Artists, Musicians, Wellness Providers Transform Petaluma for Third O+ Festival

The third O+ Festival of art, music and wellness, which takes place Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4-5 in Petaluma, Calif., features performances by Andrew Mizzy DuoKarlyn DestenoDirty Red Barn, Luke EricksonThe Incubators, Jinx Jones & the KingTonesLaughing GravyDean MartianMike Saliani Band, Saffell, Eric Schau, Vivian Sessoms, Eki Shola and Lisa Stano.

Murals will be painted Jonny Hirschmugl and Julia Rigby in American Alley.

Petaluma will be home to two temporary art installations: a construction of bottle cap art from Rachel Lynn Hernandez in American Alley and an interactive painting yurt by Nell Hernandez in between Weller and Copeland streets.

The Petaluma Art Center on Nov. 5 at 6:30 p.m. will be hosting “Letters From the Archives,” a literary show featuring fun and familiar stories from Petalumans past. Letters from the late 1800s and early 1900s have been provided by The Petaluma Historical Museum and performed by Petaluma Readers Theatre.

What makes O+ Festival unique? The artists, musicians and volunteers who donate their time and talent to the festival receive complimentary health and wellness care from art-loving volunteer providers (doctors, dentists, ophthalmologists, optometrists, specialists in obstetrics and gynecology, massage therapists, Reiki practitioners and more) in our pop-up clinic. We call this exchange “the art of medicine for the medicine of art.”

And O+ Festival is more than art-making and concerts. It also features a 50-mile bike ride on Saturday, Nov. 5 starting at Foundry Warf at 8 a.m. (followed by a BBQ provided by Sauced); a 3-mile walk that passes all the O+ event locations (beginning at 10 a.m. — starting and ending in Helen Putnam Plaza); self-defense classes, guided hand pan meditation and Bollywood dance classes at Z-Ultimate; and two outdoor circuit training classes (8 a.m. and 11 a.m.).

Make a donation, receive an all-access wristband. Your donation is now worth double as the Tides Foundation has offered to match dollar for dollar whatever you contribute! What’s it worth to YO+U? Get your  wristbands now!

Kingston Festival Director’s Top Picks for Oct. 7-9 O+ Festival

This year’s O+ Festival schedule is bigger and more diverse than ever. To help you plan your itinerary, we’ve asked members of the O+ Festival team for a list of their must dos. Up first: Aimee Gardner, festival director of O+ Festival Kingston.

I am someone who likes art, theater, music, and technology. I know less about wellness but every year I like to try something new at O+. Here are some ideas for what I would do and see, but I probably won’t have time to, so I’ll have to live vicariously through you!
Friday Oct. 7
4pm Stop by the MO+THERSHIP to get your wristband and a t-shirt! Also pick up a sketchbook and pencil for later on
5pm Gather at the Kingston Library to be in the parade, or cheer everyone as it goes by from Keegan’s or Santa Fe! The parade will pass by all the new murals for this year
6pm Opening reception for Will Lytle at Keegan Ales and check out John Breiner’s mural
8pm SageArts at ARTBAR Gallery
8:45pm “The What Inside” funeral multimedia performance by Camilla Ha at Seven21 Media Center
10pm Goddess magic life drawing theater with Anna Laura Hafner at Broadway Arts
11pm PMS and the Mood Swings at the Anchor
Saturday Oct. 8
9am EXPO+ Check out the inside of an ambulance! Bring your stuffed animals to the Teddy Bear Clinic! They need TLC too.
10:30am Durational Installation with Rosekill Activators at Academy Green
12pm Linda Mary Montano Art/Life Counseling at Gargoyle’s
1:30pm CPR Training at the Kirkland. I have always wanted to get training in this, and now you can!
3:30pm Sucfesful Performance by Rosekill Activators on the trolley! Meet at MO+THERSHIP
5pm Errorarium at BSP Middle. This is an improvised analog signal processed live concert to entertain plants and flies!
6:30pm Universe Exploding Performance by Rosekill Activators at Frog Alley. This is a ruin. Fun!
7pm Terrestrail Absorption Performance by Rosekill Activators at Frog Alley
8pm Kaki King at BSP back room. A genre onto herself and multimedia projection on her guitar with The Neck is a Bridge to the Body.
9:30pm Sondre Lerche at the Old Dutch Church
11pm SALO+N at outdated
Sunday Oct. 9
10am Beyond Death Foraged Materials Workshop with Linda Weintraub at the Old Dutch Church basement
11:30am Check out Martina Nehrling‘s mural at Kovo
12pm Chains of Love at Academy Green
12:30pm Check out Lady Pink and Jess Chen’s murals at Express Latinos and ARTBAR Gallery
1:15pm SALO+N at ARTBAR Gallery for Jess Chen‘s poetry reading
2pm Temporary Tattoo with P Tenney at Peace Park
2:30pm Find an Empowering Clerk at MO+THERSHIP and get yourself a joy license!
3pm Check out Eugene Stetz‘s mural at People’s Place
4pm Visit the (P)Optimism Shoppe to learn more about INT-O Yellow and its relationship to our murals
5pm Poetry reading by T’ai Freedom Ford and reception at the Milne Fabrication Factory
7pm Tele Novella at BSP Front
8pm Wrap Party at BSP Front

