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A dream come true - Teacher applies
for, receives grant – September 15, 2005
By Elizabeth Sembower/Staff
writer/Lexington Minuteman
Printmaking 2005 is up and running at Lexington’s Bridge
Elementary School – thanks to the ageless appeal of an
ancient art form, the forward-looking generosity of an
educations foundation, and the vision and hard work of one
very determined teacher.
“It was one of those grant proposals that just stood out,”
said Anna Afeyan, Vice-President of Programs at the
Lexington Education Foundation, which in the 2004-2005
school year awarded Lynne Murray, art teacher at Bridge, a
nearly $4,000 grant to pursue a dream. “This teacher has
such enthusiasm and put in so much extra time and work. It
made me wish I had had such an opportunity as a student.”
Murray’s mission in simple and yet compelling – to “enrich
the art experience of her students” through introducing them
to a process she loves. “Printmaking can bring wonder at all
ages and levels,” she said. “Its rewards are immediate and
satisfying.”
A table in the art room at Bridge holds the myriad examples
of this – brightly colored designs as diverse in subject and
color as every child’s’ imagination. And on a side shelf
stands the shiny object that has helped make it possible, a
brand new Ettan Printing Press.
The dream has been awhile in the making. Murray first
applied for the grant, which includes purchase of the press,
a star wheel, and accompanying materials, when she started
in the Lexington School System in 2001 as an art teacher at
Estabrook Elementary.
The proposed “high quality” program, built on a curriculum
she had started in her first year at Estabrook, would
include involvement of all students in grades 1-5 as well as
staff development. “Having a printing press that students
could use independently and safely to make large-scale work
would move this fledgling program forward and allow students
to embrace an art form that is tactile, expressive and
exciting,” Murray wrote.
This art form has been her passion since she attended
MassArt and graduated from their preeminent Printmaking
Program in the 1990s. Today she is actively involved in
printmaking, showing her work throughout the area, and
spending time in a community of fellow artists at the Mixit
Print Studio in Somerville. But art has not always been her
main pursuit.
“I sometimes ask my students what they think I wanted to be
as a child,” said Murray, “they usually say ‘an artist,’ and
I surprise them.” Admitting to always appreciating art and
possessing what she considers the sign of an artist, “paying
attention to how things look,” Murray also excelled in
science and math.
A native of Pennsylvania, Murray moved to New England 25
years ago to study at the University of Vermont and Wheelock
to pursue yet another passion. “I love being a teacher,” she
said. “It is central to my life.” After teaching for a few
years, she was lured to the MassArt program and one day, her
husband asked her, “Why don’t you become an art teacher?”
Moving to Lexington, Murray began her new career, set about
planning a curriculum, and applied for the grant. And then
the bottom fell out. An override was turned down, budgets
were cut, and she found herself temporarily out of a job.
But she never lost hope or her dream, and neither did the
Lexington Education Foundation. When she became the art
teacher at Bridge, Printmaking Studio 2005 got the go-ahead.
LEF, “an independent charitable organization founded to
enhance educational excellence for the children of
Lexington,” seeks to encourage teachers engaged in
enthusiastic and innovative endeavors, and each year awards
a number of grants and fellowships funded by contributions
from corporations and mainly from concerned community
members. Murray’s grant was one of 23 in out in 2004-2205,
from a field of almost twice that many proposals. “I cannot
say enough about their generosity,” said Murray.
The beneficiaries are clearly her students, and last year, a
special exhibit of their works proved this. This year, a
concerted program for fifth-graders will allow students to
experience first-hand the real print making process that
Murray praises for its incorporation of “both the technical
and the artistic.” Along with this is the possibility of
shared curriculum with other programs throughout the school,
including a concentration on Chinese and Japanese cultures,
the wellspring of the art of printmaking. This
interdisciplinary approach did not go unnoticed by the LEF.
“The fact that she had taken time to consider other
curriculum greatly impressed us,” said Afeyan.
One hour a week, students will create monographs, cutting
out designs of their choice – fanciful animals, abstract
shapes, sports action figures, imaginative lettering –
rolling inks of rich hues of blue, magenta, and yellow on
Plexiglas plates, securing these and paper among felt
blankets, pulling on the firm lever, and turning over a
creation.
“At that moment, all students can feel they are artistic,
said Murray with satisfaction.
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