Are you able to offer voluntary Help on the council or by forming a regional group in your area?

* We need one or two students from the Schools to join the council. Please let us know if you are interested; perhaps you could share the position with a friend. There are 4 meetings a year held on Saturdays usually in the morning and an Annual General Meeting.

* We need a news letter editor; this position could be shared between two people. At present we try to produce an annual, colour magazine but one or two simple news sheets a year would be better than nothing.

* Our regional groups are beginning to flourish providing exhibition opportunities and the chance to fraternize with other ex- grads. At present the South East of England although being particularly fertile with alumni and replete with golden opportunities for forming associated regional groups, is under represented. We need a coordinator for this area; please contact us if you are interested.

* Come to the next regional meeting on 2nd July to find out how we work and whether you feel you want to get involved, you will be most welcome.

* If you have skills to offer do contact us; working on the council can be exciting but it does require a certain amount of commitment  and team work. Having an idea is inspiring but you need to be able to think it through and put it into practice with the help and support of other council members.

You can leave messages on 020 7300 5715 or

E-mail Gloria.Steemsonne@royalacademy.org.uk

Stop press: The Annual Reunion will be on May 7th 2011

Please note that we have had to change the reunion date again; this was unavoidable but rest assured that it will take place on Saturday evening 7th May as usual in the Fine Rooms, 6 30pm to 8 30pm. Light refreshments are offered and the customary free glass of wine with your ticket; if you have paid in advance please note that you can collect your ticket/s at the door. See you there!

‘PECKHAM MEETS PICCADILLY’ Go to the gallery to see some of the children’s gesture drawings.

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Photographs by Beth Evans:  www.bethevans.com

This Thursday (March 10th), nineteen Year Five children from Brunswick Park Primary School in Peckham were given an exclusive tour of the Royal Academy of Arts in Piccadilly. Facilitated by arts organisation Young Visions and funded by the Excellence in Cities initiative working  with the Royal Academy Schools and the Education Department, the experience gave the children a unique introduction to one of the UK’s most prestigious artistic institutions.

First, they were greeted by Professor Maurice Cockrill, Keeper of the Royal Academy and taken on a guided tour of the current exhibition by two students. Then they were shown around the Schools in the basement of the Academy where they observed the current postgraduate students hard at work in the studios. Professor Cockrill said: “I hope this visit will widen the children’s horizons both as young art critics and young artists. By welcoming them to the Royal Academy we are showing that we value them. These young children are our potential audience, students and artists of the future. We want to give them something memorable that can act as a source of inspiration.”

The group was also granted special entry into the iconic Life Room, unchanged from its inception in the eighteenth century and normally only accessible to students of the Academy. Sitting where celebrated artists such as Turner and Constable would have done, the nine and ten year olds took part in a life-drawing workshop run by Phillippa Clayden, director of Young Visions and chair of the Royal Academy’s alumni association (RASA), along with Licy Clayden, Young Visions co-director and tutor. The children were given expert tuition on drawing a dressed life-model using unusual techniques such as using a pencil in each hand. Morgan said ‘I love learning new ways to draw. I really enjoyed looking at the art too’ and Tom said ‘I liked drawing the silhouettes and making them 3D. I’m going to bring my family here and tell them that I made art in the Life Room- I’ll even bring my children when I’m older!’

The work they produced will be exhibited in the Schools for current RA students to admire, and will later be taken back to their school and exhibited. It was an extraordinary art lesson where the children not only learned valuable technical skills, but also gained an impression of the entire process of being artist.

This project is part of Phillippa Clayden’s work with Young Visions, an organisation she founded 28 years ago which is dedicated to bringing unique visual arts teaching methods to young people of all backgrounds and abilities in Southwark. Her recent work has involved bringing the UK’s prestigious arts institutions into creative collaboration with Southwark primary schools.

In delivering ‘Peckham meets Piccadilly’, Clayden has given children access to the high profile world of the making of art, and helped them to be confident within it, and in their own abilities to contribute to it. The art co-ordinator at Brunswick Park School and one of the accompanying teachers, Mahnaz Kamran commented; ‘This visit has been wonderful. The children might not have been comfortable in an arts environment before, they may even have felt excluded from it, but the Royal Academy has really welcomed them and shown them how much they can enjoy looking at art and making art. They have gained lots of confidence from the event and I’m sure they will be keen to visit exhibitions and get involved in arts projects in the future.’

While the obvious learners in the project are the children, Phillippa and Licy are both keen to recognise the reciprocity of the learning experience, and they thank the children of Brunswick Park Primary for their influence on the Royal Academy. Phillippa says:  ‘It’s great to see the children in the Schools bringing their new perspectives and fresh ideas. The RA Schools initially started because a group of artists thought more people should be given the opportunity to create. It’s events like these that remind everyone of the founding principles of the Royal Academy.’ Inspired by its teachings while she was a student, she has taken the methods and ethos of the Academy out into the community and, in turn, brought the community back to the Schools. In that sense, she says ‘“Peckham meets Piccadilly” has come full circle’.

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Remmel: ‘I love being here, I love to draw!’
Remell Williams age 9

Weblinks

:http://www.royalacademy.org.uk/

http://www.brunswickpark.southwark.sch.uk/

http://www.phillippaclayden.co.uk/

http://www.licyclayden.co.uk/
Media enquiries: Julia Brosnan 07870 306867, julia@dovetailtogether.co.uk
and Cathy Wilcock 07846628669, cathywilcock@gmail.com
www.dovetailtogether.co.uk

RASA at the Art Pavilion Mile End

 The private view took place on March 1st at the Art Pavilion a rather splendid venue where Paul Curtis our London exhibition coordinator organised and hung RASA members’ works.  The exhibition lasted for a week with some sales! Paul has booked the venue for 2012. A huge thank you to all the members who gave their time to help Paul and to invigilate the exhibition.

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