La Catrina Cafe Hosts O+ Festival: Chicago Literary SalO+n, CO+llage Cafe, and SpO+ke (O+pen Mic)

We get it! It’s great to witness art and music by others, but what about a little creative YO+U time!? Fuel up at La Catrina Cafe with their “gunpowder green tea,” and spend your day taking the lead in creativity. O+ Wordsmith and O+ CreatO+r prizes will be awarded.

Literary SalO+n prompts

  1. Make an alphabetical list of things you want to see in your community (ex. “A”-Acceptance of  differences, “B”-Bikes everywhere, “C”-Chicharrones everywhere)
  2. Write a poem about art, music, wellness, and/or community.
  3. Write a first person account of one day in the life of an inanimate object in Chicago (ex: a painting, cake, keys).
  4. Freeze and Think: take in your surroundings. Finish each of the follow (1) I hear____________ , (2) I feel ____________ , (3) I see ____________ , (4) I smell ____________ , and (5) I taste ____________ . Feel free to elaborate at length.
  5. Grade yourself: Make your own report card describing imaginary subjects that you would get an “A” in. Come up with at least ten. Here are a few examples: 1. Being a frequent patron at La Catrina Cafe: A. 2. Supporting community gardens and farmer’s markets: A. 3. Thinking outside the box: A.

When you have finished writing, you have several options.

  1. Keep your writing, and read it out loud during SpO+ke (O+pen mic). SpO+ke invites writers to read, actors to perform, poets to share, any skill level of musicians to play, and anyone else to express themselves. This will take place at 5pm on Friday, July 8th; 3pm on Saturday, July 9th; and 5pm on Sunday, July 10th. All participants of SpO+ke are eligible to win an O+ Wordsmith Prize.
  2. Put your writing in the O+ Writing Box for a chance to win an O+ Wordsmith Prize. Please be sure to write your name and a way to contact you on your writing sheet. Once a winner for the O+ Wordsmith Prize has been selected, we can scan and email your written piece back to you (if you have provided your email address).
  3. Do whatever you like with your writing. Maybe you’ll be inspired to take it home and work on it more.

*You may participate in both SpO+ke (O+pen mic) and submit your writing to the O+ Writing Box.

CO+llage Cafe prompts

  1. Draw something with your eyes closed.
  2. Draw all the things you think are positive about you.
  3. Add a drawing to the community project O+ Festival: Chicago Exquisite Corpse poster. The first person will begin by drawing an image. Then that person will make a crease in the paper so that half the image is hidden under the paper and the other half is visible. The next person will draw an image that adds on to the visible half of the last image. This second person will also fold their drawing in half so that only half of it is showing. Get it?! Keep the pattern going. 

**If you would like to be considered for an O+ CreatO+r Prize, please submit your artwork to the O+ CreatO+r Box. Once a winner for the O+ CreatO+r Prize has been selected, we will bring all artwork back to La Catrina Cafe for a coordinated retrieval.

