The AccessArt Village and How a Small Idea can be Big

This AccessArt workshop was led by Sheila Ceccarelli for year nine students at Frances Bardsley Academy in Romford, where the The AccessArt Village was displayed in the school’s adjacent Brentwood Road Gallery, in January 2018.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery – working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy

Introducing the AccessArt Village

Sheila had a day in the gallery and the chance to meet, talk and work with the students.

She wanted to create a workshop experience which replicated, symbolically, the core messages transmitted by the AccessArt Village. Not only the, already poignant idea of ‘home,’ evoked by this stunning collection of sewn houses clustered together, but also the idea of creative individuals forming a whole community. Sheila also highlighted the physical journey that the Village had already made.

Paula Briggs had sent an idea ‘out there,’ after a donation of wool from Appletons Wool, that members of the AccessArt community, might want to create a ‘sewn drawing of their home’ with the donated wool. Sheila told students that this was the first lesson to be learnt from the AccessArt Village: that “every idea is important, and it is worth trusting in even the smallest idea, and allowing it time to grow.”

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery, Frances Bardsley School, Romford
The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery, Frances Bardsley School, Romford

The houses had been sewn by people, of all walks of life, and ages, in schools, hospitals, galleries and more, all over the country and beyond. They had then been parcelled up and sent to Paula’s house in Cambridgeshire where they had been collected by artist Andrea Butler, and painstakingly mounted, to create the installation sitting before the students in the gallery. By now, the AccessArt Village had travelled from Farfield Mill, in the rolling hills of Cumbria, to Mansfield Central Library, in the heart of the country, down to this sub-urban setting, east of London, in Brentwood Road Gallery, Frances Bardsley School, Romford.

Students considered how powerful it was that each one of these pieces had been created by an individual – in a creative moment, and all those many creative moments had been brought together, to create a whole piece of work.

This project is about individual creativity, being a part of a whole community, and the power of just one idea.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC


The Workshop

Working alone and lines unfolding

This workshop was for year nine Art students and was 45 minutes long.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

We had large sheets of A1 cartridge paper, sharpies, felt tip pens, and scissors.

Students enjoyed looking at the AccessArt Village in the gallery space and then were asked to find a space, a piece of paper and a few pens.

This section of the workshop was about taking in and absorbing the individual houses in the Village, contemplating the stitches made and travelled.  It was about working alone and the unfolding of private, individual, unexpected acts of creativity.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

Students were guided in their drawing and asked to make a line, any line, inspired by stitches and as though sewn through the paper. They were asked to imagine sewing and the rhythm of stitches to be reflected in the marks that they made; to make long, or short stitches with different ‘tensions’ and ‘thickness of thread,’ and to yield the marks easily across the paper. They were encouraged not to be self-conscious, to trust, to be imaginative in the marks that they made, and let the patterns on the paper unfold.

First lines

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
First lines were tentative and students had to take a leap of faith not to feel self-conscious and allow the lines to flow

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

Developing patterns

As the workshop progressed students became bolder and more confident in the marks they made and patterns started to emerge.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
Developing patterns and intuitive compositions from the lines

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

Cutting out just one shape

Students were then asked to look at their patterns and contemplate what they had created. They were given scissors and asked to cut out just one shape from their design.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
Students cut out one shape from their patterned lines

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

Working together and creating a group narrative

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
Students were invited to place their shapes in the centre of the room – they were encouraged to look at where other shapes were placed and respond

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
The finished composition

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC

 

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery - working with year nine students from Frances Bardsley Academy - SC


Thank you to Frances Bardsley Academy

Staff at Frances Bardsley Academy have been members of AccessArt for several years and have participated in many AccessArt projects, as well as used our resources, to support their already outstanding teaching of Art. Lisa Walker, curator of the gallery, picked up on the AccessArt Village Project, and ran several of her own Brilliant Makers sessions, for younger students at the school, to make a hand sewn ‘drawings’ of their home. AccessArt was delighted when Lisa nominated Brentwood Road Gallery as a venue to host the Village.

Many thanks to Lisa Walker for coordinating the AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery and to the students at Frances Bardsley’s Brilliant Makers Club for their contribution to the project.

Many thanks also to Jacinta Appleby – Head of Visual Art and ‘Lead practitioner for Creativity,’ at the Frances Bardsley Academy, for her role in facilitating the AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery.

And thank you to Brilliant Makers from Lisa’s lunchtime Art club in the gallery, for their contributions to the AccessArt Village.

Many thanks to all the students who participated in the workshop above and for sharing their processes with AccessArt.

The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery adjacent to the Frances Bardsley Academy - SC
The AccessArt Village at Brentwood Road Gallery adjacent to the Frances Bardsley Academy – January 2018

The AccessArt Village, including this workshop and the tour, has been coordinated and delivered by #TeamAccessArt on a voluntary basis with no core or revenue funding. 

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See how primary school pupils responded to the AccessArt Village in Mansfield Central Library

This was a very special day for Sheila Ceccarelli from AccessArt, as she got to meet and work with sixty, year five pupils from Berry Hill Primary School in Mansfield Central Library, with colleagues from Inspire Arts Service, who had previously facilitated the development of the AccessArt Village across Nottinghamshire.

Making an Ink and Wax Village with Pupils in Mansfield

This was a very special day for Sheila Ceccarelli from AccessArt, as she got to meet and work with sixty, year five pupils from Berry Hill Primary School in Mansfield Central Library, with colleagues from Inspire Arts Service, who had previously facilitated the development of the AccessArt Village across Nottinghamshire.


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At the beginning of the project it was important to take time getting used to each other, the learning space and the surrounding environment. Below is a list of considerations you may find helpful to use in your own learning spaces. Be aware of the daily sounds, smells and other textures of life in your learning space; a constant humming noise or flickering light may be stressful for a child with autism. Allow time for everyone to feel their way in the space; connections may be made through the use of different senses and body parts.

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To Conceal


During the six week project, the group explored different themes and actions, some of these were displayed through learning schemas. In week 2 we experimented with different ways to conceal ourselves and objects; schemas such as enveloping and enclosure were exhibited by the group.

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To Colour

Two of the sessions explored the theme of colour. The first was rather abstract, I asked questions such as; What does colour smell like? What does colour feel like?
For a child on the autistic spectrum, a question like this may be confusing, some autistic people think and understand literally. So instead of directing these questions at the children, I answered and speculated on them myself. These abstract questions became vehicles for the workshops documented below.

Two of the sessions explored the theme of colour. The first was rather abstract, I asked questions such as; What does colour smell like? What does colour feel like?
For a child on the autistic spectrum, a question like this may be confusing, some autistic people think and understand literally. So instead of directing these questions at the children, I answered and speculated on them myself. These abstract questions became vehicles for the workshops documented below.

To Construct


In my final post on the project, I want to reflect on the theme of To Construct… looking at the different ways we constructed during the project. Please remember this is a personal and artistic reflection, based on the ideas I presented and the (emotional and physical) reactions and responses of the children and their families, who inspired changes and the development of the project as we experienced it.

In my final post on the project, I want to reflect on the theme of To Construct… looking at the different ways we constructed during the project. Please remember this is a personal and artistic reflection, based on the ideas I presented and the (emotional and physical) reactions and responses of the children and their families, who inspired changes and the development of the project as we experienced it.


To Conceal….

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