Floodgates Art Project 2.0 asks Waterbury, ‘What’s on Your Plate?’

July 2, 2024 | By Sarah-Lee Terrat and MK Monley 

What’s on Your Plate? Your creative response is requested! Please share your creativity related to the continued flooding that Mother Nature continues to dish out. Several workshops are scheduled over the summer to help you share your vision, experiences and hopes…all on a Chinet paper plate. Artwork from all ages is welcome.

Over 100 kits have been distributed so far, and we’re still distributing them.

Have you finished your artwork? Please return it to one of the drop-off boxes at Stowe Street Emporium, the Waterbury Public Library, or Red Hen Bakery.

Below is a list of July workshops. More will be announced for August. Join us to make this project spectacular and meaningful! Your work will be displayed alongside many others in multiple locations in downtown Waterbury and at Red Hen cafe. 

Workshops in July

  • July 10, 3-5 p.m. at Waterbury Area Senior Center (for all ages)

  • July 13, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Waterbury Arts Fest at Pilgrim Park

  • July 25, 4-7 p.m. at Waterbury Farmers Market

More information is online at makerspherevt.com. Email questions to Sarah-Lee Terrat at yelodog1@comcast.net.


ORIGINAL POST BELOW

June 7, 2024  |  By Sarah-Lee Terrat and MK Monley 

Tiny paintings on 6-inch square tiles at the 2012 Floodgates Art Project on the one-year anniversary of Tropical Storm Irene. File photo by Gordon Miller

In August 2012, a year after Tropical Storm Irene devastated many parts of Vermont including Waterbury,  a group of community members in collaboration with Revitalizing Waterbury organized an art exhibition entitled “After Irene: A Floodgates Art Project.”

The show featured art from a variety of community members of all ages as people created original works on small square tiles using an array of media from paints to collage. Over several months, workshops were held for people to work on their creations together and kits with supplies were distributed for others to work at home. 

The exhibit received several hundred submissions. Organized by volunteers, the display was expected to last a couple of weeks, but it extended for nearly two months due to the overwhelming response from the community to visit and take in the pieces made by neighbors and friends. 

Just 12 years after Irene in July 2023, another flood devastated wide swaths of Vermont impacting many of the same Waterbury homeowners and businesses. The psychological toll left by the devastation that hit our state last summer has been undeniable. Then again in December mere months after the July flooding, more rain (added to an already saturated water table) created flooding again in towns across the state, including Waterbury once more. 

The Vermont Community Foundation sees one of its roles in helping communities move forward from those events last year. One way it is lending support to Waterbury is through its Vermont Flood Response & Recovery Fund which has awarded MakerSphere a generous grant of $6,300 for a flood art project that takes its inspiration from the post-Irene effort that was such a success. 

MakerSphere now is offering community members a chance to participate in a new art project called, “What’s on Your Plate?…Floodgates Art Project 2.0.” Following a format similar to the 2012 “After Irene: Floodgates Art Project,” MakerSphere wants to continue the important work of uniting the community and promoting participation, camaraderie, and collective healing through art. 

The goal is to inspire people to use art to share their responses, viewpoints, experiences, and emotions regarding the flooding that Mother Nature continues to dish out. 

Like the first Floodgates project, everyone will start with the same canvas. This time, organizers will provide heavy-duty Chinet paper plates. They will ask people to create their perspective of “what’s on their plate” after all of the flooding. What are your hopes? What are your fears? How are you doing? What do you need? How have you been helped and/or how are you helping others? What’s on your plate?

From mid-June to mid-August they will host community workshops throughout Waterbury and will provide art kits to take home for those who prefer to work on their own. They stress that this project is to provide an emotional outlet by creating a piece of art and they welcome anyone to participate. It’s the process – not the product – that is important. 

People take in the Floodgates Art Project a year after Tropical Storm Irene. File photo by Gordon Miller

They plan to hang the completed artworks in various downtown locations in September and October. Project guidelines and kits for those working at home will be available starting in mid-June at the Waterbury Public Library, Stowe Street Emporium, Red Hen Bakery and Brookside Primary School. Stay tuned for workshop dates and locations. 

The project will be open to anyone in Vermont. Those in and nearby Waterbury are encouraged to attend the local workshops and pick up kits from MakerSphere locations. MakerSphere will connect with some additional community organizations around Central Vermont should they want to participate and offer similar opportunities for residents in their areas to create art for the show. 

The deadline for submissions will be Friday, Aug. 16. 

Artist and art teacher MK Monley chairs MakerSphere’s Board of Directors. Artist Sarah-Lee Terrat is a volunteer with MakerSphere. Together they are leading the  “What’s on Your Plate?…Floodgates Art Project 2.0” project. 

This post will be updated with workshop details when they are available. 

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