MCCC Lively Arts Series shares a Norristown special presentation

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Artist David Gonzalez, above, working with students at Eisenhower Middle School for Finding Communidad, part of MCCC's Lively Arts Series. (Image courtesy MCCC)

Montgomery County Community College’s Lively Arts Series will be sharing a special presentation, “Finding Communidad/Finding Community: An Intergenerational Storytelling of Norristown,” on Friday, Dec. 7, at 10:30 a.m. at Montgomery County Community College, Science Center Theater, 340 DeKalb Pike, Blue Bell, that is the result of a collaborative community project among youth, families and senior citizens.

Since September, David Gonzalez (Artist-in-Residence) and Mila Romero (Teaching Artist), as part of an extended residency, have been working with Eisenhower Science & Technology Leadership Academy students, and senior citizens from the Senior Adult Activities Center of Montgomery County in Norristown.

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The project included a series of interviews of community members by Eisenhower Middle School students and creative and dramatic writing and engagement workshops with MCCC, ACLAMO Family Services and senior citizens from Montco SAAC.

Using the information they collected from the interviews and workshops, they created a suite of compelling stories and images that reveal the hopes, dreams and fears of the Norristown community which will be presented on Dec. 7.

This civic arts initiative was made possible through a National Endowment for the Arts $10,000 Challenge America awarded to MCCC’s Cultural Affairs Office. As part of the grant, Gonzalez presented “Finding North,” a one-person show created from research and oral histories about the sacrifices and dreams of the African-American Underground Railroad hero John P. Parker, as well as contemporary American immigrants. Gonzalez then hosted the six-week artist-in-residency program at Eisenhower, ACLAMO and Montco SAAC.

“For more than 30 years, MCCC has been hosting renowned performing artists and fostering these types of events to further critical conversations,” said Brent Woods, Senior Director of Cultural Affairs at MCCC. “As part of our work, we frequently bring the arts to the youth in the community through performances and workshops, and we are grateful to receive this generous grant from NEA to expand and continue our work.”

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