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2020 AFTS Year in Review

2020 AFTS Year in Review
Did we have a plan to for 2020, YES! Did we have to take a hard right hand turn, YES!

Art From The Streets is thrilled to say with the help of our amazing board and volunteers we were able to steer towards a positive, creative and supportive year for the artists in our program as well as many experiencing homelessness and at-risk in Austin, Texas. 

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Finding Strength in A Community: Interview with AFTS Artist

Community Art

Crystal has been coming to AFTS Open Studio for more than 5 years and tries to attend once a week “so that I feel like I’m doing something - life’s not just passing me by. I have something to look forward to.

“Life can draw you away from your real talent, and AFTS helped me rediscover an old talent. [AFTS] gave me the opportunity to rekindle that talent.”

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Art Therapy and Homelessness

Art Therapy and Homelessness
Homelessness is a draining existence. Daily life becomes much harder and the future at times can seem very bleak. Art gives Austin homeless residents a way to feel human again. It allows for self-expression and the ability to be seen not as a homeless individual but as a talented artist.

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Art From the Streets Celebrates Their 25th Anniversary

Art From the Streets Celebrates Their 25th Anniversary

Art From the Streets, a non-profit that provides a free art studio for Austin’s homeless citizens, will host their 25th Annual Homeless Art Show and Sell on Dec. 2-3rd at the Austin Convention Center from 11am - 5pm.

 

For the past 25 years, Art From the Streets has offered a safe space for homeless people to express their creativity and grow through painting and drawing within a supportive community.

 

“We’re very excited to have this 25th anniversary show. We have 2,000 pieces of new artwork, thousands of pieces of artwork that we stored for the artists over a period of time, and we have about 35 artists that will have booths that are participating. But over 150 artists have worked in our program over this year,” executive director of Art From the Streets, Kelley Worden, said.

 

Art From the Streets Celebrates Their 25th Anniversary

(Executive Director, Kelley Worden)

 

This non-profit has grown immensely over the past 25 years from 70 pieces of artwork to the now thousands that are expected at this upcoming show. The program started off with a few founders hosting in a small room at The Austin Resource Center for the Homeless or ARCH for short.

 

“One of our founders got together with some friends and decided that they wanted to go to The ARCH and maybe create a sandwich, some lunch maybe - just find something interactive to do with people that are living on the streets. One day they brought in pencils and paper and just wanted to do some interactions versus just sitting around and doing nothing all day and they came up with these amazing pieces of artwork,” Worden said.

 

Art From the Streets Celebrates Their 25th Anniversary

(Open studio time)

 

The art studio is now hosted within the Trinity Center, a resource for the homeless population provided by St. David’s Episcopal Church in downtown Austin. Up until five years ago the Annual Show and Sell art show was also held within St. David’s but has since moved to the Austin Convention Center to allow room for growth.

 

“So about five years ago we became a 501 (c)(3). So twenty years of just friends of friends of friends making it happen and completely volunteer run. Ten years ago we started receiving funds from the city through the Cultural Arts Division which we still do. A lot of our funding comes from them,” Worden said.

 

While the building Art From the Streets is hosted in, the size of the program and the location of the art shows have changed, the overall goal has not.

 

“Success in our world is way different than success with a homeless person or someone who is at risk. Their successes are completely different than what our world perceives as success. You know, are you the CEO of something? Are you the executive director of something? Are you making millions of dollars? Are you donating millions of dollars? Success could be a day to day kind of thing. I successfully made it to art class this week,” Worden said.

 

Art From the Streets Celebrates Their 25th Anniversary

(Donations to Art From the Streets)

 

Art From the Streets isn’t slowing down any time soon. Future goals include moving into their own space so that they can further serve the homeless population in Austin. They also hope to offer art classes and other mediums including sculpting and 3-D design.

*Eye See You Now is a proud supporter of Art From the Streets and the author of this article.

 

 

Art From the Streets rely on generous donations of people like YOU! 
Purchasing artwork supports the artists directly. 
Donating to our program helps us to offer a free Open Studio 
for the homeless and at risk. THANK YOU!
 

Donate Here!

Purchase Prints

Art Gives Hope

Art Gives Hope

Finding his way from living in a truck to an art therapy group at his church, Dennis Jones found a way to turn his life around.

He now paints at his nearby Philadelphia Starbucks and you can see his work at the Gorshman YMCA.

These art based programs that focus on creativity, like the one that got Jones back on his feet, often are a large role in empowering those who don’t have anywhere to go.

Another man that benefited from a similar program was Keith Freeman. By his 30th birthday, he had already been to jail for both stealing and selling drugs.

He later joined the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, a program that is five months long and allows former prisoners and veterans to study improv, art, meditation and philosophy. Freeman now goes by the motto “Backwards is not an option.

Another similar story happened to Miky Solano in New York. He signed up with Art Start after being released from jail at 21.  He was determined to push forward, and this group that helps homeless youth through creativity was the thing that got him to it. Now, he’s recorded a few songs and he’s pushing on to a better life. He believes music is a way to express himself, and art has given him a whole new perspective.

At Art From The Streets, we’re all about creating an organization where people can grow and stories like this can happen in our home of Austin, Texas. Volunteer or donate to homeless artists today.

 

Art From the Streets rely on generous donations of people like YOU! 
Purchasing artwork supports the artists directly. 
Donating to our program helps us to offer a free Open Studio 
for the homeless and at risk. THANK YOU!
 

Donate Here

Purchase Prints