Re: Attention Workshop Instructors.....
Date: March 17, 2007 11:24PM
Aggie,
You might also try photograms with her. And maybe making and coating a handmade photographic emulsion. Here's a pic of a 9'x9' cyanotype on muslin we did at an art camp for visually-impaired kids one summer in Michigan. The kids had a ball collecting things for it and participating in it. If you look carefully, you'll see Tiffany and her cane, a leader dog, Polaroid Colorpack cameras (another type that might work with your friend) and some stuff from the art camp like ferns, woodworking clamps, wood chisels, a view camera, and clay sculptures, etc.
[attachment 280 cyanph.jpg]
They also made their own pinhole cameras and contact-printed the results. Big cameras and big negatives make it work for them. (Also digital stuff blown up large on screens.) They also loved darkroom stuff liked developing sheet film. Contrary to popular thinking, photography can be very appealing to low-vision individuals. In many cases the still image lets them see things better because they can scan details close-up over time rather than fleeting images usually before them. And, even the totally blind kids at camp brought their own cameras with them and passed around photos. They may have needed others to describe the content of the prints to them, but once that was done, the photos documented and sparked pleasant memories for them just as they do for sighted individuals.
Here's another photogram a totally blind student made on something called a Solarplate (normally used in printmaking applications). The plate produces physical relief so the kids could also feel the image. I also have some examples of larger floral cyanotype photograms they made on large sheets of watercolor, but unfortunately I don't have scans of those.
[attachment 281 solarplate.jpg]
I did this for 4 summers with the kids and we always had an art exhibit in town following the camp. Their opening was included in the local Friday night "Art Hop" put on by the local arts council. (One year it was covered live by MSNBC.com) The kids had a great time exhibiting their photos, paintings, writings, etchings and soapstone sculptures which BTW they made from raw blocks of rock and roughed out initially with power tools. Here's an example:
[attachment 282 Cait1.jpg]
I'll also add that they were very adept at navigating the wooded paths at night and I was often the one who needed an arm to be guided through the woods after dark.
Joe