Logo
  • HOME
  • ABOUT US
    • Our History
    • Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Access (IDEA)
    • Meet the A4L Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Annual Report
    • Employment
    • Strategic Plan
    • YA National Network
  • PROGRAMS
    • Calendar of Events
    • Wolf Trap Early Childhood Arts Integration Symposium
    • Summer Camps 2023
    • Arts + Learning Snacks
    • Schedule a Program
    • Find A Program
    • Find An Artist
  • SUPPORT
    • Our Supporters
      • Our Supporters 2021 – 2022
      • Our Supporters 2020 – 2021
    • Individual Giving
    • Give Back Through Rewards
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Advisory Groups
      • Artistic Advisory Group
      • Education Advisory Group
    • Become an A4L Artist
    • Become a Board Member
    • Internships
    • Program Observer
    • Volunteer
  • Our Stories
  • Virtual Arts
  • Contact Us

“Snacks” Bring Smiles

June 12, 2021 By Cindy Sherwood

Everybody loves snacks…and our Arts + Learning Snacks are no exception. Look at the big smiles on these kids’ faces as they received their free art activity kits. We handed out 250 snack kits to children who attended the “One City Wake Up and Read Summer Kick-Off” this month in Newport News. And word has it that at Virginia Beach Public Libraries, they’re flying off the shelves  because “everybody loves them.”  

Who wouldn’t love an engaging, hands-on art activity?

Seven-year-old Everly can’t wait to dig into this delicious art snack!

Find out more about our Learning Snacks by clicking here!

Filed Under: ArtsEd, News Tagged With: 757 arts, art activity kits, art enrichment, arts integration, comics, mini-comic, Newport News Public Schools, Root Beer Comics, Virginia Beach Public Libraries

‘Make Comics Now’ with A4L’s Matt Harrison

October 15, 2020 By Cindy Sherwood

https://arts4learningva.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Make-Comics-Now.mp4

Norfolk-based artist Matt Harrison is new to the Arts for Learning roster this year, teaching a popular workshop called “Make Comics Now.” Matt comes from a teaching family—his parents are retired elementary school teachers and his wife is a middle school English teacher, and he says conversations about classroom theory and its practical applications have been a constant throughout his life. Mentoring students is one of his favorite things, whether in his role as a comic artist or in his pay-the-bills job as a web developer.

Although Matt enjoyed drawing when he was a kid, he didn’t become interested in comics until he was a young adult and stumbled on a friend’s box of old comic books.

“I started with X-Men and Spider-Man. The way those shows worked, it wasn’t episodic, it was a continuous story from one to the next. It made me very curious about continuity, so once you start down that path about caring about comics and which way the story goes, it can quickly spiral out of control. So I wound up collecting way more comics than I knew what to do with.”

Eventually Matt transitioned from an interest in traditional mainstream comics to indie comics, where he says he’s now developed a “simple, cartoony, humorous aesthetic.” He’s published more than a dozen mini-comics of eight to 48-pages long and regularly exhibits his work at comic conventions. He also works as an illustrator using a different style, which he describes as somewhat realistic straight-to-ink contour drawings of people from photos. Clients include the Naro Expanded Cinema which features his posters at their cult movie nights.

When you look at Matt’s website, www.rootbeercomics.com, you see an eclectic variety of topics and styles in his comic books, zines, and comic strips. Titles range from “Ninja Turtles with Guns” and “Lincoln versus Booth” to “Harrison Ford is Old.”

“I like to do short projects because that lets me experiment with a lot of different themes and styles of drawings. I can knock out a comic in a month and then move on to the next idea of interest.”

So why Root Beer Comics? First came the impossibility of finding a domain name when you’re named Matt Harrison. Second came the need to choose something unique, memorable, and easy to spell. But root beer also has a deeper meaning to Matt.

“I love root beer. It sets the tone for the humor stuff.  Also, there’s beer, which is an interest that a lot of people have, and then there’s root beer, which is kind of tangentially related to that but not really. And that’s kind of like what my comics are. If mainstream comics are beer, my comics are root beer.”Matt describes what he calls a “pivotal moment” in his life when he realized that comics don’t have to look a set way, that they can look like anything.

“That barrier falls away and you realize anyone can make a comic, I can make a comic, it doesn’t matter that it won’t look like the Spider-Man comic that I saw, it will look like my version of that,” he says. “I realized that I didn’t have to wait until I’m an amazing draftsman, which is a day that may never come, before I put pen on paper and put it out there for people to see.”

That pivotal moment still resonates with him as he teaches.

My objective with teaching is to recreate that moment in other people’s lives so the chains come off and they can get started in this creative hobby that can benefit them in a lot of ways.”

Matt led two Make Comics Now residencies in-person at summer camps and is currently teaching students virtually through Alternatives Inc’s after-school program. Although he’s found COVID-19 safety protocols have made establishing relationships with students more challenging, he hasn’t let that stand in the way.

“Ultimately, I think you just jump right in and treat them like they’re already old friends and eventually they’ll come along for the ride.”

Are you interested in learning more about Matt leading a workshop? Contact us at scheduling@Arts4LearningVA.org for more information.

Filed Under: Artist Spotlight, ArtsEd Tagged With: cartoons, comic books, comics, graphic novels, teaching artists, virtual learning, Zoom teaching

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on InstagramFollow Us on YouTubeFollow Us on Twitter
Phone: 757-466-7555

Visit HERE to send your letter to Congress and support arts learning as part of a well-rounded education. 

Main Office
Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502
Phone: 757-466-7555
Fax: 757-455-9859

Join the A4L Mailing List!

Sign up to receive the latest news on arts integration from Arts for Learning! Thank you for supporting arts-in-education.

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Arts for Learning, 420 N. Center Dr., Ste 239, Norfolk, VA, 23502, http://www.arts4learningva.org. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

Main Office

Arts for Learning
420 North Center Drive
Suite 239
Norfolk, Virginia 23502
Phone: 757-466-7555
Fax: 757-455-9859

An Artistic Tribute to Marty Einhorn

                       A very special—and poignant—Arts for Learning performance this month honored the life and legacy of former board president Marty Einhorn. A4L’s Rita Cohen performed A World of Song and Dance as a free performance in memory of Marty, who died in 2021 at the age of 63. After Marty’s death, Arts for Learning […]

Join the A4L Mailing List!

Sign up to receive the latest news on arts integration from Arts for Learning! Thank you for supporting arts-in-education.

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Arts for Learning, http://www.arts4learningva.org. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

Signature Sponsor:

Copyright © 2023 · Young Audiences | Arts For Learning | Virginia

×