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Friday, Oct. 29, 2004
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Art teachers Denise Marsh, of Arnall, Richard Hill, of East Coweta High, and Heather Corley, of Ruth Hill, met with Newnan Cargill General Manager Brad Down, right, at a recent reception honoring 20 Coweta County student artists whose artwork was chosen to hang in Cargill's office. Cargill donated their company's office decoration budget to the three school as a contribution. Photo/Special. School system shows off art at businessesBy JOHN THOMPSON
The Coweta County School System is making an artistic statement in a local business. ZaKerrious Bowles, who attends Ruth Hill Elementary School, painted a picture of the historic Coweta County courthouse that he donated to Cargill for display.He is one of 20 Coweta County elementary, middle and high school students whose artwork adorns the offices of the Coweta County industry. Cargill was so impressed by the rendering that it framed the artwork and donated $2,000 to the art programs at Ruth Hill Elementary, Arnall Middle and East Coweta High School. It is a better way to spend our companys budget for office art, says General Manager Brad Down, and it produces better, more meaningful art for us than anything we could buy in a store. Cargill plans to ask the schools for more artwork later this year, and will encourage other Coweta County businesses to do the same, for what Cargill now calls the Off the Wall art program. Down had the idea for "Off the Wall" when he worked with Cargill in Hazelton, Penn.When faced with how to spend an office art budget, he wondered if it wouldnt be more useful to partner with local school art programs, while at the same time obtaining original artwork on local subjects.He decided to try the same approach at the Newnan plant. What better way to put art on our walls than to tap into student talent right here in Coweta County? he said. Students in Richard Hills East Coweta High art class provided ten posters of local photography. The $1,000 donation the school received from Cargill is funding an exhibition of student work at the Carter Center Nov. 7. Thanks to Cargill, this event will create national exposure for these young artists from East Coweta, Newnan and Northgate High Schools, participants in the Georgia High photography program. They are the very same students whose photography posters are displayed at Cargill. Because of what Cargill is doing here, our students will have an experience they might not otherwise have, said Hill. Denise Marshs Arnall students received a $300 donation that funded additional art materials and equipment for students use. Students Tony Frost, Noah Fang and Adam Oothoudts paintings were displayed. Heather Corleys class at Ruth Hill received a $700 donation, doubling Corleys art materials budget for her students. Additionally, the gift helped fund a field trip this year. Students ZaKarrious Bowles, Wendell Arnold, Alberry Melson, Rashema Barnes, ODarius Pittman, Andrea Holloway and Mark East all contributed artwork. Cargill conducted the first Off the Wall program as a contest.They chose students from three schools and asked art teachers to participate. They asked that several students submit artwork of either a local Coweta County theme, or along the theme of feeding the world to fit Cargills mission. Plant employees then held a contest to choose which would be framed and displayed. Its something that every company can do and should, said Down. Everyone spends money on artwork for their office.Why not let schools benefit?Its something a big industry or a small business can do. Cherie Young, Owner of Angeles Gallery and Framing at Newnan Station, provided the matting and framing of the young artists work. A recent reception for the first Off the Wall artists, including students, teachers and parents, honored the students for their contributions.Many of the parents were as excited as the students.
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2004-Fayette Publishing, Inc.
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