►
From YouTube: NewsMakers: The Scholastic Art Award Exhibition
Description
A segment from the NewsMakers program produced by Arlington Virginia Network featuring The Scholastic Art Award Exhibition at Arlington Central Library.
A
Welcome
to
newsmakers
on
this
edition
of
newsmakers,
we
take
you
to
the
arlington
central
library
for
the
scholastic
art
award
exhibition.
The
exhibition
is
a
juried
showcase
of
works
by
arlington
students.
Grades
7
through
12..
The
artwork
will
be
on
display
throughout
the
central
library
until
february.
11Th
we'll
also
take
you
to
the
rosalind
spectrum
theater,
where
we'll
meet
the
doe
theater
group
from
arlington's
sister
city
ochen,
germany,
john
palmer,
clerid
from
arlington
county
cultural
affairs,
will
explain
how
the
doe
theater's
visit
fits
into
the
county's
planet
arlington
program.
D
Hi
I'm
rachel
harlan
and
I
am
the
supervisor
for
central
youth
services
and
it's
our
pleasure
each
year
to
select
a
piece
of
artwork
for
the
library
purchase
award.
If
you
go
into
the
young
adult
room
here
on
the
first
floor,
you'll
see
the
pieces
that
we've
bought
in
the
past
years
that
we
have
eight
different
pieces
we
bought
in
this
year.
D
We
had
a
really
hard
time.
It's
always
what
I
consider
to
be
a
very
difficult
pleasure
to
go
around
the
exhibit
and
to
choose
just
one
that
we
would
like
to
buy
because
for
one
thing
it's
hard
for
us
to
agree
sometimes,
but
and
also
there's
just
so
many
there's.
So
many
wonderful
examples
of
the
kids
work
we
did.
We
were
able
to
come
to
consensus
this
year
and
the
piece
that
we
would
like
to
give
the
library
purchase
award
to
is
by
judy
sam.
Is
she
here.
D
I
don't
know
if
she
is
and
it's
her
piece,
you'll
see
it
on
the
first
floor
and
I
understand
it's
pronounced
taiwan.
It's
a
young
man
whose
face
is
in
shadow
on
one
side.
You
can
see
the
face
clearer
on
the
other
side,
it's
right
on
the
first
floor
as
you
come
up
into
the
lobby
from
the
elevator.
So,
mr
fishman,
I
guess
you're
here.
Let
me
give
you
the
letter
for
judy.
Okay.
C
Before
we
announce
the
american
vision
awards,
which
are
five
awards
that
are
considered
best
in
show,
they
go
on
to
new
york
to
be
judged
in
the
pinnacle
ward
level
in
new
york,
two
notes
one.
I
know
that
the
auditorium
is
small
for
the
amount
of
students
and
parents
that
we
have,
but
the
community
response,
as
we
hang
the
show
and
are
here
in
the
library,
is
just
unbelievable,
and
it's
really
just
a
great
venue
for
have
the
community
see
what's
happening
in
arlington
schools.
C
E
I
took
my
neighbor's
dog
for
a
walk
and
noticed
that
he
was
quite
tired,
so
he
sat
on
the
ground
I
was
like
you
know.
Maybe
this
could
turn
into
a
really
good
painting.
So
I
went
back
home
grabbed
the
camera
took
about.
I
don't
know
40
50
pictures
and
was
really
you
know,
sort
of
piecing
through
them
and,
like
you
know
some
of
this.
Some
of
that
would
look
good
so
and
then
the
background
came-
and
I
was
like
you
know-
I'm
not
really
excited
with
this,
I'm
just
so.
E
It
took
forever
to
do
the
background.
I
used
acrylic
paint
and
started
out
sort
of
dry,
painting
everything
and
then
working
with
using
a
little
bit
of
water
to
water,
it
down
and
sort
of
get
the
textures
and
everything
into
place,
and
then
over
the
top.
I
went
with
more
dry
acrylic
and
started
to
do
every
hair
individually
working
from
the
top
down
and
it
took
hours
and
hours.
So
a
lot
of
work.
F
So
that's
why
I
decided
to
have
several
different
panels,
because
I
like
doing
different
types
of
mediums
so
and
then
I
just
just
sketched
myself
full
scale
and
did
a
different
treatment
on
each
one.
So
this
one
is
paint
and
then
beading
and
collage,
paper
and
multimedia
through
the
whole
piece.
C
G
C
C
This
piece
is
photographed
and
on
the
second
floor,
but
the
actual
dimensions
of
the
piece
are
about
eight
feet
tall
by
maybe
five
feet
wide.
So
when
you
look
at
the
photo,
imagine
the
capacity
of
this
piece-
that's
98
percent
made
out
of
clay.
A
student
is
taylor,
benny,
bff,
yorktown
installation.