NAEC
artist in Hotel Dieu students’ art galleryby
Valerie Allan
Megan
Cruickshank with the two artworks selected by the Hotel Dieu
students’ art gallery.
North
Addington Education Centre student Megan Cruickshank has two pieces
of art in the Hotel Dieu Students’ Art Gallery in Kingston. Megan
and her family attended the opening ceremony at Hotel Dieu Hospital
on Monday, May 10. The opening ceremony consisted of a slide show of
all the artworks, followed by a viewing of the artworks on display in
the gallery.
Megan
is in Grade 9 at NAEC. While she is a gifted art student, the two
pieces which were selected were completed in Megan’s spare time.
This year, there were over 2,500 submissions, and 100 pieces were
chosen, so it is particularly impressive that Megan had two pieces in
the gallery.
Mr.
R. Westgarth, a teacher at Elginburg Public School, organized the
exhibition, along with several volunteers. The gallery has about
75,000 visitors per year. Mr. Westgarth joked that the visitors tend
to be a “captive audience” who are at the hospital for medical
reasons, but it is still an extensive number of visitors for any
gallery.
Submissions
came from Limestone District School Board, Hastings Prince Edward
District School Board, and Algonquin Lakeshore Catholic School Board.
North Addington students investigate
Canada’s art and the Cold War
by Valerie Allan
Joanne Butler and Robert Maciag walk
through the Diefenbunker on NAEC's school trip
A busload of NAEC students set off for
the nation’s capital on Tuesday, May 11 to learn about Canada’s
art and Canada’s Cold War experience. The Grade 9 art class, the
Grade 8 class, and the School to Community class attended the trip
with their teachers.
The first stop for the students was the
National Gallery of Canada, where they learned about Canadian
artists. The Grade 8 class focused on Contemporary Canadian art. The
Grade 9 art class concentrated on Canadian artists from the first
settlers up until WWII. Students made sketches of some of the works
in the gallery. The School to Community class toured the Canadian
Collection and the Aboriginal section.
After an enjoyable couple of hours, the
students boarded their bus and headed off to the Diefenbunker,
Canada’s Cold War Museum. A guide led the students on an
hour-and-a-half journey through the Deifenbunker, far below the
ground. They saw the living, recreation, and working conditions of
the bunker inhabitants. The Diefenbunker was designed to house the
government in the event of a nuclear attack by the USSR on the United
States.
School trips are a fun way for students
to learn more about the world. Two more trips are planned in May and
June, one to the Science Museum and Museum of Nature in Ottawa, and
another to the Cataraqui Conservation Authority in Kingston.
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