Arts in Detention



It’s a drizzily April night for Art Walk, but I’m out for just one stop: Buckham Gallery and the opening of the annual “Arts in Detention: GVRC Share Art Exhibit.”  

“Arts in Detention” presents the work of kids ages 10 to 17 living in the Genesee Valley Regional Detention Center (GRVC), on Pasadena Avenue in Flint.  A short-term residential facility (capacity 60), GVRC currently houses 45 to 50 young people; their charges range from truancy to murder. Three nights a week girls and boys participate in writing and spoken word, visual arts, theatre and dance workshops. The GVRC Share Art program partners with Buckham Gallery to bring art to youth in detention and then share their work with the public in this annual spring exhibit.

Artwork as large as a mural or an automobile hood, and as small as a standard sheet of paper for a T-shirt logo, hangs on the gallery walls.  Video screens show kids involved in movement, dance, and dramatic arts exercises. The young artists are unnamed, but for each group of art pieces instructors and assistants have provided statements about the process and goals of the work. “It’s more about the process than the products,” says Shelley Spivack, Flint attorney, juvenile court referee, and co-founder of “Arts in Detention.”  

The Genesee Valley Regional Center Share Art program began in the fall of 2011 as a pilot project.   Spivack, who also teaches a Juvenile Justice and Law class at UM-Flint, responded to the Ruth Mott Foundation’s “Share Art” call for project ideas. Awarded a mini grant to re-establish an art workshop at GRVC (a previous one had lapsed), Shelley and Steven Hull (a Mott Community College art graduate studying Criminal Justice at UM-Flint), co-founded “Arts in Detention.”  

Instructors in the Share Art program are either members of Buckham Gallery or other creative groups in Flint or teach at one of the colleges.  UM-Flint lecturer Tracy Currie (in spoken word), and Todd Onweller, Steven Hull, and J.T. Thigpen (all artists) formed the initial core of instructors. Currently seven artists, one student assistant, and two interns teach in the arts workshops. 

Boys and girls live in separate wings at GVRC, but according to Shelley and Steve, the workshops only became gender geared as it emerged that girls had unmet needs and felt more at home in spoken word, while boys tended toward the visual arts.  Shelley emphasizes that during sessions there is no talk about charges or cases; instructors strive for an atmosphere of freedom to work in the arts.  “In seven years,” Steve says, “only one student was removed from class and that was for mental health issues.”  Overall, the workshops relax the kids and they look forward to them. The instructors have developed a relationship with staff and now work unguided in the facility.   

As I walk the gallery, a stack of books grabs my eye with its day-glo lime cover (artwork by Grand Blanc artist Julie Abbott) of four girls stretching their arms upward to the book title: “HerStory: Unlocked.” The books are the 2016/2017 collection of girls’ poetry and short prose interspersed with photos of the actual products in the workshops led by Traci Currie, Emma Davis, and assistant Jia Ireland.  A grant from Michigan Humanities Council helped make the volume possible.  

Another eye-catcher is a display of sculpted commedia dell’arte theatre masks done jointly by workshops in Boys Theatre and Visual Arts.  Titled “Shakesmedia,” the project involved study of stock character types and creating a visual image of characters.  A video shows the boys acting in guided improv scenes. 

Reflecting on her experience with “Arts in Detention,” Shelley says, “It’s done as much for us as it has for the kids; we see ourselves and our own place in the world differently.”  Asked how he feels about the GVRC Share Art program, Steve says, “It’s making a mark.” Then Steve glances down at his phone; he works for state Child Protective Services and both he and Shelley are “on call” tonight. The needs of the kids are never far away.  Shelley comments that of those currently in short term detention, 16 are facing adult sentences; juvenile crime is declining, but sentencing as adults is rising.
 
Tonight, however, sharing the kids’ art at the annual exhibit is always fun.  Besides the Art Walk public, court officials, probation officers, and judges often show up. Surprisingly, Shelley adds with a laugh, “In all our years with this community exhibit, no one has done a story done about [the show].”
I chat with Corinne Nuzum and Casey Hamann, former volunteers and now interns in visual arts with girls at GVRC.  They would like to develop a program specifically for interns.  They want to get a grant that help interns with supplies---participants in their art group fluctuate from 9 to 12 and they never have enough materials.  “We need continuing education too, training to develop our teaching skills in all media,” says Corinne.  Casey’s dream is to develop a cooking program.  She has worked at Crust in Fenton and cooking skills are practical for both boys and girls, both for employment and for life. “How long is your term as interns?” I ask.  Corinne and Casey laugh and respond in unison, “As long as Shelley and Steve will have us!”http://www.eastvillagemagazine.org/2018/04/18/arts-in-detention-program-unlocks-creativity-from-the-inside-for-gvrc-youth/

“Arts in Detention” is growing beyond the walls of Genesee Valley Regional Center.  In response to kids leaving GVRC who want to have something on the “outside,” a 12-week pilot project (in partnership with Genesee County Family Court) began September 25, 2017.  With help from Gear UP Academy students, a workshop titled “Arts on Probation” is held weekly at the Juvenile Probation Office in the McCree Building.

Current funders of GVRC Share Art Project include: the Hagerman Foundation, the Flint Women and Girls Fund of the Community Foundation of Greater Flint, Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs, United Way of Genesee County, and Greater Flint Sunrise Rotary International. 

“Arts in Detention: GVRC Share Art Exhibit” runs until May 5 at Buckham Gallery, 134 ½ W. Second Street.  Gallery Hours: Th-Sat: 12-5:30. See http://www.buckham-gvrc-share-art-project.org/ “HerStory: Unlocked” is available as a free e-book at http://www.buckham-gvrc-share-art-project.org/project-staff/

This essay originally appeared in East Village Magazine, April 2018. 



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