Why is creativity so important?

Why is creativity so important?

Research shows that creativity influences quality of life in many ways.

By Paula Schaper, Mat Bevel Company Vice President / Executive Director
 
According to Dr. Mark Runco, a world’s leading creativity scholar and Mat Bevel Company educational partner, the benefits of creativity include dignity, quality of life and meaning in life. Data shows that creativity is more important for life outside of school than is intelligence, GPA, IQ, etc. It has even been suggested that creativity is a more valid predictor of future significant life accomplishment than conventional IQ score and school grades.
 
When I became aware of the national creativity deficit in our schools, I thought it would be great to use my brother Ned Schaper’s world of Beveldom and his Available Resource Technology (ART) lifelong creative practices to build students’ confidence in their own problem-solving abilities. Mat Bevel Company began developing The Universe Within world-building course over one year ago. At that time, I would have been satisfied if just one kid’s world was changed. After participating in The Universe Within course with 26 students at Patagonia Elementary School in April and May, I’m blown away by the excitement and energy each student put into every class.
The Universe Within encouraged students to be confident in their designs and innovative ideas. It freed their minds from the shackles of antiquated paradigms. The course showed the girls that they too are scientists and leaders of value. The Universe Within developed a creative community of cooperative learners and school citizens. It literally rewired thinking in my classroom.”
 
-David Clovesko-Wharton, Math/Science teacher Patagonia Elementary School
Students built two-gear spinning wheels from recycled materials to help them solve the social issues in their worlds. As they persevered in troubleshooting frictional, mechanical and material failures. their frustration turned into accomplishment!

The Universe Within helps students explore the outer universe through the inner universe.

 
Creativity expert Sir Ken Robinson knocked it out of the park with his record-breaking TED talk in 2006 titled “Do schools kill creativity?” making a case for creating an education system that nurtures (rather than undermines) creativity. He champions a radical rethink of our school systems, to cultivate creativity and acknowledge multiple types of intelligence. In an Adobe creativity study, 88% of U.S. professionals believe that creativity should be built into standard curricula. And in that article Sir Ken Robinson concludes, “Creativity is not an option, it’s an absolute necessity.”
 
Here’s my take on why I think The Universe Within world-building course captivated these 26 students in practical and personal ways. Once students identified something of meaning to them with their social issues, they had a context for learning. Once they began to construct an alter ego, they identified virtues beyond their “ordinary” self that they can take into their everyday lives. The course not only improved students’ creative problem-solving, it built the strength of their character to take on life’s tough challenges.
 
But there’s something more. I think Ned’s world of Beveldom provides an analog to real life. Students encountered situations where they had to solve all kinds of problems in their imaginary worlds that they can now use to solve problems in their real lives. They were challenged in this environment, yet they had fun solving problems.
Students participated in a interactive lesson where they spun different geometric shapes—the cube, tetrahedron and octahedron—and identified the number of faces, edges and vertices.

Don’t think education is your thing?

You might not think education is your cause, but a report from UNESCO has valuable lessons for anyone concerned about how future generations will develop and the world they will shape. Providing young people with creative training techniques for life is an investment in our collective future. We want to give students the skills they need to solve social issues and be productive in society.
 
Mat Bevel Company named this year’s campaign “Escape Velocity,” because we are in position to produce an innovative multi-media digital version of The Universe Within world-building curriculum, that within one year will be available in schools around the country.
 
We can’t do it without you. We need your support to make this happen. We hope you see the need and that you’ll lend us your support so we can move to the next level. Gifts of any amount are welcome and all contributors will be acknowledged on our website at MatBevelCompany.org.

“The immersive visualizations of digital multi-media open the world to learning anywhere, and Ned Schaper’s work is very cutting-edge in this environment. Video technologies, such as Virtual Reality, make science and art universally accessible and useful, allowing us to step inside interesting new worlds. The future of education will lie in our ability to create learning not bound by linear modalities.”

