WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Student artists in kindergarten through 12th grade celebrated the “go green” effort by participating in a recycled art challenge organized by producers of the “Working Class” public television documentary series.
Based on themes explored in the Telly Award-winning documentary “Working Class: Build & Grow Green,” the recycled art challenge sought to inspire innovation while reducing waste. Elementary and secondary students turned trash into treasure by using ordinary art materials to transform discarded items into works of art.
Series producers, Pennsylvania College of Technology and WVIA Public Media, selected “Victory Garden” — a bouquet of paper flowers representing a page from the artist’s family history — as the favorite entry from students in kindergarten through sixth grade.
Brooke Dorman, a fifth-grade student at Carl G. Renn Elementary School in Lairdsville, made the flowers by cutting and quilling (rolling, shaping and gluing together) paper strips from recycled bank checks that belonged to her great-grandparents. Dorman and her mother, Heather Dorman, who submitted the entry to the recycled art challenge, said their ancestors survived the Great Depression and World War II, and the flower bouquet represented victory gardens that were popular during that era.
“Reduce Your Carbon Footprint,” an imaginative sneaker created by Lauren Ogden, a 10th-grade student at South Williamsport Area High School, was selected as the judges’ favorite among entries from students in grades seven through 12. The entry was submitted by Ogden’s art teacher, Betsy Jones.