To learn more about La Catrina Cafe, click this link: https://www.facebook.com/lacatrinacafeon18/?fref=ts

***Sunday, July 10th from 10am-12:30pm, La Catrina Cafe will also having a youth painting class for kids. Laura Neira will lead this private event. See this link for more details: https://www.facebook.com/lacatrinacafeon18/photos/gm.1586126621685009/644697575682560/?type=3&theater

(In 2014, Alanna Okun wrote a pretty useful article on 21 clever writing prompts. We picked our favorite five and revised them a bit. The link to all 21 writing prompts can be found here: https://www.buzzfeed.com/alannaokun/21-clever-writing-prompts-that-will-unleash-your-students-cr?utm_term=.wmLlqp3O4#.ouMqz1ErG)

As part of GastrO+ (exposure and education on the art of choosing, cooking, and eating good food), O+ Festival: Chicago has teamed up with Pilsen Community Market. 

GastrO+ with Pilsen Community Market 

Craving fresh produce? Something gluten-free? Something baked? Aguas frescas? Pilsen Community Market has it all! Start your day off right this Sunday, July 10th buying your weekly groceries locally. Bring your friends, family, and bikes! The Pilsen Community Market is open from 8am-2pm and located approximately 200 feet west of S Halsted St. and W 18th St. You can find out more about the Pilsen Community Market here: https://www.facebook.com/pilsenmarket/?fref=ts

While the market is open July 10th, there will be a community coloring book mural activity, children’s games, and a musical petting zoo (this does not involve animals). A musical performance by Gideon Redic and Kerry Kavanaugh will take place at noon. After that duo inspires you to dance, Insanity Piyo and Turbokick Live will get you in shape from 1-2pm.

If you would like to join us for the O+ Adult Upcycling Bike Tour from 9am-11am, please pre-register using this link https://www.eventsprout.com/register/o_festival_chicago or at the O+ YO+UTH area from 8:30-9am on the southwest side of the Pilsen Community Market this Sunday, July 10th. Activities will continue at the market while the Adult Upcycling Bike Tour occurs. The Pilsen Community Market is our first featured community highlight of the Adult Upcycling Bike Tour. Our friends at Simone’s Bar will be providing bikers’ light food and victory refreshments at 11:30am. Then, we will return to the market so you can shop and enjoy the musical performance at noon. Use this link to find out more: https://opositivefestival.org/9123/o-festival-chicago-adult-upcycling-bike-tour/

On Saturday, July 9th, we will have the Family Bike Tour encompassing art, bike safety, education, and gardening. Use this link to find out more: https://opositivefestival.org/9128/o-festival-chicago-presents-a-family-bike-tour-encompassing-art-bike-safety-education-and-gardening/

O+ Festival: Chicago Adult Upcycling Bike Tour

O+ Festival: Chicago Adult Upcycling Bike Tour 

Sunday, July 10th 9:00 a.m. – 11:45 a.m.


O+ Festival: Chicago Adult Upcycling Bike Tour (approx. 6.25 miles) is collaborative event supported by Citlalin Gallery Theatre, Lagunitas Brewing Company Chicago, Pilsen Community Market, Simone’s Bar, and Working Bikes.

Adult Upcycling Bike Tour Registration (9:00 a.m. – 9:15 a.m.): Pilsen Community Market (W 18th St and S Halsted St, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Bike Safety and Registration

Checkpoint 1 (9:30 a.m. – 9:45 a.m.): Citlalin Gallery Theatre (2005 S Blue Island Ave, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Hydration Station 1

Checkpoint 2 (9:45 a.m.- 10:00 a.m.): Working Bikes (2434 S Western Ave, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Hydration Station 2

Checkpoint 3 (10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.): Lagunitas Brewing Company Chicago (1843 S Washtenaw Ave, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Upcycling Station

Finish-line (11:30 a.m. – 11:45 a.m.): Simone’s Bar (960 W 18th, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Biker’s Light Food and Victory Refreshments (exclusively for O+ Festival: Chicago Adult Upcycling Bike Tour participants)


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For a map of the O+ Festival: Chicago Adult Upcycling Bike Tour, please use the following link: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1aSHh_98k5d0xYpr2qumPWiBDWAE&usp=sharing 

The schedule above is for people to know where we will be incase they arrive late to the bike tour. However, anyone may continue to join us at any point. The main goals of this adult upcycling bike tour are to (1) build confidence biking in an urban landscape, (2) educate community members on bike safety, (3) engage community members in an upcycling project they can take home, and (4) promote holistic living.