 
– Luis Carrión, award-winning producer/videographer, University of Arizona’s Office of Digital Learning

Gratefully,

Vice President and Executive Director, Mat Bevel Company
 
Your gift to the 501(c)3 Mat Bevel Company during the “Escape Velocity” campaign will help us scale up our programs at our new home and with co-collaborators.
 
Please make your online donation today or send your gift by mail to: Mat Bevel Company, PO Box 1684, Tucson, AZ 85702 or PO Box 1163, Patagonia, AZ 85624. To learn more, please contact Paula Schaper at 520-604-6273.
 
Registered Charitable Number (EIN): 13-4012463

SPONSOR HIGHLIGHT: Doug Rogers, CPA & Co-owner of Sonora Investment Management, LLC

SPONSOR HIGHLIGHT: Doug Rogers, CPA & Co-owner of Sonora Investment Management, LLC

MBC sponsor Doug Rogers with wife Mary at the Grand Canyon.

During last year’s annual fundraiser, Doug Rogers helped Mat Bevel Company (MBC) reach its financial goal with a matching gift challenge during the last 15 days of the campaign. His support of MBC over the last several years stems from his fascination with innovation. He says, “A lot of innovation comes from people who develop the ability to think in active and creative ways. Ned Schaper’s world of Beveldom encourages people to think outside the box.”

Doug Rogers is a Certified Public Accountant who co-founded Sonora Investment Management, LLC in August 1986 with business partner Brad Toland. Prior to this, he worked for a national CPA firm in Los Angeles, California, and in industry in the financial accounting realm. A native Arizonan, Doug received his Bachelors in accounting and finance and an M.B.A. from the University of Arizona.

As a former auditor and verifier of companies’ financial statements, he’s learned that financial statements reveal some things about a company, but certainly not the whole picture. Doug’s passion and experience researching businesses help him see common-sense success patterns and predict the odds of their long-term viability for client investment portfolios.

Doug Rogers with his dog Zoey.

“Sometimes people have negative perceptions of business, but I think that’s misplaced because successful companies are solving problems. They’re creating a service or product that people choose because it’s better than someone else’s, it’s cheaper than others, or it’s one-of-a-kind.

And that’s where his interest in Mat Bevel Company comes in. Doug believes if you solve a problem that no one has solved, often that’s the ingredient of a very good business. “Most innovation requires someone to think in a creative and different way, or to make a connection that other people don’t see. Ned Schaper is compelled to take risks and think in new ways, and that’s where the world’s progress comes from.”

As a financial advisor, Doug maintains financial success follows from solving problems or simply materially improving on what already exists. He believes that the world of Beveldom transports us from the mundane to the fantastical realm, to a place where imaginative solutions can address some of today’s critical problems. He’s banking that innovative programs like The Universe Within world-building educational course and Bevel Café arts entertainment for the whole family will inspire people to re-connect with the physical world, become more aware of available resources to solve problems and strive to think creatively to help reach our greatest potential as individuals. He says, “I think Mat Bevel Company is extraordinary as a way of making that creative and mind-expanding thought happen.”

Thank you, Doug, for supporting Mat Bevel Company’s work during the 2018-2019 season!

SPONSOR HIGHLIGHT: Jack Zittere, Field Ecologist & Collector

SPONSOR HIGHLIGHT: Jack Zittere, Field Ecologist & Collector

Mat Bevel Company (MBC) Sponsor Jack Zittere is a field ecologist, whose vocation and passion is nature and how it interfaces with science and art. For him, the Surrealistic Pop Science Theater and The Universe Within world-building course represent the confluence of art, nature and science, and even more. Jack is inspired by MBC President Ned Schaper’s work which he describes as “the most original and broadly integrative bodies of work of an individual artist I’ve ever seen. The way his theater blends kinetic sculpture, poetry, science and music is wondrous and spell-binding.”

