To Hout Bay High, with love

January 10, 2022

Above: Our teen mural painters beautifying a corner at Hout Bay High in Hangberg – the idea was to encourage interaction of a different kind, rather than tagging the walls

“I think it is safe to say that one cannot speak of Lalela without the word ‘mural’ being included,” writes Lalela facilitator Rowan Roman, who oversaw a group of teens from the Hout Bay communities of Imizamo Yethu and Hangberg in the painting of an interactive mural at Hout Bay High School during the December Holiday Programme….

Mural creation is by far one of the most exciting and engaging parts of our programme. It entices public participation and really does help to cement our footprint even more, while simultaneously being a great recruitment strategy and overall reminder that we are still here, in the communities, doing the work.

Another word, ‘pandemic’, has become such a big part of our vocabulary over the last two years and the awareness around this worldwide problem is astronomical. However, as an arts-based after-school project, we know that there’s always been another pandemic, one that plagues particularly high school teenagers, and one that is rarely discussed – yes, I am talking about their incessant need to express themselves and ‘mark’ their territory (which usually doesn’t belong to them) by writing/drawing, and to those who have to deal with it, defacing property.

It sounds bad but, since at Lalela we like to ‘reimagine challenges as opportunities’, this puts us in a great spot with learners, the leadership of schools and the communities at large.

Below: Young artists and Lalela team members hard at work (and having fun!)

What better way to not only give teens a means to express themselves and mark their territory, but also to have a beautiful art outcome for the school, all while providing a safe and engaging environment during the school holidays when our learners are at their most vulnerable? You’re right, it is three birds and one stone! And we did just that!

The idea to create something that learners wouldn’t dare ruin with obscenities and puppy-love-letters, but something they’d be proud of and have many people engage with.

Their love for the ‘gram’ birthed the idea of interactive art – a ‘pose & post’ moment – that anybody could participate in and, of course, it worked!

It was an incredible, collaborative project that saw the Hout Bay communities of Imizamo Yethu and Hangberg come together, share and make great memories while creating amazing artwork as a festive gift (and beyond) to Hout Bay High School.

Smiles, laughter, music and paint everywhere really made for one of the most magical short holiday programmes we have had to date.

Lalela kids are phenomenal, and so are these murals!

Below: Rowan adds finishing touches; a cheerful bunch of balloons waiting for a selfie moment; Lalela facilitators Terri and Mark show us how it’s done!

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2022-02-04T16:49:20+02:00
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