If you would like to join us as a biker, please use the following link to register ahead of time: https://www.eventsprout.com/register/o_festival_chicago. Anyone and everyone is welcome to join us. If you do not have a bike, consider renting a Divvy Bike. Be aware that Divvy Bikes have a thirty-minute limit. You will need to check-in your Divvy Bike every 30 minutes. In light of this, we made sure to make the checkpoints within thirty-minute time frames. While at Lagunitas Brewing Company, you can leave your Divvy Bike checked in a Divvy Station.

*This event has a capacity, please register early to secure a spot.


Check out more of the amazing work our bike tour partners are up to: 

Citlalin Gallery Theatre https://www.facebook.com/pages/Citlalin-Gallery/734733713272944

Lagunitas Brewing Company Chicago https://lagunitas.com/taprooms/chicago

Pilsen Community Market https://www.facebook.com/pilsenmarket/

Simone’s Bar http://simonesbar.com/

Working Bikes http://www.workingbikes.org/

O+ Festival: Chicago Presents a Family Bike Tour encompassing Art, Bike Safety, Education, and Gardening

O+ Festival: Chicago Family Bike Tour 

Saturday, July 9th 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.


O+ Festival: Chicago Family Bike Tour (approx. 2.25 miles) led by Working Bikes representatives and Checkpoint Garden Service Projects led by Neighborspace and Openlands representatives with O+ Festival: Chicago’s Eco-Team.

Family Bike Tour Registration (9:30 a.m. – 9:55 a.m.): La Catrina Cafe (1011 W 18th St, Chicago, IL 60608)
-Bike Safety and Registration

Checkpoint 1 (10:00 a.m. -10:45 a.m.): The Butterfly Garden /El Jardin de las Mariposas (S. Carpenter Street & W. 18th Place, Chicago, IL)
-Garden care lesson and eco-service project

Checkpoint 2 (10:45 a.m. -11:15 a.m.): Xochiquetzal Peace Garden/Jardín de la Paz Xochiquetzal (1903 W. 23rd Street, Chicago, IL)
-Art and eco-service project

Checkpoint 3 (11:15 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.): Orozco School Garden (1940 W. 18th St., Chicago, IL)
-Garden history and eco-service project

Finish-line (12:00 p.m.): The Resurrection Project’s Zocalo courtyard (1818 S Paulina St, Chicago, IL 60608)
The Wellness Expo+

*We encourage family bike tour participants to take advantage of the free supports at the Wellness Expo+ (Noon to 2 p.m.)


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For a map of the O+ Festival: Chicago Family Bike Tour, please use the following link: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1aSHh_98k5d0xYpr2qumPWiBDWAE&usp=sharing 

The schedule above is for people to know where we will be incase they arrive late to the bike tour. However, anyone may continue to join us at any checkpoint beyond the proposed time frame. The main goals of this family bike tour are to (1) familiarize the community with each garden, (2) show community members how to care for each garden properly, (3) make gardening, art, education, and biking a fun, family-friendly experience, and (4) promote holistic living.

Anyone and everyone is welcome to join us, with or without a bike. If you would like to join us as a biker, please use the following link to register ahead of time: https://www.eventsprout.com/register/o_festival_chicago


Check out more of the amazing work our bike tour partners are up to: 

La Catrina https://www.facebook.com/lacatrinacafeon18/

NeighborSpace http://neighbor-space.org/

Openlands http://www.openlands.org/building-school-gardens

Working Bikes http://www.workingbikes.org/

The Resurrection Project http://resurrectionproject.org/

NO+ POSITIVE: A Panel on the Empowerment of No

ScO+pe – Perspectives: NO+ POSITIVE

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Panel at Citlalin Gallery Theatre: Saturday, July 9th 4:30-5:30 p.m.


As part of ScO+pe (cinema, live performances, and perspectives about art and wellness), ScO+pe – Perspectives will feature a NO+ POSITIVE panel with the following focus: 

No! Nope. Nah. Uh-uh. Not into it. No way. Back the f*&! up. Step the f*&! off. No, thank you 🙂 

From microaggressions to sexual assault; from establishing personal space to defending safe spaces; from being defined to defining ourselves; we’re going to dig in to how, when, and why “No” is powerful, positive, and affirming

  • No?“: When has your “no” not been heard and why? When have you refused to hear “no” and why.
  • No, I changed my mind“: How to assert “no” after you’ve said “yes.”
  • Not again“: How we internalize and respond to traumas and injustices on-line and in real life.
  • Nah, I’mma be me“: Building and maintaining confidence when feeling alienated within your own family and community.
  • Nope, I’m staying in tonight“: Finding ways to maintain personal time and space to nurture mind, body, and spirit.

