NYU ART+EDUCATION CERTIFICATION

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Room 403 Artist Educator Collective

February 9, 2022 by je2190 Leave a Comment

In Summer 2019, a group of a group of nine people – including seven who identify as white and two as LatinX formed an artist educator collective to address a sense of frustration and anger with the white supremacy that orients public education, as well as a sense of hope for enacting a consciously anti-racist and anti-oppressive teaching practice in art classrooms in New York City. 

Image of artwork with a manila folder and text and collage elements underneath     Image of a brainstorming idea map with text in purple and red  

We spent many hours together in Room 403 of the Barney Building on NYU campus, discussing, drawing, mapping, creating collections, and building ideas and commitments towards socially just art education together. We read about how schools are racialized spaces that foreground white bodies, we mapped our own histories of education in relation to whiteness and privilege, we shared new commitments and values based on the books that we were reading and the titles that held us accountable to new ways of being in the classroom.

Two figures sit on the floor and work together on a large piece of paper with markers and a computerImage of a body map; the figure is wearing a skirt and glasses with colorful patternsImage of a black and white drawing of a stack of book spines showing their titlesImage of a table with many different drawings and documents organized in a row

A field trip to the Interference Archive in Brooklyn, gave us a chance to research examples of manifestos from different social movements, play a radical un-Monopoly game, and talk with the volunteer radical archivists who make Interference Archive such an amazing resource for social movements. 

Image of the front door of the Interference ArchiveImage of a collection of books laid out on a tableImage of a group of people sitting and standing around a table playing a board gameImage of two people looking at book shelves and documents in a hallway space

The end result of our collective research and negotiations together was a manifesto of 10 commitments that we made to each other as anti-racist art educators and to our future students. We created a website to invite other artist educators to share their experiences working in schools and involve them in these commitments. We imagined each commitment as a visual poster that would hang in our classrooms to remind us of the work that is required every day.  

Screenshot of website for 403 Artist Educator Collective

Screenshot of 10 artist educator collective values visualized in different colors on website 

“We are a collective of passionate and radical New York City based artist educators working in PreK-12 schools who are fed up with an educational system that perpetuates racism, inequality, and complacency. We commit to challenging this system through art + education. Art has always been a powerful force, one that helps us re-imagine ourselves and the world around us.”

Filed Under: Class Projects, Explore Posts, Research and Final Project in Art Education Tagged With: artist collective, manifesto, praxis, white privilege, white supremacy

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