Digging for gold in prison art class: Finding goodness, autonomy, and great art

Art Class, By Charles Mosby
Following my education, I began teaching art in various traditional venues. I was never quite satisfied, or enthusiastic, about any of them until I took a job teaching painting and drawing in Oklahoma State prisons to men and women incarcerated in medium and maximum-security facilities. That clicked. That was where my heart found its home, and that is the population I’ve been working with ever since, for the last twenty-five years.
“Art Teacher” didn’t seem the right job description after a few weeks of working behind bars. Some of the men and women had already created strikingly fresh work without benefit of an art program or decent materials.
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Our newsreel focuses on news about progress and possibility – and it is in that spirit that this one also includes a call to action - incidentally right in line with our democracy challenge this month!

“In framing an ideal, we may assume what we wish, but should avoid impossibilities.”

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One of the topics discussed at our last meeting for The Sunny Way last Saturday was the focus of the site, which is admittedly wide-ranging. While this makes perfect sense to us, in our discussion we wondered if it might not be clear how it all fits together. From my article on
Chris Jordan’s photographic gallery,
Every August, Senators and Congressional representatives return to their districts, and we have the chance to meet with them to express our opinions on the issues that matter to us and how we want to work together to affect change.

Today I am harvesting my first batch of compost from the worm bin. It’s surprisingly fun to dump in a bunch of fruit and veg scraps and come back a week later to find rich, useful compost!
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Mass PowerShift lobbied in the Statehouse in Boston (see previous 