A bit about the panelists…

nopos

Panelists (left to right): Diana Azaryan, Megan Blomquist, Dr. Obari Cartman, Alexandra Lively, Diana Rose Harper.

Diana Azaryan – Azaryan received a degree in International Studies with a concentration in Diplomacy, Security, and Peace. She is a client success manager at Infor and a volunteer medical advocate at Rape Victim Advocates. She has previously interned and volunteered at International Rescue Committee, where she mentored two refugee families. She proudly identifies as an intersectional feminist.

Megan Blomquist – Blomquist, Director of Education and Training, began working at Rape Victim Advocates in August 2009.  Megan graduated from University of Illinois-Chicago with a degree in Applied Psychology, focusing in Gender & Women’s Studies. She is 40-hour certified in both Sexual Assault Crisis Intervention (2009) and Domestic Violence work (2011) in the state of Illinois. Through the Illinois Attorney General’s Office Megan has also completed the 40-hour Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner training (2012). She is an active rape crisis counselor and community educator. Megan is also a leader in the Illinois Imagines project, a statewide collaborative which strives to improve the systemic response to people with disabilities who have experienced sexual assault. Megan is passionate about the pro-consent movement, and working within communities to end sexual and gender-based violence.

Dr. Obari Cartman – Dr. Cartman is a father, son, brother, uncle, thinker, writer, therapist, photographer, and drummer. He is a Chicago native, where his cultural and educational foundations were firmly planted by several African-centered institutions and communities. He received his undergraduate degree from Hampton University and a Ph.D in clinical & community psychology from Georgia State University. He has worked as a therapist is a variety of settings ranging from a family center to a women’s prison. He has worked as a professor of psychology at Georgia State University and the Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies at Northeastern University.  Currently Dr. Cartman works as a restorative justice coach with H.E.LP., LLC (Healing Empowering and Learning Professions) in Chicago Public Schools. He also conducts trainings for adults and workshops with youth about maintaining good mental health, critical analysis of hip-hop and media, racial and cultural identity, developing authentic manhood, and healthy relationships. Dr.Cartman’s new book is called “Lady’s Man: Conversations for Young Black Men about Relationships and Manhood. It is a critical thinking guide that addresses historical trauma, hip hop, emotional intelligence, intimacy, communication, power, purpose and a variety of other topics. The book is a tool for families, teachers, mentors, and coaches to help young men think critically, and build character, discover their purpose, love themselves and each other, communicate with clarity and intention, understand the need for proper education, relate to women with integrity, express their emotions, understand their place in history, develop healthy coping strategies, and learn how to build a world where all people are truly free. To learn more please visit: www.DrObariCartman.com.

Alexandra Lively – Lively serves as an OSMTH United Nations Delegate, Board Member of the International STEM Society for Human Rights, the Leadership Council of the Explorer Program and as an Advisory Board Member at DePaul University. Working with the United Nations, she helps their mission facilitating conflict-prevention & resolution for disaster relief, domestic charity & international humanitarian aid, human trafficking, peace building and sustainable development. Alexandra was previously the Chicago News Bureau Chief reporting from the trading floor of the CME Group covering global financial markets. Lively is an advocate for Disabled American Veteran’s, Feeding America, the Alzheimer’s Association, PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center, among other charities. She holds her Bachelors & Masters from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, completed her Masters in 1 year, graduated with institutional high honors, and speaks German & Brazilian Portuguese. Some of her studies included: improving peacekeeping operations, enhancing perceptions of multilateral organizations, international agricultural policy, news media framing, and the EU sovereign debt crisis.

Diana Rose Harper – Diana Rose Harper is a writer, reader, and healer-in-training currently living in Chicago, IL. Her ideas on wholeness and integration have been influenced by ecology, feminism, transpersonal psychology, bodywork, mythology, and a broad range of spiritual traditions. As a descendant of African slaves, Roma wanderers, and German immigrant farmers, she considers the reconciliation of conceptual divisions to be an especially fertile area for self-knowledge, community building, and healing.