Jack and Ned met nearly 30 years ago at high teas which took place with a small group of writers and thinkers. Jack remembers these get-togethers as “a multi-disciplinary gym where we would talk about ideas and do conceptual art and science. The juggling of art and science was incredibly fun and imaginative.”

Jack was first introduced to the theater when Ned’s sister Paula Schaper moved to Tucson in 1993 to help her brother co-produce a performance series at a small venue in ‘Lost Barrio.’ Jack says, “I had never seen this type of integration before in the performance art world.”

Jack recalls when Ned moved into the former Downtown Performance Center, a 5,000-square-foot performance venue that became well-known as the Mat Bevel Institute. Jack explains, “I loved the creative community that surrounded the theater and world of Beveldom at the Mat Bevel Institute. The museum and theater became a performance center for Zeitgeist Jazz at the Institute and other public events. The Day of the Dead procession would conclude at the Institute with a huge community celebration. When the building was demolished, we lost a huge community asset.”

Jack believes that in our modern consumerist society, there is a greater need than ever to have a creative community where people can dream their dreams and spur their imaginations. He supports MBC’s theater and educational curriculum because he believes it adds a visionary component to people’s lives and the Tucson community.

What excites Jack most about MBC’s new home at Launchpad Artspace is that it provides the resources to fully implement Bevelvision Productions. “In the translation of Ned’s theater and Available Resource Technology practices into film, the world will get a glimpse of the Bevel Universe. It’s so important that people experience Beveldom because this magical world not only feeds the soul with art, it educates the mind with surrealistic physics and mechanics in an artful way.”

A dumpster diver and collector of cultural relics, Ned’s work intersects with Jack’s through the shared value of resourcefulness. Jack says, “It’s cool to see someone upcycling. To turn throw-aways into art is a grand gesture. Since my parents lived through the depression, I’ve always been impressed with people who are resourceful.”

According to Jack, “MBC’s importance is already established. Ned is so far ahead of our cultural curve, his work’s relevance will only increase with time.”

Update: The Universe Within Is In Full Swing At Patagonia Public Schools

Update: The Universe Within Is In Full Swing At Patagonia Public Schools

Mat Bevel Company’s The Universe Within world-building course is helping students at Patagonia Elementary School increase their problem-solving abilities. Taught by Science and Math Teacher David Clovesko-Wharton, third and fourth graders at Patagonia Elementary School are the first students to participate in The Universe Within full coursework. 
 
Clovesko-Wharton says, “Without surprise or warning these motivated virtue heroes of The Universe Within make an intelligently creative impression on me every day with their intuitive comments on problem solving in the real world and their artistic innovations expressed in their colorful geometric headdress pieces. The curriculum rocks and the chemistry is both fun and an entirely alternatively universe.”
 
The Universe Within launched on March 4, with a student field trip to Mat Bevel Company President Ned Schaper’s Museum Of Kinetic Art in Tucson. Students enjoyed a “Welcome to Beveldom” program, then a personal tour of the museum.
 
The course was developed to address a national creative intelligence deficit through a local grassroots effort in Southern Arizona. The basic premise of the course is that genius and creativity are not so much about IQ as employing daily practices to solve problems. It also fits into STEAM, an educational approach that uses science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics to help meet the needs of a 21st century economy. 
 
Patagonia Public Schools Superintendent Rachell Hochheim thinks the course is valuable because, “The approach used to engage students targets their natural curiosity and imagination. This allows for students to make judgment-free inquiries that lead to higher levels of thinking and ultimately increases students’ confidence in thinking critically about their environment. Many students couldn’t stop sharing their enthusiasm after they returned from their field trip to the Museum Of Kinetic Art.”

Five course modules are integrated into 16 two-hour classes that align with Arizona state standards.

The Daily Doodle

Students identify a creative solution for overcoming major social issues in their worlds, and identify the character they will play and that character’s virtues, powers and morals.

Corrugated Headgear

Students learn about design, technology and spatial relationships as they construct three-dimensional replicas of their characters’ headdresses from recycled materials.

