 |
| Wainwright: zoologist,
sculptor,
entrepreneur for young artistsPhoto:Chris Hildreth |
After-school Art For Sale
From 1991 to 1997, Stephen Wainwright '53,
James B. Duke Professor emeritus of zoology and adjunct professor
emeritus in the College of Design at North Carolina State University,
headed, among other things, the Bio-Design Studio in the zoology
department at Duke. It was, to his knowledge, the only art studio
in a scientific research laboratory, anywhere. It even employed
a full-time sculptor. And its mission--"to use methods of
art and design to create three-dimensional working models of biological
systems for research"--was essentially a melding of the two.
Wainwright, like his studio, is difficult to categorize: a discipline
straddler, an innovator, a maker of curious matches. To call him
a professor of zoology is to neglect the artist in him (he sculpts).
And yet, to call him an artist is to ignore the fact that, in recent
years, Wainwright has once again transitioned. He is now an entrepreneur,
too.
SeeSaw Studio, the latest of his novel creations, is a nonprofit,
after-school design- and-business program for youths, located at
Five Points, a major intersection in downtown Durham. Where three
streams of traffic converge, so too does creativity, enterprising
spirit, and an imaginative, ambitious effort to provide opportunities
to an economically disadvantaged, though talented, group of people.
Twice a week, forty-five students meet to design and make crafts--jewelry,
hats, chairs, pillowcases, and banners--that they later sell in
the studio's storefront. "Empowering kids is the basic issue,
the major passion," Wainwright says.
He got the idea after a visit to Kenya in 1988 and an encounter
with the Kazuri Bead Company, a group of poor village women on
the outskirts of Nairobi who had come together to share resources
and make clay beads. The income they made from selling the beads
to tourists not only helped them put food on the table, but also
raised their self-esteem. "They just glowed with confidence," he
recalls. Wainwright sought to replicate the model in Durham. Ten
years later, with the help of local artists, SeeSaw Studio was
born.
"We're trying to show the kids that their creativity can have
commercial value," says Amy Milne, the studio's executive
director and a graduate of State's College of Design. With responsibilities
ranging from managing their materials to keeping track of their
production time and costs, students at SeeSaw become more than
students. They're aspiring professionals; they have titles ("youth
designer"); and they make money.
"They're our colleagues," says Wainwright, and, as such,
they're entitled to half of the proceeds on a sale. "A lot
of these kids, they might be interested in art, but they've rarely
if ever had any reinforcement, any encouragement. So when they
create something in here and somebody comes along and offers them
cash for it--that's reinforcement."
Through their experience at SeeSaw, nearly 85 percent of the youth
designers have gone on to pursue degrees in the field. "To
get into a university program, you need to put together a portfolio," says
Milne, and SeeSaw helps them do it. But she says there's more to
preparing students for the next step than building a portfolio. "In
design school, you have to be able to talk about the creative process,
what you went through. It's about more than having talent. It's
'Can you push your vision through? Can you market it effectively?'
And that's another thing kids learn here--that as artists they
have to fight for their place in this economy. Saying 'I am an
artist,' is a really bold and bodacious thing to say."
"I've only just begun to admit it myself," says Wainwright. "Since
I retired, I've become a sculptor. I don't tell anybody I'm an
artist. But I am. We all are, here."
www.seesawstudio.org
--Patrick Adams
|