• What Does Collective Change Look, Sound, or Feel Like?

    Digital Illustration, Music Production, Photography, Video Production, Ceramics, Fashion Design, Podcast Production, 3D Animation + Modeling

Across WMCAT’s Teen Arts + Tech Program studios, teen artists leveraged their creative mediums to answer the question, “what does collective change look, sound, or feel like?”

WMCAT’s Teen Arts + Tech Program provides GRPS 9-12th grade students the space to discover their voice and explore a variety of themes through visual arts and digital media. This semester our students have recorded music, used photos to compare past and present, illustrated memes, produced a short film, designed clothing and jewelry to represent peace over war, and more.

Hear what they had to share during the creative process here

ARtistry In Motion: 3D Animation + Modeling

In this group project, students scanned a Grand River Walk tunnel during Grand Rapids’ World of Winter using the art as the virtual environment. The art piece represents changes in Grand Rapids from prehistoric to modern times. Each day students added a little more to the 3D environment as they learned new techniques: they began by creating digital graffiti on the wall then added lights, models with movement, and finally advanced models with animations.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Ceramics + Fashion Design

The ceramics and fashion design studios teamed up to create two collaborative pieces featuring original clothing and ceramic jewelry. The teen artists hoped to inspire collective change towards global peace.

See the full fashion show here.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Digital Illustration

Teen artists used their understanding of collective change to create memes using illustration and digital media.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Documentary Filmmaking

Documentary filmmaking students created a satirical parody of TED talks that spotlight the generational divide between millennials and Gen Z. The teen artists hope to demonstrate that mutual respect is essential to collective change.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Mural

Teen artists in the mural studio symbolized the collective change that happens when students are empowered to express themselves in the Teen Arts + Tech Program. Students demonstrated this through elements of their mural on the wall at WMCAT.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Music Production

In the production of their album, teen artists used the concept of collective change to inspire an auditory journey for the listener. They used stylistic changes in music history and generational genre shifts to make a statement through song. 

South (1960s): Barrett Vernon samples Summertime by Ella Fitzgerald
Untitled (1970s): Aaron Hinkle samples the Funky Drummer by Clyde Stubblefield
Beepbox Giggle (1980s): Charlotte Foreman samples 8-bit sounds from early video games
Autumn (2010s): Barrett Vernon samples Mortal Man by Kendrick Lamar

Behind the Scenes

Photography

Students responded to the driving question with a visual comparison of the past and present. Using their experiences with their family, friends, and surrounding community, teen artists found images from family members, albums, and archives and contrasted them with a photo they took this semester.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work

Video Production

Students produced a collaborative and creative short film about a group of friends who graduate, separate, and change, but eventually reunite in support of one another.

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Finished Work

WMCAST: By Teens, For You

Students focused an episode of their podcast, WMCAST: By Teens, For You on the driving question. They facilitated a round table discussion on what collective change means to them, and its effect on art, class, and modern society.

Behind the Scenes

Finished Work