Showing posts with label Artward Initiative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artward Initiative. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2020

New Program in Partnership With Carson Sheriff's Station Gang Diversion Team (GDT)


We have launched the new COVID-19 emergency program in the City of Carson with my long time  Love My Neighbor project collaborating partners from the nationally recognized Carson Sheriff Stations’ Gang Diversion Team (GDT). In these hard times the important work of GDT is more needed than ever. 

With our nonprofit Artward Initiative we provide the GDT with art supply kits and food relief packages. We secured amazing food donations, like absolutely awesome Sunrise Produce boxes, through our great collaboration with Food Cycle LA non profit. The Deputies deliver the food relief packages and art supply kits to the families of at risk children who are part of their program.

We ask children while staying safe at home to create art in support of their #neighbors at risk and in need.  The Deputies then collect the artworks and I pick them up. I include the kids artwork into graphics that are printed out and included into the next round of our food relief packages for the long underserved and difficult “Scottsdale” neighborhood of Carson.

There is a great need to find ways to engage children at risk in difficult communities. They are shot out by the pandemic from schools and from all after school activities.  The only thing left for them is the local gang influence from which the schools and afterschool park centered programs were built to protect them for the last twenty years. This is an unacceptable social cost of this emergency. 

 

Special heartfelt thank you to Deputy Noya for all his long service and dedication to GDT. It’s a great privilege and inspiration to have this remarkable partnership in serving the community at the time of unprecedented need.  

 

#lacounty #sheriff #lasd #losangeles #carson #deputy #crimeprevention #art #deputysheriff #community #losangeles #coronavirus #lovemyneighbor #artwardinitiative #alexeysteele 

#foodcyclela

#sunriseproduce

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Breaking Bread With Our Neighbors. Why We Do It.

Another week of quarantine and another week of food distribution in the long under-served difficult “Scottsdale” neighborhood of Carson. This place was hard hit even before COVID19, now for many residents below poverty line, elderly and ill it is even more so.  This is where the meaning of the “community” and “neighbors” comes into sharp focus.  
Within the first week of the emergency we lined up a great collaboration with FoodSycle LA which secured for us great donation sources and we started the distribution to the most vulnerable group of Scottsdale on the first weekend of the stay at home orders. 
We launched our emergency program on Saturday, March 22 ahead of most local governments who developed similar programs.  We are doing it ever since in the great collaboration with an amazing long time community activist, Chairwoman of Scottsdale Townhouses Association Board of Governors and Star Pro Security Company. On our food bags we put the uplifting art from local kids we generated through our program along with supportive messages.
Last week we collected and brought great nutritious food from Whole Foods and Sprouts, Sadie lovingly packed it and with Star Pro officers Jonathan and Adam we delivered 30 packages of  to fifteen families in need.  An 85 year old lady had fractured her leg and cannot even get out of house.  She had no food. Many lost what small odd jobs they had. Some are too frail to go to grocery stores.
There are places of need where we can all do something during the pandemic and especially once its over. We bring food and art. That’s why we do it.


 With Art We Persevere. 
By Loving Our Neighbor We Will Prevail!

Thursday, April 2, 2020

With Art - We Persevere!


We have launched a new program - Love My Neighbor 2 Prevail - which brings together the healing power of the community with the long proven power of art to communicate and inspire at the times of crises.

We are continuing our Love My Neighbor curriculum program through a new format with its central message and practice being directly applied to communities in need in midst of national emergency.  In essence, the crisis is emphasizing everything the Love My Neighbor message and project are all about.  

We are combining the food distribution with outreach through children's art generated from our program, sharing the images and support messages from the children to lift the spirits of our older neighbors who are lonely in the social isolation.
This program now is more essential than ever with kids out of school, out of all organized after school programs, sports and clubs.  This program not just provides some in home activity – it gives kids the sense of participation in something important, of social responsibility and community engagement while being safe at home.

We tell kids that even in home isolation we are still a community.  We ask them what image they think can lift the spirit of another person who is lonely, who is worried, who is in need of help.  We tell them that art has a great visual power that can affect other people; that at the time of crisis people need each other even more than ever; that through art they can communicate their feeling toward other people, their neighbors.



This is what we believe the true purpose of art is and at the time like this it is needed more than ever.

With Art - We Persevere!


Monday, March 30, 2020

In Isolation - We Are Still A Community!

Thanks to the donations from FoodCycle LA and Trader Joe’s we were able to rapidly bring much needed food to one of the most difficult and notorious neighborhoods of LA county, the “Scottsdale” neighborhood of Carson, the site of our Love My Neighbor public art project.

The food situation was difficult for older people and limited ability folks over there even before the crisis.  There is no food store in walking distance. Now we were able to fill the gap when needed most and quickly  bring much needed food for the quarantined elderly folks of this long underserved community.

We are bringing food in at night and community activists and security takes them to houses in the morning. We also bring children’s art generated from our program with support messages from kids to lift the spirits of our older neighbors. 

Even in home isolation we are still a community!  By loving our neighbor we will prevail!








Sunday, October 27, 2019

Love My Neighbor at the Taste of Soul 2019 with Bank of America


Our awesome Love My Neighbor Day “Scottsdale” art tent was front and center at the remarkable TasteOfSoul 2019 celebration this past Saturday thanks to my awesome partners from Bank of America Better Money Habits community volunteer team. 

The Taste of Soul Marching band parade passing by our Love My Neighbor booth

350000 people attend this annual iconic LA celebration.  


So many things were super special about it.  Bank of America team of volunteers worked their hearts out from 5am setting it up and all throughout the LA heatwave day assisting kids with my art program and giving their parents free financial advice (of course regardless of where they bank) just as they always do in our Carson based program.  It’s an amazing and real dedicated effort by a corporate player to truly make itself part of the community.  





 

It was amazing as always to see how kids respond to an idea of thinking about their special neighbor after learning the stories of my special neighbor that I love to portray.  



As an artist it is a special privilege to see how portraying diversity of my special Carson neighbors affects the viewers and participants of Love My Neighbor project.

 


 

 


 

 


Another amazing part was that the long marginalized and neglected epicly troubled “Scottsdale” neighborhood in Carson that was given up on so many times throughout its 5 decades of policy failure history was now representing The City of Carson right next to the booth of Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors at the event that carries particularly special meaning for “Scottsdale’s” long time African American residents. We did it all with art.  Art is power. 





It was also great to see my good friend  Carson Councilmemeber Jawane Hilton stopping by the booth.