“A New Color” Highlights the Activism of Artist and Educator Edythe Boone

ScO+pe – Cinema: A NEW COLOR (The Art of Being Edythe Boone)

Screening at Citlalin Gallery Theatre: Saturday, July 9th 2:00-3:00 p.m.

Presented by Peace on Earth Film Festival and O+ Festival Chicago


Painting walls to build bridges toward unity.

Long before Black Lives Matter became a rallying cry, Edythe Boone embodied that truth as an artist, an educator, and a great-grandmother. When a deeply personal tragedy ignites a national outcry, everything that Edy has worked for so tirelessly comes into question.

From humble Harlem beginnings herself, the indefatigable “Edy” has for decades introduced underserved youth and seniors to the transformative power of art. Having helped her students use mural making to grapple with the disproportional shootings of young black men, the issue hits home when her nephew Eric Garner dies in police custody, his last words: “I Can’t Breathe.” The tragedy evokes the powerful and deep questions that many artists and activists face: has her nearly eight decades of social justice work meant something? Has it been worth the sacrifice? Can building multicultural bridges through art bring about positive change?

Edy’s reaction shows the depth of her clear-eyed, compassionate commitment to building a just and peaceful community. A New Color illuminates the social issues of our time and shows how the work of one woman reverberates throughout a community.

Winner of the Audience Favorite Special Mention for Documentary at Mill Valley Film Festival and the Best Documentary Short at the Chicago Peace on Earth Film Festival, A New Color has been the official selection at several other film festivals across the United States, including: Pan African Film Festival, Sebastopol Documentary Film Festival, Independent Film Festival Boston, Sarasota Film Festival, San Diego Black Film Festival.

(Description courtesy of director Mo Morris)

Length:  57 min.

http://anewcolordocumentary.com/

https://www.facebook.com/anewcolorfilm/?fref=nf

http://anewcolordocumentary.com/support/donate/

 

“Unafraid” Shares a Cinematic Discourse on Sexual Assault and Activism

ScO+pe – Cinema: UNAFRAID (Voices from the Crime Victims Treatment Center)

Screening at Citlalin Gallery Theatre: Saturday, July 9th 3:00-4:00 p.m.

Presented by Peace on Earth Film Festival and O+ Festival Chicago


Four rape survivors and two pioneering feminists share their stories of trauma, resilience, and activism.

A deeply personal documentary, UNAFRAID gives voice to four, diverse rape survivors and takes a historic look back at the pioneering treatment center where they now receive counseling.

In her directorial debut, Karin Venegas highlights the work of two unsung heroes in the movement for victims’ rights at the height of 1970s feminism. From empowering survivors’ voices to the revolutionary invention of the rape kit, the film intimately explores the impact of sexual assault and the capacity of ordinary individuals to effect change.

(Description courtesy of director Karin Venegas)

Length: 44 min.

http://www.unafraidfilm.com/

https://www.facebook.com/UnafraidDocumentary/?pnref=lhc

“Sketch” Explores the Expressions of Art with an Autistic Brooklyn Youth

ScO+pe – Cinema: SKETCH

Screening at Citlalin Gallery Theatre: Saturday, July 9th 1:30-2:00 p.m.

Presented by Peace on Earth Film Festival and O+ Festival Chicago


 SKETCH (played by Kwesi Boakye) is an autistic twelve year-old boy who lives in Brooklyn. His autism isolates him from other children and he gets no help or support from his mother, an alcoholic, or his father who was killed by gang violence several years earlier. By many standards he has a difficult and painful life; but he is resourceful… and a great artist.

Sketch perceives his world in incredibly rich and detailed snapshots. Like a camera storing photos in its digital memory, he stores images in his mind then renders them later with pencil and paper, drawing perfect copies from the abundance of data he is able to retrieve from his memory.

Because he is so different and misunderstood Sketch endures ridicule and rejection from kids in school and people in his neighborhood. The pain and shame he feels causes him to hide. He keeps his thoughts and ideas to himself and doesn’t share them with anyone. He learns to hide so deeply that he even refuses to speak. He channels all his expression into his sketches.

All these forces that are at work in his young life drive him to create a goal, a solution that will give him relief from his impossible predicament: Independence. Sketch goes about achieving that goal in very unique and interesting ways that you will discover when you see the movie.

(Description courtesy of director Stephen T. Barton)

Length: 22min.

https://www.facebook.com/sketchthefilm