ORRHS Art Students Participate In Memory Project

Superintendent Michael S. Nelson and Director of Guidance Lauren Millette are pleased to share that Old Rochester Regional High School students recently participated in the Memory Project.

            The Memory Project is a youth arts organization that uses art created by children and for children to promote kindness and intercultural understanding around the world. Since 2004, the Memory Project has engaged 300,000 youth in 55 countries through school-based programs.

            In the fall of 2022, ORRHS students received portrait photographs of Syrian school children aged 5-12. Using the photographs as reference, students worked diligently — under the leadership of art faculty members Joanne Mogilnicki and Kate Butler — to create portrait paintings and drawings of the Syrian children.

            Upon their completion, all the portrait art works were sent back to Syria to be presented to the children. Each finished portrait had a picture of the ORRHS student who created it glued to the back, along with a tracing of their hand. Within that traced outline, the ORRHS student included a handwritten message for the Syrian child. The tracing of the hand that made the portrait is meant to serve as a symbol of how art connects people and can be used as a vehicle of kindness, one portrait at a time.

            A common sentiment among the ORRHS students was that being a part of the Memory Project was one of the most fulfilling and meaningful art projects they have ever experienced.

            “Art is an excellent way for our students to express themselves and use their skills to create something that creates a meaningful connection with others,” Director Millette said. “It was wonderful to see how much they enjoyed this project.”

            Added Superintendent Nelson, “The Memory Project is a great organization that inspires students to see the positive impact their creations can have. We are pleased to recognize the students for their hard work, and I would like to thank Joanne Mogilnicki and Kate Butler for working with our students on this project.”

            In an online message about the Memory Project, founder Ben Schumaker notes: “The Memory Project gets its name from its first intention, which was to provide handmade, heartfelt portraits as special memories to children in orphanages. Now our intention has expanded to touching the lives of youth around the world facing many types of challenges, while opening our hearts and minds so they can touch ours in return. Together we are using art to reach a distant destination: a kinder world in which all youth see themselves in one another regardless of differences in their appearance, culture, religion, or circumstances.”

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