Viewing bright images splashed across walls and perched on pedestals, a vivid world snaps into focus: churches, farm scenes, chickens, and freshly harvested crabs and fish, all rendered in joyful colors.
The playful pictures and sculptures are imaginative 鈥 but also perfectly familiar to eighth-grader Ja鈥橲hayla Scarborough.
鈥淚 love it, actually,鈥 Ja鈥橲hayla said, during a visit to 凹凸视频鈥檚 Baron and Ellin Gordon Art Galleries with classmates from her school, YELLOWHAB in Norfolk. 鈥淚t really gives you the life of the Eastern Shore and how it is, down to the watermelon and the crabs. It鈥檚 amazing how specific she is in her paintings.鈥
She had not heard of Mary Elizabeth 鈥淢AMA-Girl鈥 Onley, but after strolling through the Gordon Art Galleries exhibition celebrating the late folk artist, Ja鈥橲hayla emerged a fan.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very fun,鈥 she said of the collected work. 鈥淚 really relate to it. I feel like I know her, but at the same time, I don鈥檛. Most of my dad鈥檚 family lives on the Eastern Shore.鈥
This eureka moment didn鈥檛 arrive by accident. It was helped along by five 凹凸视频 Art Education students. Guided by their Elementary Methods teacher, Dr. Tamryn McDermott, they built a set of lesson plans related to the 鈥淢AMA-Girl!鈥 exhibition.
The YELLOWHAB visit gave this quintet of developing teachers a chance to try out their work.
Stephanie Crock introduced the children to MAMA-Girl鈥檚 personal style of abstraction. Lamarah Gonzalez talked to them about the artist and how she created a sense of place. Naya Medy talked about one of the artist鈥檚 favorite images, the watermelon. Carissa Cox introduced the idea of symbolism as the students gazed on the exhibit鈥檚 colorful paintings and sculptures made from newspaper and glue.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really fun and bright and unique, but there鈥檚 a story behind it,鈥 Cox told the young visitors.
Dashiell Quasebarth, literacy instructor for YELLOWHAB, said the Gordon Art Galleries field trip was a hit with his students 鈥 called explorers.聽
鈥淔rom a pedagogical standpoint, the 凹凸视频 students were well-planned and prepared for the visit,鈥 he wrote in a message a few days later. 鈥淭hey were knowledgeable on their individual topics and also felt comfortable to tag in others who may have more expertise on a certain topic which is important in today's world of education, where teachers are not the dispenser of information but rather a facilitator to help pursue information of value.鈥
凹凸视频鈥檚 budding teachers hope their lesson guide will enjoy a long and active life.
鈥淚f the show travels, or if it鈥檚 online, teachers would be able to bring up these lesson plans,鈥 said Deborah Ward, another of the Old Dominion students who shaped the lessons. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very excited about that,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e all loved the show.鈥
The idea of creating a MAMA-Girl lesson guide originated in conversations between McDermott and Galleries Director Jasper Waugh-Quasebarth. McDermott wanted students in her Elementary Methods course to work in a museum or gallery setting right along with their required student teaching. When she learned that MAMA-Girl! exhibition curator Cullen Strawn planned to assemble a catalogue for his exhibition, she saw an opportunity.
鈥淭here was a potential to have this set of lessons my students designed be paired with the catalogue,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t would be great if it were available on the Gordon Art Galleries website so that the resources are more broadly accessible and distributed. There are many ways we could get the word out about it. But that's the ideal.鈥
The concept aligns with MAMA-Girl鈥檚 generous spirit.
鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting to think of others beyond the university benefitting from the great work that the students have done 鈥 work encouraging children and all people to pick up everyday materials and create, just like MAMA-Girl would have wanted,鈥 said Strawn, Old Dominion鈥檚 executive director for the arts.
The Old Dominion Art Education students certainly benefitted from the experience, McDermott said.
鈥淚 think for my students, it was inspiring for them to be immersed in the work, to be surrounded by a wide range of subject matter and ideas from one artist,鈥 she said. 鈥淎rt is a method of communication. For our students to understand that words and images have a lot of impact and send some very strong message, that鈥檚 an important part of our students鈥 education.鈥
The exhibition 鈥淢AMA-Girl!鈥 closes Saturday, May 10.