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Personal touch

The Huntington Beach Art Center doesn’t just show people art: It encourages them to make it themselves.

October 18, 2007|By Josh Aden

The art world is a constantly evolving entity where names and styles are changing perpetually. Roiled in artistic innovation, the latest generations of work can be missed by the undiscerning eye. But the folks at the Huntington Beach Art Center, one of the largest contemporary art venues in Orange County, are committed to promoting what’s fresh.

The center curates new shows and offers fine arts workshops — all part of their program aimed at cultivating a community educated in art. In other words, the center doesn’t just show people art, they encourage them to make it themselves.

It’s with that informative spirit that the Huntington Beach Arts Center hosts its annual Family Arts Day Sunday, where children and their parents have the opportunity to create their own personal works of art.

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“The kids are away from the computers and the TV and the parents are actually spending time with their children,” says Lindsey Cornell, the center’s arts education coordinator.

The event, sponsored by Target and Jack’s Surf Shop, hosts a number of professional artists. They each set up a booth and guide visitors through creating art projects in various mediums.

Families will be able to join drama students to make puppets and put on a puppet show, or they can take a turn at shaping a ceramic pot. From painting to dance, the free event lets kids and adults alike try out multiple artistic interests.

The pint-sized Picassos will also get exposure to exciting new contemporary art. The center will open it’s new gallery show — a survey of Los Angeles artist Mark Dutcher’s work called “Shelf Life,” Friday.

Apparently people love their chance to be an artist as much as the center’s staff loves providing the opportunity. “The program is a hit,” says center Director, Kate Hoffman. About 500 people are expected to pack the venue’s parking lot Sunday. Each of them will leave with their own creation.

Families benefit from working on art projects together because it brings them closer and lets children cultivate their creativity, Hoffman says. “The family is better suited to recognize that budding artist.” The children — themselves much like blank canvases — have the potential to develop as part of a new generation of artists.

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