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Congratulations! National Wind Energy Art Contest winners!Finally, the winner of the National Wind Art Energy Contest has been posted on the website. Once again, I would like to send a congratulatory message to one of my students who won the first prize, Iris Yang and the Honorable Mansion Awards, Oscar Bao and Elbert Wei.
Congrats! 2024 Fish Art Contest Winners!Two of my students, Olivia and Cindy, performed well in the 2024 Fish Drawing Contest. This contest was created to raise awareness among the public about loving and conserving nature by drawing wild fish and linking nature conservation and art.
Excellent students from each region in the U.S. and abroad compete with each other to select first, second, and third place works. My two students were selected as second place. Once again, I sincerely congratulate Olivia and Cindy. In particular, it is a truly amazing achievement that two of my students were selected among the second place students. Above all, Olivia and Cindy showed their love for nature through this contest and their ability as artists by translating these feelings into beautiful messages through watercolors and conveying them to people. In the future, I look forward to seeing these two students hone their talents and skills so that they can grow into amazing professional artists who can convey their beautiful messages through their paintings. Congrats! Winners of National Wind Art!The National Wind Energy Art Contest is open to students in kindergarten through eighth grade. Submissions are due by March 22, 2024. Winners will receive $200 and a chance to showcase their work at the annual CLEANPOWER 2024 conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota May 5–8, 2024. I encouraged my students to participate in this competition. More than anything, I hope that students will love and protect nature through art and realize the secrets of its beautiful nature. And this is also why I truly pursue art and paint. In this sense, I am proud that three of my students were selected for this year's National Wind Art Contest. I am deeply grateful to Iris, Elbert, and Oscar for reminding us of the beautiful wind in this competition. As they prepare for this competition, I am well aware of the beautiful stories they have told me as they express their invisible desires. It was truly an amazing experience.
I would also like to express my deepest gratitude to the students who prepared together even though they did not receive the award. As we take on challenges together through art contest, I discover that this opportunities are not a place of competition, but a place of chance to upgrade one's skills and discover the ability to live together with the community and people around us. And before I know it, I find that my students are enjoying the challenges themselves rather than focusing on winning or losing through numerous challenges. This is also a very valuable experience. And our challenges will continue in the future. I hope that students will be given many opportunities and competitions to take on these challenges. Through these competitions, my students and I are able to get out of the narrow studio room and turn our gaze to the wider world, broaden our horizons, and focus our attention on creating a world where we can live happily together. In particular, competitions focus on environmental issues, nature conservation, It is very beneficial to students educationally and artistically because it deals with various issues such as social problems, race and culture. Above all, I am deeply grateful to the people and institutions that gave us and my students this opportunity. Growing picture!When you teach children, at some point you will see them understand the principle and jump. At times like these, I feel the greatest joy and reward as a teacher. Recently, the following students among my students began drawing with a perfect understanding of perspective and composition. Based on this understanding, we can find that their paintings become more three-dimensional and richer. When children draw for the first time, they enjoy drawing as they freely spread their imaginations. But as children get older, they want to expand their drawings more. Children with these concerns often ask questions, worry, compare themselves to other children, and have a desire to draw better. When my students have this mindset, I begin explaining the drawing skills in detail. And through this process, we find that students rapidly improve their drawing skills, enrich their statements, and gain confidence and assurance through drawing. And when they reach this point, their picture is sure to change. You will gain an understanding of space and objects, and you will be able to understand your flat paper in a more three-dimensional way. You can draw a picture and write a statement that fits the topic. They also shine light on their paintings and imagines objects changing depending on the light. I help kids get to this level. And this level coincides with the point at which I first began to understand painting. When I reached this point, I was able to go deeper into the world of painting. But if you don't know this point, you have no choice but to copy and draw forever. That's really unfortunate.
Because the white space before my eyes is the only world I can create. There, it creates light, makes wind blow, illuminates objects brilliantly, and creates shadows. Sometimes the paper itself informs me, the artist, of certain objects and images. I draw with great wonder, as if the paper were a living creature. If you know this joy, you won't be able to bear it without drawing every day. And when my students discover the world they are creating on paper, they soon realize that art class is not just play time. Instead of chatting and playing and not drawing, they can play in the drawing. I love seeing these changes. |
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