The Art of Kinetics

Students learn about technology, motion, forces, gravity and balance as they complete four-dimensional kinetic structures from their characters’ worlds from recycled materials.

Digital Story Book

Students reflect on their group identity as world-builders, explain choices they made while creating their characters’ worlds and examine the evolution of their ideas through digital stories.

Exhibition & Pedestrian Carnival
Students curate and install their doodles, headgear, kinetic art, photos and video stories for The Universe Within group exhibition and, during the exhibition, they share their characters in a group parade. Peers, family and community get to see the students’ entire process of creating their work.

Dr. Bruce Bayly, Professor of Math at University of Arizona, works with MBC to translate the world of Beveldom into science and math lessons through video introductions, classroom instructions and hands-on activities.

Dr. Mark Runco, Faculty at Southern Oregon University, is using creativity tests to assess students’ creative potential and performance before and after coursework. A new interactive 3D creativity assessment was developed on the iPad, with support from Patagonia Regional Community Fund (PRCF). Other major sponsors for development of the curriculum include South32, Arizona Commission on the Arts and Doug & Mary Rogers.

Paula Schaper, Vice President and Executive Director, who works from MBC’s Patagonia location, says she is already receiving requests for the curriculum from others in Southern Arizona and “going forward, we hope individuals, corporations and foundations will continue to support new dimensions of The Universe Within. In school year 2019-2020, the curriculum will extend to more ages, subjects and schools.” 

To get involved and for more information, contact Paula Schaper at 520-604-6273 or pschaper@matbevelcompany.org.

Meet Amy Dunn, Graphic Designer & Screen Printer at Launchpad Artspace

Meet Amy Dunn, Graphic Designer & Screen Printer at Launchpad Artspace

Tucson native Amy Dunn has been an artist since she was very young. Her mom, a visual artist and teacher, always nurtured Amy’s artistic side. 

After graduating from high school, Amy studied at Pima Community College where she earned an Associate’s degree in Graphic Design. She continued to study Graphic Design at University of Arizona, but after taking an elective Relief woodcut class, she switched to printmaking. Amy loved the print making process and earned a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts with an emphasis in 2D printmaking in 2014.

After graduating, Amy founded Red Collar Press, a printmaking company that keeps traditional techniques alive…and creates radical artwork using her graphic design skills. 

Red Collar Press embraces the history of printmaking, what Amy calls, “processes for the people.” She loves the smell of ink, the feel of quality paper, the vibrant ink colors, and the impressions left from a carving are only a few perks of printing through laborious means.

Amy located her business to Launchpad Artspace in October, 2018. She was looking for a location for her business among other artists. When she checked the Launchpad, she felt very comfortable and at home with the other artists.

As far as her goals for Red Collar Press, Amy says, “I’ve only just begun. I feel as though I’m starting to find my stride, balancing working as a bartender with my art business.” Her goal is to be fully supported by her art business. 

Amy’s learning the ins and outs of how to manage and market her business. She is working on building her portfolio through social media to increasing her business’ online presence to reach a wider audience. She also finds support by connecting with other local artists in Tucson through markets and social media. She says, “The Tucson art community is very friendly. Artists are helping other artists, with art and technology.” 

Check out the Red Collar Press Facebook.

You can also see some of Amy’s designs at Tucson Pop Cycle, a gift shop that promotes local art made from recycled materials, re-used products and refurbished goods. On December, Tucson Pop Cycles featured Amy’s “Love Tucson” t-shirt in a Facebook post saying, “We have been in love with Amy Dunn’s sweet LOVE TUCSON T for a long while. She has graciously agreed to share it with us at Pop Cycle. There are so many reasons to love Tucson, and Amy has highlighted a multitude of them here.”

Amy is excited about the synergy at Launchpad Artspace. She looks forward to group art shows and open studio tours in the future, maybe even a small market. 

You can learn more about Amy’s business and her artwork at the Red Collar Press website.