Let Us Encourage Our Children to Engage in Art
“I started painting as a hobby when I was little. I didn’t know I had any talent. I believe talent is just a pursued interest. Anybody can do what I do.” – Bob Ross
Part 1 - Benefits of Art for Children
Part 2 - Respite in Drawing
Part 3 - Take time out to be close to Mother Nature
(Original title: Children Painting under the Trees)
Part 4 - Ode to the Kite in the Sky
Dr Abe V Rotor
Engaging children in art fosters creativity, emotional expression, and cognitive development, allowing them to explore their inner world and connect with the world around them. Art provides a unique language for self-expression and can help children develop essential life skills. Internet
Part 1 - Benefits of Art for Children
Author and tutor Dr Rotor poses with young artists V-jay Rigos, Francezz Ragasa, R-jay Tolentino, and Kimberly Santos, all students of San Vicente Integrated School. March 30, 2025 at Living with Nature Center
One fine Sunday morning four kids from the neighborhood came
to draw with pastel colors, cheerful and cellphone-free.
And what do we know, we grownups, teachers, parents, guardians?
Look at their works of art - what a great discovery!
“The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.” – Aristotle
Take your choice - color as you wish,
from the creative mind, joyful heart
parrot, jay, heron - just don't miss
the free expression and joy of art.
"A picture is a poem without words". - Horace
"Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life." - Pablo Picasso
Sailboats in the wind sans sailors;
a proud mother hen sans her brood;
sans man's presence, yet complete
to the young, not we who are old.
Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist when he grows up." - Pablo Picasso
8 Important Benefits of Art for Children
That Everyone Should Know*
Creating art isn’t just a fun, colorful pastime. It has a variety of unique, positive effects on preschoolers, young children, and teens that other activities don’t provide. Here are eight reasons why you should encourage kids to participate in art on a regular basis.
1. Stimulates Creativity and Problem-Solving Skills
2. Promotes Self-Esteem and Self-Expression
3. Contributes to Fine Motor Skill Development
4. Helps Develop Visual-Spatial Processing
5. Builds Memory and Self-Control
6. Provides Rest, Relaxation, and Reward
7. Increases Academic Performance
8. Connects Kids to People and the World
Dr Rotor's family and friends, grownups and children - all disciples and students of art.
“The urge to draw must be quite deep within us, because children love to do it” – David Hockney
Acknowledgement with Gratitude to *Painting to Gogh (Painting to Gogh Offers Fun, Engaging Painting Tutorials for Kids), Internet
Part 2 - Respite in Drawing
Living with Nature Center
San Vicente, Ilocos Sur
“I experience things by drawing them.” -Eleanor Dickinson
"Lolo," knocking on the gate, they called,
"Why it's gloomy, typhoon's coming," I said;
And the wind had started blowing cold;
Children are children, bless them, oh Lord.
And I, a parent, a teacher grown very old,
Rose from my armchair to meet the three;
"Can we draw?" chorused they cheerfully
What shall they draw when the sky's heavy?
Dr Abe V Rotor
Facilitator
Living with Nature garden with Rizal's shrine as background.
The shrine depicts his life in exile at Dapitan as artist, scientist,
doctor, teacher and farmer, among other roles.
Who knows more than one's mind and feeling,
more than all the world's hearing and seeing?
“When I draw I rule the world.” -Mort Walker
They write "finished" when they've not really started;
children are impatient to what we grownups wanted.
As an artist, art's never finished, take Venus de Milo,
or the works of Michelangelo and Vincent Van Gogh.
However I explained, chorused they "Tapos na, Lolo."
Ideals never die, they live in innocence of childhood,
Where have all the singing birds gone after a typhoon?
Listen to the children with colors, they'll return soon.
Children see beauty restored sooner than we do,
and a brighter tomorrow. ~
Author's Note: From the neighborhood these three children came to learn drawing in the course of weather disturbances caused by a series of typhoons lately. School classes were suspended, but thanks to the brief calm moments the children found respite in drawing. They brought home their works, in order to share their acquired skill and optimism to their family and community.
Part 3 - Take time out to be close to Mother Nature
(Original title: Children Painting under the Trees)
"Go to Mother Nature when tired, lonely and uncertain,
when all human comfort fails, when abandoned." - avr
Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog (avrotor.blogspot.com)
Also open Naturalism -the Eighth Sense
Integrated Children's Summer Workshop conducted by the author
at the San Vicente Botanical Garden , San Vicente, Ilocos Sur.
Take time out from TV, computer, malling;
life's so dull, busy yet empty;
The left brain's overworked, the right idle,
growing up is a sad story.
Take time out in summer away from school,
put down your books and depart;
give imagination a chance over knowledge
through creativity in the art.
Take time out to be close to Mother Nature,
draw and paint under the trees,
recreate the world you wish it should be,
let your worries go with the breeze.
Take time out to be your real self, discover
beyond the world of reality,
with myriad colors and the paintbrush,
the boundless realm of fantasy. ~
Author's Family takes a break for chores and school
"Keep close to Nature's heart... and break clear away, once in awhile, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean." - John Muir.
(John Muir, also known as "John of the Mountains" and "Father of the National Parks", was an influential Scottish-American naturalist, author, environmental philosopher, botanist, zoologist, glaciologist, and early advocate for the preservation of wilderness in the United States of America). ~
Part 4 - Ode to the Kite in the Sky
Dr Abe V Rotor
Kite Flying on the Lakeshore in acrylic, group project,
Children's Summer Art Workshop, circa 1995.
Fly high into the sky, until you see us but minuscule on the ground,
how insignificant we all are, to the world and to the universe;
Fly with the wind with all your might, that we too, feel we are flying,
save our strength, our will and faith to remain with Mother Earth,
our home, our only planet, our spaceship, the place of our birth.
Fly high with our dreams, our fantasy of conquering space and stars,
how lofty dreams are, how ambitious, how proud we humans are;
Fly away from our hold, be free, drift aimlessly if you call that freedom;
then neither you are a friend, nor we are your master, but a renegade,
breaking away from the rules and order that humanity has made. ~
"Throw your dreams into space like a kite, and you do not know what it will bring back, a new life, a new friend, a new love, a new country." - Anais Nin