Broken Wings: Art-Making with Children

As I work in schools across the country, I had a special opportunity to make monarch butterflies with preschool children and talk about the butterfly’s unique characteristics and what it needs to survive. The paint-stained fingers led the children into experiencing the joy of discovery. Even though everyone had the same two colors of orange and black, each child’s painted butterfly emerged as unique.

Before we started painting, I asked the children, “Did you know that the butterfly can’t see details?” Interestingly, the butterfly can see colors that we can’t see. Then I asked, “Did you know that some butterflies’ tongues are almost as long as their bodies?” To help the children imagine the butterfly’s long tongues, I bought juice boxes to drink the sweet nectar juice through the long tongue-like accordion straw. Finally, I asked, “Did you know that a butterfly can’t fly when it’s cold?” The children and I pretended to be butterflies waking up as the sun energized our wings. I even wore elegant butterfly wings made of painted sheer fabric to illustrate the flight of a butterfly.

During our time together, we discovered more about the delicate butterfly’s unique characteristics. We learned about the importance of clustering together to help these cold-blooded insects to survive. We celebrated each preschool artist and the beauty and fragility of their butterfly. We ended by discussing the importance of showing kindness, unity, and love to help all the butterflies to be healthy and safe in the garden.

What is one way you can use creativity to teach children about bullying prevention and safe schools?

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Broken Wings: Participatory Art

While on a cross-country flight, I took along some children’s butterfly books to prepare for my next exhibit, Broken Wings. As the flight was landing, a fellow passenger tapped my arm and asked, “Are you a teacher?” She had been watching me underlining important phrases in my children’s books that were sprawled across my tiny airline desk.

I told her that I was an artist and that I was preparing for my next installation about butterflies, bullying, and school shooting. With that, the look on her face changed. Perhaps she was imagining that I was this sweet kindergarten teacher. But instead, she discovered that I was an artist creating an exhibit about butterflies and school gun violence.

I explained that the butterflies represent the beauty and fragility of childhood. If a child, or our culture for that matter, is healthy, then the scales on butterfly’s wings refract light—producing gorgeous shimmering colors. But when the wings are broken, light can’t reflect. So, the colors grey or disappear.

Bullying and school gun violence reflects a broken culture and destroys children. To help each child emerge from cocoons with beautiful wings, the transformational process will require everyone. If each of us starts a Butterfly Effect of kindness and compassion, then the next generation of beautiful, delicate butterflies will begin to thrive and flourish—and restore the balance of our cultural habitat.

How can you help nurture or show kindness to one specific child?

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

WCSG and Broken Wings

Pamela with Jeremy and Amanda at WCSG radio studio

Yesterday, WCSG aired Jeremy and Amanda’s radio interview with Pamela discussing her Broken Wings installation at ArtPrize Ten.

Listen to the interview on SoundCloud…

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Broken Wings: Strengthening Kids

Broken Wings is about strengthening and nurturing kids. To help promote safe schools and healthy home environments, the art challenges viewers to become collaborators. Children with broken wings can undergo a transformational process—when a caring adult helps build emotional stability—and emerge from the cocoon with resilient wings.

Jeff Veley, a national bully specialist, offers some helpful tips on how to help at-risk youth and victims of trauma. This bully expert offers strategies and solutions to help children with emotional issues at school or at home. To learn more about helping children overcome social aggression, visit Jeff’s website for free training materials.

How can you empower one at-risk child to solve their own social challenges and cope with negativity?

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

ArtPrize Ten: Whitney and Butterflies

Get the behind the scenes story of Broken Wings at ArtPrize Ten and Whitney’s story of courage and kindness. Watch time lapse clips of Broken Wings being set up and ArtPrize visitor interaction with Broken Wings.

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Butterfly Effect: Strength, Resilience, and Kindness

Broken Wings empowers students to overcome bullying and toxic relationship by starting a Butterfly Effect of kindness. The interactive artwork also invites visitors to come up with their own creative solutions on how to diffuse negative social situations. In this video, one student offers his advice on how he has learned to personally overcome negativity and social aggression.

At Broken Wings, we love to hear how individuals are starting a Butterfly Effect—where one positive choice impacts another positive choice. This ancient wisdom still speaks: “A gentle answer turns away wrath.” We can all learn appropriate strategies to deal with adversity. Positive choices and kindness can impact our family or our community for good, and collectively we have the potential to influence our entire globe with the message of healing.

How can we transform negativity into a positive butterfly effect to encourage others?

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!

Broken Wings: Butterfly Effect

Broken Wings encourages students to overcome adversity through emotional strength and to diffuse negativity through kindness. The work challenges visitors to come up with their own creative solutions on how to stop bullying and help end school gun violence.

After seventeen were killed in Florida, Jeff Veley, national bullying specialist, wrote about one student who had a different idea on how to respond: Why not show love to seventeen new people? Smile at seventeen new people? Or befriend seventeen new people?

Kindness may not solve every problem. Or stop every bullet. But perhaps the power of love could have changed the deadly consequences in some of our schools. Since none of our current solutions are successful, how can each of us start a positive butterfly effect to help heal our nation and bring an end to the suffering, chaos, and brokenness?

Who is a new person in your life that could use a little kindness today?

Broken Wings
Grand Rapids Public Museum
272 Pearl Street NW (west of the river)
September 19 to October 7, 2018
Vote #66688

In light of the recent tragic school shootings across America, find out how you can create positive change from national bullying specialist Jeff Veley.

Share your story #BrokenWings

Our healing art involves you—because you matter!