated to be the first executive director and master printer for TANA.
Montoya envisions that youths working in TANA will soon be designing and producing posters and flyers for community organizations. In the act of providing a service to their community, the youths will become active in the creation of culture, he says.
"Through the arts, TANA seeks to cultivate the cultural and artistic life of the community, promoting an awareness of cultural and human values," says Montoya, who is affiliated with both the Chicana/o studies and studio art programs at ºÙºÙÊÓƵ. "Chicano Studies views the arts as an essential element to a community's development and well-being."
The Chicana/o Studies Program at ºÙºÙÊÓƵ offers a series of community-based arts courses built into its curriculum. Both undergraduate and graduate students can take a mural workshop, a series of silkscreen poster workshops and a survey of Chicana/o art.
Freeman Elementary School and Woodland High School in Woodland and Grafton Elementary School in Knights Landing are sites where murals were developed through collaborative projects headed by Montoya and Jackson, a former graduate student.
The public is invited to enjoy refreshments and hors d'oeuvres at the Dec. 8 event. For more information about this event, contact Professor Malaquias Montoya at (530) 752-2421 or by e-mail at mmontoya@ucdavis.edu.
This introductory event is co-sponsored by the Yolo County Diversity Program.
Media Resources
Susanne Rockwell, Web and new media editor, (530) 752-2542, sgrockwell@ucdavis.edu