Ngā mihi mahana ki a koutou
katoa
Last Saturday (11th May) was World Fair
Trade Day. People all around the world were taking part in activities and
celebrations to help raise awareness about Fair Trade.
For our 4th year
as a Fairtrade School we chose to help Trade Aid with their celebration in
their Merivale Shop.
Year 8 art students and the
Art extension worked to produce an exhibition of paintings entitled ’Cups of
Kindness’.
Amy year 8
We spent the day talking to
many people about Fairtrade and our work. We also handed out Cards we had made
and some delicious Fairtrade Food made by Papanui High School students. The
Brownies were particularly delicious.
..
Nellie year 8 and ex Heaton Student Gabby …..
We had a huge number of
compliments about the art work and many
offers to buy our paintings!.....
It was a very special day and
we learnt that, however young you are, you can inspire people to make a change
and that campaigning can be great fun.
A highlight of the day was
our Chorale singing some beautiful African songs. Many thanks to Mrs Tokona for organizing
this.
The paintings will be on
exhibition in Trade Aid Merivale until Tuesday 21st May.
We hope that our work will
inspire you to make a change too.
Nellie Dodds and Jenny Choi
Kākano Mano Leaders for Mahi
Toi/Visual Art
4 years of Fair Trade Art by our students
As we are about to celebrate our 4th Fairtrade Fortnight as a Fairtrade School I have put together some memories of our exhibitions. Special acknowledgement to
Gareth Davies-Jones music 'Greed for Gain'. I came across this song when I used to volunteer with Traidcraft, the UK Christian Fair Trade Company and Charity. Check out his web site for other music. Gareth was delighted that we were using his music at school.
Visual art – Mahi Toi
‘A cup of kindness’
Exhibition opening on World Fair Trade Day
Saturday 11th May at Trade Aid , Papanui Road, Merivale, Christchurch
Join in a day of fun activities and chocolate tasting as we celebrate with Trade Aid.
10am-4pm
Exhibition opening on World Fair Trade Day
Saturday 11th May at Trade Aid , Papanui Road, Merivale, Christchurch
Join in a day of fun activities and chocolate tasting as we celebrate with Trade Aid.
10am-4pm
The current year 8s have been investigating Fairtrade,
the development of paint and Monochromatic painting.
Paint is made from pigment and dyes that are either
animal, vegetable or mineral in origin. For example, Tyrian purple used by the
Romans came from a small sea snail, the Indigo plant produces a wonderful blue
and different earths provide and array of beautiful browns. Depending on the
rarity, or difficulty preparing various pigments, some colours are more
valuable than others. In older paintings usually it is only the important
people who have clothes of purple, red or blue.
To turn pigment into paint there needs to be a
binder, a glue, that holds the particles together. In egg tempera the binder is
egg, in oil painting it is oil, in water-colour it is Gum Arabic and in acrylic
paint it is PVA glue.
All the students first experimented with using
instant coffee as paint. The coffee has a natural stickiness and so holds
together well anyway. By adding a little PVA glue the coffee paint becomes
stronger. However, it also works well just mixed with water but the finished
painting does need protecting with a sealer.
We then looked at how oil paint might be made by grinding
pigment with oil in a pestle and mortar. Children about the same age as Heaton
students would have prepared paints for artists in Leonardo da Vinci’s day.
They would usually be boys apprenticed to the artist but occasionally were
girls if, for example, their father was an artist.
We made our own Fairtrade oil paint by grinding
Trade Aid Cocoa powder with a few drops of Trade Aid Olive Oil. The oil gave
the cocoa a much greater depth of colour than just mixing with water.
Because oil paint is quite a flexible paint it
allowed artists to paint on a flexible surface such as canvas. Previously
artists had painted on heavy panels of wood. Canvas was much lighter and so
paintings became more portable.
Students made their own canvases by stretching
coffee sacks on a board then priming with household paint. When these were dry
they either chose Coffee or Cocoa paint to produce a cup of Fairtrade Coffee or
Hot Chocolate. The Ethiopian Coffee sacks have a rougher texture compared to
the Brazilian sacks and this effects how the paint may be used.